Starbucks Explosion: and you shall know us by the trail of the dead

Starbucks Explosion, Broadway and Heather

Ten years ago I worked here and, strangely enough, was just talking about it yesterday, although when I worked there there were no assplody taco shops next door; it’s the beans, people. Beans are the devil’s work.

Witness Lesley Jackman said: “The flames were almost completely across the road. They were probably 15-feet high and all you could see was the fire.”

Two other witnesses told CBC News that immediately after the explosion, they saw a man dressed in dark clothing running from the area. It is not known whether the man was fleeing the explosion or was involved in the incident.

Starbucks Explosion, Broadway Avenue

I’m kind of bitter about this. When I worked at the Broadway and Heather Starbucks (and Stephen Hayes and I opened it) the most interesting thing that would happen is when the head cases from the hospital would come down and…be headcasey. One fellow shuffled down in his paper gown and paper slippers, toting his IV, because he just wanted a cigarette and a decent coffee, dammit. We called the hospital and said, “You’re missing a guy,” and they actually said, “How do you know he’s our guy?” I guess they just didn’t want him back.

Then there was Apparent Eating Disorder Woman, who ordered one of every pastry and one glass of orange juice and a big empty cup. She very slowly took the pastries apart, chewed them, savouring the flavour, and then spat the chewed bits into the cup. We didn’t see her do anything in particular with the orange juice, but when she left we saw that the cup with the food mash was very moist and quite orange.

David Duchovny, himbo extraordinaireThere was, though, the time I was working with Sam (we think it was short for Samantha, but she was sensitive about it so we never asked) and, it should be explained, Sam had the mother of all crushes on David Duchovny who, it must be admitted, is pretty sweet-looking, especially if you’ve got a weakness for doe-eyed, soft-spoken, sexy-professorlike brunets and we surely don’t know anyone like that around here, do we? And she was puttering away behind me, making a fresh batch of decaf or some such attention-occupying task, and a customer stepped up to the till and ordered, and I still remember it, “A tall Kenya, please,” which he pronounced correctly and everything. I rang it in and took his money and asked Sam to pour it for me, as she was right there, and I used her name and everything, and so she did. She poured it. And she turned around, said, “Here you go,” handed David Duchovny his Kenya, and then she looked up and smiled, and then she froze, and then, magnificently, her knees gave out and she sank sloooooowly to the floor, like some kind of mesmerizing reverse levitation. He watched her sink and when her head was even with the counter he smiled a slow, sexy smile, said, “Thank you, Sam,” and left.

Oh yeah, and the beggars who sat out in front of London Drugs paid some guy a “management fee” because he “owned the block.” Some of them were quite short in the wits department and we used to give the guy hell for renting out a public sidewalk and taking money from people, but you can’t argue with a born capitalist. He was greatly insulted at the suggestion he’d done anything wrong. “Don’t I make them feel a part of something bigger? Don’t I make them feel protected?” Yeah, maybe, but they, of course, were deluded to think so and when one of them got mugged and beaten we finally reported the whole deal to the cops. Apparently, it’s not illegal to rent a public sidewalk to a mentally handicapped dude? Or apparently those cops were particularly lazy.

The “sidewalk manager” controlled a lot of sidewalks around town outside prime spots like liquor stores and London Drugs, and he spent his days gambling. When he was finally put away for something, the beggars could not BELIEVE how much more money they suddenly had.

Oh yes, and there was the (literally) prize-winning story of the lumpenprole. I really don’t know what else to call her. She was there when I got back from my break: large and squashy and overflowing the chair, like soft serve ice cream poured out of a cement mixer and into an acrylic tracksuit. She was quite clearly drunk, which may be against the law but as long as you’re quiet who really cares, but at some point she reached into one pocket, pulled out the most noxious-smelling weed I’ve ever encountered and lit up; with her other hand, she reached into her bag and pulled out a bottle of, I believe, Captain Morgan rum. It took three increasingly firm “You can’t do that. You must put it away. We will call the police. Oh yes we WILL.” to get her to put the doobie out, which she did in her latte. We let her continue to drink it and indeed, she didn’t notice till she’d gotten to the bottom, whereupon she screeched complaints about someone putting a joint in her latte. “Look,” I said, “would we put it in your latte or would we keep it to ourselves? Hey? That stuff doesn’t grow on trees!” and she laughed heartily, passed out, and peed herself all over the floor.

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I found my dream job!

Funny Pictures

 

But before I get into that, let me tell you about raincoaster.

Not this one.

This one:

Username: raincoaster19 Jan 2008
Gender: Man Income: Please ask me Age: 55 Located in: Abbotsford, NA, Canada Title:
New register member of nudistfriends.com. – http://www.NudistFriends.com/

Just for the record and so there is no confusion, that is not me. Nor is the one in the Tiffany Pollard sex tape.

No, for realz.

Now, where was I? Ah, yes, pontificating about having found my dream job. Longtime raincoaster fans (at least, fans of THIS raincoaster, not those ones) will know that the liquor cabinet (okay, safe) at global HQ is not quite as full as it could be, owning to a tragic lack of prosperitousness; indeed, it could well be said that, most remarkable among my many in-and-of-themselves-remarkable talents is the ability to avoid so much as the very appearance of capitalizing on any of the other skills and abilities, let alone the actuality of theredoing.

Even my marvelous tits.

Consequently, I have pursued many strange and increasingly bizarre job opportunities. There was the time the Russian Mafia wanted to hire me to write high school essays to be sold online; it took quite a bit of doing, including the doing of threatening an EI officer with arrest, which is, frankly, something I do not generally restrain myself from when it is good and warranted, and, indeed, enjoy, to get the dadgum gummint to admit that I couldn’t be thrown off EI for refusing to accept an illegal job with the kneecappers from Moscow. There was Occupational Pursuit, the magazine for job hunters, which commissioned several months’s columns in advance of publication and then went belly-up before opening its doors. There was the Spiderwick resume, of which I am still justly proud and convinced that thing wouldn’t be DOA if they’d hired me. There was the pitch for an online Daily Prophet, complete with really-quite-amusing-and-pitch-perfect-if-I-do-say-so-myself columns from Snape and Hagrid which I note I have failed to post on this blog, an omission which shall soon be rectified for lo, they are very funny.

There was this.

But, at last, there was The Manolo. And he said unto me, go forth and post! Save the little chillens from the scourge of Crocs! And he saideth also unto moi, ayyyy, I tire of sifting through Britney’s crotch shots and we all know what your standards are like, so would you manifest thy superfantasticness and take this spiritual burden off my hands? and so it came to pass.

But it was not enough.

Soon, very soon, I shall be babysitting a blogging lab on behalf of the Fearless City project, although what I shall do if it happens to fall on the 21st of February I do not know, for verily it is completely unthinkable that I shall miss a tiki party, particularly one with a buffet. But it’s money, blog money, which is better than blood money if a few orders of magnitude less lucrative.

But, alas, today my very favoritest kind of client, the kind who is nice and friendly and dutiful and who thinks I am a genius and who always pays in cash, immediately, bailed fifteen minutes before the meeting. So there goes the budget for this week.

So, today I find a dream job posted. Really, truly: a dream job. God knows, I’m agnostic when it comes to riches, so they don’t factor into the equation here. But it’s an incredibly high-profile, paid, full-time blogging gig at a place where I’m already somewhat known (Denton was my first follower, although whether that’s good or bad is anyone’s guess) where I know about the management and staff, and it is a site that I adore. That’s the good news.

The bad news is, anyone taking this position is essentially stepping over the still-twitching corpse of Mark Lisanti, perhaps the best writer in the blogosphere. Maybe it was murder; maybe it was suicide. Maybe he’s following his dream and the Sanjaya tour bus to strip malls across the continent. Who knows?

why

But the net effect is, rather than slavering over my keyboard as I frantically surf through the blogs for writing samples of the very cleverest link roundup in the history of gossip blogs as I have done for so many other Gawker Media openings, I find myself wishing for a monstrously large bottle of Jack Daniels to drink down and then crawl inside and sob.

So, fuck that with a chainsaw.

I’m going for this job instead.

Job specs: work vampire hours, take no shit, bust balls, wear fabulous clothes, attack people inferior to me, then tie them up and ignore them and get paid $185 per hour plus tips. And since it looks like one of their staff will be away on hiatus for 5-15, it’s got a solid future.

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Business Lessons from the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and the Beatles

You know, it’s actually pretty good advice. However much contempt one (nameless now and forever) may heap upon anti-poverty campaigners who themselves somehow end up stinking rich, one can hardly argue with the principle that mo’ meditation, mo’ betta. I, myself, could internalize the second-last of these a little bit better. Or is that “manifest” instead? I always get those mixed up; maybe THAT is the Secret?

From the Financial Times:

  • Make yourself stand out
  • Choose the right product: easy to sell, impossible to disprove
  • Make good use of celebrity endorsement
  • Innovate around your core strength
  • Charge what the market will bear. If you can persuade people to part with $1m for your world peace fund to go on a training course, then, for heaven’s sake, you should.
  • Lastly, let people feel they are buying not just a product, but also a set of values, a lifestyle. The power of Om.

Indeed, my project for the next week is to revamp the business model to um, maximize transcendental prosperity and expansion manifestation opportunities, particularly as they relate to the bottom line.

Speaking of which, it’s time for my yoga…

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older sex-trade workers going hungry

Older sex trade workers go hungry

Underage prostitutes are forcing experienced sex workers to go home hungry.

The young girls are taking business away from women who have been working the streets for years, says the Papatoetoe agency that helps prostitutes over 18 who want to leave the sex industry.

Gee. Wonder why?

Ladies, I have one word for you: SWALLOW!

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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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