Project Run Away... or How Not To Dye Pants

Yes, I'm aware I split an infinitive in this post's title. Good catch. Now hush [very much] up.

As I have mentioned before herein, my propensity for purchasing pants online has burned on me on several occasions, once literally (unaware as I was that slacks manufactured in Turkey are unsafe in temperatures exceeding 65°F... though, to be fair, nothing is safe in Turkey). Most commonly, I miscalculate the conversion between U.S. and European sizes, or forget that some manufacturers have a rather liberal interpretation of "low-rise boot cut". These are total losses, and will be placed in a box labeled "ATTN: Impoverished Locals", hastily dumped on the street under cover of night, and written off on my taxes as "donated automobiles."

From time to time a pair of $6 pants will arrive in my mailbox that suits my needs but, perhaps due to the seller photographing them in flattering light, are not quite the color I had anticipated. Such was the case with a recent pair of jeans that were in dire need of a darkening. Given my innate knowledge of textiles and my ability to deftly disguise any life-prolonging mending magic I cast upon my favorite jeans, one would think that a simple dye job would be well within my capacity.

One would be wrong.

CHAPTER I: Instructions Are For The Timid

Have you ever made Tang? Yes? In my book, you're qualified to dye something. There's a box with powder in it; so long as your plan doesn't involve wearing the garment you wish to dye and just swallowing the powder, you should be fine.

Pay no attention to that nagging "DO NOT" list on the side of the box, as it can only weaken your resolve, rattle your confidence, and likely convince you to buy something you don't really need -- probably in the name of "safety", from the Latin for "without the aid of balls."

After all, this is a simple procedure.

CHAPTER II: This Is An Increasingly Difficult Procedure

In my case, only one item really needed dyeing (the jeans: black), but since I wasn't about to purchase a costly bucket, I was using the kitchen trash can for the dye bath, leaving me with plenty of room to throw several other items in need of an updated look. The only thing keeping me from some fresh fly threads was a lack of the most abundant compound on earth, water.

To the bathroom.

Using what could loosely be referred to as logic, I decided to pre-soak the clothes, assuming [correctly] that wet fabric would absorb the dye more evenly than dry. Using what could loosely be referred to as profound retardation, I decided to turn on the shower full blast and just hold the clothes in front of the stream until they were properly saturated.

As I held up the jeans, the shower soon flowed down my forearms and cascaded majestically from my elbows onto the bathroom floor, briefly awarding me the title of America's Hairiest Water Sculpture. Not wanting to alarm Briana, who was preparing to leave for work in the adjoining living room, I muted my panicked cries and calmly removed my newly water-logged wardrobe.

The trash can was placed in the tub, and the jeans et al. placed (and the stream of scalding water directed) therein. If a soak was good, I figured, a bubbling hot tub of black dye would surely cut the required time in half, and I could reward my forward thinking with a soda.

With the clothes percolating underneath, I tore open the dye packet and began to pour its contents into the trash can.

CHAPTER III: Oh Fuck Oh Fuck Oh Fuck

Whatever happened, happened quickly.

Were there a Zapruder film of the incident, the bulk of the action would span three frames. In frame one, I would be crouched over the tub, holding a small brown packet of an unknown substance upside-down over a large blue trash bin. In the second frame, the entire back half of the tub and much of my face would be a deep, midnight black, my eyes already registering a vague sense of frenzy. By the third frame, I would be violently pitching myself backwards trying in vain to escape a toxic cloud of jet black dye that is by now coating everything in the southern third of my apartment, including several vital organs.

Now in survival mode, I dumped the remaining dye in the tub, began spitting what appeared to be Pepsi with wild abandon across the walls, and, apparently channeling my fire emergency training, dropped to the floor (see: pond). While I assumed that the airborne dye would take more than a few minutes (hours?) to fully settle, time was of the essence... Operation Hide This From Briana was about to commence.


CHAPTER IV: Pay No Attention To That Giant Ebony Nebula Behind Me (And Here's A Fun Idea: Why Not Wait To Pee Until You Get To Work?)

With Briana mere minutes away from walking past the bathroom en route to her day job, I took a quick survey of the devastation. Not too bad, actually. A cursory glance at the bathroom, however, would belie the truly sinister nature of the damage. Microscopic particles of inky dye clung to every exposed surface of the bathroom, invisible until a large bald male made the slightest of contact with them, at which point they would explode into a black streak of semi-permanent coloration. Every item in the bathroom was the opposite of a scratch-off lotto ticket.

My previously discarded shirt was quickly enlisted as the primary hand mop and just as quickly became the only successfully-dyed article of clothing of the afternoon. Kleenexes were employed sparingly. The shower head was aimed at previously-unheard of angles. That the bath mat had been purchased in charcoal gray was a godsend, as puddles of black disappeared into its shag. I worked furiously, black beads of sweat steadily forming only to drip upon the linoleum and set back my progress. I flailed wildly. I looked not unlike Ving Rhames fighting a ghost.

Against all odds and the laws of physics, the bathroom was made presentable in a matter of minutes, although I spent an hour and a half un-detailing various nooks and crannies -- both the bathroom's and my own -- following Briana's departure ("How's it going in here?", "Love you too.")

In an unrelated story, my new Diesel Boot-Cuts arrive tomorrow.

Low Resolution

I'm wrestling with rededicating myself to this blog as a resolution, so expect this blog to start smoking by January 6th. Still, it seems less difficult than the other two resolutions I've committed to:

1. Salsa Lessons.
I can't believe that I'm serious. Meet the instructor. Holy shit.

2. Dunking.
For this one it will prove helpful if anyone out there [um, that's you, Audio and Ing] is willing to bet that I can't do it.

Thoughts? Disparaging remarks? Until then, here's a photo from an WNBA game that so perfectly captures the ineptness of the sport that I daren't say more.

[whimper]

I'm fully aware that I've not updated BumperSmash since, apparently, returning from Florida.

While there are several reasons for this, all of them would be lies. I was originally waiting for my magical Super 8mm film (featuring both Dougie/Ingie & Dandy/Sommer weddings) to get processed so I could incorporate the stunning images therein into my otherwise video-challenged blog, though now that I have the film back I'm going to need about sixteen months to color correct and otherwise edit the footage into something remotely coherent. Since the camera wasn't functioning properly, the movie features roughly 27,000 shots, each three tenths of a second in duration, so any prolonged viewing sends an audience into a wedding-themed epileptic seizure.

That said, I'll get back to you (hopefully with said footage) soon[ish].

For now, I need advice on how to not take Top Chef to bed with me. I dreamed the other night that I was in a Quickfire Challenge that was to tell a sordid story through the culinary arts "the more out there the better." So, I pan-fried a Cajun pickle and rested it upon a bowl of spicy baby Blue Crabs and told Tom Colicchio that it was an STD ("There's a tickle in my pickle because I have crabs.")

And Padma wasn't even nude, so I have to tweak these dreams somehow. Please advise.

Love Boat: An SPF 100-Soaked Dispatch From America's Nether Region


Upon hearing news that Brother Andrew was to wed the lovely Sommer on a boat in Tampa (in July no less), I promptly moved Multiplicity to the top of my Netflix queue in hopes of researching and, ultimately, genetically engineering a clone that might attend the ceremony in my stead. However, a complete lack of scientific acumen and an $11 budget meant that, two weeks later, all I had to show for my efforts was a sore wrist and a foil-lined shoebox full of my DNA rotating slowly in the microwave.

That is not to say that I wasn't looking forward to seeing my little brother tie the knot with his better half; on the contrary, I was merely hoping that such a blessed event would in no way be tarnished by my abhorrence of all things Sunshine State.

And as I have no doubt imparted to you, Dear Reader, countless times in countless watering holes across this fine country, I speak from experience. In only four short [long] months of living in Miami, I came to know the region's noble peoples, its diverse wildlife, and of course its world-renowned culture. And, often in South Beach, all three.

Admittedly, in the summer the weather can get borderline uncomfortable.

So it was with some trepidation (and plenty of climate-specific clothing options) that I made my way across lo these many miles to Tampa International Airport last weekend. To the eternal credit of both my brother and my parents, the accommodations were not only tolerable, they were beyond reproach. The Fair Briana and I were afforded all the creature comforts associated with a typical beach vacation, in stark contrast to the creature comforts just outside most Florida hotel room windows.

Admittedly, said vacation bliss was largely due to the fact that I could catch up with the fam all whilst celebrating the burgeoning love of the happy couple. The ceremony and reception were held aboard some sort of party barge, and both were romantic and divine, and that was not only due to my proclivity for dinghy jokes. Maritime matrimony is truly the way to go, especially when there's an open bar and air conditioning and wonderful kinfolk, many of whom were positively delightful (and understanding of my refusal to dance in public... tall men shouldn't dance, ever, write that down).

Raise your hand if you know why Florida sucks.

So congratulations, kids... I love you both. But irrational hatred is much more fun to write about than love, so:

Ten Observations From The Weekend:

1. For all the shit I lay upon thee, Sunshine State, at least you aren't goddammed Texas. Whenever somebody utters the phrase "It could be worse..." they are inevitably referring to something terrifying that happened to them in Texas. My stopover en route to the wedding was in Dallas, and when I stepped out of the plane I was 85% sure that the grounds crew had screwed up and just angled the jetway back into the port-side engine's intake. Gale force winds with a payload of airborne magma greeted the passengers until we collapsed inside the concourse in search of a balm to sooth our newly-acquired 1st-degree burns. With three hours to kill, I passed some time asking a friendly local waitress about the creative ways she's thought of killing herself every time she wakes up and remembers she works at an airport in Dallas. If some guy had crept up behind me at the bar and shot me in the head, I am confident that I would have rented a car and driven across the nearest border before allowing myself to die.

2. Dear Austin, Texas: Sorry about all that. You get a pass. And of course whenever one Ms. Frazier sets foot in the state... but I think that goes without saying.

3. From Dallas to Tampa I thought I had miracled an empty seat next to me despite the plane being "super full" when I had asked for an exit row seat at the desk. Shortly before take-off, I saw a rather vivacious older woman coming down the aisle dressed in her most comfortable travel outfit, and who was to spend the entire 2-hour flight cleaning and otherwise-pampering her nails.

4. Mama Bear and I spent the first evening sipping adult beverages outside the Fox, which was all class, evidenced by their waitresses wearing tuxedo jackets and absolutely no pants. This made my getting rejected from entering the club for dress-code reasons harder to take ("Only collared shirts, and no sneakers allowed, sir." "I see. What about pants?"). As we imbibed and watched the local patrons coming and going, we soon realized that the dress-code was not exactly intended to attract only the most refined clientele.

5. Papa Bear and The Suze must have lost a bet with God, because they drove to Tampa. I've driven on Florida roads, and please believe that doing so puts both your life and those lives of millions of local insects at risk.

6. In what is widely regarded as my least well-thought-out idea (2nd place: buying all my jeans online), I decided a while back to dedicate myself to American Airlines in an attempt to some day actually use frequent flier mileage. I even have a credit card that earns miles with every purchase, but I must be doing something wrong because at the time of this writing I have enough saved up for a free flight provided it both takes off from and lands at the same gate. But I am dedicated, even though flying American means not walking past the age of 40 as my knee cartilage is systematically raped by whoever sits in front of me. Every flight is a battle of wills as some [without fail, huge] person gently reclines into my splintering shins and I unwillingly teabag the SkyMall. Over the course of the trip, I will attempt to bruise the kidneys of the affronting party through a series of subtle adjustments into/around his/her gastrointestinal tract, though this tends to provoke a series of retaliatory bounces that only fans the flame of my wrath (in the form of quiet whimpering). There are of course some techniques I've developed over the years in an attempt to save what's left of my patellas, though most of them would require expensive surgery or a wacky incident involving a cursed voodoo artifact that leaves me trapped inside the body of a much smaller person.

7. Congratulations, you are the only person who actually read this far.

8. An Open Letter to the Guy One Row Up and Across the Aisle From Me on the Flight From Tampa to Dallas: No fucking way are you reading that Hustler on this airplane. And oh look; it's still in the plastic, so, I guess that means that you're the guy buying porn in the airport. Please, do explain the thought process to me. Go ahead and click the COMMENT button down there and fill me in. Perhaps something unforeseen happened to you in the cab on the way over here and you thought, "Shoot... I can't believe I left all my porn at home, right when I need it the most." In a way I'm envious, I suppose; such complete disregard for how those around you (including the elderly woman sitting right fucking next to you, quivering) must be liberating. But what concerns me most is that, if you are batshit insane enough to read that Hustler on the plane, you might be batshit insane enough to "use" that Hustler on the plane.

9. Yet one has to admit: Hustler is a great name for a porn mag.

10. The second time around at the Dallas Airport was better (i.e. shorter) but I did witness a couple walking to their flight that warranted a double take. The guy, a younger Asian gentleman, was wearing the traditional garb one associates with the Far East. But his girlfriend, bedecked in traditional American garb save for a rice hat that I assume was the Family Size model, was just some white girl. Now, perhaps I'm jumping to conclusions, but I'm guessing she doesn't opt for that hat when she's going out for A&W cheeseburgers with her friends between sexting sessions. If I'm the dude in that situation, I have to believe I'm a little offended that she's using me as an excuse to don a bamboo flying saucer on her head. Of course, if the Fair Briana came home tonight and announced that she discovered Native American ancestry in her family tree, I'd probably use it.

BONUS. The last leg of my journey was spent sitting next to a very nice ex-Halliburton executive who actually had the guts to order a white russian on a plane and used the phrase "sphincter-clencher" twice.

That Insane Photoshop Job Is Very Slimming On You

I grew weary of BumperSmashing there for a while.

Truth be told, I'm still lacking inspiration (at least until the weddings of Brother Andrew/Sommer and Ingie/Dougie, respectively). And while I'll use as an excuse that I've been busy, it's less of the "I'm writing the great American novel" variety of busy than the "I'm going to spend the next four hours popping this bubble wrap and catching up on Whale Wars" variety.

To bide the time til the wedding postmortems, here's a slice of life courtesy my place of employ's hallway decor:


The 2nd floor hall features a trophy case that proudly houses our "Best Local Election Coverage, 1978" Emmy, and a series of posters celebrating just some of ABC's most celebrated series (Lost, and Lost).

Now I know these are idealized publicity photos, but holy shit:

"That sound you hear is my face."

Remember at the end of Cocoon when the aliens turned back into their original form? Or perhaps this?

Potent Potables: Stag Party Ruminations

Bachelor parties are generally considered to be something akin to the film Fight Club, not so much in that the first rule of Fight Club is to not talk about Fight Club, but rather that at some point you will contemplate shooting yourself in the brain to make the evil go away as you watch the collapse of civilization while early Pixies plays in the background.

At the request of a certain scraggly-sideburned Stag of Honor, however, I will neither post [m]any pictures nor relate any of the more tawdry goings on from last weekend's Coors-soaked mountain high jinx, though I maintain that nobody of import is likely to Google "professor + kamikazes + boob-shot + terrifying." Now that I write that, however, that may well be a Funkadelic album, and certainly describes my dream episode of The Wonder Years.

That said, I'll here highlight the few PG-13 moments from our magical 48 hours of self-discovery and/or hangover recovery.

1. In an alarming development, I've [quite literally] stumbled upon a new, previously-undiscovered level of drunkenness; specifically, the "Bruce Springsteen is a douche" level. While I can not recall even once thinking about disliking The Boss, much less denouncing his entire life's purpose, I apparently spent much of late Friday night chastising everything from his songwriting acumen to his role in popularizing the bandanna. No doubt I was another highball away from shitting upon an American flag and insisting John Wayne preferred men.

2. Speaking of shitting (there's a segue I had hoped to avoid), Denver International Airport should consider handing out a free roll of toilet paper to arriving passengers. Only the most peripatetic of poopers know how altitude can adversely affect one's regularity, as I was woe to discover during six glorious trips to our well-appointed commode Saturday, tying Streiter's single-day record.

3. We sent Gerrit away from Casa du Sheflin with instructions to pick up enough 5 Hour Energy Drink to send Amy Winehouse into cardiac arrest. Upon his expeditious return, we were soon to discover that not all amphetamines are made alike. Given my staunch support of the energy drink genre, I was both unprepared for and embarrassed by Amp, which is all he could legally find.

Do not under any circumstances drink, smell, look directly at, nor mention in my presence Amp. While the label touts its JACKFRUIT CITRUS flavor, I found it more closely resembled HEMORRHOID CILANTRO. To recreate the experience, get a pineapple, cut it into 1 inch squares and marinate for 6-8 hours in balsamic vinegar. Now, turn around and bite the penis off the llama that somehow snuck up behind you.

The effects? Negligible, though my projectile vomi-spitting was admittedly youthful and extreme in its neon green coloration.

4. I am presently authoring an amendment to the Constitution that will require background checks prior to iPhone ownership. Alternatively, if Eric Streiter is permitted to continue his usage of his "Sounds Of Space Chipmunks Fingerblasting" application, I should be permitted to shoot him in the throat.

5. Pride precludes mentioning my performance at the batting cages. John John can rake, however. In an unrelated story, I'm learning to use my left thumb when hitting the space bar.

6. Nothing else happened, though we at long last resolved the question of who makes the best sundaes in the industry.

John's tire was the only flat surprise of the weekend.

Fortunately, I can take this entire weekend to recover, as the only event I'll be attending is tomorrow morning's Bay to Breakers, which is the San Francisco version of a marathon, which is to say that it's less than a third of the distance, has a lax dress code, and requires everyone to be naked and drunk. I smell another blog post and urine.

Or that could be Jackfruit.

When Asked About His Team's Execution...

Stop me before I draft again.

Despite my proclamations to the contrary, baseball is most assuredly not a thing of beauty. To be sure, the game can be charming in its simplicity, its dedication to its fans, its sounds, and its cherished place in the American experience.

Truly, baseball is but a structured mélange of talent and the grotesque.*

Perhaps an "action shot" would better serve Mr. Mossi.

So it was with great folly that I spent the eve of Major League Baseball's Opening Day in the the friendly confines of Washington Square Park, preparing in earnest for the most money-intensive of my fantasy baseball league drafts, the La Rocca's Home Run Pool.

When it is 77 degrees in the city, the grass is green, and the more emotionally-needy ladies of North Beach are wearing their bathing suit bottoms in their traditional fashion (internally), it is easy for a wide-eyed innocent such as myself to succumb to the cruelest of life's pitfalls: hope.

It's the same old story. "When all is clearly right with the world," one thinks, "surely I could not possibly fuck up the next 5 months of my life by drafting Adam LaRoche."

Not to put too fine a point on it, the brand of hope in question is not the pedestrian "I wish for a safe and prosperous future for my loved ones." Nay, the brand of hope in question is more the "For the love of all that is Holy, let us hope that Alexei Ramirez figures out what to do with that big piece of wood they keep sending up with him to home plate."

These are the glorious possibilities, these dreams of my drafting a rag-tag bunch of youngsters that will exceed their modest preseason expectations and slug their way to a triumphant championship for my proud "No Glove No Love" franchise.

And so it was that, surrounded by the dazzling sights, sounds, and less-than-dazzling smells of Washington Square, I finalized my draft game plan, opting to draft batsmen with high upsides rather than those so-called-established players I dismissed as last season's news. Carlos Lee? Not interested... it'll be Jay Bruce and his .176 BA for me please. I spit upon Lance Berkman's guaranteed 30+ dingers. I'll take the prolific Chris Davis, who is now hitting at a scorching .179 clip, which I believe gets you summarily executed in Latin American countries.

No Glove No Love skipper Nate Gallant expects
big things
from Ian Stewart this season.

Finally, I awoke yesterday morning [technically, as it was before noon] to the news that my veteran catcher, Brian McCann, can no longer see out of one of his eyes, which I can only assume will prove a problem when facing, you know, moving baseballs.


*Yet another surefire BumperSmash (!) contribution
to Bartlett's Book of Familiar Quotations

You Will Get Nothing And Like It

BumperSmash will be on the back burner indefinitely as my [considerable] free time is dedicated to my five, count them five fantasy baseball teams, whose exploits will be no doubt make their way to the annals of BumperSmash once the season is in full swing.

Pee Papparazzo

After skateboarding to work on this beautiful Friday afternoon, I decided a trip to the men's room was in order. The KGO restrooms are the standard fare; the men's is a urine-soaked purgatory covered in plaque-colored tiling, while the lady's is a richly carpeted Xanadu, scented with a potpourri of extinct flowers and attended by towel-and-mint-wielding attendants.

I opted for the bathroom on the main floor, as it is located near the worker's lounge where I could warm up a bowl of my latest crock pot stew ("I Can't Believe It's Not Poison") whilst I was hosing the porcelain. So as I was tending to my business, somebody took up residence at the adjoining urinal.
As per the time-honored Code of Men, I did the standard half glance over and half nod, which is a gesture meant to convey "Hey there... I hope you have an enjoyable time pissing next to me for the next 15 seconds but don't get any ideas" through one manly bit of body language.

This is what I saw.

I have to stop using this restroom. There are far too many strange guests of our afternoon show running happily about. Two weeks ago I peed next to Jimmy Carter.

Perhaps I could author a coffee table book consisting solely of close-ups of the sides of celebrities' faces, all of whom are taking a leak and trying to ignore me. "Pissing Greatness: My Career In Television"

Did The Airbag Go Off Or Are You Just Glad To See Me?

Whilst watching the first of 8 consecutive hours of the NCAA tournament, I took an opportunity during a commercial break to grab a healthful snack in the form of a 3-day old fish burrito.

Upon reentering the living/loving room, mine eyes fell upon the television at the following, rather unfortunate, moment... I'm going to suggest that the new Chevy Traverse advertisement could stand to lose this portion of the sales pitch:


"Hey! Aren't you Howie Long?"

I could not eat the burrito.