quiz: what kind of shoes are you?

Shhhhhhhhh. Don’t tell the boss. Yet another nail upon the head quiz, except for that non-judgmental thing. Only inferior people are non-judgmental.


You Are Bare Feet


You are a true free spirit, and you can’t be tied down.

Even wearing shoes can be a little too constraining for you at times!You are very comfortable in your own skin.

You are one of the most real people around. You don’t have anything to hide.

Open and accepting, you are willing to discuss or entertain almost any topic.

You are a very tolerant person. You are accepting and not judgmental.

You should live: Somewhere warm

You should work: At your own business, where you can set the rules

Unspeakable Homes and Gardens

In-demand international businessman Abdul Nyarlathotep and his charming wife Shub Niggurath had never seen a challenge like the old Gloaming homestead, but, having once seen it, they knew they had to have it. Putting to good use all their famed persuasiveness, the duo finally convinced the eccentric recluse to let them take possession.

“Yes,” chuckles the dryly avuncular Nyarlathotep, “you could say we made him an offer he couldn’t refuse.”

The couple have previously given our readers tantalizing glimpses of the gardens and furnishings, but are now ready to reveal their elegant and eldritch abode to our eager cameras. As I liveblog this, my tummy is rumbling, for there is to be a buffet dinner party later, doubtless some marvelously exotic recipes they’ve picked up in their travels, and Mrs. Nyarlathotep has promised that, as her highly esteemed guests from Unspeakable Homes and Gardens, we will be eating first.

Lily Allen IS a congeries of globes
Mrs. Shub Niggurath Nyarlathotep
Dress by Asenath Waite, hat by The House of Rlyeh

Stylist Walter Gilman describes the remarkable chapeau for us:

I sometimes compare the hat to prisms, labyrinths, clusters of cubes and planes, and Cyclopean buildings; and the organic things strike me variously as groups of bubbles, octopi, centipedes, living Hindoo idols, and intricate arabesques roused into a kind of ophidian animation. Also, I believe you can see a congeries of globes in there somewhere.

Quite so.

Mrs. Nyarlathotep, or Shub as she prefers to be called (“You can’t use the N-word, my dears, not in this country,” she explains, laughingly. “It’s considered unspeakable. I’ve always been unspeakable, really!”) leads us to the mansion’s ornate entrance. There will be a special service in the family chapel later, one to which we’ve wrangled a very exclusive invite.

“The ceremony is something very special, something we introduce to only a select few. You have been extremely helpful to us. Your articles have brought us many curious and innocent seekers after forbidden knowledge. You will be eating first,” Nyarlathotep reminds us, with just a hint of … is it a Texan accent we detect in the last sentence?

And now for some more photos:

York Minster Cathedral, Carols of the Great Old Ones Service

The lovely exterior of the palatial Nyarlathotep residence. They’ve booked a choir to entertain their star-struck guests, most of whom shuffle forward in silence, jostling for position in the velvety darkness of the tropical night. It must be remarked that, from the flabby softness of the crushing bodies, this crowd can hardly be said to be fashionably fit. They are, however, wearing what appear to be carefully distressed and oddly bunched robes of earthy colours, perhaps Vivienne Westwood, John Galliano, or late Helmut Lang.

Well, wasn’t that…remarkable. If one were to hazard a guess, one would suggest that the distinctively dissonant melody had been composed by Diamanda Galas.

Carpet Cowhide

The interior of the house is beautifully accessorised, with throw rugs of amusingly faux alien hides and a wall of similarly ironic stuffed trophy heads, among them a very lifelike effigy of Andy Warhol.

“He was close to us, and we like to keep him there,” says Shub, reading over my shoulder. “‘Ironic.’ My dear, you have no idea. But you’ll see later…” she teases.

Got to go. It’s time for the service and then, the feast!

What time is it? Not Peanut Butter Jelly Time!

That’s for goddam sure.

So. It’s that time again.

Yay, periods are fun!

What do I want? These:

Meat. Mmmmmm, meat!

Meat is murder

Bochox

Coffee, the OTHER Vitamin C

Viiiiiiiiggooooooo

Prada Sandals

What do I got?

  • dried pasta
  • a bag of chop suey vegetables
  • a half a container of 2% yogurt
  • a small tub of baby greens that was going off
  • a lemon and a half
  • one head of garlic
  • a jar of Ragu tomato sauce
  • coffee
  • twenty-five packets of artificial sweetener
  • a VHS tape of Walk on the Moon
  • a pair of seven year old Hi Tec trail runners.

It’s going to be a loooooong weekend.

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Lucy Liu attacked!

Lucy Liu attacked by a school of horny cuttlefish!

Lucy Liu and the Horny Cuttlefish of Doom

It gets worse.

Lucy Liu and the Horny Cuttlefish of Doom, back attack

Yes, showbusiness is a sordid, gilded ghetto. Behind the flashbulbs and the awards, behind the makeup and the costumes, lies an ugly truth.

The Casting Aquarium.

Even Lucy Liu, the lovely and talented star of the Charlie’s Angels chick action flicks, cannot escape its greedy clutches. Smiling bravely for the paparazzi despite the slimy embrace of a school of hormone-crazed cuttlefish, she personifies what must be suffered in silence inthe unspoken struggle for stardom.

In what used to be known as a “Faustian Bargain” and is now called “a personal contract with Harvey,” comely starlets are subjecting themselves to the embrace of repellent, corpulent invertebrates from under the sea. As for what their agents can do about it…why don’t you ask this young woman:

Why is this file entitled Dating?

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black and white and banned all over?

TatfaceDon’t get me wrong.

I hate tattoos.

They say, “I never went to art school, but at least I can have the Chinese symbol for “chiaroscuro” on my ass cheek.”

They say, “Why yes, I am worried about becoming my parents.”

They say, “I may be a middle-aged middle manager, but in my cosplay dreams, I’m an ass-kickin’ Goth Faerie.”

But…if there’s one thing I hate more than bourgeois nostalgie de la boue trends, it’s bourgeois blandness and conformity.

Confusion arises, of course, because, for the past fifteen years, getting a tattoo has been a type of bourgeois conformity.

I well remember one of the last training meetings I attended, back a decade ago when still I worked at Starbucks. These always start with some self-consciously cheesy icebreaker question: in this case, “Show us your tattoos.” I was the only person there without one, including the trainer.

Now, whatever beefs you may have with the corporation (and people do have beefs with them; many valid, quite a boring number simply reflexive and chauvinistic, and Hi Metro!) it was at the time relatively enlightened. The dress code was a little heavy on the preppy, it is true, but they’d recently rescinded the “No Visible Tattoos” rule under what I can only guess was heavy pressure from HR who said, not without solid justification, that there were hardly any qualified, capable barista candidates at the time who didn’t have ink.

And there was much rejoicing.

People I’d been working alongside for years suddenly showed up to work in short sleeved shirts, displaying quite an impressive array of Maori or Haida designs up, down, and around the arms.

Wereleopard

I am reminded at this point of the “no unnatural hair colours” rule and the mess that Dan Fazio made of his very, very black, Italian hair the night he got drunk and tried to become Billy Idol. I got to eyeball the result when worked with him the next morning, and it was magnificent. Instead of combing the bleach through his hair, he had instead grabbed clumps and, apparently, rubbed the peroxide down to the roots. The overall effect was something between leopard and ocelot, on a backdrop of black, starkly outlined with brown at the edges of each golden splotch. Quite spectacular, actually.

Natural colours, all.

It was just Dan’s bad luck that this was the day the VP for Canada happened to be doing the rounds of stores. Roly Morris is not a man to mess with. And he’s not a man to walk-up-to-the-line-and-dip-a-toe-over-while-you-giggle with, either, particularly when you’re spectacularly hung over. While Dan made drinks at the bar, I watched Roly move slowly up the line, eyes narrowing with each step. When he got up to the till he spoke, and until that time I’d never seen someone speak without moving any part of his face, nor had I known that humans had the power to lower the ambient temperature several measurable degrees Celsius simply by greeting one another.

Good.

Morning.

Dan,”

he said.

Dan stared back, eyes wide and body frozen, like a leopard-spotted bunny facing a king cobra. “Uh. Morning, Roly?”

It’s.

A.

Nice.

Day.

Isn’t.

It.

Dan?”

“Uh, yeah. I made your drink!” said Dan, handing over the latte with extremely un-Dan-like unctuousness. Dan, you see, was very cool. Dan and his band went on tour with the Scorpions and got kicked out of Germany for being “too metal.” But Dan knew that here he was up against something much more formidable than a bunch of Eurogroupies and some elderly headbangers.

I’ll.

See.

You.

Around.

Won’t.

I.

Dan?”

And, indeed, he did. 12 hours later Dan’s hair was restored to its original blackness, if somewhat more crispy, 18 hours later Roly’s assistant phoned the store to check on the hair situation, and a memo was composed and disseminated stating that, not only did hair have to be natural in colour, but also in colour distribution.

My advice to Dan that he claim Big Cat heritage went unacted upon, alas.

Tattoos. We were talking about tattoos. It’s a blog post about tattoos.

Strangely, while I’ve been writing this post, the Starbucks Canada official website went down. I don’t know my own strength!

So, Starbucks had, then tossed, a no-visible-tats rule. When it did so, many a tat saw sunlight for the first time in years (at least on the clock). Many, many more virgin-hided baristas rushed out to proclaim their love for unicorns, vaguely Celtic knotwork, or Black Flag with some fresh ink.

Several months later, about the time they committed to replaced the existing La Marzocco machines (I don’t care what they say, they’re not as good as Cimbali) with those inferior robotic things that did everything but add the sprinkles on top (to standardize the beverage experience, and hoo, boy, did they ever, standardized the hell out of it, lower) and so much for my beloved 16-second shots, they rescinded the freedom they had bestowed.

Problem: ink everywhere.

Ink on necks, ink on hands, ink on ears, ink on legs. Even ink on faces. So, what does a shift supervisor or manager of some standing but some ink now do, when the company again bans visible tattoos? Retire on that cushy pension? Segue into a job at a Harley dealership? Sue? Strike?

In any case, this post over on Valleywag got me wondering: now that ink is so pervasive, are tattoos the canary in the mineshaft? Is a ban on tats the first sign of the End Times? After all, if you can’t control the flow of blood from the gaping wound in the jugular, you can always turn your attention to, and try to control, the capillaries, no?

Who else bans visible tats? 

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