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  <title>mmarlay's blog</title>
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  <updated>2007-08-01T04:28:51+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Interview game redux</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2003/09/interview-game-redux" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2003/09/interview-game-redux</id>
    <published>2003-09-01T04:47:17+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-08-01T04:28:24+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>mmarlay</name>
    </author>
    <category term="guest author" />
    <category term="lists" />
    <category term="meme" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>These are my answers to the <a href="http://domesticat.net/node/993#2598">five questions Amy posited to me</a>.</p>
<p><b>(1) You have five bullets and a guarantee that you will never be prosecuted.  Who gets the bullets, and why?  (A single person is allowed multiple bullets, if necessary.)</b></p>
<p>Hmmm&hellip;If you're going to limit me to five, I'm going to have to be pretty judicious; I don't think I'm in danger of having to pump multiple bullets into the same person.<br />
(1) Gallagher.  I've always wondered if his head would explode like his melons.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>These are my answers to the <a href="http://domesticat.net/node/993#2598">five questions Amy posited to me</a>.</p>
<p><b>(1) You have five bullets and a guarantee that you will never be prosecuted.  Who gets the bullets, and why?  (A single person is allowed multiple bullets, if necessary.)</b></p>
<p>Hmmm&hellip;If you're going to limit me to five, I'm going to have to be pretty judicious; I don't think I'm in danger of having to pump multiple bullets into the same person.<br />
(1) Gallagher.  I've always wondered if his head would explode like his melons.<br />
(2) While we're at it, Carrot Top.<br />
(3) And, what the hell, Pauly Shore, so we can finish off the ruling triumvirate of irritating "comedy."<br />
(4) The Microsoft programmer responsible for Clippit, which if it were real would also get a bullet.<br />
(5) My neighbor, who has apparently decided to form a thrash-metal band in his apartment and spent most of this afternoon letting the whole complex know about it.<b>(2) We're both Netflix addicts, so I'm going to cheat and ask you the same question I asked Adam: If you were introducing someone to American movies for the first time, what movies would you have them see first?  It can be as few as one or as many as you like.  (Extra credit: a reason why you chose the ones you did.)</b></p>
<p>I think I'd have to pick out a selection, to demonstrate the various extremes of American cinema:</p>
<li>For the popcorn section, the most entertaining &mdash; although admittedly fairly mindless &mdash; big-budget studio moves, such as <i>Silverado</i>, <i>Terminator 2</i> and <i>Aliens</i>.  I’d also go with a lower-budget, but equally entertaining, choice like <i>Pulp Fiction</i>.</li>
<li>For the bizarre, <i>Hedwig and the Angry Inch</i> and a theatrical showing of <i>The Rocky Horror Picture Show</i>.</li>
<li>For documentaries/non-fiction, <i>Koyaanisqatsi</i> and <i>Startup.com</i>.</li>
<li>For the best of independent cinema, <i>Lone Star</i> and <i>Limbo</i> (hell, pretty much the complete oeuvre of John Sayles, although we’ll start with those two), <i>A Simple Plan</i>, <i>Happiness</i>, and <i>Requiem for a Dream</i>.</li>
<li>For comedy, I’d go with both sharp, satirical, and/or black (<i>Bob Roberts</i>, <i>In the Company of Men</i>, <i>Dr. Strangelove</i>, <i>War of the Roses</i>, <i>Waiting for Guffman</i>, and perhaps <i>American Psycho</i>, although I’d recommend a reading of the book first) and lowbrow (<i>Airplane!</i>, <i>Blazing Saddles</i>, and <i>A Fish Called Wanda</i>).</li>
<p><b>(3) You did not have a television in your house when you were growing up, but your friends did.  Did this choice in your house influence you in any way?  If so, how?</b></p>
<p>I think so.  Probably most importantly, I read a whole hell of a lot more than I otherwise would have, and certainly more than most of my peers, although you could attribute part of that to the hegemony of ignorance in Arkansas and the concomitant, pervasive attitude that too much book-learnin’ is a dangerous thing.  I think all of that reading helped to develop my grammar, writing, and vocabulary tremendously.</p>
<p>Don’t get me wrong &mdash; I’m not necessarily anti-television; I own one now, and I’m glad I do.  But I realize that about 90% of what gets on the air is total shit, and I’m glad my parents made the choice not to have one in the house.  If, through some horrible practical joke by the universe, I were to have kids, I think I would do the same thing.</p>
<p><b>(4) Can you pinpoint when sarcasm became a lost art?</b></p>
<p>Unlike, say, scrimshaw, I really don't think it has.  It may have moved into a more rarefied circle, but, thankfully, I think it's still going strong, if my immediate circle of friends is any indication.  Anyone who doesn’t realize that I’m being sarcastic just falls into his own version of <i>The Most Dangerous Game</i>, and I’m more than willing to participate.</p>
<p><b>(5) Your parents are the only people I know whom I'd describe as "professional travelers.”  How have their stories influenced you?  What places would you like to visit, and which would you avoid, based on your own knowledge and their stories?</b></p>
<p>Their stories have influenced me in a fairly general way &mdash; they always made me conscious that there was a world out there, which, as you know, isn’t always obvious when you’re in a small town in the South.  It really broadened my horizons in many ways: culturally, intellectually, cuisine-ally, etc.  Because of that, I never felt like I was trapped or limited in any way.</p>
<p>As far as places I’d like to visit, I like my vacations to be restful and leisurely, so my first choices would be Hawaii and then either Ireland or New Zealand.  Relaxing places.  Places I could see on my own time, following my own itinerary.  I detest the idea of “travel by checklist,” where you arrive in a new city or country with a list of things you simply must do, or you can’t say you’ve “done” the place (e.g., Alcatraz in San Francisco).  I have friends who do that, who are convinced that if they don’t see the exact things laid out in the guidebook then they haven’t really experienced a place.  Fuck that.  Go off the beaten path, walk around, see what interests you, and follow your hunches.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>I hate you</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2003/08/i-hate-you" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2003/08/i-hate-you</id>
    <published>2003-08-30T02:24:48+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-08-01T04:28:51+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>mmarlay</name>
    </author>
    <category term="guest author" />
    <category term="lists" />
    <category term="rants" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I hate you.  You are:</p>
<li>The commuter who, when you see the bus coming, but you’re still a block away from the bus stop, starts sprinting towards the bus.  It’s not the last helicopter out of Saigon.  It’s a fucking bus.  Another one will be there within two minutes.  But I do love it when you arrive, all bedraggled and sweaty, only to have the bus pull away and leave you standing there in a cloud of diesel fumes, pounding on the side of the bus for it to stop and let you on.  That’s just awesome.</li>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I hate you.  You are:</p>
<li>The commuter who, when you see the bus coming, but you’re still a block away from the bus stop, starts sprinting towards the bus.  It’s not the last helicopter out of Saigon.  It’s a fucking bus.  Another one will be there within two minutes.  But I do love it when you arrive, all bedraggled and sweaty, only to have the bus pull away and leave you standing there in a cloud of diesel fumes, pounding on the side of the bus for it to stop and let you on.  That’s just awesome.</li>
<li>The contestant on <i>Wheel of Fortune</i> who guessed the letter ‘P’ when the puzzle was R-U-_-_-E-R C-H-I-C-_-E-N.  Just where in the hell did you think a ‘P’ was going to fit in that phrase?</li>
<li>Pretty much anyone with whom I went to high school.</li>
<li>Any person who sits next to me on a plane and proceeds to tell me your life story.  See my copy of <i>The Economist</i>, into which I am pointedly sticking my face?  Hear my grunted, monosyllabic responses?  See me not reciprocating?  Take the hint.  I don’t care about you or your stupid life, or where you’re going or what you’re going to do when you get there.  As long as you’re not trying to rush the cockpit, your presence is nothing more than an irritant to me.</li>
<li>The guy sitting across from me who had two Bloody Marys before we took off and then two more in the air.  On a one-hour flight between Salt Lake City and Phoenix.  At 10:00 in the morning.  Who then proceeded to be loud and irritating for the rest of the flight.  Sir, I know they’re free, but please.  That’s a benefit, not a challenge.</li>
<li>The Delta customer service representative who was on the phone with me when I wanted to use my free companion travel voucher for an extra seat for myself.  (Cf. that whole “hating to sit next to other people and suffer their idiocy” thing, above.)  When I asked it was possible to use the voucher for myself, you answered, “I don’t understand.  Of course you can use it, sir.  It’s your voucher.”  I know it’s my voucher, you simp!  Please answer the question I actually asked.</li>
<li>The relentlessly cheery person who tells me that I should smile more.  Fuck you!  I like scowling!  And you should be thankful that I’m scowling, since it’s only that constant low-level expression of my anger that is keeping it from exploding all over you like a water balloon dropped from the top of the Sears Tower.</li>
<li>The woman who sat on the other side of the cubicle wall from me at my old job who responded when someone on the phone asked for you, responded, “This is her.”  NO!  This is not her; this is actually bad pronoun usage.  Even the grammar checker in Word catches that one, and it’s hardly <i>Strunk and White</i>.  It took actual physical effort on my part not to yell over the cube wall at you, “This is SHE, you stupid cow!”</li>
<li>People who insist on trying to explain to me why <i>Beavis and Butthead</i> is funny.  No, it’s not.  <i>The Simpsons</i> is funny.  Monty Python is funny.  George Carlin is funny.  <i>Beavis and Butthead</i>?  Not so much.</li>
<li>Any parent who decides to bring your child to the same restaurant where I’ve decided to have dinner, yet still refuses to control the child. I’m pretty sure I asked for a seat in the non-shrieking section.  Spend the $20 and hire a babysitter, please.  Or at least put the little bastard on a choke chain so that you can jerk him back over to your table when he starts wandering too far, or we might have to find out just how deep fork tines can penetrate.</li>
<li>Anyone who still refers to Target as “Tar-jay.”  That stopped being original, funny, or, really, even remotely humorous at least five years ago.</li>
<li>People who drive around the Tar-jay parking lot for 20 minutes looking for a close-in parking space, often following like SUV-driving sharks shoppers coming out of the store and returning to their cars.  Just walk the extra 50 feet!  It won’t kill you!  It might even do you some good, since it’s probably the most exercise you’re going to get all week.</li>
<li>As a corollary to the above, anyone who parks in a handicapped spot while not actually handicapped.  Not being able to read the sign does not qualify as a handicap.</li>
<p>I’m sure there are others, but that’s a start.  As you can probably tell, it doesn’t take much to make the list, but it’s damn hard to get off of it.  I tend to write these things in permanent marker.</p>
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