Friday, May 27, 2016

Nick Name



              My friends, they call me Shorty, which might have something to do with the fact that I stand six foot seven. As a kid growing up in Georgia, they called me Jimmy the Fingers, not because I was constantly stealing anything I could get my hands on—which I was—but because I had a rare growth defect that left me with giant hands on a tiny frame. By the time I hit puberty and the rest of my body finally caught up, my family had moved to Florida, where, being from Georgia, I became known as Peaches McGee. It wasn’t long before I found myself on the outskirts of the Everglades, teasing an alligator, which didn’t take too kindly to my tickling, thus biting off all the toes on my right foot, scaring my parents all the way to Northern Michigan, where all the other kids on the high school swim team called me No Toe Joe. That name didn’t stick though. One day at lunch I won a dare by eating an entire gallon-sized tub of margarine, thus earning the name, Oily Pete. But Oily Pete didn’t last long either. Senior year, after getting caught making out with the Spanish teacher in the janitor’s closet, all the kids started calling me Stud Rodriguez. I became so associated with that moniker, that even the faculty at Richard M. Nixon High thought it was my God-given birth name and had it printed on my diploma. Not long after graduation, I was off to boot camp, where the drill instructor, because I had arrived from banks of Lake Michigan, I presumed, immediately labeled me Lame Shitigan. But before that name stuck, I was shipped off to Vietnam, where I was dishonorably discharged for accidental shooting my Platoon Captain in the groin during a game of backgammon. Well, if the boys back in my hometown didn’t catch wind of that and begin calling me Castration Carl. Now, you can’t stick around a place where you’re best known for removing the most treasured part of your fellow man’s anatomy, so it wasn’t long before I was off to Alaska, where I quickly married the fattest woman in Anchorage in order to stay warm. I must have looked like a toothpick next to her, because it wasn’t long before everybody started calling me Slim. It soon became apparent that my new wife’s large appetite was much larger than my bank account, so after a quick divorce, I was off to find new love in warmer weather. I moved to Texas, where everybody called me Alaska Bob, then to Tennessee, where they called me Tex, and then to Alabama, where they called me the Nashville Kid, and then to New Mexico, where they just called me Swamper. It was there that I met the love of my life, a midget named Mimi, had nine midget children, before moving to Oregon, starting an alpaca farm, and becoming forever known as Shorty. But now, suffering from a severe case of cynicism, with only few days left to live, it’s time to inscribe my tombstone, and since my entire life, nobody ever called me by it, I think I’ll go with my birth name, Nicholas Michael Name, or Nick Name for short.



Friday, May 20, 2016

A Perfect Game, or Why Going to the Gym isn’t Always the Best Idea



            May 18, 2004. A Tuesday evening. It was my senior year in college, final exam week, and like any serious academic, I was preparing for my tests by drinking beer and watching television. I sat on the couch, flipping through the 30 or so channels we had, trying to find something, anything, to engage my restless mind on that most lackluster night of the week in a college town.
            “Wait,” my roommate Smoothie said. “Go back.”
            I shifted my thumb to click the “down” channel button on the remote and found the screen filled with dirt, grass, and grown men wearing hats, gloves, and high socks. The station was TBS, the Turner Broadcasting System, as in Ted Turner, the billionaire owner of the Atlanta Braves. “Fuck the Braves,” I immediately said, the team being one of my least favorite in Major League Baseball.
            Smoothie, on the other hand, loved the Braves, and quickly developed an argument to leave the channel where it was. “Randy Johnson is pitching for the Diamondbacks tonight.”
            “Fuck Randy Johnson,” I said, the pitcher being one of my least favorite in Major League Baseball.
            But if anything, Smoothie was persistent. “The guy’s forty years old. This might be one of our last opportunities to see the one the greatest pitchers of this era play the game.”
            He brought up a good point. Randy Johnson wasn’t only one of the best pitchers of the past fifteen years, but one of the most dominant in the long history of the game. Standing at 6’ 10”, it was like watching some sort of human/dinosaur hybrid hurl unrelenting heat toward grown men who couldn’t help but have horrified expressions plastered across their faces. I was sold.
            The game started. We watched Randy work his magic. Out. Out. Out. Next inning. Out. Out. Out. Next inning. Out. Out. Out.
            Three innings went by and the Atlanta Braves had failed to reach first base. No hits. No walks. No errors. Randy was pitching a perfect game. I looked toward Smoothie. “Randy’s pitching a perfect game.”
            “It’s only been three innings,” my friend promptly replied.
            But then it was four. And then five. Then six.
            “Well, I’m going to the gym.”
            I looked at Smoothie as if he was out of his mind. “What do you mean you’re going to the gym? Randy Johnson is in the midst of pitching a perfect game. You can’t leave now.”
            “Oh, he won’t do it. There’s three innings left. Do you know how rare a perfect game is?”
            Smoothie, always a man of science, was right—perfect games were extremely rare. How rare? Before May 18, 2004, there had been only 16 perfect games in the history of Major League Baseball. With close to 200,000 games played, that meant they occurred .00008 percent of the time, or once every 12,500 games. Seeing a perfect game in real time was akin to winning a small lottery jackpot. It had been five years since the last one happened, and at one point, from 1922-1956, thirty three years passed without a single one occurring. If you were a Pittsburgh Pirates fan and you watched every single one of their games, from their establishment in 1882 to the present day, you would have never witnessed a single perfect game, for or against them. Since baseball was invented, there have been more Presidents of the United States than there have been perfect games. I would say that’s pretty rare. And yet, Smoothie was out the door, off to the gym.
            Seventh inning. Out. Out. Out. Eigth inning. Out. Out. Out. Ninth inning. Out. Out. Out. I was ecstatic, jumping up and down in my living room, screaming at the top of my lungs. Who cares if it was against the Braves? (Actually, I was glad it was against the Braves. Fuck the Braves!) Who cares if it was Randy Johnson? (Who just happened to become the oldest person to ever accomplish the feat.) I just saw a perfect game! I just witnessed a motherfucking perfect game on live television! And then, Smoothie walked through the door…
            “What are you so excited about?” he asked.
            “He did it!” is all I could say. “He did it!”
            “Who did what?”
            I could see in his eyes that he already knew the answer. “Randy Johnson! He just pitched a perfect game!”
            “Bullshit.”
            “I swear on my life, for the love of baseball, Randy Johnson just pitched a perfect game and you missed it in order to go to the gym.”
            A look of pure devastation fell across my friend’s face. Few people loved baseball more than Smoothie, and almost immediately, he understood the error in his ways. A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity squandered in order to work on his biceps.
            “At least I can watch the post game.” He dropped his gym bag on the floor and sat on the couch. At that exact moment, the television went dark. We hadn’t paid our cable bill. Now, what were the chances of that?



Thursday, May 12, 2016

Sherpa Convertible Pants, Men’s Size 32, Obituary

Pants, Sherpa Convertible 8 years old May 2, 2008 May 7, 2016. Pants suffered a life-ending crotch tear on Saturday, May 7, 2016, while climbing Elks Mountain in the Tillamook State Forest. He was eight years old. On the day of his passing, Pants was surrounding his owner, Jon Penfold. The mood was upbeat and the weather, a perfect sunny and 75. Pants is survived by a Patagonia long-sleeved shirt, size large, and a pair of Hanes boxer-briefs, color red. Pants was a registered donor and his nylon belt will be reused as a sleeping bag strap. Pants was purchased in Potsdam, NY in 2008 by Jon Penfold. After suffering a small burn hole from a campfire spark during his first week with his owner, Pants went on to live a productive, unblemished eight-year career as a pair of comfortable leg wear. On cold nights, he kept the legs of his owner warm. On hot days, the bottom half of Pants were removed via zipper, providing Penfold with a much valued pair of shorts. His pockets were used to hold both important and inconsequential items. Twice, Pants traveled across the United States by bicycle, and once, down the Mississippi River by canoe. He was briefly mentioned in Penfold’s critically acclaimed travel book, The Road and the River: An American Adventure. Throughout his prosperous life, Pants went on countless adventures, hiked numerous trails, and summated several high peaks, including Mount Hood, Mount St. Helens, and Mount Bierstadt. Unfortunately, the steep topography and difficult scrambles up Elk Mountain proved too much for his worn fabric. A private ceremony and celebration of Pants’s life will be held later this summer. Donations in his honor can be made by purchasing copies of The Road and the River, at jonpenfold.com.



Thursday, May 5, 2016

The Backroom



Chappaqua, New York, about one year ago…

            The man with the funny hair and the orange colored skin stepped out of his private helicopter and started toward the white mansion. Halfway to the back door, he was met by a handsome man with silver hair. “Donnie!” The man reached his hand out. “I’m so glad you could make it.”
            “Billy,” said Donnie as he grasped the man’s open palm, “it’s always a pleasure.”
            “Come on inside,” Billy said with a slow Arkansas drawl, “Hillary’s waiting for us.”
            The two men walked through a glass door on the back patio, through a family room, and into a large study. Inside, a woman with blond hair was yelling into the receiver of a telephone. “…I swear to God, if I hear you use the words email, server, or scandal one more time I will cut out your fucking tongue and shove it up your fucking ass!” The woman noticed the two men walk through the door. “Sorry, I’ve got to go. Love you too, Chelsea.” She hung up the phone, turned to the man with the funny hair and spread her arms out wide. “Donnie! I’m so glad you could make it.”
            “Hill’babe,” Donnie replied as he gave her a big hug, “you look spectacular!”
            “Can I get you a drink?” Billy asked.
            “Whatever you’re having,” Donnie answered.
            Billy walked over to a small mahogany bar and poured three tumblers of Brandy. “The reason we invited you here,” he said as he handed out the drinks, “actually, maybe it’s better if Hillary told you.”
            “Donnie, we’ve been good friends for a long time…”
            “Good friends? I would say great friends.”
            “And as you know, I’m running for President, again...”
            “And you’re going to make a marvelous President…I couldn’t be happier for you…wait, is that why you invited me here? Are you going to ask me what I think you’re going to ask me? You want me to be your running mate?”
            “No, Donnie.” Hillary took a gulp of her Brandy. “I want you to run against me.”
            A small amount of brown liquid sprayed out of Donnie’s mouth. “Against you! Why would you want me to run against you? You’ve already got the Democratic nomination in the bag. I would only do damage to the party.”
            “Donnie,” Billy chimed in, “I don’t think you understand. We want you to run as a Republican.”
            “A Republican? Why would I run as a Republican? I don’t hold any of the same beliefs as those fundamentalist hillbillies.”
            Hillary walked to the bar and poured another tumbler. “We need you to destroy the Republican Party from within.”
            “We’ve done some recent poling,” Billy added, “and my wife isn’t fairing so well against some of the early contenders. I mean, we got yet another Bush who wants to follow in his daddy’s footsteps; some kid from Cuba who thinks he’s the next Obama; hell, even that fat troll from Jersey poles well against Hillary. You, on the other hand…”
            “But what I don’t understand is why you’d even want to go back to the White House? Things seem nice up here in Chapaquaquaqua. Why deal with all that stress?”
            Billy smiled. “Well, Hillary has “aspirations” of becoming the first “female” president. As for me, I have other “aspirations.” Do you know how much pussy I got when I was in the White House?”
            Hillary stared daggers into her husband. “Fat pussy.”
            “Better than old pussy,” Billy replied.
            This made Donnie laugh. “But what’s in it for me?”
            “The one thing you want for than anything,” Hillary answered.
            Donnie’s eyes lit up. “Money!”
            “Oh, you’ve already got all the money you need. I’m talking about something you love even more than money—fame. If you think you’re famous now, wait until you run for president. And think about the reality show you can have when it’s over.”
            Donnie looked towards the ceiling and nodded his head. “You know I’m going to be nasty.”
            “The nastier the better.”
            “You know I’m going to say stupid, ignorant things.”
            “You always do.”
            Donnie smiled. “Okay. Sounds like fun. I’ll do it.” He shook both of their hands. “So what’s next?”
            “We head to the bedroom,” Billy said, “and have a three-way on top of the taxpayers’ money?”
            Donnie began to unbutton his shirt. “I thought you’d never ask.”