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Movie manners courtesy cards

When I was living in San Francisco and working with Cory Doctorow at OpenCola, we probably went out to go catch a movie once every couple of weeks. Our observation, as Canadians living among Americans, was that “American etiquette” is:

a) an oxymoron, and

b) at its worst in movie theatres.

Cory told me that he believed the home theatre changed movie-going behaviour: people were simply behaving as if they were in their own homes rather than in movie theatres. It’s an example of the inappropriateness of certain private behaviours brought into a public space.

The most over-the-top breach of manners we experienced was during Hannibal. We sat in front of a couple that insisted on giving voice to every stray thought that crossed their minds throughout the movie.

During the beautifully-shot scenes in Florence: “Damn, Italy is beautiful. We gotta go there sometime, baby.”

Watching Hannibal Lecter overpower just about everybody: “Damn, he strong for an old man.”

When Gary Oldman’s disfigured character first appears in full view: “Damn, you ugly.”

Cory threw them an angry glance and I turned around to shush them with each outburst of theirs. Each time we admonished them, they’d sheepishly make some kind of apologetic gesture and remain contritely quiet for a couple of minutes. Soon afterwards, something would happen onscreen, a new thought would coalesce in their brains and they’d vocalise once more.

During Ray Liotta’s last scene — a rather grim and gross one at that — the guy behind us broke the stunned silence with his funniest outburst of the show:

“Daaa-yum! Hannibal be eatin’ HIS BRAIN!”


Glarkware has a product that might help out in situations like the one I just described. For a mere US$3.50, you can purchase a pack of 25 business card-sized “movie manners courtesy cards”, shown below:

Photo: Glarkware movie manners courtesy card (front and back).

According to Glarkware’s site:

Handing one to a talker means that you don’t have to make a “shush” noise even louder than the talking. The vague wording of the text gives the (false) impression that the cards have been distributed by the theatre chain, lending the card-giving an authority that your “shush” lacks.

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It Happened to Me

#300

Just for counting’s sake, the entry prior to this one was number 300 since moving to Blogware.

I have no idea how many entries there are in my old blog, but they date back to November 11, 2001.

Here are some articles from the old blog that you might’ve missed:

  • The con man comes a-knockin’. Once upon a time, a guy posing as a new neighbour in distress conned me and my housemate out of 80 bucks. Three months later, in what is either supreme testicular fortitude or forgetfulness, he visits my house again and manages to con my housemates out of 80 bucks and a lift.
  • Fourteen new year’s eves. A Chronicle of my New Year’s Eves from December 31, 1988 to December 31, 2001. Tales of sneaking into clubs, sneaking out of pubs, getting ethnic on somebody’s ass and how accordions can come in handy when you’re being mugged.
  • Elegy. This is probably not what happened when I got sacked from OpenCola, but it’s funny.
  • One helluva Saturday night. A fun evening all around.
  • Stagette. I always knew that someday the accordion would get me invited into a limo full of pretty women and that hilarity would ensue.
  • Sacrelicious! A one-act play in which God, Moses and Jesus mix it up telling the story of Creation. It may be offensive to some readers, and there’s one particularly painful Buddha double-entendre. I’m hoping some Unitarian church out there turns it into a puppet show.
  • The accidental go-go dancer. I walk into a dance club as a guy with an accordion and walk out as their new bartop go-go dancer. Kind of like Coyote Ugly, but with an accordion.
  • That Syd, what a mensch! I have the best fucking accountant in the world.
  • The Star-Spangled Banner and anal sovereignty. The accordion literally saves my ass at U.S. Customs.
  • Now it can be told. On occasion, I do have dates that go right. Really.
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Oh geez, people, PLEASE TELL ME!

Reading a recent entry in Meryle’s blog, I just found out that she was drinking with The Strokes, who just happened to wander into my local watering hole, the Bovine Sex Club, on Tuesday night.

And she didn’t call!

Meryle! I would’ve called you!

After all the accordion-related rock star fun we’ve had together…

Sniff…

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It Happened to Me

Let’s set some ground rules [UPDATED]

Correction: The spelling of Kerry-Ann’s name has been corrected from the incorrect “Carrie-Anne”.

The scene:

Last Sunday evening at Kickass Karaoke, upstairs at the Rivoli. I’m returning to my table from performing Nine Inch Nails’ Head Like a Hole. Sitting to my left is a friend I’ll refer to as Dude, and sitting across the table from me are Sam and Kerry-Ann. Meryle and Erik are sitting nearby, dressed for Disco Night, looking as if they’ve fallen out of a 1977 high school yearbook.

Sam: That was great!

Me: Thank you!

Sam: By the way, you should turn ar–

Dude: Shhhhhh!

Sam (sheepishly): Sorry.

Me: Huh?

Dude: It’s nothing. Don’t worry.


Later…

Sam: Joey, I think you should kn–

Dude: Shush!

Sam: But —

Dude: Shhhhhh!

Sam (sheepishly): Okay.

Me: Will somebody please tell me what’s going on?

Dude: Later. Let’s see how this develops.

Me: Whatever. I’m going to buy this round. Who wants what?


Later…

Dude: See the brunette with the black T-shirt? She’s been checking you out all night.

Me: Why didn’t you mention this before?

Dude: Because I didn’t want to interfere. This should just happen naturally. The girls wanted to tell you, but I told them to let it play out — if you knew, you’d act differently and maybe it might not work out.

Me: Mmm-hmmm.

What Dude said sounded like such complete nonsense that I dismissed it as him having a little fun with me.

Minutes later, a skinny punk rock girl would walk directly up to me, make eye contact and start dancing against my chair. You know what happened afterwards.


The scene:

Last night, after the Radiohead concert.

Sam: You know, that woman at karaoke really was checking you out.

Me: Karaoke? What woman?

Sam: The woman at the bar. Kerry-Ann and I were watching her check you out, and we both agreed she was into you.

Me: Why didn’t you tell me? I thought you were my friend!

Sam: We wanted to, but [Dude] told us not to. He was really forceful about it, saying that if you knew, your chances would be ruined.

Me: Wait a minute. When he said it, he used that “if you’re aware of it, you’ll ruin it” bullshit. I thought he was kidding because of that. You mean to tell me that he wasn’t?

Sam (sheepishly): No. Uh…you want me to tell you next time?

Me: Yes, please. Oh, and another thing…

Sam (sheepishly): Uh-huh?

Me: [Dude] must die.


No, Dude, I’m not going to kill you. Even though the Universal Code of Guys gives me the right to do so — and pee on the corpse, too! — under such circumstances.

What you did was with the best of intentions and in the spirit of true friendship. Perhaps you were worried about violating the golden rule of baseball that you should never mention to a pitcher that he’s on a no-hitting streak, because once he knows, he’ll fumble and the streak will end. Perhaps you were worried that by “interfering”, you might make the same kind of mistake that Steve Bartman made (although Bartman would not do so until two evenings later).

But really, “let things happen naturally”? The natural outcome for 99% of bar and club-goers is a state of equilibrium, which is for nothing to happen at all. No conversations, no exchanges of phone numbers, no nuthin’.

When this happens again — and I mean when, not if, bucko — I want to be informed. Please. Have some faith that I will know what to do with the information. After all, outside of 1984, the saying isn’t “Ignorance is power”.

Here are the new rules. Be assured I will do the same for you!

  • If my fly is down, I would like you to tell me.
  • If I’ve left my car’s headlights on after parking it, I would like you to tell me.
  • If I’m about to cross the street and a large truck driven by a crystal meth-smoking man in a Pikachu costume is running a red light and about to plow me down, I would like to tell me.
  • If a girl is checking me out, I WOULD LIKE YOU TO PLEASE TELL ME.
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It Happened to Me

Denouement for “Worst Date Ever”, part 2

(In case you missed it, here’s the link to part 1 of the denouement.)

What happened to Crabs

In the comments to one of the Worst Date Ever stories, Rick McGinnis guessed correctly that I remained friends with Crabs.

One Saturday night in the fall of 1999, Crabs and I met up at Buddies in Bad Times — the site of the first date with The Waitress — to dance there for old times’ sake.

Crabs came with his new boyfriend, who I recognized from TV.

“Dude,” I said, “I loved it when your head exploded on Earth: Final Conflict!”

“People actually watch that?” he asked, seeming genuinely surprised.

“Hey man, I was young and I needed the money.”

In this story, I shall refer to him as Exploding Boy.

As the evening progressed, more of our friends joined us, and by the time the club was in full swing, we had a pretty good group. The music was excellent, the crowd had a very pleasant vibe going, and for the first time in a long time, I was actually enjoying myself at Buddies in Bad Times. It seemed that the curse had been lifted from the place.

At the end of the evening, after the last song had been played, Crabs went downstairs to fetch his jacket from coat check. I sat on the stage, sipping from a bottle of water, talking with Ryan, whom I knew from my days at Crazy Go Nuts University.

The DJ had shut down the sound system, and the place was lit by the harsh glow of fluorescent tubes.

“Ugh,” said Ryan. “They’ve turned on the ‘ugly lights’.”

We started making our way towards the door when a voice came over the sound system.

“Everybody, get up!” said the voice. “We’re going to dance again!”

“What the…?” asked Ryan. “That sounds like [Exploding Boy]!”

I looked up at the DJ booth. Exploding Boy was in it, with the DJ’s microphone in his hand. He appeared to be searching the booth frantically and throwing switches at random.

“I want everybody to get up,” he said, “because the night’s not over! We’re going to have music!”

“The managers aren’t going to like this,” said Ryan.

Two bouncers raced from the main entrance towards the stairs to the DJ booth.

“Oh shit,” I said. “I’d better go get [Crabs].”

My experience working as a DJ at student pubs has taught me that if you want to get an overly rowdy or belligerent drunk to calm down, one of the best courses of action is to involve his/her significant other. Usually a girlfriend or boyfriend can calm down an out-of-control patron more effectively than any bouncer.

I found Crabs and took him upstairs to the balcony level where the DJ booth was. We arrived to find four bouncers, each one holding onto either a leg or arm belonging to Exploding Boy, who’d adopted the passive resistance strategy of going completely limp so that one is very difficult to move. This was especially effective in Exploding Boy’s case, as he was a pretty husky guy.

“I’m not leaving until we have music!” screamed Exploding Boy. “We…need…music!”

“We’re closed, buddy,” said one of the bouncers. “Go home!”

“You close too early! There’s still time for music!”

“Think we can lift him?” asked one of the bouncers to the others.

“Not when he’s all limp like that,” said another bouncer. “Guy weighs a fucking ton.”

“[Crabs],” I said, “why don’t you talk to him?”

Crabs burst out in tears. “[Exploding Boy], why are you doing this to me?! This is embarassing!”

Crabs lunged at Exploding Boy and pummelled him with a volley of completely wussy, Dame Edna punches.

“Accordion Guy,” said a bouncer through gritted teeth. “This…isn’t…helping…

I grabbed Crabs by his arm.

“C’mon, let’s just leave. [Exploding Boy] will follow,” I said, annoyed at once again having to deal with what was likely more ketamine-fueled outbursts. “Goddamn horse tranquilizers…”

I walked Crabs out the front entrance. He sobbed all the way. As we passed Christine the doorperson, she looked at me and said “Accordion Guy, did you hit him over a girl again?”

NO!


Outside, it was cool, which felt wonderful after being inside a sweaty dance club for hours. I was hoping that the air would help clear Crabs’ head.

“Why is he doing this to me, Joey?” he sobbed.

“He’s not doing this to you, or anyone. He just wanted the evening to go on. Look, it’s still early enough for us to get into one of the boozecans…”

The emergency exit that led to the side of the dance floor opened. A voice came from the doorway: “On three! One…two…three!”

Out flew Exploding Boy. The bouncers had managed to carry him down the stairs, across the dance floor and to the emergency exit, where they swung him by his arms and legs and threw him out on his ample ass.

Exploding Boy landed with a thud and rolled over onto his stomach. He shook a defiant fist at the open doorway, calling the bouncers Nazis.

“We called the cops, fatass!” one of them yelled.

“Like I give a shit!” he yelled back. He stood up, raised both fists in the air and started yelling gibberish about peace, love, music, and “the fundamental right of all human beings to dance until sun-up” at no one in particular.

Crabs ran at him and attempted to tackle him. Exploding Boy swatted Crabs aside as if he were a rag doll.

“I want there to be love!”

“SHUT THE FUCK UP, WE’RE TRYING TO SLEEP HERE!” yelled someone from one of the nearby apartment buildings.

“NO!” replied Exploding Boy, all revved up now that he’d found a new audience. “I’m not going to shut up until we have peace and love and dancing!”

“Be quiet!” yelled another voice from another apartment building. “I’m calling the cops!”

Crabs charged again at Exploding Boy and unleashed another volley of punches, each one no stronger than a sneeze.

“StopitstopitstopitstoptistopitSTOPIT!” he yelled.

“You know what?” yelled Crabs. “I’m going to call your mother and tell her what you’re doing right now. Let’s see what she thinks of your behaviour. Joey, give me your phone!”

“No!” I said, and grabbed Crabs by both shoulders. “For Chrissake, pull yourself together! We…are…grown-ups! We don’t solve problems by telling on each other anymore!”

Besides, it was three in the morning. I’m sure she would’ve loooooved getting a whiny phone call in the middle of the night.

In the meantime, Exploding Boy had gone off on a rant, occasionally interrupted by a number of people who’d taken to yelling out their bedroom windows demanding that he shut the hell up.

“Let’s get out of here and get a coffee,” I said. I pulled Crabs in the direction of Church Street, where there was a 24-hour coffee shop.

“We’ll let him get tired.”

I bought Crabs a coffee. As we drank, I suggested that perhaps cutting down on the recreational chemicals — “I’m not trying to be a killjoy, I like to party too, but…” — might be a good idea.


After we finished our coffees, we returned to Buddies in Bad Times. I knocked on the front door, and Christine answered.

“Hey, ‘ccordion Guy.”

“What happened to our friend? The big guy who wouldn’t leave?”

“He yelled a little more, pissed off all the neighbours and then the cops came and took him to detox. Wellesley Hospital.”

“Thanks.”

“By the way, don’t come back for the next couple of weeks. You three are on the list.”

By “list”, she meant the “banned list”.

“What?! Why [Crabs] and me? We didn’t raid the booth.”

“I know, but the manager said so. Sorry.”

She closed the door and locked it with a very final sounding ker-chunk.

“I hate this place,” I said to Crabs. “Something bad always happens here.”

It was months before I returned.


We made our way to the detox center at Wellesley hospital. Crabs and Exploding Boy were reunited, had a small argument and followed it up with a joint crying session. Once it looked as though sanity were restored, I got in a cab, leaving the two drug-addled idiots to their own devices.

Since then, Crabs and Exploding Boy have quit drinking and drugging. They’re considerably saner, pleasant to hang out with, and have not turned any outings of mine into hellish nightmares since.

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Send some love Boss Ross’ way

His car got broken into not once, but twice, and the thieves helped themselves to his laptop and MP3 player the second time.

Drop by his blog and say something to cheer him up, willya?

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It Happened to Me

Worst Date Ever: The Denouement

Some people wanted to know what happened to everyone involved in the Worst Date Ever stories.

(In case you haven’t read them yet, here are the various parts of the story… <a

Enjoy!)


What happened to The Waitress

A week after the Third and Final Date, I was once again at Tequila Bookworm, sitting in one of the tattered but comfortable second-hand easy chairs in the cafe’s back section. I was lazily typing at my laptop, not actually accomplishing anything.

Beside me, in the equally-tattered second-hand couch, sat Hector. He had a coffee in one hand and was lazily picking at some loose couch-stuffing with his other hand.

(Years later, Hector would introduce me to Emily, better known in this blog as the New Girl — while sitting in the very same couch. Needless to say, I have a strong guideline – even now I’m not ready to make it a hard-and-fast rule — to never date anyone I meet there.)

“Um, hello there,” said a sweet but nervous English-accented voice. I nearly dropped my laptop in response.

Hector must’ve noticed the discomfort in the air, but had no idea why.

I hadn’t told anyone what had happened. It wasn’t embarrassment that kept me quiet, but shock. I still couldn’t believe that my dream date had gone so awfully, disastrously, stool-softeningly wrong.

I suggested that we take the conversation away from prying ears. She asked one of her coworkers to take over for her for about fifteen minutes, and we stepped outside. It was one of the first days that could truly be called spring. It was a bright, cloudless day, and the smell of budding plants was in the air. It seemed wrong to be having an “it’s not working out” conversation on a day like that.

“Look…” she said.

I interrupted her. “It’s okay. You don’t have to say anything.”

Especially if it’s in verse, I thought.

The rest of the conversation was simply an admission on both our parts that we weren’t going to pursue a relationship, but remain friends. Under normal circumstances, I would have been devasted by such a turn of events, but that last date’s circumstances were anything but normal. Yes, i was a little disappointment, but what I was feeling most was relief.


A couple of weeks later, I was sitting at the bar with Chris.

She took our orders, and after bringing them to us, announced that she was leaving waitressing for greener pastures.

“I’ll tell you more later, because I’ve got to run right now. Hot date.”

She and the film girl who was always drawing in her sketchbook were an item. Before that, Film Girl and The Artiste — The Waitress’ former boyfriend — had a little fling.

“What are you thinking of doing?” I asked.

“Adult film. I know a director, and he says I’d be a natural. Tell you more later, I’m running late. Bye, Joey!” she said, and ran out the door.

I sat in stunned silence.

“You, my friend, have achieved the dream,” said Chris. “Someday, you’ll be able to point and say ‘See that porn star? I dated her.’ Those are serious bragging rights.”

“I feel soiled, yet proud,” I said, still stunned.

The Waitress never ended up in the adult film industry. Instead, she ended up waitressing at increasingly posh restaurants and dated one of the cooks at one her workplaces. We met from time to time for coffee and conversation, but I saw less and less of her as the months wore on.


A year later, in the summer of 2000, my coworkers from OpenCola and I went to Kickass Karaoke at the Bovine Sex Club. When we entered the back room where the stage was located, I was surprised to see The Waitress there. She never goes to the Bovine. She waved to me from her seat.

I went over to greet her, and we exchanged a hug and a peck on the cheek. She introduced me to her date, a dark-haired woman with angular features. I’ll refer to her as The Designer. I then introduced The Waitress and The Designer to my coworkers, among whom were Deenster and Chris.

After we found a place of our own to sit, Chris whsipered to me “Did you get a look at The Designer’s hands! They’re…man hands!”

After taking a another look at The Designer, I said “You know, I think you’re right.” She was referred to as “Man Hands” for the rest of the night.

Later that evening, Carson, Kickass Karaoke’s host, called The Designer and The Waitress to the stage to perform their number. I laughed when I recognized the number they were singing — Sweet Transvestite from The Rocky Horror Picture Show.


Weeks later, Film Girl (the one who’d been with both The Waitress and The Artiste) and I were having coffee together.

“You won’t believe this, Joey,” said Film Girl, “but my cousin was with The Designer for a while, and it turns out that she’s not fully post-op.”

“You mean…?”

“She’s a woman only from the waist up.”

“And, uh, what about, you know, ‘below the equator’?”

“Dude.”

“Wow, those really were man hands. But you know what? She looks waaay better in a dress than I ever could.”


Earlier this year, I was at Tequila Bookworm with a friend of mine I’ll refer to as Rock and Roll Girl. I told her the story of my worst date ever, and mentioned that the last person I saw The Waitress dating was The Designer.

“Oh, I was with The Designer once,” she said.

“I thought you were only into guys.”

“I am,” she replied, “but I was curious about the boobs. Straight girls never get to play with boobs.”

“You know, I actually understand where you’re coming from. They’re pretty neat things, they are.”

“You know, [The Designer’s] still pining for [The Waitress].”

“That’s because she never made him speak in verse.”

I haven’t seen The Waitress since September 2001.


What happened to The Artiste

AKMA wanted to know what happened to The Artiste. Unfortunately, there’s not much, but here it is anyway.

The Artiste found out about my involvement with The Waitress weeks after the Third and Final Date. He immediately became all chummy with me because we “now had a common bond”.

No thank you, sir. The only common bond that he and I have is that we’re both carbon-based life forms. That’s about it.

One afternoon, The Artiste felt like annoying Film Girl (this was after their fling) while at Tequila Bookworm. I wasn’t there, so I have no idea what he did or said, but whatever it was, it was bad enough that Film Girl — a whole foot shorter than The Artiste — knocked him off his barstool with a solid right cross, leaving him stunned, embarrassed and bloody-nosed on the cafe’s floor. For this act, Film Girl was banned from Tequila Bookworm.

“If I were manager of Tequila Bookworm, I’d have given you free coffee for life,” I told her.

I haven’t seen The Artiste in about three years.


Next: What happened to Crabs, or why I no longer dance at Buddies in Bad Times.