"Picking Up Girls Made Easy", Available for Download

Remember that MP3 of the full album Picking Up Girls Made Easy that I

mentioned last week? I’ve downsampled and made it available for temporary download here, here or here [8MB MP3].

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Lost Conversations #3: Toronto the Good or Toronto the Redoubtable?

Lost Conversations is the title of a series of blog entries that have

been sitting in draft form for too long; it’s my attempt to do some

“spring cleaning”. This is the third in a series — the other two are:


Russ “Burkean Canuck” Kuykendall occupies a interesting position in my worldview. On the plus side, he is a colleague of Gideon Strauss,

a fellow blogger I hold in high esteem. On the minus side, he has

posting privileges on the foaming-at-the-mouth-conservative group blog The Shotgun,

which I treat as a warning sign on the same level as a white baseball

cap worn backwards or a predilection for bow ties — not enough for

dismissal by itself, but it’s a strong positive indicator for

“jackass”, which Kuykendall clearly is not.

In a recent blog entry titled Finding the Old Toronto in the Burned-Over District (which he posted in his own blog and cross-posted to The Shotgun, whose writership tends to the classic Albertan anti-Toronto stance),

Kuykendall talks about his experiences driving through the towns of

upstate New York: “Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, and Albany, and in

little burgs in between” and how he “could not help but notice the

general helpfulness, consideration for

others, and common courtesy I encountered, again and again, in service

stations, in down-scale and up-scale stores alike, in rest stops, and

so on”.

He then writes:

It makes me a little sad. Because there was a time when I noted the

contrast going the other way, even when visiting that New York wannabe,

Toronto, where I now live. “Toronto the Good” was also “Toronto the

courteous and considerate.” But no more. And no, I don’t mean that no

one is courteous and considerate. But I can’t tell you how many times

I’ve seen a door opened by one of the last gentlemen in Toronto for a

lady of a certain age only to observe three able-bodied men precede her

through the propped door. Or, how many times I’ve seen young people

walk three or four abreast down a Yonge Street sidewalk expecting

pedestrians to move out of their way.

Now, I know there are

communities across Canada that are more like the burned-over district

in this respect than they are like Toronto the Redoubtable. And I know

that many of the great American cities are more like Toronto as it is

now than like upstate New York. But it troubles me, nonetheless, to

note the change in what is now Canada’s largest metroplex. Can

Montreal, Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver be far behind?

I

thought that the best response might be to ask my fiancee Wendy, a

dyed-in-the-wool Bostonian moving to Toronto, for her opinion since she

might have more “distance” from the topic than I would. Here’s her

response:

I

think it’s stupid that the Maple Leafs are not called the Maple Leaves.

 I don’t care much about the Bruins but I am a loyal Red Sox fan.

 I am a Bostonian who will soon live in Toronto.

 Considering I’ve spent nearly thirty years here in Taxachusetts

being a Masshole, no one will ever believe I’m actually from Canada.

 Even though I don’t have the huge,

close-your-eyes-and-think-of-Kennedy accent — unless I want to.

That said, I love Toronto.

Tranna. It’s clean, it’s safe, and drivers know how to merge.

 People are nice. I’ve actually been reduced to tears a few times

at the kindnesses of relative strangers who have told me how welcome

I will be in their city when I arrive next month.  Here at home, I

have great affection for the jerks who drive me around in their

cabs, sell me juice, or elbow past me on their way off the bus. But 500

miles west north west, I know I’ll find the opposite, which I also love.

It

was a little bit creepy when the girls working at the natural foods

store near Joey’s and my new apartment told us how gorgeous our

potential kids would be, but they meant it. I get warm hugs and kisses

from almost everyone I meet in “T-dot” – even though that kind of

fights with my New England sensibilities, it’s very reassuring. And

strangers in Toronto will pick you up off the sidewalk, not point and laugh, when you slip on the ice.

I never knew the “old” Toronto. Maybe people used to be nicer. Maybe they baked you fresh bread because they thought you might be hungry, or shoveled

your quarter-mile driveway because they were already out there anyway.

But from where I sit, normal humans couldn’t be nicer than they are

in TO. (Trying to learn the lingo here, please forgive my overuse of

slang.) I love the full-of-beans denizens of the town we don’t particularly

call Beantown, but it’s not because they’re polite. I’m looking forward

to living with the pleasantly less profane. Although it kind of pisses

me off that on top of having to be nice to them, I have to spell the

people next door “neighboUrs.”

Categories
It Happened to Me

How Things Are

It’s a gorgeous and sunny-but-cool day here in Accordion City, and although there’s lots to do at work, things are going nicely both in terms of my own productivity and today’s trading…

Categories
It Happened to Me

I’m Not Alone…

Photo: IKEA Expedit bookshelf.

Construction of my new IKEA “Expedit” bookshelf is not going as

planned. Wendy and I were doing just fine until step 11, not far from

the end: attaching the right side. Getting the pegs to line up is a

chore, and I suspect a third set of hands might come in handy. I’ve

assembled IKEA furniture since getting my first set in 1980, and this

is the only one to ever confound me (not counting those which had

missing pieces).

I’m not alone: the number one Google result for the words “IKEA” and “Expedit” is this open letter from an Expedit purchaser.

Categories
It Happened to Me

I Used to Be Cool Once

I discovered this in a post in the blog This is Hi-Fi via a recent trackback:

…Accordion Guy used to have a relatively cool blog with topics such as the multi-part “Worst Date Ever“.

Dude, I wasn’t going to stay a single guy forever, and I certainly wouldn’t do so for the story value!

Categories
It Happened to Me

Lost Conversations #2: Two Fandoms, One Approach

Back

in 2002, I was invited as one of the special guests for the

100th episode of MuchMusic’s show MuchOnDemand, a live show tailored

to the after-school crowd. The show, which was hosted by VJs Rick

Campanelli and Jennifer

Hollett

at the time, is an hour long and features some entertainment news, a

couple of videos, the occasional interview with a rock/pop star and the

usual talk show “filler activities”, all in front of a live audience of

mostly teens. It takes place in a studio whose garage-door walls are

opened so that passers-by and fans can get a look. If you’re familiar

with MTV, MuchOnDemand‘s format is a clone of TRL, right down to the way they

refer to it as “MOD”.

They show videos in between live segments on MuchOnDemand.

During the videos, the cameras are off and the hosts have a chance to

either take a little breather, get prepped by the director or chat up

the audience.

The differences between guys and girls really manifest themselves in

the audience during the lull. The guys remain fairly silent, preferring

to express their hots for Jenn through sly whispers. The girls, on the

other hand, aren’t as quiet about their celeb-crushes on Rick.

“Oh, hold on,” said the director while we were in mid-conversation.

“You need to see this.”

He pointed at a pow-wow of girls in the audience. Their leader said

“Okay, on the count of three. One…two…three…”

“RICK, YOU’RE HOT!” exclaimed a dozen of them in unison. This call was

followed by a bunch of embarrassed giggles.

“Nice job you’ve got here, Rick,” I said to him.

“It’s one of the perks,” he replied.


A couple of weeks ago, I attended the TechTV meetup at No Regrets, a

resto-bar just a block away from the Tucows office. The place was

packed literally hundreds of geeks; at least 300 had RSVP’d for the

meetup.

Perhaps some of the geeks were there to see G4TechTv Canada’s Call for Help’s Leo

LaPorte, some were fans of excellent Techphile podcast and some

were there to the first diggnation shoot in Canada.

But let’s face it: the real most of the geeks were there is the leftmost person in the shot below.

Photo: Amber MacArthur, Leo Laporte and Joey deVilla filming a

  bumper promo for the G4 TechTV show 'Call for Help'.

They were there for Amber MacArthur, host on G4TechTV Canada’s Call for Help and geek’s dream dare.

“Accordion Guy!” a number of people would ask after handing me their

cameras, “could you please get a shot of me and Amber?” I’d gladly

oblige, and like Rick from MuchMusic, Amber was very good about

indulging her fans.

“Hey, Accordion Guy,” said Amber, “d’you wanna be on TV? Come over here

and let’s shoot a promo spot for Call for Help with you and the

accordion and me and Leo.”

As I walked over, I heard a mumbled “I hate you” from some guy behind me. Heh.

The deja vu moment of the evening came as I was talking with Ray

“iPodderX” Slakinski. Behind us, about ten guys had formed a line and

were following the lead of a guy who was saying “Okay…here

goes…three…two…one…”

“AMBER, YOU ROCK!” they yelled in unison, followed by some laughter and high-fives amongst themselves.

“That was odd,” said Ray.

“Not really,” I said. “They’re just in touch with their inner teenage girl.”

Categories
Uncategorized

You Really, Really, Really, Really Need to See This Movie

Photo: Poster photo for 'The 40 Year Old Virgin'.

I laughed all through the movie. Steve Carell’s bang-on portrayal of a

nerdy man-child, the strong supporting cast (especially Seth Rogen and

his often-ad-libbed performance as a grown-up version of his Freaks and Geeks

character), the endless tream of good jokes (even the ethnic humor got

done just right) and the best movie ending in a long time all made it

that rarest of things: a movie I’d gladly see again in the theatre

during its first run. It’s both a “boy’s night out” film with a heart

and a date movie

that won’t make you feel as if you’ve been chloroformed.

It really pushes the R-rating on the swearing, but it’s no worse than

the way a good number of otherwise upstanding individuals speak all the

fucking time.

If my endorsement is not sufficient, you could always listen to the

movie critics, who by and

large loved the film.