|  | 
Dean to America: "Sorry I Yelled at You"January 26, 2004 |
âRun,â presidential candidate Howard Dean tells the press, âYou run and tell Bush Iâm coming and Iâm bringing hell with me!â Or something equally cool. n another self-critical apology on national news, Vermont Governor Howard Dean tried to cheer up teary-eyed Democrats by letting them know, once again, he was sorry he yelled at them last Tuesday.
âClearly, I was in a bad mood, or at least it seemed like I was in a bad mood,â Dean spoke slowly, in his lecture tone on Fridayâs CBS Evening News With Dan Rather. âI want to make it known again, I was not yelling at you. I was just having a bad day.â
Blubbering Democratic and fence-riding undecided voters have chastised Dean, along with his supporters, for an almost human display of emotion following his third-place finish in the Iowa caucus last week. The candidate, previously holding a fair lead over other Democratic presidential nominees, has s...
n another self-critical apology on national news, Vermont Governor Howard Dean tried to cheer up teary-eyed Democrats by letting them know, once again, he was sorry he yelled at them last Tuesday.
âClearly, I was in a bad mood, or at least it seemed like I was in a bad mood,â Dean spoke slowly, in his lecture tone on Fridayâs CBS Evening News With Dan Rather. âI want to make it known again, I was not yelling at you. I was just having a bad day.â
Blubbering Democratic and fence-riding undecided voters have chastised Dean, along with his supporters, for an almost human display of emotion following his third-place finish in the Iowa caucus last week. The candidate, previously holding a fair lead over other Democratic presidential nominees, has since appeared on every national media outlet except for the Food Channel and Screw! Magazine to let everyone know his yelling should not mistake him for being an exciting candidate.
âUnderstand,â Dean continued later, on NBCâs Later with Carson Daly show, âsometimes, you and your campaign people put a lot of work into getting your message out there, and it only helps you come in third in a state full of corn-chucking sons ofâIâm sorry, sorry. Again, Iâm not mad at you, Iowa. I mean, you can probably go and hand the thing to Bush right now, if you want, butâI apologize. Iâm getting off message. Iâm just saying, John Edwards? Isnât he the guy that talks to dead people? How does John Edwards beat me? Tell me that and Iâll shut up.â
Deanâs efforts to apologize havenât wavered since Tuesdayâs outburst. He again tried to amend his statements and not go ballistic Saturday on M-TVâs Punkâd, with Ashton Kutcher.
âSometimes I get a little riled up. Iâm only human, or 80 percent human by-product, and I get mad sometimes. Like when Ashton made me think my car had been crushed into a cubeâthat was pretty funny, dude. But when I lost my temper, it wasnât because I couldnât take a joke. And thatâs what the Iowa caucuses are, after all, right? Big fat jokes. John Edwards beats me, yeah, like Iâm so sureâsorry. Iâm losing my focus. What I mean to say is, sometimes, we candidates get mad and we fight with each other. But weâre not yelling at you, Democratic voters. Itâs not your fault. Unless youâre from Iowaâlousy little outhouse right smack dab in the middle of Americaââ
Despite repeated outbursts on other news shows, Dean managed a reserved manner on Saturday morningâs Flatbush, New Jersey cable access show, 4 a.m. with Boner Cunningham.
âWeâre taking lumps on this one, true, but itâs not distracting us from our campaign. The problem with this country is George W. Bush and a wayward administration, and weâre taking that message to the New Hampshire caucus, and people are responding. The Iowa caucus was a disappointing setback, but the New Hampshire caucus will show my campaign hasnât suffered. I admit, Iâm not a perfect person. I am capable of getting mad. Like when you introduced me as âthat weird yelling guyâ on your show, or when you asked me if my statement of having âwartsâ meant they were on my genitals. You think itâs funny, but itâs just the kind of thing that might send me into a rage if I werenât so focused on the upcoming caucus andâlook, you little shit, the word is âcaucus,â thereâs nothing funny about it. Quit sniggering before I come over there and give you something to wail about.â
Needless to say, this reporter didnât, and the governor did. We can safely say I think the commune has found a candidate worth endorsing. the commune news has a history of backing the wrong horse, like when we picked Mamaâs Little Helper in the 2000 presidential electionâin hindsight, maybe an obvious mistake. Boner Cunningham is our special caucus correspondent, but apparently when he realized what a caucus was it didnât seem so funny.
 | Bush-chosen Afghan president accused of Bush-style election theft
Stupid Mexican dog talks but not in English
Iraq occupation troops to enjoy long period of job security
Cocaine, ecstasy may turn kids into awesome mutants, like X-Men
|
Bushs MySpace Page Traffic Way Down Plans for Tallest Ferris Wheel Scrapped; Yao-Ming Too Busy to Turn It Entwistle Pleads Not Guilty of Murder, Last Several Who Albums Condi Rice Hates the Way She Smiles in Pictures |
|  |
 | 
 February 14, 2005
You Spin Me Right RoundI received an angry reader email this week, which for the first time in my life didn't involve Viagra, my Superbowl predictions, or a time share in the Balkans, so I thought I'd grant it some precious column time here. Concerned reader Munay Dubutu of the Bronx recently moved to these friendly shores from the decidedly unfriendly shores of Namibia, and is pissed off that his toilet water is spinning the wrong way. Though he has attempted to remedy this problem by purchasing a special spinning toilet, Munay finds the fact that his water now just goes straight down to be vaguely unsatisfying. How, Munay asks, has the government managed to control his water and where can he buy a gun? After I explained to Munay that guns are readily available on most New York street corners, I realized there were probably other poor, huddled mass-like readers out there wondering why water drains counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, yet clockwise in the pagan Southern Hemisphere.
I'm glad somebody finally asked this question, because I'm sick as a dog of listening to well-meaning momos give the incorrect answer in bars and at science symposiums. The reason for the bathtub drain (or toilet, or record player for that matter) switcheroo is because the earth itself rotates counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, and clockwise in the Southern. The government has kept this mostly a secret for years, to keep people from flocking to the equator to check this shit out in person....
º Last Column: No Balls: The History of Video Games Four º more columns
I received an angry reader email this week, which for the first time in my life didn't involve Viagra, my Superbowl predictions, or a time share in the Balkans, so I thought I'd grant it some precious column time here. Concerned reader Munay Dubutu of the Bronx recently moved to these friendly shores from the decidedly unfriendly shores of Namibia, and is pissed off that his toilet water is spinning the wrong way. Though he has attempted to remedy this problem by purchasing a special spinning toilet, Munay finds the fact that his water now just goes straight down to be vaguely unsatisfying. How, Munay asks, has the government managed to control his water and where can he buy a gun? After I explained to Munay that guns are readily available on most New York street corners, I realized there were probably other poor, huddled mass-like readers out there wondering why water drains counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, yet clockwise in the pagan Southern Hemisphere.
I'm glad somebody finally asked this question, because I'm sick as a dog of listening to well-meaning momos give the incorrect answer in bars and at science symposiums. The reason for the bathtub drain (or toilet, or record player for that matter) switcheroo is because the earth itself rotates counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, and clockwise in the Southern. The government has kept this mostly a secret for years, to keep people from flocking to the equator to check this shit out in person. But it is nevertheless truthy. For this reason, crossing the equator has proved a dangerous proposition for travelers since the beginning of time, challenging daring souls to leap across the equator with the hope that they timed their jump well enough to end up in the part of the Southern Hemisphere they wanted to get to.
Since the earth rotates at 1,000 miles an hour in the Northern Hemisphere, and 1,200 mph in the Southern (slightly faster due to the bottom half of the earth being lighter), crossing the equator is similar to attempting to jump onto a train going 2,200 miles an hour, a daunting task in itself that has produced more than a few hobo pancakes. To make matters worse, timing your jump is always a bit of a roulette gamble, since entire countries are only lined up for a few minutes out of the day, plus you don't want to jump into some other-hemisphere-fleeing douchebag who's trying to jump across the opposite way at the same time. Coconut-sounding skull collisions and severely bruised egos often result, much to the glee of the audiences that gather at the most-popular equator crossings.
Complex systems have developed in equatorial nations to cope with Earth's geological quirk, including the brave mailmen who hand off letters and packages across the divide, often suffering decapitative papercuts and parcel burns in the process. And a special prayer must be said for the unlucky souls who live on one side of the equator and work on the other, making the dangerous commute twice daily. Few can forget the story of the Brazilian meter reader who was late to work one day and carelessly jumped across the equator into the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Thankfully, someone in Indonesia was able to throw him a life preserver and a hot dog several minutes later, and some relatives with a hook grabbed him the next day. But others are not so lucky, leading to a booming casket and wall-scraping business in most equatorial towns.
This phenomena is especially challenging for ships at sea, since the unwary sailor can easily shipwreck on a beach that wasn't there a second ago, or sometimes even into downtown Singapore. Even when they do manage to time it right and hit the fat part of the ocean, ships still have to contend with the sudden 2,200 mph change in velocity and direction, which all throughout history has led to the kind of rollover fatalities the world wouldn't see again until the Suzuki Samurai. There's a very slim margin for error in crossing the equator in a boat: either you get the timing and angle just right and hold on for the 2,200 mph ride of your life, or you die very, very suddenly.
Even in the modern era, planes have difficulty compensating for the equatorial rotation shift. Say you're late taking off from Heathrow because some tit had an expired salami in his luggage, on a flight to Ecuador. You try to make up some time by cutting in line on the runway and burning your special reserve tank of Dave's Insanity Fuel, but still, by the time you get to where Ecuador should be, it's the Democratic Republic of Congo. Shit. Then your navigator's got to figure out the best way to get to Ecuador from the Congo, if you should just turn right or if it would be faster to hop back across the equator and fly the other way until Ecuador comes back around again. Then your navigator and your copilot get in an argument over which half is spinning which way that you have to settle by drawing a diagram and twirling your hands in opposite directions, which makes you nauseous and you crash in the Congo and are eaten by bush people. Government scientists believe this to have been the fate of most of the vessels lost in the famous "Bermuda Triangle."
Law enforcement is especially difficult near the equator, since villains on the run can always leap across the equator to safety, much like screen-side warp zones in Pac-Man. Unless the felon spends the next 24 hours sitting in that very spot gloating, or comes back the next day to show a friend exactly where he outsmarted the fuzz, the police are unlikely to ever see him again.
Television ratings, employment rates, and sporting event attendance are also especially poor near the equator, since people in equatorial towns spend most of their time sitting in lawn chairs, watching the world whiz by at incredible speeds, and pointing out people they recognize. Some have even developed friendships with "other-siders" over the years, in spite of the limitation of only being able to shout one word to each other every day, usually "Hi!"
Now you know why your toilet water spins the way it does. The only question that remains is why you spend so much time staring into the toilet. For that answer, I refer you to a licensed professional. º Last Column: No Balls: The History of Video Games Fourº more columns
| 
|  August 22, 2005
Lost LeavingsAnyone who knows me should know I'm not political. Or at least I never thought I was. Which only means I never knew myself. Huh. How does something like that get by me? But it don't matter. I'm taking a stand, for once in my life. And it probably will be once. It's hard to take a stand for or against something. I keep forgetting I took a stand, and then I can't remember which side I'm on.
So I might as well tell you before I forget: I'm taking a stance against body grooming. Not all of it, mind you. I'm not some big slob or nothing. I'm still going to take my bath every couple of weeks, and I might even use soap. But no more of this bullshit about hair cutting and shaving and clipping nails and so on. It's all just a lot of crap made up by big business to sell us things we don't need, like electric razors and razors for the Amish and such.
Think about it: What would be the worst thing that would happen if you stopped cutting your fingernails today? Sure, a lot of fatcats who own nail clipper corporations would be out of luck. But you, with the long fingernails and toenails? If you get thrown out of a helicopter or airplane, you can just grab the side of a mountain or building on your way down. Save yourself from certain doom. That means we've been cutting our own throats by cutting our nails. And I'm done with all of it.
I'm done with haircuts, too. Done with lining some bigwig wig magnate's pockets with my hard-borrowed money by...
º Last Column: That's Nostaligia º more columns
Anyone who knows me should know I'm not political. Or at least I never thought I was. Which only means I never knew myself. Huh. How does something like that get by me? But it don't matter. I'm taking a stand, for once in my life. And it probably will be once. It's hard to take a stand for or against something. I keep forgetting I took a stand, and then I can't remember which side I'm on.
So I might as well tell you before I forget: I'm taking a stance against body grooming. Not all of it, mind you. I'm not some big slob or nothing. I'm still going to take my bath every couple of weeks, and I might even use soap. But no more of this bullshit about hair cutting and shaving and clipping nails and so on. It's all just a lot of crap made up by big business to sell us things we don't need, like electric razors and razors for the Amish and such.
Think about it: What would be the worst thing that would happen if you stopped cutting your fingernails today? Sure, a lot of fatcats who own nail clipper corporations would be out of luck. But you, with the long fingernails and toenails? If you get thrown out of a helicopter or airplane, you can just grab the side of a mountain or building on your way down. Save yourself from certain doom. That means we've been cutting our own throats by cutting our nails. And I'm done with all of it.
I'm done with haircuts, too. Done with lining some bigwig wig magnate's pockets with my hard-borrowed money by cutting off my hair and letting him come in after I've left to make some wig out of it. I recognize my hair, once in a while, when I see some bald guy wearing it on the street. Nobody else's hair curls just the way mine does. I'm losing all this hair out of ignorance and some greaseball with a dustpan and wig business is getting rich off my leavings. It's over, rich guys.
I'll just grow my hair out forever and ever. Grow it long, grow it high, grow it down to my ass, and then if it falls out from terror when it reaches that length, bury it proper and then grow it out again. I'm lucky to have hair. Even this hair. Some day I might be some old guy with huge bald patches and I'll remember all the huge patches of hair I left on a barber's floor in my youthful indiscretion. But that guy's not going to be me anymore. I'm keeping all of it, never cutting it again. And if any does fall out for any other reason, I'm going to develop an elaborate filing system to keep track of it all.
And I'm not going to cut or shave my crotch hair either. It probably goes without saying, but it always pisses off my mom when I talk about my crotch in my columns.
Face shaving is out, too. I've already got me the world's most beautiful moustache (despite what those elitists at Moustache Quarterly say) and I'm going to grow the world's coolest beard to be its buddy. They'll hang out together constantly, on my face, and go with me on fishing trips and to ball games. The best of friends until they grow old and gray together. I'll have a big thick beard and moustache, like that one famous religious guyâManson.
The jury's still out on what to do with my urine and stools. But I've got plenty of jars, so there's lots of time before I have to come to a final decision on all that. º Last Column: That's Nostaligiaº more columns
|

|  |
Quote of the Day“I have not yet begun to fight! When I have begun, it will look quite different. Fists will be flying about, and you will hear a high-pitched whistling sort of sound that will actually be a scream. In factâI'll make a little hand gesture to let you know. When you see that, that will let you know I'm fighting.”
-John Paul Jones RingoFortune 500 CookieThat tumor-sized growth isn't what you thought, but it could mean big money, so don't despair. One homosexual dream doesn't make you gay, but try one more. What are you in the mood for tonight? Roasted chicken, with sautéed potatoes. Eat less fiber, what the hell. Lucky numbers 10, 10, 34, 10, and 194.
Try again later.Least Popular Internet Videos| 1. | Fat kid re-enacting his favorite scenes from Citizen Kane | | 2. | World of Warcraft online players expressing crippling loneliness they feel | | 3. | Totally hot chick in skirt does routine car maintenance | | 4. | Trailer for Julia Roberts' Mary Reilly 2 | | 5. | Manson gets one side of Rubik's Cube all red | |
|   North Korea Pissed Their Real-Life Hunger Games Nowhere Near as Popular as Movie BY Roland McShyster 10/24/2005 Yola, America. Roland McShyster here, there and every- where, like the Buggles used to say. Are you ready for a new weekâsworth of exciting new releases? Too bad, too bad. Letâs see how you like another weekload of the normal bullshit instead.
Elizabethtown
You ever meet a girl who thinks the whole world revolves around her? Well, thankfully not all of them are like that: a few have more humble aspirations, only manifesting their egomania on the local level. Hence the case with Kirsten Dunstinâs character Elizabeth in Elizabethtown, who believes an entire podunk Kentucky town revolves around her. The only one who agrees is the gay guy from Pirates of the Queer Bean, who carries around a sword in this movie for no apparent reason. So is...
Yola, America. Roland McShyster here, there and every- where, like the Buggles used to say. Are you ready for a new weekâsworth of exciting new releases? Too bad, too bad. Letâs see how you like another weekload of the normal bullshit instead.
Elizabethtown
You ever meet a girl who thinks the whole world revolves around her? Well, thankfully not all of them are like that: a few have more humble aspirations, only manifesting their egomania on the local level. Hence the case with Kirsten Dunstinâs character Elizabeth in Elizabethtown, who believes an entire podunk Kentucky town revolves around her. The only one who agrees is the gay guy from Pirates of the Queer Bean, who carries around a sword in this movie for no apparent reason. So is the movie enjoyable? Hard to say. Is it as enjoyable as throwing peanut M&Ms at the boy scouts sitting in the front row? Most certainly not.
A History of Violins
The guy who played heroic king Eric Orn in the Lords of the Ring trilogy is back in a film thatâs half really boring documentary about how they make violins, and half ass-kicking good time about how to beat the shit out of a bunch of people with a violin after they come into your music store and demand sheet music for the score from Armageddon. Some may call the film dyslexic, but I call it Pete. I donât know, just looked like a Pete to me. The other guy is played by the polack from that funny Polack film a few years back about how many polacks it takes to paint the floor.
Serenity
Itâs exceedingly rare that a television show is made into a successful big-budget film, but Serenity is the rare exception that proves the rule. Granted, we are talking about one of the most successful TV shows of all time here. But few would have guessed that the first Seinfeld spin-off movie would focus on George Costanzaâs dad and his weird "Serenity Now!" cult religion, so it was still a gamble. The producers hit a bunch of sixes, or however you win at gambling, with this one though, since I was glued to my seat for every frame, and only partially because I sat in some tacky combination of nacho cheese and half-dried Mr. Pibb. The film delivers the laughs, though with a few surprises mixed into the batter. Donât be shocked toward the end of the film when Costanza flips his kibbles and starts kicking everyoneâs ass in a dress, but I wonât say any more than that for fear of giving away the filmâs thrilling finale.
Two for the Money
Al Pacinoâs next and all future movies should just be called Being Al Pacino, since then screenwriters wouldnât have to muck around with thinking up new names for their Al Pacino characters. Alâs back, and heâs Paci-no different that he has been in his last eighty-seven films. But is that a bad thing? Only if you donât like furious nose breathing. Histrionics fans will enjoy this tale of a flashy guy who dares to suggest that having loose morals and a giant ego are good things, for only the four thousandth time in film history. That bit of redundancy having been pointed out, Two for the Money is still the best movie about alpaca breeding youâre ever likely to see.
And thatâs a wrap mogul, ladies and gentlemen; hope you enjoyed this birdâs eye view into the current theater scene. Join us again next week when protĂ©gĂ© Orson Welch will thrill you with his own brand of movie hate in his other-weekly column Jewel of the Bile.   |