Author Archives: Will Jones

One Milf, Two Milf

One handed reading is out of fashion. One hand for the musculus, the other for the mus, nowadays. And of course this is all as it should be. Far be it from me to shout up the feeble powers of our atrophied imaginations, to suggest that in the face of  Gutenberg’s “Dying Gaul” routine we should seek the fodder of erotic fantasy in mere text! There is our imagination–useful both for the re-purposing of remembered sexual experience as accompaniment for the solitary act and for enacting such pure hypotheticals as “what if both of the daughters on Kate and Allie were my girlfriend?”–and there is porn. Yes, porn kills our higher faculties of erotic resource-deployment, but kind of the way high fructose corn syrup kills waiting two starving weeks in a hole for one chance at bagging a prairie chicken with a rock. That is, art and experience take a hit, but boy, does efficiency shoot up. And that foodish shit is pretty tasty, once in a while (several times a week, that is).

But we’ve forgotten something–what if dexter is grappling a book with pictures? And what if the off-hand is steadying something altogether more wholesome? (I do not refer to a regular polyhedron and MM3.5p198.) In such a case, can we reclaim our reading lives, if not as opportunities for actual self-abuse, as foraging expeditions for the fodder of future fantasies? The mind is the original parallel processor, images are images, and the male brain is the male brain–surely we can do whatever it is we are doing and still upload printed images directly to the xxx drive, all undetected by the outside world?

But who reads picture books? Aha: there is a growing demographic in this little bloughgosphere of those who find themselves, or will shortly find themselves, reading picture books for the benefit of local youth. Wholesome, very wholesome. And these same bloughers (rhyme: duffers) no doubt find themselves short of free time–and yet the reading of picture books is not intellectually taxing, and the brain–in my case, as will shortly become relevant, the heterosexual male brain–will frequently task most surplus processing capability toward sexual fantasy.

But these are wholesome books! They feature babies, talking animals, small children, mute animals, frolicking families, farm animals, and even large and passive anthropomorphic bunnies who speak as if possessed of a slightly sub-human but fully self-conscious and suffering intelligence. What sort of sick fuck could have fantasies in such a situation? Well, er, yes. But a clarification, followed by an objection, dear interlocutor! First: we are not speaking of actual fantasizing, we are speaking of the inexpungeable (and–thanks for the suggestion–also inexpugnable) instinct to assess any female form (I operate on personal authority, now), within the limits of sexual possibility, that might heave into view. This is the hording of surplus for when the house is asleep and the image-hoard can be rifled and put to use. (Well, maybe it never is, because, again, you’d have to cook up those images into something more satisfying… and those sugary snacks are right there on the old CRT monitor. This point is, really, not about masturbation but simply about the sexual appraisal of the female literary object… it’s just that masturbation is so literary a topic, and still perhaps carries some feeble charge of naughtiness!) Second: many children’s books are primarily devoted to demonstrating family life to the young child, to modeling family behavior, or they at least take care to set the protagonist’s activity in what is meantto be a familiar family setting. Siblings, usually; dad, often. And most often of all, Mom. (In the books for the really little ones; this is less the case in books aimed at slightly older children, the already-halfway-to-the-orphaned-hero-of-adventure-and-romance Cat in the Hat books, where Mom is rarely more than a limb and a looming presence, on which see below.)

Does this post make hackneyed and seedy references to masturbation? Yes, it does. Does it praise pornography? Mm-hm. And is it otherwise complicit in the objectification of women? Sure thing. Does it uncomfortably juxtapose child care and adult sexuality? You betcha. But all in the service of truth, motherfucker. Would you have me lie? Would you have me smother the awkward reality, taking that first step down the road to secretive depravity? And, for fuck’s sake, ladies, it’s not that big a deal. First, if Tori Amos can self-identify as a Milf, my feminist papers are in order. Second, how many times more wholesome for those of us in this laudable and unsexy time of life to take sexual interest in women of a certain age and status? Our unenlightened brethren befoul the culture by lusting after the eternal barely legal, even as they close in on doubling that age. So give a thought for the picture book milfs, instead of neglecting the DVR and letting your thoughts wander during a Hooters commercial or those Girls Gone Wild spots that air during the re-broadcast of the Daily Show you had to tape because you were still taping two basketball games at 11:00. My e-rectitude is unimpeachable here–I am reading to children! I am praising the sexuality of strong, boldly-drawn women in their 30s and 40s! (I don’t imagine I can be the first to have coined “e-rectitude,” but praise me with great praise if I have.)

Enough preamble, time for the gift of blough: my time and mental energy is hereby turned to public service. You might have to select a picture book to read someday. When that day comes, remember, and think well of me.

The Ten Hottest Picturebook Milfs

1. The Baby Goes Beep. A family romance, here. We take the role of daddy, rather than the milf-cruiser or gentleman caller. This is one of those mommas who finds the full-bore satisfaction of family life to be engaging all sorts of appetites. The luxuriant hair, the slight curves and the sinuous movement hold much promise–this is woman who dresses for action and knows how to move. And just check out the cuddling on the last page. Smart-ass baby thinks they’re asleep? Ah, but soon you will be, and there are other rooms in the house for mommy and daddy to romp in. The rather broad planes of the face might be a turn-off for some, but this is of a piece with the the broad-brush-strokes approach chosen by the artist. This choice allows both baby-pleasing fullness of form and the impressionistic suggestion of powerful sexuality. This is most effectively conveyed, and the hair and body overshadow the vagueness of mere facial features.

2. Knuffle Bunny (Willems). Now, your small-breasted Brooklyn hipster is not for everyone. This momma is a bit uptight, a bit on the straight-laced-and-nervous side. But you know she’s a step ahead of that goofy sensitive-guy dad in more ways than one. You know what that face means: this isn’t the first time you’ve gone scrabbling after something limp and soggy. “Why don’t you take Trixie to the Bronx Zoo tomorrow–I’ll stay home and wait for the plumber.”

3. A Baby Blessing (Wireman). This queer cross-generational gift addition to our library consists of hackneyed “blessings” penned by “Welleran Poltarnees” amidst a choice selection of early 20th century (i.e. public domain) illustrations. It’s saccharine-infused sentimentality… even learning that the compiler’s pen-name cites two different Dunsany stories only serves to underscores the oddity of the period-obsession, rather than to partly redeem its ickiness. A terrible book. But the milfs are crafty, and lurk even in the strangest corners of ersatz-religious recycling projects drawing on century-old how-to manuals. A salute to you, Katharine Wireman, illustrator of How to Bring Up A Baby, for being a light for us in dark places, and for hitting us not only with the wasp-waist and puffy sleeves of the period but with a timeless image of sloe-eyed, marble-browed pulchritude… and also for so brilliantly anticipating (the anticipation of) the librarian-letting-down-her-hair cliche. The beauty of the scene is there in the inscribed meaning, but it is the semi-intentional hint of milfiness in the demure three-quarter profile pose (not the frank full-frontal availability we get elsewhere) that makes it work. This is a beautiful woman, and somebody is going to have to fetch the cocaine-laced unguent and massage those corset-marks. Mystery and historicity, but high, high upside.

4. Blueberries for Sal (McClosky). I’m going to take some flack for this. Mama plays within herself, here, it’s true. The haircut and silhouette are reminiscent of late-maniacs Natalie Merchant; if that’s not your cup of tea, well, fine–then she’s lower down your list. She’s a woman, with woman’s hips, (but these are blown out of proportion by the flared 50s-ish skirt) and close-set eyes. There is a reserve and a primness–though she is still rather fetching–when putting up blueberries or setting out in her trim little berry-picking jacket. But see this momma startled by a bear cub, and you get not only a better look at a slim profile but also a strong sense of beguiling physicality.

5. Everywhere Babies (Frazee). Strenuously politically correct and cloyingly illustrated, this cutesy-wootsy horror sketches moms and dads in various attitudes of exhaustion, cuddling, and exhausted cuddling. Very cloying. And politically correct: lots of different sorts of babies, and lots of different sorts of parents. Still trailing the play? …I want some LESBIAN action on my milf list. Three options–a blandly cute interracial lesbian couple sleeping atop each other while one rocks a cradle, an equally bland interracial lesbian couple (indistinguishable but for different hairstyles, but such are the limitations of talent here–the hairstyles are surely used to indicate their distinctness from earlier moms) walking their twins, and a still-bland but distinctly cuter, long-legged, light-skinned black woman romping with young twins. A lesbian? Perhaps–those twins look like the other twins, but then again she has different hair, so perhaps not. And really short arms, since the artist can’t quite manage the hands-and-knees “horsey ride” position she has attempted. Not working from life models, here. The hottest milf in this book? The passed-out-in-a-rocking chair-presumably-nursing-mother. She too, is reading, while holding a baby. And she has pretty hair. And let’s take the thrown-back head and open mouth as “erotic repose.” So, let’s get the horsey-mommy, the first lesbian couple, and the sleepy mommy together and shoot our milf orgy all the way to number five, bland and sexless drawing and all.

6. D’Aulaire’s Greek Myths (D’Aulaire). Yes, that’s right, I’m picking Demeter. This is an awesome book, a fact not terribly relevant here, and the illustrations can tend toward the hazily impressionistic, the goddesses toward “for statuesque read blocky.” But there is a lot of emphasis on the Persephone story, and Demeter gets it done in two different illustrations: dandling the baby Persephone in the Olympian group shot and receiving the teenage daughter back from Hades (a sub-genre implies itself). The big goddesses are physically imposing and unfeminine, but Demeter is relatively demure, a pretty blonde–an odd distinction among the immortals, but still. Hot Olympian Mom–just catch her in the Spring or Summer.

7. The Cat in the Hat (Seuss). Because the good doctor needs to be on the list. And, given the author’s style, we are lucky to get even the hint of non-satirized human form. My Seuss knowledge is not exhaustive, but as far as I can tell, the only competition for this spot comes from the matronly, scalloped-collared, sagging-everything mom on pages 58-9 of Hop on Pop, and that ain’t happening. No, it is the absent mother of The Cat in the Hat. Her absence is in fact quite suggestive–why does she leave such young children at home? An assignation? And why is the fish so terrified of her wrath? Something is going on here. So, although we see glimpse only a leg, through the window, and then the same shapely leg and a casually waving right hand as she enters, this mystery milf is bringing it home.

8. Be-bim Bop (Park). While connoisseurs of pornography will be confused by the categorization of an Asian woman as… well, any other category that “Asian,” (“Wait a minute, it just said ‘blowjob!’ That should mean a white girl giving a blow job!”) here we have a lithe and attractive young milf. She is badly drawn, her hairstyle is implausible, and throughout the book she appears generally as an unremarkable torso involved in kitchen work. All reasonable criticisms, hence her lowly position on this list. But check out the first page, the supermarket scene–this is a hot mom. And who is to complain that she spends much of the book cooking… just for you?

9. Going on a Bear Hunt (Oxenbury). This one is a problem. The cover shows only dad, a toddler, and two older tykes. Then a winsome blonde appears, in such a way as to be easily taken for the eldest daughter–the infantile features and Anglocentric cartoon minimalism make age-typing difficult, and the flowing dress and loose hair certainly convey girlishness. But it seems, upon further investigation, that we have a rather youthful mom. The granny panties revealed (a strange choice, by both character and illustrator) in the fording scene are one clue, her role in shoeing the kids and carrying the toddler throughout the latter pages are another, but perhaps only the hugging of daddy at the cave and the final glimpse of a much more suggestively adult profile are close to dispositive. So–she’s very pretty, maybe the prettiest of all. But if you can be mistaken for a tween, you’re not exactly nailing down the milf aesthetic. So, 9th.

10. Waiting for Baby (Kubler). O.k., first, as the title suggests, mom is pregnant (see the categorization comments at 8, above). Inexplicably, she wears overalls. And the soft-tone pastels are not conducive to close assessment of physical form. Then there is the mom haircut and the dopey smiles… so the conditions are tough, here. But she seems to be very cute, and obliging. The same mom appears in My New Baby, and there is a little side-boob while nursing, if you’re into that. Rock on.

Honorable Mentions, Milfs of the 70s division: Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (Cruz, 1972), Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (Barrett, 1978). Two sturdy-looking women in shapeless skirts, questionable-to-awful tops, and schmattes. Meatballs is ahead on body but has an implausibly large-featured face, while poor Alexander’s mom has even worse clothes and the broad-shouldered, small-breasted frame that screams “maternal drudgery.” So they don’t make the list, because they are… not attractive. But don’t hate the playa, hate the era.

Grumble

Oh the distant roaring of the guns

I could give a rat’s ass about either LCS.  I will fail to even notice the World Series.  Who bloughs for me?

Seriously; Frisman evidently cares, and I know we have a few Phillies and Red Sox fans, but there are at least five Mets fans on this group blough, and silent legions of the deeply indifferent.  Let’s talk about something else.  I’ll get us started: I hope the Rays win the whole thing, out of vague hatred for all the other teams and a desire for baseball to further sully itself with poorly-attended teal.  Besides, it will embolden the religious right.  Oh, wait….

PI Oh My! (Greg Maddux PI watch, #1)

Tonight’s the night.  Not for some olympic shit; not for discussing the weak-ass title of this post; not for wondering why, if I don’t want this blough (rhyme: tough) to be about sports, I keep writing about sports; not for reading and responding to the Professor’s little gambit–not yet–or for my promised interpretation of the fat man’s dream.  No, not even for musing on this nice new war.  Something important.

I fully expect Greg Maddux to allow a run in the first inning tonight against the Rockies; after all, he doesn’t have the stuff he had ten years ago.  Maybe a lead-off single, steal, grounder to the right side, and–just where you’d expect a sac fly–a one-out single to left.  I don’t know, I’m not a doctor.

But then he’s going to recover, get out of the inning, and set them down in order in the second and third.  No runs in the 4th.  Then, leading off the fifth–it might be Tulowitzki, it might be Torreabla–he’s going to coax a grounder.

One earned run in the first four and a third innings, is my point.  And then, his lifetime Earned Run Average, over Four Thousand Nine Hundred and Fifty Nine Innings, will be 3.1415.

Your move, Professor.

Grumble

Blough of Despond #1

Allow me to take advantage of my insomnia and the news on my screen to return to the subject of the subject of our blough. (Now maybe it rhymes with “tough,” not the “how” with barf-forward mouth that I usually use.) It cannot be primarily about sports, because I am a Jets fan. And forget old sad proud Chad loyalties and the promise of the young guy with the ill-omened name; pretend that the acquisition of Favre fits perfectly with some rational football plan… this is unspeakably awful. Football is a sucky sport for SABR suckers like us, given the fact that stats don’t describe the game well and things like on-field morale, subtle expertise, and coaching decisions actually matter. And yet, magically, Favre is the only clear and humongous Jeter’s Range Fallacy example in the whole game. Who is super-famous, breathlessly praised for near-mystical abilities, considered to be charismatic, and was probably once a bit better than average at his position and is now straight up lousy (anomalous year anomalous–he’s fucking 38)?

Fine, Favre is really pretty and Jeter is overrated even on his charisma and, until right now, when he has joined my team, I hated Favre casually and Jeter with passionate intensity, but now, oh boy do I hate this egomaniac mental midget, who lacks the insight to throw the ball away on third down and the emotional intelligence to either consistently albatross his old team or stay (the fuck) retired. He’s like a not-fat Clemens, except, god I hate to say it, worse at his sport.

What is the only stat that matters in football? …yes, and who turns the ball over constantly (a quick check–first all-time in interceptions, third all-time in fumbles), while “gun-slinging” his way to a decade of mediocrity? If the New York Times can immediately and unequivocally state that this is a dumb move for the Jets from the winning-games perspective and that it is merely a cheap publicity stunt, how can we make any observations on this? How can we bear the Jets any longer? If ESPN has been vomiting this “story” and returning to its vomit steadily for weeks, how will it be remotely watchable (I know it’s a horrible channel, I’m kicking it, I’m kicking it) from now until January? This is going to be the biggest, dumbest circus ever. Every single platitude and nonsense statement will be deployed–over and over again. We can’t talk about this. Never speak of this again.

Grumble

In Local News (Numbers 0 and 1)

Seems like a slow day in the arbiterrordome, so I thought I would post some local news, after I went and got me some lunch. But nothing in the paper left at the counter. At all. So, I could post some other local news: In NYC, home to at least one of our correspondants, a crane-thing (more of a cherry picker, I guess, but now New Yorkers have a statistically irrational fear of cranes to rival their similar fear of terrorism, so crane it is) keeled over, killing two window washers. Good local bus-plunge action for the NYT.

What I like is this: the initial story line called the death-dealing vehicle (it’s got wheels… upended in dramatic photo) a “contraption.” Then they amended it, captioning a front-page photo on the web, to the more dignified “machine.” Now it’s a contraption again, and back to the middle of the paper/site.

A) I would have liked to be in on the jargon-laced, coffee-fueled newsroom argument about those changes (I imagine much the same snappy dialogue, crusty craftsmanship, and princely idealism as in the goofy newsroom scenes in the Wire, season five).

B) Kudos to the MSM. (See, Ev, your foul habit of using au courant abbreviations has caught on with me. I’ve been… wait, we need to coin a word for “being reduced to a banal, derivative commentator on short-attention-span internet “events” and having one’s intellect slowly abraded by the belt-sander of the blogosphere… something with “blog” in it… it’s probably been done… a circumstance that should set the Professor spinning… maybe we could call our blog a “blough” [“ough” of course the most ambiguous English letter-clump, pronunciation-wise] and this would be “visiting the blough of despond.” The reference? Professor? Fatman?)  But anyway, Kudos: you don’t read enough about “contraptions” these days. I say we start a list of them.

But anyway anyway, let’s call the dead window washers “in local news #1.” Last week or so, I went to the coffee shop and, waitin’ on my sandwich, read this (in local news #0), from the Akron Beacon:

Quintessential journeyman Paul Byrd insists that the Indians’ bullpen catcher was recently the “player of the game” because, while playing his usual role as

…wait for it…

the-guy-who-stands-in-the-batters-box-lefthanded-but-batless-while-Byrd-warms-up

he insisted on staying in there even though Byrd plunked him multiple times.  In warmups.  Because it was that important that Byrd pitch inside to lefties. Guy whose job is to be plunked, standing batless (and, one presumes, wearing athletic shorts with broken elastic and an Indians road jersey bearing tobacco, blood, and ketchup stains), all for the fine-tuning of Paul Byrd.  Player of the game!  Is it merely that Paul Byrd, the Akron Beacon, you all, and I are idiots?  Or have we come a bridge and a half too far in our lionizing of untalented assistants?  Let’s pause for a minute (and throw half this stupid blough-so-far out the window) and pretend that good baseball players are worthy of praise, for their skill, their vaguely “heroic” sporting achievements, bla bla bla.  Even Paul Byrd, who must be one of the 300 or so best pitchers in the world, bla bla.  Let’s also concede that one should be nice to everyone, even–perhaps especially–to the underpaid, unremarkable busy-workers lurking the aisles and hallways of your local place-of-business.  Can’t we chuck just a little bit of the silly faux democratic cant and admit that, in a country of extreme wealth and nae much of a real middle class, it’s kind of insulting to praise the losers.  Fuck that; they’re not losers, and who cares if it’s insulting–it’s just plain stupid (by which I mean intellectually dishonest) to give lots of credit to people for doing easy things.  Nobody would want to talk about–even blough about–such garden variety egotist ponces like Arod (we will not even speak of square-headed, Texas-style solipsist sociopaths like Clemens) if they weren’t good at something hard.  So, fuck the bullpen catcher.  It’s cute that he has a job, and there’s a nice Monty Python vibe to the story.  But I’ve gone off track: my point is this–not that Byrd is an idiot, but that we’re too far gone if in baseball–BASEBALL, the last one-stop shop for the mythic, the archetypical, the pastoral, and (most of all) the romantic metaphor–we can’t distinguish the “heroes” from the peons.  Servants are people too.  And valuable in their own way, hence their jobs–but not members of the team.  Byrd, god help them, is on the team; not the bullpen catcher.  People.  But, also, servants.

Grumble

Frisman Jackson Jr. Discusses Race in America

They’ll come to Iowa for reasons they can’t even fathom.

to watch the white folk play baseball

They’ll turn up your driveway not knowing for sure why they’re doing it.

to watch the white folk play baseball

They’ll arrive at your door as innocent as children, longing for the past.

Well, just the white folk, because I sure don’t long for the past

Of course, we won’t mind if you look around, you’ll say.

You’ll mind when I show up at your doorstep.

It’s only $20 per person. They’ll pass over the money without even thinking about it: for it is money they have and peace they lack.

Do what now?

And they’ll walk out to the bleachers; sit in shirtsleeves on a perfect afternoon. They’ll find they have reserved seats somewhere along one of the baselines, where they sat when they were children and cheered their heroes. And they’ll watch the game and it’ll be as if they dipped themselves in magic waters. The memories will be so thick they’ll have to brush them away from their faces. People will come Ray. The one constant through all the years, Ray, has been baseball.

Yeah, white baseball

America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It has been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt and erased again. But baseball has marked the time. This field, this game: it’s a part of our past, Ray. It reminds of us of all that once was good and it could be again. Oh… people will come Ray. People will most definitely come.

May whitey come! They got a black dude to say all that. And a black dude who once played Jack Johnson. And note the pansy Jack Johnson.

PART 1

Yeah. So Frisman Jackson Jr. here takes a look at how folks hit depending on what country they come from, and first of all Frisman Jackson has to make some excuses:

Frisman’s working off a lousy dial-up because the Verizon guy won’t come to his house, so putting this junk together takes a little time. Frisman is pretty sure that his data is coming off that transatlantic cable laid down in the 70’s. 1870’s! And so far Frisman is only doing hitters because there’s a rat chewing through his modem line and it shorts out, so things have to move fast up here. And stats are only through 2007, because uploading 2008 was a pain in the ass. And Frisman doesn’t have any friends who know how to use a calculator.

So real fast, Frisman takes a look at OPS by country of birth, for countries with over 300,000 AB’s. The USA has over 11 million. And sure enough:

Puerto Rico .748

Domincan Republic .729

USA .713

And yes, Puerto Rico is another country. They can’t vote for president right, just like DR? So not USA. [ed note: Frisman Jackson Jr. is laying the groundwork for his upcoming constitutional argument that black folk can’t vote for president either, so when PR gets to secede, so can the black folk.]

So what’s this mean? Yup, baseball America sure is racist. We’d rather have dumb old honkey putting up .713 than jazzy savage Caribbean Adonis 25 points higher. Frisman is secure in his sexuality. Plus, that USA number includes some imbalanced black participation, which Frisman will get to next month, since they were only letting the really good black guys in for a good 20 years. [ed. note: Frisman is pretty sure there was a Steve Jeltz back then pulling things down, but he’s exercising some selective recall]

Here’s more from whitey:

OPS Total AB’s

Curacao .813 8,668

Panama .746 61,005

Venezuela .713 180,427

Canada .712 105,630

Cuba .707 151,620

W. Germany .688 8,015

Scotland .681 12,431

Australia .678 11,557

Mexico .664 53,718 (who put that there?)

Ireland .646 40,214

England .640 24,708

Germany .569 11,725

OK, Curacao is unfair because that’s Andruw Jones, and at the rate he’s going now, he’ll be hitting like a Welshman (trust Frisman, they suck at everything, and MLB was smart enough to not let them play after 1929). But look at that long list of whiteys after that. This country suffered through about 1% of all baseball AB’s just to watch some white dude from some white country hit like Nick Punto (career .644).

[ed. note: For a good time check out Netherlands Antilles, because Wladimir Balentian went 2 for 3 with a homer and double last year. But he ruined it this year, and Jair Jurrgens showed up, so they’re done.]

But Frisman is no dope. Everybody was racist back in the day, and some backcountry places like Philly and Boston probably cashed in better losing with sucky white guys than winning with foreigners. So let’s bust this out for modern times, you know, when nobody’s racist.

The 60s

Cuba .717

DR .735

PR .784

USA .747

Hard to say. Cuba stinks all the time, and remember those DR guys in the 60s were just discovering the wheel, so they get a pass. But PR, for shit’s sake

The 70s

Cuba .744

DR .723

PR .747

USA .764

Frisman doesn’t want to talk about the 70’s right now, but he will when his intern shows up for work. Clarence!

The 80s

DR .718

PR .761

USA .775

OK, we all know this is when the roids really got moving, and those kids down in the Caribbean also couldn’t afford the stuff. Also, this is when America decided is was cool to have the no-hit middle infield as long as there was a jheri-curl and the name end in -onzalez or –artinez. Cubans were stuck in Cuba by the 80s.

The 90s

Cuba .879

DR .761

PR .819

USA .804

Venezuela .750

Cuba gets back on the chart, they’re fifth in AB’s at around 14,000 for the decade. That ridiculous number is due almost entirely to los senores Canseco y Palmeiro. Whatever, everybody’s on dope. Frisman is getting a little bored.

00-07

Canada .879

DR .816

PR .824

USA .817

Venezuela .793

Japan .806

Canada’s messed up because of Walker, Bay, Morneau even Stairs and Koskie are breaking it. But it looks like the rest of the countries have finally evened out. Which means the Man doesn’t care about it anymore as long as his dollars are coming in. Just in time, since Frisman has noticed that they’re finally getting rid of the black guys. Frisman Jackson Jr. will get to that next time, but first he’s got to do some legwork since those sites don’t want you to know what color people are, so he’s got to set up some cross-reference files, which is a pain in the mf ass because of the spellchecking. Clarence! Where’s that list!

Frisman Jackson, Jr.

Are you herakles, or just a hellish boulder?

I address you, my old, old friends, my fellow arbiters–I don’t think there is anyone else out there. I hope not. Yet. What I mean to say is this: is this untended blog the hill, are you the dead weight, and I Sisyphus? Or have the heavens morphed into blog-shape (that’s a good metaphor for our decadent-phase, god-is-dead, species-wide navel-gazing worldview) and you’ve tricked me into once more upholding them while you purportedly re-arrange your shoulder pad? In either case, some mythical neglect is going on.

Kudos to (I must assume) Ev for getting rid of our assy assy banner and replacing it with 32 pixels-worth of what appears to be a Navajo rug loosely based on the Bud Box of old. It looks terrible.

O.K.–in the aphoristic spirit of that artifact, another attempt to start a conversation: I excerpt here three interesting little folk-sayings from a book on pre-literate Kirghiz culture (all trans. Tchitcherine). Rack your meager brains, come up with something to say!

#36: There is always some misogyny of thought or deed, when a truly ugly woman is involved.

#117: If a brave bets that his three-legged pony will outrun your thoroughbred, do not take the bet.

#119: If Ukrainians are coming for dinner, offer prunes–and widen your outhouse trench.

Grumble

And PS, Frisman, if you are not yet admitted to the site, email me your post and I will dutifully add it.

Hell of a blog

Wow, good day in our little corner of the blogosphere. Nothing much to say? Did actual work cross your desks or have you all already lost interest?

O.K., how about this–we’re going to kick people in the back of the knee, right? (I do like that, Evan, a good phrase. It wouldn’t work if there was a good one-word name for the back of the knee.) Let’s start with ourselves, and muse on cultural literacy and social humiliation. Remember that time that the Silent Partner disbelieved the currency of the term “watersports?” Thought we were waaaaaay out there? Remember when sadfatman gave me a hard time about referencing Rashomon, thinking it was obscure? There must be other examples… let’s start a list of fumbled referential passes–I’m sure this will excite old Harun–and dissect their significance.

Grumble

blogging is stupid

I can’t figure out how to comment. Yet I believe I have figured out how to post. This is very, very stupid.

May I pose a question? Why would anyone care what we have to say? Is there not sufficient e-drivel out there? Do we have any talents at all? Meager little talents? Allow me to pose an answer: I am smart enough to know the basics of smartness, which comprise knowing where to find low, protruding elements of the heap of idiocies, and how to kick them–hard, repeatedly–until the pile comes a-sliding down. At the risk of manifestoing for a manifest waste of time, let’s find some idiots, and kick them. And–fuck you–I know my metaphor morphed, but I liked the kicking. And the syntax works, no matter how ugly.

Grumble