Happy Mornings!

You know, sometimes I suspect there’s a factory somewhere in Korea or maybe Guam, stuffed with people hastily making retro-style ads and uploading them to YouTube so the companies for which they work get credit for having been transgressive in the Seventies. This is one of those times.

Tell me these aren’t Seventies haircuts. And tell me that isn’t an  Eighties style URL. So, tell me what this ridonkulous Folgers commercial actually means…if anything.

BTW Folgers actually sux. It makes Maxwell House look like Cafe Artigiano.

useless facts: perfect for looking as if you’re actually working!

Via Fark. A collection of 371 useless facts and, surprisingly, the ones I've bothered to verify (ie the ones I know off the top of my head) are actually correct!

  1. Al Capone's business card said he was a used furniture dealer.
  2. The characters Bert and Ernie on Sesame Street were named after Bert the cop and Ernie the taxi driver in Frank Capra's "Its A Wonderful Life."
  3. It's impossible to sneeze with your eyes open. (DON'T try this at home!) [actually raincoaster can keep her right eye open. It's a long story]
  4. The giant squid has the largest eyes in the world.
  5. In England, the Speaker of the House is not allowed to speak.
  6. The microwave was invented after a researcher walked by a radar tube and a chocolate bar melted in his pocket.
  7. Mr. Rogers is an ordained minister.

Well okay, Mr. Rogers is dead. But it's not like he was defrocked or anything. Or even decardiganed.

love, exciting and new, and extremely inconvenient in a country where most singles still live with their parents

Such as Japan. My friend over at JapanProbe has launched a new blog, and indeed for this contribution to travelling "comfort" his place in heaven is assured.

It's a love hotel info blog.

Rabuho.com : A Love Hotel information Blog!

Ever wanted to find out where a good love hotel was, but lacked the ability to navigate Japanese language love hotel sites? I remember the days when my Japanese was still at a beginner level and I had to struggle to locate “after date” locations to take girls. It was truly difficult to find a good love hotel in those days.

Love

Well, those days are now over, and I’ve decided to launch rabuho.com, a blog devoted to providing the English-speaking population of Japan and tourists with love hotel info. At the moment there are only a few hotels listed on the site, mostly in the Kanto region. However, I plan to update it regularly, eventually creating an extremely useful resource for “socially active” gaijin. Please check it out!

Blogroll accordingly. Me, I've decided I'm never having sex again, so why would I bother?

John Malcovich has Bird Flu

Apparently the latest dance craze combines the spastic idiocy of the Chicken Dance with the heartfelt celebration of morbidity which is the Tarantella. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, the time is ripe for a dance that makes the Lambada look tasteful, the Pogo graceful. And it has achieved its highest expression here, in the half-scale crawlspace inhabited by this freakish, almost subhuman performer. UPdate: video removed or something. Replaced with your common or garden variety of Jamaican bird flu dance.

Sploid has an update:

A dance craze sweeping the Ivory Coast has onlookers baffled.

It’s like a chicken with Parkinson’s disease trying to dance to hip-hop,” said one person who saw it.

Dancers stretch out their arms, bend them at the wrists, and then start trembling and twitching … to hip-hop. It’s called the bird flu dance, perhaps due to the fact that avian flu tends to set in when birds engage in strenuous activities such as dancing to African hip-hop.

The man who invented the dance, DJ Lewis, said that he was trying to lighten the mood after the H5N1 strain of bird flu turned up in his country.

“I created the dance to bring happiness to the hearts of Africans and to chase away fear — the fear of eating chicken,” he said.

“If we kill all our chickens and poultry, our cousins in the village will become poor. So I created the bird flu dance to put joy back into our hearts.”

Kottke.org has diligently traced “the Jamaican strain of the bird flu dance” (Watch a video set to unlistenable music! [nowhere near as much fun as this vid]), but thus far nobody has been able to find video of the Ivory Coast version.

The Ovaltine

The OvaltineSaturday, September 21, 2002

 

If you've ever watched DaVinci's Inquest you've probably seen it: the grimy, black-tiled front with two big windows and a Baroque mass of neon up above, declaring the premises to be the Ovaltine Cafe, which it is and has been since this was a working-class neighborhood, back before Welfare.

 

Inside it hasn't changed since then. I don't even think it's been thoroughly scrubbed down since then. Took a friend there once, and she mentioned to the waitress that the last time she was there was in 1964. The waitress apologized for not recognizing her. Carinthia looked like the Queen, with silk scarf from Liberty of London, cashmere coat, and "nice" sweater and skirt combination. Pearls of course. It was like lunching with a costumed superhero; you are treated with a certain kind of awe in the neighborhood if you know, and wear, the real thing. I was wearing my sweats, if I recall, though I was not actually sweating, at least not after I realized that the stares didn't mean we were going to get mugged.

 

At the Ovaltine there are, natch, alot of those old-fashioned swivelling stools planted in front of the long counter, and all one side is booths,Booth in the Ovaltine big enough for four if they have all had sex with one another already, but otherwise only big enough for two. Each booth features a largeish chipped and decaying mirror and a little sign telling you that, yes, they have beer and wine, but you have to pay for it when you order. Must be quite a few stories behind that little policy. My friend Carinthia says they only serve it because the heap-big-mucky-muck cops used to come in the back door and eat lunch there, and they wanted a drink or two to wash it down with.

 

Above the mirrors are several of the kind of paintings that are the very last thing left at the very worst garage sales; dreadful florals painted by slave labour in foreign lands that have never seen daisies anyway, seascapes that make one queasy, it wouldn't surprise me if they had a couple of Walter Keane orphans with big eyes and clown costumes. Or black velvet, but unironic black velvet. And given the state of the walls I'd hate to imagine the state of the velvet.

 

The walls used to be that pastel green colour that all dentist's offices were, the colour that, above all others, was supposed Ovaltine exteriorto soothe people. And I'm sure it did, right up until it got associated with people who stick big needles and drills in your mouth and then lecture you about flossing. So it has all those layers of uncomfortable association, despite having been on the walls so long that the oil is seeping out of the paint itself, forming a faint orange coating in varying thicknesses, dribbling in super slo-mo down the walls that ripple with age. Carinthia tells me it was this way when the Beatles were still playing Hamburg dives.

 

I will not discuss the ceiling; the memory is just too painful.

 

The counters are clean, at least, and you never stick to the booths so they must get wiped down though I am in no hurry to wear short-shorts there any time before Ragnarok. They let people smoke there, at least people do, and I've never heard them tell people to butt out. If you ask, though, they tell you no. There is a No Smoking Section sign in the booth where I usually sit.

 

The salt and pepper really set the tone for the place. The sugar is innocent enough, in a big juice bottle with a hole hammered in the top. The salt is sometimes in a salt shaker, but more often it is in a tiny airline-sized liquor bottle, as is the pepper.

 

If God is in the details I wonder what this says about their gods.

 

Once, a largish Native fellow came in and gave a very complicated order, convoluted enough that the waitress would have to stand at the kitchen door and go over it with the cook. She got a look in her eye that said she'd been down this road before and had no intention of getting taken for this ride again; instead of putting in the order she just went to the back of the place and watched. Soon enough he got up from his booth and moved to a different one. Then he got up from there and went to a stool at the counter. Then he walked quickly out the front door.

 

The whole restaurant was riveted. The waitress walked over to each of the places he'd sat and looked them over with a puzzled expression. Suddenly, she burst out laughing. We all looked at her like a class whose teacher has suddenly flipped out.

 

"He stole all the salt and peppers!"

 

Of course. Value isn't constant on the street; the closer you get to Welfare Wednesday, the cheaper everything gets. Anything that can be turned into money becomes more valuable, especially if the value is fixed. If you return an airline-sized Seagram's bottle to a depot you get 5 cents, regardless of the date. If you sell it to a binner you'll get a different price depending on how close he is to his next cheque. The less he has, the less he gives you. Same with hookers: $10 on Tuesday, or even just a few beers. $50 on Wednesday.