Thursday, July 2, 2009

Fulfilling My Civic Duty

Today was quite an eventful day for me. I was called upon by the Superior Court of California to report for jury duty. This was very agreeable to me, because it meant a day off from my much-loathed day job, with the possibility of even more time off to follow. Since the aforementioned much-loathed day job pays me my normal daily wage to serve on a jury, this seemed like a pretty sweet deal, and I was positively thrilled at the prospect.

The last time I served on a jury was about 14 years ago (ah, to be 15 again), and I remember it fondly. It was a simple theft case. There was one solitary vote against conviction by an obstinate woman who refused to vote "guilty," not because she thought the defendant did not commit theft, but because she felt that the theft "was no big deal." We all tried to reason with her, but it was like trying to convince a tree stump that it had an obligation to make its decision on the basis of the law and the evidence (and anybody who's ever tried to convince a tree stump of that, you know what I'm talking about). That's when I decided to dig deep and bring all my considerable powers of persuasion (and by persuasion, I mean angry scolding) to bear against her. Moved to tears by my eloquence and trenchant logic, the lone holdout changed her vote to "guilty." Thus, the conviction was secured, justice was served, and the evildoer was duly punished (maybe even executed, I don't know for sure). I was hailed as a hero by the other jurors, and the one pregnant woman on the jury promised to name her baby after me (at least that's the ending I'm going to use when I write a Tony-Award-winning play based on the experience—tentatively titled "One Angry Man").

So, it is understandable that I arrived at the courthouse bright and early with a spring in my step and a song in my heart (that song being Weezer's magnum opus Hash Pipe, for reasons that are unclear to me). With all dispatch, I made my way to the jury waiting room, signed in, and eagerly waited to be called. The jury waiting room had a fascinating assortment of magazines for us to read while waiting. I couldn't decide whether to read Bird Talk, Super Street Bike, Packaging World or the paint and coatings industry trade journal PCI, so I read the somewhat less glamorous book I had brought instead.

At about 8:30 there was a brief orientation wherein it was explained to us that we were the very backbone of the American justice system and that, as a sign of the state's gratitude, we would be earning a generous fee of $15 per day for our service. After the orientation, I was told to report to a courtroom for voir dire, along with a small army of prospective jurors populous enough to invade Cuba. With such a large pool of prospects, my hopes of being impaneled were severely shaken. Each juror was assigned a number and ushered into the courtroom, where we got our first glimpse of the dirtbag (oops—I mean alleged dirtbag) who was on trial. The deputy DA was a distinguished older man with a shaved head, who had all the charm of a CIA interrogator. Standing in diametric contrast was the defense attorney, an attractive young blond in a gray skirt suit, whose name, if I remember correctly, was Legs Magee. I immediately sensed a strong chemistry between us, an intuition which found undeniable confirmation in the way she coyly avoided eye contact with me throughout the proceedings.

My hope of being impaneled diminished even further, as both attorneys began dismissing people who I thought seemed like perfect picks. There was the surfer dude who appeared in a Hobie tee shirt, board shorts and flip-flops, a perfect representation of California cool. He was immediately dismissed. There was the gruff old guy with the gray goatee, whom I had first noticed in the jury waiting room reading the latest copy of Varmint Hunter magazine. Dismissed. And, most perplexing of all was the ample-busted young punker chick, wearing a low-cut zebra-striped tank top and short black denim skirt, sporting a piercing in her nose and no less than four piercings on her bottom lip, who dutifully informed the judge that her girlfriend was a "dancer" by profession—dismissed, inexplicably. If the most awesome people in the room were being shot down then what possible hope could I, in my boring tailored white cotton dress shirt and black silk tie, have of meeting their impossibly high standards?

I never got the chance to find out. By 4:15, they had found the magic combination of acceptable jurors, and the rest of us misfits were sent back to the jury waiting room, where the clerks validated our parking and gave us jury duty slips to take back to our employers. That was when the overwhelming despair washed over me like a flood of hungry army ants feasting on my innards. I had experienced more than my share of rejections in my 29 years of life, but this one stung far worse than any I could remember. I wasn't just being rejected as a juror, I was being sent back to my much-loathed day job. The court had sentenced me to hard labor, and I wasn't even the one on trial. So much for justice being served.

A courthouse statue perfectly depicted the sense of
desolation I felt at being rejected as a juror.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Boulder Dash

I just got back from yet another quick two-day trip to Boulder City, Nevada to visit my family. Boulder City is a sleepy little town, resting along the highway that runs from Las Vegas to Hoover Dam. It's one of those quaint, charming little communities whose main source of revenue is derived from the issuing of speeding tickets to tourists from other states. The city government facilitates this booming economic gravy train by setting city speed limits that are so low that it would be a better idea to just get out of your car and push it through town—you'd get around much faster, and you can't get a speeding ticket if you're not actually driving the car, right? (Actually, I'm not so sure about that. As always, consult your lawyer before beginning any car-pushing regimen).

One thing I noticed is that, during my trip, I was adhering pretty closely to the established speed limits. I have a pathological fear of being pulled over and cited by the police. I'm not sure why this is. Maybe I just don't trust people who carry night sticks and firearms, and who subsist on a diet consisting almost entirely of sugary donuts and massive quantities of caffeine-rich coffee drinks (actually, now that I put it that way, my phobia seems completely rational).

Whatever the reason for it, this cautious attitude has served me well. In all of my 18 years of driving (that's right—I started driving when I was 11 years old) I have received only one speeding citation. It was for speeding in a school zone one fine morning about about 5 years ago, right there in lovely Boulder City. When I was pulled over, I didn't even know that I was in a school zone. I never saw the school zone sign, and the complete absence of any baggy-trousered young people anywhere within my visual purview lulled me into a false sense of security. Also, I was so busy thinking about where I could get some Chinese food at such an early hour that I failed to notice the great big high school building that was to my immediate right. (Incidentally, the legal speed limit for a school zone in Boulder City is approximately the same speed that one's vehicle would travel if it were, say, placed in neutral and pushed by two very determined hamsters).

The officer who issued the citation was riding a motorcycle, and it is a scientifically established fact that a seal has a better chance of escaping the jaws of a hungry killer whale than an errant motorist has of talking his way out of a ticket with a motorcycle cop. In keeping with the common practice of all traffic enforcement officers, this one asked me a number of questions that seemed calculated to confuse me and, possibly, to trick me into confessing that I was actually smuggling huge bags of heroin, or conflict diamonds, or bootlegged DVDs of Ernest Scared Stupid in the trunk of my Geo Prism. Since I was most definitely not doing at least two of these things, his ploy failed to rattle me in the least. I was issued a ticket and a stern talking to and sent my merry way, pushing my car all the way to the city limits.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Kicking and Screaming

I took a trip to the store today to pick up a few essential items, such as bulk fiber laxative, fish oil capsules, a copy of Soap Opera Digest and a yo-yo. I was, of course, shopping at Walmart because I am a horrible hypocrite whose hatred of the globalist corporate power structure is outweighed by my need to save what little money is left to me after that ravenous monster of federal and state taxes has pretty much taken a huge ravenous monster bite out of my paycheck, and then invited its ravenous monster friends, the local and state sales taxes, to come sate themselves on the still warm corpse of my earnings. Whatever is left after this horrific blood feast is then given to me as beneficent offering to do with as I please. Of course, as an American citizen, I am more than happy to suffer through this trauma, taking comfort in the knowledge that my sacrifice will provide free condoms to horny underprivileged teenagers all across this great land of ours. But I digress.

While standing in the checkout line, contemplating all the ways my daily life could be improved with the impulse purchase of a Sham-Wow, I was quite suddenly torn from my reverie by the most nerve-jarring, spine-spanking shriek to leave the lips of a human mouth since Celine Dion's famous Titanic ballad assaulted the public airwaves around the clock for about three years in the late 90's.

I looked around to see whence this incredible noise had emanated. Right ahead of me in the checkout line, was a toddler in a stroller kicking his legs and screaming with a vocal power so phenomenal that it would make Maria Callas sound like Paris Hilton. Of course, his young mother was completely oblivious to his prolonged wailing, as she blissfully counted out her coupons and money to the clearly-frazzled check out woman. At that moment I found myself wishing that I had the power to administer the Vulcan neck pinch. On one level, I knew that I lacked this ability, but on another level, I really wanted to give it a try anyway. Instead, all I could do was sound the alarm when this precious bundle of joy took into his tiny little tear- and snot-soaked hands the screaming-toddler-sized Carl's Jr. beverage that had been unwisely left before him in the stroller's cup holder. Like a pint-sized Kim Jong-il, he held it aloft as high as his stubby little arms could manage and defiantly threatened, before the entire world community, to chuck it onto the tile floor of the checkout line. The young mother finally took notice and sprang into action, snatching the dangerous beverage from his grasp and setting it in a safe location (that being the cup holder on the stroller from which the beverage had been procured in the first place). Fortunately, our ill-tempered Pavarotti decided against a second attempt with the soda and instead resumed his blood-curdling kicking and howling.

As I watched the young mother wheel her half-human, half-banshee progeny out the door, I realized that I had just found a new appreciation for taxpayer-funded programs providing free condoms for underprivileged youth. Go USA!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Futility

Hello again, gentle readers. I just wanted to check in and fill you in on the latest. It would appear that, so far, the Million Monkey Typewriter Consortium has hit the proverbial wall in its attempt to provide usable material for Kungfupower Blog. However, since I am paying tens of dollars annually for this service (and because I'm out of haiku), I have decided to post some of the more legible bits that have emerged just so that you can see the difficulty I am facing with this project. These fragments are quoted directly, in all of their random glory, but please bear in mind that the writers of said fragments are, in fact, just monkeys with tiny little monkey brains...pounding randomly on typewriters. I apologize in advance.

Example 1:
"...he;;placedhis hand.onher\gen7tly heaving;;;;; can.of p0rkandsbeans..."

ooh la la...très romantique, non?

Example 2:
"...your a grea tguy;donteve.r;changge :P..."

Something like this was written numerous times in my high school yearbook, but that was a completely different set of monkeys at work there.

Example 3:
"...0bama-fo;rchangeyukanbe.lievin..."

I've long suspected that campaign slogans were acquired by this method, and here's the smoking gun!

Example 4:
"...E=mc3..."

So close! Keep trying, little monkey!

And last but not least, here is my personal favorite:

"...poopiefartstinkcookieapple..."

I'm going to have a t-shirt made with that one.

Nevertheless, despite these minor setbacks, I still have faith in the monkey thing. It is a good plan and just needs time to work. If there's one thing I've learned from living in California and observing the goings on in Sacramento for the past 8 years, it's that there is no problem too big that it can't eventually be fixed by a large room full of monkeys throwing vast sums of money down a black hole.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Why Don't You Take a Haiku

The three people who actually read Kungfupower Blog (I shall call them The Triumvirate) have been after me for the past year to start posting again. I, on the other hand, have been suffering from a complete lack of inspiration and have repeatedly ignored their entreaties out of a callous sense of personal laziness. Now, after a 14-month absence from the blogosphere, here I am, writing up a storm. So what changed? Have I suddenly been gobsmacked by the blog muses? Has inspiration quietly crept into my bedroom and laid its eggs in my ear while I slept? The answer to both of these questions is: "probably not." What has happened, though, is that Kungfupower Blog is now joining the 21st century and, in the spirit of true globalism, we have decided to begin outsourcing. That's right, KFP has hired a collective of foreign (animal) workers, known as The Million Monkey Typewriter Consortium, to help keep things running smoothly here at the blog. My one-million-monkey typing pool will pound out random keystrokes 24-7-365, and whatever nuggets of coherence emerge from this vast ocean of output will be certain to keep The Triumvirate well and truly diverted for many years to come.

Unfortunately, the monkeys have not, as of yet, produced anything remotely readable, so I have taken it upon myself to fill the void with some haiku which I wrote. Enjoy.

I.
Line one: just five beats.
Line two: five beats plus two more.
Line three: see line one.

II.
Japanese cuisine
Next to tropical fish store...
I will not eat there.

III.
Small child stares at me,
The fat man in the red shirt.
She thinks I'm Santa.

IV.
Blonde hair like sunbeams
The vast blue sky in her eyes
Summer in her smile

V.
Those dogs keep barking
and barking and barking and...
Oh, please do shut up.

VI.
The warm night breeze moans.
Wind chimes tinkle dreamily.
Brilliant loneliness.

VII.
Tonight's moon looks close.
Maybe she is coming here.
I should hide my beer.

VIII.
She still has those eyes -
Her sad smile made my heart ache
Once upon a time....

IX.
Blank piece of paper.
I wait for inspiration.
Harsh mistress, haiku.