Operation Global Media Domination: Operation Undead

TIAEven when I am operating without benefit of electricity I still get 600 hits! Awesome, let's see Graydon Carter match that! Sure, he'd win the plaid pants modeling contest, but will that get you hits? Not unless they can do something A) orgasmic and upload the video or B) amusing with Diet Coke and Mentos.

In related news I note with some pride that ten people found their way to this blog the other day by googling "Self-aggrandizement." No idea why it led here…

The Ovaltine Cafe: the Food Part

Wednesday, September 25, 2002

 

OvaltineYes, the Ovaltine serves food, a fact which endears it to me no end, as it is well known that I am a food addict, though not one such as gets out of control, nor even one that is likely to get on Oprah, but just one who has been known to enjoy a little food now and then, perhaps even at breakfast. Churchill ate food at breakfast unapologetically, as did Hemingway and quite a number of other fine, respectable types, so I see no need to feel apologetic or defensive about it and do not indulge in such behaviour.

 

The food: oh yes, the food. They have a big whiteboard in the window with all the specials listed; the specials are always the same and have been the same since, as I said before, the Beatles were playing Hamburg. Breakfast special, served all day $3.50, and a fine value it is, too. Two scrambled eggs, at least I take their word it is two because it sure ain't three to look at it, I mean you can just tell, right? But it might be two. Since they're all scrambled up you sort of have to trust them. One hotcake. No mistaking that, it's one hotcake allright, and a yummy one it is, too. God only knows what's in the syrup, but it's sticky and that's something. Although now that the ownership has changed, you don't get the hotcake, just some home fries, and that is not at all adequate consolation for depriving us of our hotcake. Bacon or sausage, the Western type, no Chinese duck sausage as one might expect in this part of town, but I don't know how it tastes, as I had the bacon. It tasted like bacon, what can I say? Toast as well, white or brown, both of negligible nutritional value; I think the brown is just dyed. If you want to put anything on the toast they charge you: think it's 35 cents for peanut butter. But on the whole a yummy and voluminous breakfast as you can find anywhere, especially now that Denny's charges like $6 for a Grand Slam; honestly, what is the world coming to when Denny's is too pricy?

 

The other specials are invariably: liver & onions, pork roast, lamb chops, and fish 'n chips. Can't really comment on them, as I haven't eaten them yet, but Carinthia ordered the fish and chips once and said it was good, so it must be. She's a tough sell.

 

I was skating down the street one day and came to a temporary roadblock in the shape of two junkies. One was a tallish, willowy Native girl of about 18, wearing a hot pink baby T and lowrider jeans, with a fringed belt and two long, silky pigtails wrapped with brown leather ties, hanging down in front of her shoulders. Very 70's. Her friend was closer to 30, with a tight poodle perm and black jean jacket, with blue jeans and a big, floppy hat; also very 70's, just not in the good way. She was saying:

 

"See that?" she stage-whispered hoarsely and pointed with a scrawny, frosted-pink-tipped finger. "That's the Ovaltine Cafe. They have the best milkshakes on earth. I'm not fucking with you." Her friend was chuckling, she was so dead serious and secretive, like somebody was listening or something. "The best milkshakes on earth. You don't need to eat nothin' with it, nor nothin' after and you're set for the day. I tell ya, they're the best thing on earth. Expensive, mind you, but they're the best."

 

I figured I'd keep that in mind and skated on my way.

 

She was right, they are the best, at least since that kitchy place in Victoria with the car in the ceiling closed down. And they are decanted with all the ceremony of a fine Burgundy; I think the waitress even had a napkin draped over her arm as she poured my chocolate shake from the tin cup, but it may have just been a tensor bandage. The shakes are so thick you figure it's even money whether the shake comes up the straw or your brains go down into the glass; it's worth the risk. And they taste like the nice, old-fashioned shakes that your pal-with-the-coolest-Dad's Dad used to make when you would all go over there after school. I never understood how somebody without a job could afford a milkshake maker. Anyway, they're like that.

 

But the burgers and fries. Ah, the burgers and fries. How, pray tell, can you beat a $2.80 burger? Fries 80 cents more? Sure, pile them on. These ones are chubby and short, like the deep-fried fingers of Edward G. Robinson. And they are yummy indeed, pure gold on the outside with thin outlines of rich burnt umber along each edge; the insides are as pure as the driven snow, white and fluffy and soft and hot and all sorts of wonderful other things including vinegary, salty and ketchupy after I've finished with them. Yum.

 

The burgers: now, nothing beats a real dinery burger when that's what you want. It's an innate craving, like rootbeer, that cannot be satisfied by any substitute. This is a real, dinery burger. I always order the deluxe, as I am, as you know, a real foodie and always insist on the luxe versions of whatever is served me, the very finest, so I spend the extra 50 cents for a slice of tomato, some shreds of iceberg, and a glob of thousand island dressing; nothing but Cadillac for me! It tastes like a diner burger, which is really all you can ask for $2.80, except that the sesame seeds from the bun not get stuck in your teeth, though they always do.

 

But the best thing about eating here is the eavesdropping, of which more later.

topiary

Next week I shall present you with something authentically Vancouver, and authentically shocking. Until then, this will have to do.

Topiary

notice for raincoaster fanbase

such as it is. Here's a roundup of good advice, should some unfortunate friend of yours (and here we are naming no names) be detained by the criminal investigators of your general locale. How to help a friend who gets arrested. No reason I mention it here…

How to Help a Friend Who Gets Arrested in the Middle of the Night

It is 2 AM and someone you love has just been arrested. You know you need legal help. You do not want your loved one to make a confession or be in a line-up or even get fingerprinted if it can be avoided. It is tough to know what to do or who to trust. Moreover, you do not know who will even answer the phone at that time of day. Here is what you need to know if this happens in the United States of America.

Gotti Mug Shots

Steps

  1. Find out where they are being held and by what police agency. Whether you get the call from a police officer or your loved one, make sure that this is the first thing you ask. If you can, tell your friend or family member that you are finding him a lawyer and not to answer any police questions until the lawyer arrives. Your friend MUST invoke his rights himself. If you tell the detective not to talk to your friend (or loved one) without an attorney, he'll laugh at you. Only the arrested subject can invoke his rights.
  2. Ask what the charges are and what time the arrest was made. Do not let your loved one tell you what happened. The call is not privileged and it can, and probably will be, recorded by police for later use against your loved one. They should just tell you the actual charge. If they cannot tell you without explanation, tell them that it doesn't matter, and continue to step three below. If the arrested is an adult, the police are not required to tell a friend or family member anything.
  3. Tell your loved one not to make any statement or take any test and tell them you are getting a lawyer and not to do or say anything until they hear from that lawyer. (In some states, you have a very limited time or no right at all to contact a lawyer regarding alcohol testing. If you don't know, ask the officer.)Only the arrested subject can invoke his rights, you can not do it for them.
  4. Select a criminal defense attorney. See the related wikiHow's below for steps to take in finding one. Keep calling lawyers until you find one that either answers their phone or has an answering service that can reach them anytime, day or night.
  5. Tell the lawyer that your friend is arrested and give as much information as you can. Ask that they immediately call the stationhouse and stop your friend from being questioned. Many lawyers will do this for free, but expect to pay at least $150-350 for that call.
  6. Gather as much money as you can to both pay the lawyer in court and to post bail. It is more important to get a good lawyer into the case early than to immediately get your friend out of jail.

Tips

  • Always keep about $500-$1000 available without having to go to the bank. Most minor crimes and traffic violations can be bailed out from the stationhouse through the use of a desk appearance ticket or a desk sergent's bail.
  • Do not feel obligated to stay with the lawyer who helps you the first night. Selecting a lawyer for a case long-term should be done with the accused person's participation. Tell the lawyer you found that you are using him for the purpose of securing your loved ones rights only for the night in question. Do not sign a long term retainer.
  • Any legal fee for standing in at arraignment should either be a flat fee or should be hourly. Again, most criminal defense attorneys will charge between $150-$350 per hour. It will cost more in many big cities or urban areas. For example, many well known NY lawyers charge upwards of $600 per hour.
  • You do not have to use the lawyer that helps you get your loved one for arraignment. A free lawyer is often available. However, it is better to have your own lawyer at arraignment if you can.
  • If you run into trouble finding out where your friend is being held and by what police agency, get ahold of a bail bondsman (see link below, how to make bail) as they are experienced at this, and can sometimes locate your friend faster than you using the same resources.

Warnings

  • Police do not have to "give you your rights," and their failure to do so does not invalidate an arrest. They only have to give you your rights if they (a) arrest you and (b) ask you questions about the crime. Hence, tell your friend who is under arrest to plead the fifth.
  • An oral statement is just as bad as a written statement. It is always best to say nothing.
  • Do not worry if you cannot find an attorney to represent your friend in court without being retained. Some courts will not let a non-retained lawyer stand in at arraignment. The court must provide an attorney at an arraignment if one is requested, or give the accused time to retain someone before he is arraigned.
  • There are times when the best thing you can do for your friend or loved one is to let them deal with the consequences of their actions on their own. Spending a night in jail can be a real wakeup call for someone who is in need of a wakeup call.

Related wikiHows

weenie wannabe

Copycat dog attempts to follow Russet's lead, falls short by something like 400m.

Dog safe after 50ft cliff plunge

Jasper

Jasper had been chasing rabbits when he fell near Newquay

A dog had to be rescued by a lifeguard after falling down a 50ft cliff in Cornwall while chasing rabbits.Jasper, a whippet-spaniel cross, went missing on Thursday while walking with his owners, Clifford and Joan Day from Worcestershire, at Pentire Point.

Summa Calaghan, an RNLI lifeguard at Crantock, went paddling out on her rescue board to check the bottom of the cliffs for signs of Jasper.

She found him shivering in a cove on a rocky ledge.

'Great job'

Clifford Day said "He went charging past us like a rocket and just didn't come back.

"After looking for him for about an hour, we thought that was it, we wouldn't see him again."

Two-year-old Jasper had been missing for about two hours when Ms Calaghan went out on her board to look for him.

After searching the bottom of the cliffs for some time she eventually found him two metres above the water on a ledge.

Ms Calaghan said: "I couldn't get the board close enough, so I left it on a rock whilst I approached him.

"I thought he might have broken his legs, but then he tried to run away so I knew he wasn't badly injured."

She then paddled out with Jasper to Rodney McDonald, an RNLI lifeguard at Restormel, who was waiting in the inshore rescue boat about 30 metres out from the cliffs.

Jasper was then reunited with his grateful owners.

Mr Day said: "He is doing remarkably well after his ordeal. He had a few cuts and scrapes but is back to his usual self.

"Summa's persistence saved his life, she really did a great job."