New Yorker goes all “returning its own popcans”

Eustace Tilley Hat?From Gawker:

There’s an interesting report today on a Columbia undergraduate publication’s punnily and speech-impedimently named blog, the Bwog, regarding an old trove of slush-pile submissions to The New Yorker’s poetry department:

[I]t was with much fanfare that the interns were told that they were finally going to throw out the box. But first wouldn’t they be so careful as to go through the submissions and remove all the self-addressed stamped envelopes? Why? To save the stamps, of course. Yes, the poetry editor of the New Yorker had her interns cut out each and every 37 cent stamp they could find, even though these stamps on their own were useless without a two cent supplement to compensate for the 2006 cost of postage.

Midway through their task she stopped them. Touched by the hand of reason? Of common human decency? “I just wanted to make sure… neither of you has a blog, right?”

Oh, silly poetry editor, everyone has a blog now.

Meter Money [Bwog]

Tourist Rage!!!

Well okay, they're Canadians we're talking about here, so maybe it's more like tourist moderately-strongly-worded-emailing, but the tourists are ENRAGED AND OUT of CONTROL!!! however they're expressing it, and you would be too, if you'd ever had to fly Air Canada.

Passengers should be aware of their rights, Huot said, but they should also know their responsibilities, and that includes not putting live crustaceans in their suitcases.

Okay so Pepe is a prawn, not a lobster. He's still the ugliest Muppet you've ever seen!

That's right! If you're going to be flying with live Crustaceans, be sure to keep them in your pants, along with the monkeys. Learn from:

the example of one man whose luggage was lost while he was travelling from Halifax to Toronto. It was found four days later – but neither the bag nor the live lobsters it contained survived the delay.

"There's not a lot we can do about that, and that passenger will fall into the category of not being happy with the settlement."

As will everyone in the vicinity of the lost luggage, I would guess.

In another case, he said, "a passenger wanted two round-the-world tickets because the different melons all tasted the same in his fruit cup."

I'd be for it, but only halfway. Literally. And hang a sign around his neck so that the people in Sierra Leone or wherever he ends up will know that he's the melonhead who insisted on being deported because the airline meal tasted prefab.

Adventures in Yaletown: From the Archive

Monday, September 09, 2002

For this I must thank my friend Dale, who, as a former Beagle owner and hunter, came up with this brilliant get-rich-slowly-but-amusingly scheme.

Yaletown mosaic view

CoyoteCoyotes; heard of them? Fine critters, no doubt, just right for wandering the arid prarielands, rustlin' groundhogs and chasin' rats, but somewhat out of place in the Wired World of Yaletown.

Yaletown; heard of it? fine neighborhood. Full of rich, beautiful people who have the most amazing manners and who are really, really nice. Really. You want to send cards to their parents or something, they all turned out so well. Nothing bad ever happens there; I think it's a bylaw. All the buildings are either spankin' new fiberoptic wonders or reconditioned SOHO style lofts in old brick lowrises with professionally tended flowerboxes above and Starbucks below.

Yaletown is infested with coyotes.

How can this be? you ask. Easy. Easy peasy. The fact is that Yaletown is built right next to, or even on, the old Expo 86 grounds, most of which still remains barren. Sure, there are glossy highrises, but most of the area is still either a twenty-year-old deconstruction ground of broken paving and scrub grass, or it's Indy track, which is about as close to a desert plain as you are going to get in a temperate rainforest. So really, all you need are a couple of coyote singles getting together over a sixpack of Smirnoff Ice down by False Creek and next thing you know it is a Playboy Mansion for four-footed 'uns. The whole place is ringed with a fence that keeps people out, leaving it free day and night for coyote goin's-on. Gawd only knows whut them critters gits up ta.

So now when the sleek Iranian princesses go out in the mornings to walk Fifi the Maltese they must keep a keen eye out or Fifi may be dejeuner pour un petit loup. Merde!

Yaletown, the Mild West

Alors, my friend Dale put that whole grim tragedy together with the tourist trade and the money in being a hunting guide and came up with this:

The British are slowly losing the legal right run around with a pack of dogs and chase things to their deaths, and are missing the whole hound-hunting experience. Dale suggests that we get a pack of de-accessioned hounds and some old horses that don't mind tourists and one of those cool horns and we conduct a hunt through Yaletown and the old Expo lands. This would have to be done at night, as that is peak coyote-huntin' time.

Happy Coyote Hunters, perhaps with their Mount Pleasant kills?

Picture this: a dead-black night, with a cold, hard rain driving down relentlessly. A bitter wind sweeps the historic streets of Yaletown, setting the lofts to shivering on their firm parkade foundations. A lone creature stalks the night, skulking from Dumpster to Dumpster, gliding like the shadow of a ghost. It pads wetly on its four miserable paws, water pours like slowly waving icicles off its hollow belly. A flare of headlights, and two eyes glow in the darkness, pinpoints of seeking, of hunger.

Suddenly, a sound! Faint trumpeting in the distance, a gaggle of indecipherable noises. The coyote pricks its ears. The cacophonous music comes closer, invisibly, sourceless in the darkness, as if the Great Hunt of the Celts had descended to spread terror through modernity itself. As the mists part and the rain relents, for just a moment the coyote sees.

Hounds, dozens of them! Tall, strong, and hungry, a pack of foxhounds tears down Hamilton Street in a berzerker blood-rage! Behind, as many as twenty fat, rich tourists on horseback, wearing scarlet coats and bowlers and yelling "Tally Ho!" at the top of their lungs, with a guide and hunter tootling on a tiny horn that somebody used to use as a Christmas ornament. The coyote runs, past the Nygard showroom, past the Home Shop, past the yuppie brew pub and Beautymark Cosmetics, past Seattle's Best Coffee and Bar None, past Rodney's Oyster Bar and the neogothic building with the twirling letterblocks that must be art, they're so palpably useless. Can he make it across Pacific Avenue to the wastelands?

No! He has forgotten to push the button for the pedestrian light!

They bring him to ground just outside the Jugo Juice.
 Yaletown, primo huntin' territory!

EFF’s Legal Guide for Bloggers

For Freedom's SakeBookmark it. Please.

Because if I catch you asking me any dumb questions that are answered in here I'm going to make fun of you, and nobody wants that to happen, do they?

The Electronic Frontier Foundation's Legal Guide for Bloggers

I'm going to assume you know what country you live in, and whether, therefore, any of this applies to you. Not so fast, Canucks and Brits…you're more co-opted than you thought. You need to read this, too.

Liberty waits on your typing

Operation Global Media Domination: Technorati kneels

TIAThe view is more beautiful now that it is mine.

Technorati Rank: 196,923

I suppose two pretty much solid weeks in the WordPress Top 100 (out of 179,000)kinda suggested to Technorati that they maybe needed to think about updating their data and poof! All of a sudden I've gone up by a quarter of a million places in the blogosphere. If only it happened in real time, but that would be awfully Web 2.0 of them. I suppose batch processing once a month isn't that bad, it's just that much worse than their PR.

Update: And today, thanks to Chaucer's dirty bits and a Fleshbot pass-along, I'm #1 AND #2 on the WordPress Sex tag. My mother would be so proud!