Manifest Idiocy

Canada America Done Right

The Guardian has been doing a virtual world tour of literature, and recently they featured Canada. In fact, the blog comments, meant to be a roundup of readers' favorite Canadian books, featured James Sherrett's book Up in Ontario(over there in the blogroll), so kudos to him, whatever kudos are. I hope they're chewy and taste like peanut butter fudge dipped in chocolate, but probably it's just a euphemism for a boring plaque and an arrangement of silk flowers or something.

In any case, the editor in charge may have many good points. He/She/It may be a great humanitarian, kind to the elderly, charitable, hospitable, and good with children and animals.

I. Don't. Give. A. Rat's. Ass.

I want the editor disciplined. I want the editor publicly named and shamed. I want the editor to be forced to cover Groundhog Day from Wiarton next year. I want the editor to be compelled at hockeystick-point to read all of Pierre Berton's interminable late-career mumblings. Read through this and see if you can't spot the wee little problem I have with this clueless fucking foreigner:

http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/culturevulture/archives/2006/03/21/whither_canada.html

Whither Canada
By Richard Lea/World literature tour

Thanks to you all, the world literature tour is going from strength to strength. After Finland and Poland came the Czech Republic, where alongside the Kundera and the Klima there were recommendations for Bohumil Hrabal, poems by Jaroslav Seifert, plays by Karel Capek and many, many more. There was even time for some strong words on the exclusion of Kafka
Richard was not alone in wanting to "take issue" with the decision,
complaining that we'd become confused between country and language.
Many thanks for all your contributions.

This month we can confidently predict there will be no
such confusion, as with one great leap the world literature tour
crosses the ocean and heads for Canada. Beating off strong challenges from India and Japan, we are heading for the frozen north. With suggestions ranging from Sweden to St Lucia the nominations took an increasingly personal note, with Babak voting for the country of "Tom Stoppard" and a number of anti-Atwood
protests. So much so that I'd like to declare an Atwood amnesty here
and now – any and all of your Atwood suggestions will be gratefully
received.

And don't forget to keep your nominations for next
month's destination coming – after a month up by the Arctic circle
would you all mind if I suggested a little sunshine? Unless there's
anyone else who feels like heading for Stoppard country out there …

Vermont Maple Leaves

Photograph: Toby Talbot/AP

caption: Sweet dreams…Maple leaves in Vermont

Today in Cetacean Artwork News

Cetacean Brian Jungen

Brian Jungen
Cetology, 2002
plastic chairs

This is from the Brian Jungen show currently on exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery. Yes, it's made of plastic chairs. I saw it on BoingBoing. To see more of this bizarre and awe-inspiring artwork, check out this Tyee Link.

Operation Global Media Domination: weekend operating procedures

TIAFYI for anyone out there who is going to check the blog over the weekend; there probably won’t be much added here. Not only do I normally try to take the weekend off , but WordPress isn’t working in Internet Explorer right now okay, all fixed now. As well, an old friend is in town and I hope to be away from the keyboard, doing fun things.

There are 150+ entries here you can scroll through or just play with the tags to find everything you ever wanted to know about Giant Squid, Curling, or Aki Beam.

Friday Hooker Story

Just because it's Friday and I found this on Fark.

Calgary broker fired over prostitute felt unappreciated

CALGARY — A vice-president with RBC Dominion Securities who was fired for bringing a prostitute to his office after hours testified Thursday that he felt his job security was waning despite the fact he was one of the firm's top performers. "I had a different business model,'' said Jim Whitehouse, who is suing his former employer. "I felt that even though I was one of the top producers, I was not appreciated within the organization.''

Given that they fired his inflamed, sorry ass, he's probably right.

So there was this cop story. It's true, too. Cop stories are great; they're always really bleak, usually with a wicked twist at the end. Cops and Shirley Jackson tell the same kind of stories, only theirs feature perps, tweaks and hookers and hers feature young children and townspeople. Hard to decide which is the more terrifying sometimes.

So there was this cop story. And it goes like this:

So there was this guy, pulled over on Nelson and Homer. Yaletown. It was Yaletown.

Yaletown

The guy is yelling at a hooker, the hooker is yelling at the guy. It's a Jaguar. I told you it was Yaletown.

I get up to the two of them, ask them what's going on. The girl is real upset. So is the Yuppie. Seems he stiffed her, ha ha, no, he really stiffed her.

"It's twenty-five bucks for head, and I gave it to him and now he won't pay me."

I don't like to take sides in these matters, but something about this guy just got up my nostrils.

"C'mon," I said to him. "Pay the lady her twenty-five bucks. Your socks cost more than that."

He gets all outraged. He says, "These socks cost seventy-five dollars! They're cashmere."

So I gave him a choice. He could pay up or he could go for a ride downtown with me.

Forget it, Jake. It's Yaletown.

Dining and Damning

Oh! How the mighty have fallen. Ladies and gentlemen, is thisGlamour not one of the crappiest-looking, low rent, most cheesetastic web pages you’ve ever seen? It looks like something the most pompous steak house in Hill City, South Dakota would put up. Allow me to assure you that the degree to which you approve of this web page is inversely proportional to the degree to which you would enjoy Delilah’s. It is the one authentically glamorous restaurant in Vancouver; both Dorothy Parker and Princess Diana would have enjoyed it. And combining the two (which you wouldn’t think possible) Prince apparently likes it very much.

Now let me tell you a story about Delilah’s.

I’m going to assume you know the story of the original Delilah, the temptress who cost Samson his flowing locks and freedom. So the name has long been associated with disreputable hidden-agendoids, sexual temptation leading to tragic falls, important historical events, religion, politics, the rights of political prisoners, justice, nemesis and (most importantly) personal grooming.

So this story is kinda like that.

Now, in the old blog, RIP, I used to use pseudonyms for my friends. I was out to dinner with one of them tonight and he mentioned offhandedly that he liked the name I had given him in that blog. Damned if either of us can remember what it was, though, so I’ll just make up another one for him. Normally I’d use his real name on the new blog, but since he’s already known to thousands as “Whateverthehellitwas” I must continue from the basis of the precedent and call him “SomethingIpulloutofmyassbutdon’tgetthewrongideaaboutuswearejustfriends“.

Javier? Bob? Tarquin? *hits Yahoo.com quickly* JJ. It was JJ. Meh. I suppose I could go with JJ, or I could just make up something new. Samson. Yeeeeeeeaaaaaaaah, Samson. Sampson? Yeah, I like that even better; there’s just something about a P. Not that.

Where was I? Sampson @ Delilah’s.

Samson and DelilahSo there’s something you should know about Sampson/JJ. He’s really, really good-looking; he looks like the guy who should play Beethoven in the biopic if Beethoven were really, really good-looking. A mature Rilke, only like not dead and stuff. It’s hilarious to walk down the street with him; it’s like pacing alongside an extremely selective tornado, as about 15% of the straight women and 40% of the gay men he passes whirl around to take another look. I once took him to an art opening, and we had to leave because a sculptor was following him from room to room, arms outstretched with fingers a-quiver, mumbling, “that head…that head…” Ye-ah, kinda creepy.

So we went to Delilah’s one night with his then-partner Teddy. The waiter…noticed. Notably. After the warmup Martinis at the bar, we moved to a table and picked out our courses; Delilah’s has a list of courses, and you tick off what you want for each course. It’s a bit like a very hedonistic exam. Perhaps the Epicurians had finals like that? Eventually, the soup came, and the waiter very nearly did. It was thus:

I got my soup. I am a chick: nobody even looked at me except some of the older men with women slightly older than me. Looking to upgrade, I guess. Ickypoo. So, I got my soup without incident. Teddy got his with a bit of edgy hostility; waitroid clearly knew who was getting what he wanted to order that night. Then it’s Sampson’s turn.

Slosh, goes the soup, right into his lap. Fast as lightning, the waiter grabs a napkin and attempts dabbage.

“I’VE GOT IT! THANKS!” says Sampson, slightly quicker than lightning and blocking it with a wrist move I think he stole from Wonder Woman. Looked like it wasn’t the first time he’d had this extra-personal service.

The waiter slunk away, clearly disappointed. The manager was happy to serve our table the rest of the night.

Once, Sampson took me to the Alibi Room. After the meal we were still hungry, so he asked the waiter what did he have that was sweet and delicious, and the waiter replied, “You mean on the menu?

That, Delilah’s staffer, is how it is done.