December 20, 2007

RORT Global Warming Christmas

RORT Global Warming Christmas

(A word of explanation - RORT is Rec.Outdoors.RV-Travel - a usenet group that deals with RV's and, lately, politics)

Twas the night before Christmas and all throughout RORT
Nothing was stirring, no-one had a thought.
The spammers were snoring, tucked up in their beds,
And loquacious ol' Linus was taking his meds...

Tories and Liberals had ceased their debating,
And for once, even Lon wasn't hating.
And Ferguson, Carl, and crusty Al Balmer,
Had mellowed out and were considerably calmer.

Ol' Gar had retired for the night, under his bridge
And Ginger had thawed out the food in her fridge.
Bob Giddings was off researching his genes
And Will Sill was dreaming 'bout washing machines.

Hugh, Jan, and Dusty were getting along
And Lampson was greeting the season in song.
Max was a sawing, and Hunter was too
And Janet dropped in for a natter or two...

When out on the Web there arose such a clatter,
That the Hamster logged in to see what was the matter.
A new YouTube clip had appeared, so it seemed,
The contents of which you could never have dreamed.

The scene opened up (after loading the file)
And I watched as the action unfolded in style.
When to my wonder, of all things ersatz
I saw a huge sleigh, drawn by six overfed cats

With a silver haired driver, his hand on the tiller,
I knew in a moment it had to be Miller.
Faster than light, his felines they came,
And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name.

"Now Dozer! now, Jade! now, Pearl and big Bubba!
On, Rumble! On, Tank! Let's burn some more rubber!
To the top of the porch! to the top of the wall!
Now dash away! Dash away! Dash away all!"

As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,
When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky.
So up to a mansion with lights bright as suns,
They rose into the air like a goose with the runs.

And there on the back a-plopping himself
Was a scowling bill horne, attired as an elf
I grinned as I thought to myself, "What the heck
Some folk will do anything just for a check..."

He was dressed in green silk, and looked quite disjointed,
His hat was aluminum tin-foil and pointed.
A forty-four magnum stuck out of his clothes
And he looked awful cute in his form fitting hose.

As I looked closer, I saw two more elves
(Who were doing their best not to laugh at themselves)
One had a cane and walked a bit stiff
And I wondered if that one could have been Cliff?

The other was bigger, not exactly a waif,
And perhaps his green tights were beginning to chafe
For he couldn't stay still on the back of that sled
And he squirmed in his outfit of greenish and red

He carried beside him a contraption of sorts,
It was buzzing and whirring, made of tin, wire, and quartz.
He pushed a small knob, and it lit up like a flame
And I knew in a flash, Neon John was his name.

They spoke not a word, but went straight to their work,
As they blew up the lights being used by this jerk.
Al Gore's house was in darkness and Kevin arose,
Saying, "We can't afford carbon credits like those..."

He sprang to his sleigh, to his cats gave a whistle,
And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.
But I heard him exclaim, 'ere they faded from sight,
"Hasta la vista, Al baby... we turned out the light."

November 29, 2007

Pumpernickel Pete

Pumpernickel Pete - David E. Malone - November 29, 2007.

Mully surveyed his surroundings.

He wasn't expecting much and the place pretty much met his expectations. The sign on the way in had said, "Mulberry Center for the Emotionally Disturbed" but 'nut-house' seemed more appropriate. The place reeked of disinfectant and something else which made his gut heave for a moment before he got used to it. Whitewashed walls and parquet flooring as far as the eye could see... not exactly Martha Stewart decor, more like a San Quentin cafeteria, but that was to be expected.

Damn that judge. All he'd done was smack a deserving thug with a cue-ball in the toe-end of a sock at the local pool hall and this was the result. For a moment he considered leaving... community service was one thing, but doing his community service in a loony bin was surely cruel and unusual punishment.

The doors locked automatically behind him when they swung to, and at the back of the main hall you could see what looked like prison bars. That must be where they keep the violent ones, he thought, shuddering. Thank God he would only have to interact with the merely slightly crazy inmates. His job was to try and keep some of them entertained for a while and free up the nurses and other hospital staff to do other things.

"What the heck..." he thought, and approached a relatively normal looking little old lady sitting in a chair all alone at a card table.

"Hi, I'm...."

He never got to finish his sentence. The woman looked up in absolute horror and started to scream, over and over again. She was shaking her hands in front of her and her eyeballs were rolled up into her sockets. Unsure of what to do, he backed off slowly with his hands up and a nurse came running over to take charge of the situation.

"Don't worry..." she said cheerfully. "Mrs Campden doesn't take to strangers very easily... why don't you ask old Pete over there if he wants to play some cards...?"

Shell-shocked, he did as he was told and nervously approached an old man in a hospital gown who seemed to be lost in thought and staring into space.

"Are you Pete?" he said.

"What's it to you...?"

"I thought you might want to play some cards...."

"For money?"

"For fun..."

The old man looked disgusted and went back to his reverie. Mully was at a loss, but eventually tapped him on the shoulder.

"Don't ever touch me again." said the old man, fiercely, waving a bony fist at him. His hands were thin with skin like transparent parchment, albeit heavily veined, and the finger-nails were uneven and short as if they'd been chewed. With the robe drawn tight, you could see he was as skinny as a rail and his ribs stood out under the cloth. Apparently he hadn't shaved for several days judging by the stubble on his chin.

"Um, so, do you...?"

"Do I what?"

"Want to play some cards..."

"Well, why didn't you say so... I was just thinking about doing that. It's probably a good thing you happened along."

They settled on gin rummy and Mully soon found that the frail old guy with the piercing blue eyes was neither senile nor stupid. In fact, he very quickly found himself down by a good number of points and thought maybe he'd better make an attempt at some conversation.

"So, how are you these days...?" he said.

"What you really mean..." said Pete, grinning broadly. "... is, what's a perfectly normal looking guy like me doing in a place like this?"

"I thought it might be insensitive of me to ask, but... okay... why?"

"It's not a long story." said Pete.

"My name is Pete Rowlings... I may have been the best pool player in the world at one time bar none - they used to call me Pumpernickel Pete. You heard of me...?"

"The name sounds vaguely familiar," said Pete, nodding. "I think my father may have mentioned you once..."

"If you play pool long enough in Canada, you've heard of me." said Pete firmly. "They call me Pumpernickel Pete because I only play for the bread and I always come home with the dough... I never lost a money game in twenty years. I can still beat anyone out there if they'd let me."

"So what the hell are you doing in here?"

"I got tired of playing smart-ass junior shortstops. Nobody has any respect anymore for one of the greatest players who ever lived... and one day I snapped. It was at a tournament in Oshawa and I was playing this kid.... don't even remember his name... doesn't matter... nobody else remembers his name either. He was sharking me and making jokes while I was shooting, and eventually I just walked up to him and cold-cocked him with the butt of my cue. When they tried to restrain me, I went nuts and just beat the crap out of anybody that came within reach. The guys in the white coats took me away in a straight-jacket and I've been here ever since. I'm as sane as you or anybody else but they won't let me go home.... the bastards."

He paused a few moments remembering.

"Fricking damned miserable bastards." he said again, bitterly.

The conversation soon turned to other things, but Mully made a mental note of the name.

Later that evening after his Mulberry 'shift' he logged onto Google and did a search on Pete Rowlings "Pumpernickel Pete". To his surprise there was a whole lifetime's worth of information about him there. Canadian straight pool champion six times in a row, winner of dozens of other big tournaments; he had apparently beaten both Willy Mosconi at pool and Cliff Thorburn at snooker straight up in an exhibition in Toronto in 1965. The more he read about the man, the more he was impressed. Like old Pete had said, there was no record of him losing... at all. Every tournament he was shown as having played in, he won. The evidence was right there on the Web...

On his next visit to the Mulberry, he looked immediately for old Pete and sat down beside him.

"How are you, Pete...?" he said, cheerfully.

"Who the hell are you?" said Pete.

"It's me... Mully. You remember we met last week and played cards..."

"Oh, yeah, now I remember. The born loser who sucks at cards... well, I'm just about as lousy as usual, son. But thanks for asking."

"Look, I did a search on the Internet and everything you told me about you being a great pool player is true..."

"Of course it is, you dumb putz... " said Pete. "Did you come here just to call me a liar?"

"No, no, no." said Mully quickly. "Not at all. I've been thinking and I have an idea... if you don't wanna do it, I'll forget about it, but... how do you feel about playing some straight pool again... for money? Can you still play, do you think?"

"Can I still play...? Get me outta this piss-palace and we'll see." said Pete with some enthusiasm. "Playing billiards is like riding a bicycle... you don't forget. I promise you I'll beat you like a tin drum and likely show you a few things you've never even seen before."

"Nope. Not me... there's this guy, Charlie Adams, down at the Coronation who's a real good shortstop and a high roller. Bit of a hustler too. Took fifteen-hundred off me a few weeks ago and I'm no slouch. I was thinking we could set him up for a few, mebbe five, dimes and then roll him. I get my fifteen-hundred back for smuggling you out of here and sweating the match - and you get the rest..."

"Lessee... let me get this straight. You want me to do all the work - and you'll only take a dime and a half? Maybe I can fetch your coffee and lick your boots as well?"

"I'm taking a big chance," said Mully, earnestly. "If they find out I smuggled you out of here, it'll be a breach of my probation and I'll get thrown in jail."

Pete thought about it for a while.

"Well, okay... cash isn't much use to me in here anyway." said Pete. "Okay, I'll do it. But you'll have to buy me a cheese-burger and a beer or two and get me back here as well. Just tell me when and where - I'll put my street clothes on and wait by the side entrance over there. When you get there... bang on it three times and open the door. I'll be ready."

After some heated negotiations back at the Coronation, Mully finally got Charlie to agree to a match. It was hard going because obviously Charlie was nervous about taking a match with someone he'd never seen play and whose name he didn't recognize. He was smart enough to know it might well be some kind of set up, but Charlie wasn't yet born when the name Pete Rowlands meant something in the world of professional pool and people had mostly forgotten about his exploits. It was only when Mully told him the guy was eighty years old and hadn't played for a few years that he reluctantly agreed.

"There ain't anybody out there over seventy that can still play except Willie Mosconi, and Willie's dead. I want proof he's eighty though before we hit any balls." he said. "And don't think I believe that crap about him not playing for a while. I've heard that one before - you must think I was born yesterday."

"Not a problem... in fact, the senile old bastard looks like he's ninety..." said Mully shrugging his shoulders. "It's an easy five dimes for you... I'd take him on myself if I could find enough backers to come up with the dough."

Saturday night finally arrived and Mully arrived at the side door. Sure enough, old Pete was waiting for him in an old brown suit that smelled of mothballs and a faded although clean white shirt. He must have weighed considerably more when he was originally incarcerated because the suit hung on him like clothes on a scarecrow and there was ample room in the shirt collar to stuff in another scrawny neck of the same diameter. He was carrying an ancient canvas cue case trimmed with brown plastic. Mully helped him into the car...

"Nervous...?" he said.

"Me...? Nervous?" said Pete, incredulously. "Do I look nervous?"

And actually he didn't. His blue eyes had a twinkle in them and he looked, if anything, agog with anticipation. Mully was rather more subdued because, after all, it was his money that was at risk.

When they arrived at the Coronation, Charlie and his cohorts hadn't yet arrived, so they shared a plate of poutine and a couple of beers. The old man ate with relish and took his time, savoring the cold beer. By the time Charlie eventually arrived, Pete looked relaxed and confident.

Mully had made some initial arrangements with the floor manager, Ruby, and they had cordoned off a Gold Crown next to the bar for the match. It was newly felted with forest-green Gorina Granito Basalt so it would likely be fast... and the pockets were tight, as Ruby had put it... tighter than a mosquito's ass stretched over a rain barrel.

"Best table in the pool room," opined, Ruby.

"Do you want to warm up, Pete...?" said Mully. "You really should hit a few balls first."

"Nope. Soon as I start playing, people will remember who I am and the cat'll be out of the bag." said Pete. "Let's keep it a secret a little while longer..."

He opened the cue case and took out an old two piece Dufferin. It certainly wasn't a Balbushka or Palmer, or even a custom-made cue, but it looked in good nick... a bit thin by today's standards, maybe 11mm at the business end, and the tip itself was nicely shaped to a dime. He stared at the two pieces for a short while as if they were old friends and then screwed them together firmly. Then he cast a critical eye down its length and nodded - satisfied.

Mully made the introductions and an awed Charlie didn't even ask to see Pete's proof of age. There wasn't any doubt he was 'nearer my lord to thee' than anyone else in the room and Charlie saw no need to insult him by asking his age. The stakes were collected by Ruby and stashed under the bar for safekeeping. Charlie threw a couple of balls on the table and said simply...

"Let's lag. Straight pool. Race to one hundred..."

Pete leaned over the table and played his 'lag' ball. The cue made a strange sound, skidded strangely off the cue-ball and his effort slid maybe a foot down the table - a complete and utter miscue. Charlie's parallel effort rolled smoothly down the table and then back up to within an inch of the bottom rail.

"No fricken chalk..." Pete said, absently. And then to Mully... "Don't worry, I'm just rusty... after all, I haven't played for fifteen years. But it's like riding a bicycle - you never forget."

Well, the wheels came off his bicycle pretty quickly after that. Not only was he a bad shot, there was even a nagging thought in Mully's mind that he'd maybe never even hit a billiard ball before. Every time he got to the table, Pete swung and missed badly... a detached observer could almost hear the sound of hundred dollar bills wafting their way into Charlie's wallet.

It seemed to take an agonizingly long time, but eventually a cruising Charlie reached his century and closed out the match. He smirked...

"What was he thinking...?" he said to Mully. "I'd bet the old man has never even played straight pool before... more money than sense, I guess."

"The two of us... Pete and me... we're gonna have a little talk about that." said Mully grimly, as he grabbed the old man by the shirt and dragged him to one side.

"That little exhibition just cost me five thousand bucks." he said heatedly. "You're not goddam Pumpernickel Pete Rowlands, are you? What in hell's name made you pretend you are... are you out of your freaking mind?"

"Yes..." said Pete. "Yes. Actually I am... "

He smiled apologetically.

"Why else do you think they'd put me in the fricken loony bin?"

November 23, 2007

Lord Chumley's Exhibition


Lord Chumly's Exhibition - David E. Malone - Nov 21, 2007

In this life, there are billiard players and there are billiard player pretenders. Simon Montvale was an accomplished billiard player... and acknowledged as such by his peers in the English Billiards association. Tall and rangy, with a keen eyesight and an analytical mind, he was quite possibly the best of breed when it came to the royal sport of carom billiards. And, indeed, as a five time Merrivale Sporting Club champion he thought of himself as such with some justification.

So his interest was piqued when he ran into Stanley Attenborough at the club. Stanley was a foppish and elegant creature who affected a kind of upper-class dilettante persona but yet possessed a sly wit and a shrewd mind that belied his manner. Clapping one manicured hand upon Simon's shoulder, he took him aside before he entered the billiard room with the news of a sensational new game in town. The game was apparently called Boston Billiards and the object of the game was not carom but directing the balls into leather drop pockets at the sides and corners of a ten foot table.

"Pockets?" said, Simon blankly.

"Pockets..." said Stanley firmly.

"It sounds like one of those colonial abominations..." said Simon doubtfully. "Those American chappies are always trying to make a perversion of the game to make it easier to play."

"Why don't you attend the exhibition this afternoon." said Stanley smiling slightly. "It may or may not be an American abomination - I believe it may have been invented on the Continent in fact - but regardless, the gentleman giving the demonstration is none other than Lord Chumley, your uncle..."

"Uncle Algernon?" exclaimed Simon. "I don't believe it... he, of all people, would not let the noble game of billiards be taken over by a mere fad of fancy."

"Nevertheless..." said Stanley, and pointed him toward a small poster on the column in front of the lobby.

"Boston Billiards Exhibition." it read, "by Lord Algernon Chumley. The time: Three of the Clock Post Meridian. The venue: The Billiard Room."

After a light lunch of kippers and scones, Simon allowed himself to be led into the exhibition room which had been converted into an arena of sorts by the placement of a number of chairs beside the main table. Stanley was awfully keen and had saved him a ring-side seat by placing his jacket on it. There was some grumbling amongst those at the back who had arrived earlier when he took his seat, but as soon as they recognized him it was short-lived and good natured.

At the prescribed time, a relaxed and cheerful Lord Chumley made his appearance. Physically he resembled Simon not at all, being short and plump with a greying moustache and a receding hairline. He carried with him a bag with many colored ivory balls, a long leather case, and a large wooden triangle which further increased the sense of anticipation in the audience.

"Are you going to play that triangle..?" cried a wag in the second row.

"I am not..." said, Lord Chumley firmly. "In fact, I am going to play a volunteer from the audience."

He cast a theatrical eye around the room and feigned astonishment as his gaze lit upon Simon trying his best to remain anonymous in the first row.

"What have we here...?" he said. "I think I see the perfect opponent. None other than our distinguished club champion, Simon Montvale..."

"Perhaps another time, Uncle." said Simon, laughing.

"Nonsense, my boy. You are the perfect foil for this demonstration..." he said, and allowing for no refusal, pulled Simon out of his seat to a great round of applause and some friendly ribaldry from the assembled members.

"You'll pay for this, Stanley, you miserable worm... " said Simon wagging a mock stern finger at him and reluctantly allowed himself be led to the table.

He'd been set up and he knew it... but accepted this forced circumstance with his usual easy grace.

Once uncovered, the table turned out to be a new one - beautifully decorated with marquetry, and the half-dozen unconventional leather pockets shone with polish. But the surface of green baize was at least familiar as were the cushions which bordered the edges.

"There are fifteen balls in play," started Lord Chumley. "You will notice that almost half of them, seven to be exact, are yellow and another seven are red plus there is one solitary black ball. I will commence by racking all fifteen of them in a triangle on the foot spot with the black ball in the center. This is the foot spot..." He pointed. "And the white ball, which is called the queue ball I shall place in the kitchen..."

The laughter which greeted this temporarily interrupted his discourse, but eventually the audience settled down and he continued.

"By that I do not mean the domain of our esteemed chef, Monsieur Pelham but this area here on the table..." he said, and indicated an expanse that encompassed the end of the table opposite the foot spot and stretching from the rail to the first diamond on the short rail.

"Can I get an order of sheppard's pie and a draught cider just the same?" queried the same wag who had earlier questioned Lord Chumley's musical intentions with the triangle. This further sally drew a few titters but order was quickly restored and the member directly behind the comedian knocked his hat off and ruffled his hair for good measure.

Casting a reproving glance at the now disheveled miscreant, Lord Chumley produced two matched and exquisite maces from a leather case under the table. They looked like a traditional mace with a bevelled butt end except that the small end of each appeared to have a rounded leather tip, perhaps to cushion the effect of striking the balls.

"These are called queues." he continued. "I obtained them from a fellow in France by the name of Francois Mingaud who is the master of every aspect of this new game. He is a common rascal and, I understand, spent many of the last twenty years in the custody of the French constabulary, but no-one who has seen him play billiards can question his genius with this particular instrument.

Under his tutelage, I myself mastered sufficient of the arts to dazzle and defeat the average journeyman, such as my nephew, Simon here."

"Oh, I say, Uncle. That's a bit rich." protested Simon. "I'm not exactly a beginner, you know..."

"In this game, you are." said Lord Chumly with a smile, stepping up to the table. "Play always begins with a break-out of the balls..."

He stepped up to the table and with explosive power drove the cue-ball hard into the triangle of colored balls. This had the effect of spreading them out all over the table and one of them dropped randomly into a pocket.

"Since I was able to pocket a ball on the break-out, " he continued, "I have the honor of staying at the table for the first inning. And because the ball that dropped was yellow, I must continue to direct my attentions towards yellow balls only. Each shot I make must contact a yellow ball or it is considered a foul shot.

If I fail to pocket a yellow ball, my distinguished opponent will take my place at the table and must shoot only red balls. Once all of the red or yellow balls are down, whoever is at the table at that juncture may direct his attentions to the black ball. And whoever pockets that ball is the winner of the game. Simple, is it not?"

"I'm not sure I quite follow," said Simon, a frown creasing his brow. "What if I am in such a position that I cannot contact a red ball and either miss entirely or perhaps contact a yellow ball by mistake?"

"You have, by lucky accident or superior intelligence, seized upon the key to the game," exclaimed Lord Chumly delightedly. "We must be related in some fashion."

He waited for the laughter to abate and then continued.

"In that case, it is considered a foul and the queue ball is turned over to your opponent as a penalty. He has the opportunity to place it anywhere behind the balk line in the kitchen and fire at one of his particular suite of balls instead..."

He leaned over the table, his chin almost resting on the queue, and smartly pocketed a yellow ball that hung over a pocket.

"See how very simple it is...?" he said, winking at Simon.

"Perhaps not as simple as it looks, Uncle, said Simon. "But in this instance I rather think you've stymied yourself. Once you pocket the next ball, you will have no position to continue because the angle is absolutely straight in and you have no possibility of caroming off a rail with side..."

"Another cogent observation. I am more convinced than ever that we spring from the same genes..." said Lord Chumly. "However you are backing a lame horse in this instance... watch and learn, my dear boy."

He struck the cue ball firmly and pocketed the yellow... but then something extraordinary happened. The cue ball which was momentarily spinning in place suddenly obtained traction and rolled backwards, away from the point of contact, and indeed half the way down the table.

"Good lord..." said, Simon. "How is that even possible? Surely there is some mechanical motor or magnetic source inside that particular ball?"

"Not at all..." laughed his uncle. "It is called backspin or draw, and I will show you how it can be accomplished after the exhibition is over."

Now that the cue ball had travelled so far in reverse, he was presented with several options for additional shots. But, as he explained later, he wanted to use the situation for a further demonstration and carefully played the cue ball off one of the yellow balls and sidled it up tightly to another yellow - a veritable snooker.

"Good grief.." said Simon, heatedly, "How devilishly unsporting a shot is that...?"

"My dear young nephew... there is more to the strategy of this game than merely sinking balls. " said Lord Chumley calmly. " A player of your advanced facility and dexterity should have very little trouble making contact with a red object ball in any case."

And so it proved. Although Simon advanced the clock a good seven minutes calculating angles and the like before sending the cue ball three rails to make the required contact - his English Carom Billiards experience standing him in good stead. This feat earned him a warm round of applause, however the complexity of the shot made it patently impossible to pocket the red ball and he was forced to relinquish the table.

This abortive attempt left Lord Chumley in good position with his unique leather tip to complete the potting of the rest of the yellows at leisure and this he did in stellar fashion completing each pot with remarkable precision and some aplomb. On each occasion he managed to position the queue ball in such a manner as to make it ridiculously easy to pot the next ball.

Eventually and inevitably, he was left with just the black ball to pocket but sadly his last shot had created an untenable situation for him. The cue ball lay on a rail with a red in between the cue ball and the winning black ball which was also on the same rail.

"I rather fear you've put yourself in a position wherein your mastery of backspin cannot help you this time." Simon observed.

"I still have some tricks up my sleeve..." said, Lord Chumly with a twinkle.

The room hushed in anticipation as he addressed the ball - the queue held almost vertically over it. Then he struck it suddenly with a firm downwards motion as if to drive it into the cloth. To everyone's astonishment, the cue ball squirted out in an arc around the blocking red ball and then spun back, contacting the black ball... and tapping it gently into the top pocket.

A spontaneous burst of applause arose from the audience.

"What wizardry is this," said Simon, bemused. "I saw it, but I don't still believe what just happened. You are indeed the master of this new game."

"Thank-you, Simon, my boy... the French call it a masse and as to my mastery of it, everything is relative..." said Lord Chumly. "I can assure you that Monsieur Mingaud could perform that shot and others like it with some ease."

After the exhibition was completed, Simon sat down with his uncle and the traitorous Stanley to discuss what had occurred. Many of the tricks they had seen would certainly be useful to expand the limited vocabulary of available shots in English Billiards as well as the new Boston Pool and Simon was eager to learn them.

"All in good time..." said Lord Chumly. "All in good time. Now tell me... what is your opinion of this new game?"

"I think it an amusing pastime..." said Simon, "But I very much doubt it will catch on with the purists. After all carom billiards is an established sport and has been played here for decades."

Lord Chumley nodded sagely.

"On the contrary, I think it's entirely possible that Boston Pool will one day outshine even English Billiards and Snooker as the billiard game with the most currency worldwide..."

Simon laughed heartily.

"Forgive me, Uncle," he said, clapping a patronizing hand on his relative's shoulder. "But that is exactly what they are saying about this upstart Association football they are playing these days at Eton. Can you imagine it one day superceding our beloved Rugby Union football? I warrant it will never happen."

Lord Chumly settled himself a little deeper in his chair and allowed himself a wry smile.

"Simon, my dear boy," he said. "You are probably right."

November 22, 2007

If the Shoe Fits...

If the Shoe Fits...

Ever have one of those days when nothing goes right? It took me an extra hour just to get to work this morning because of the snow and ice conditions...

And then there was the shoe thing.

I noticed, when I sat at my desk this morning, that one of my shoe laces was frayed at the end (spare me the jokes about I'm a frayed knot) and looked in my drawer for a pair of scissors. Why is it called a 'pair' by the way? I guess the thingie at the end had fallen off the lace. Anyway, I found some, clipped the frayed bit off and thought no more about it... until a short while ago, I noticed it had separated even worse and was apparently unravelling itself.

Must be those new nylon shoelaces I bought at Walmart, I thought, but I know how to deal with that. When I go camping we often have to cut nylon lines and then we simply melt the cut end with an open flame to seal it off and stop it unravelling. Works like a charm. I don't smoke but I have a butane lighter in my desk left over from lighting Christmas candles last year some time. So... I pulled this out, touched it to the end of the lace and put it away. It left a burning smell which made me wrinkle my nose a bit and it seemed to get stronger. I looked down and it was still burning - basically the whole top of my shoe and the lace was on fire.

I stifled it quickly with a bunch of serviettes I keep on my desk and the lack of oxygen put it out. The leather didn't seem to be damaged - which was a good thing because these are expensive shoes. You'd think that was the end of it, but no... when I got up, the laces gave way and the shoe nearly fell off. I surveyed the damage with a critical eye and removed the burnt pieces. This left me with maybe a third of the good lace and I laced it from the back and tied it off half-way.

Not so good. The shoe still flapped because the knot was only half way
up the shoe...

Sitting back, I thought about it for a while and wondered what people do in this situation. Then it hit me. I cut the remaining lace in two and made two knots - one at the top and one in the middle.

Tada... success. I am able to walk normally again.... I just have to ignore all the people pointing at my feet and snickering.

Tonight I'll buy a new pair and this time I think I'll keep the good, old one as a backup.

November 19, 2007

The Paul Potts Phenomena


The Paul Potts Phenomena

A pudgy Englishman with a slightly crooked smile and a diffident manner stood on the stage of the UK series "Britain's Got Talent". It was obvious from the attitude of the judges that they were expecting one of those laughable performances that give these 'reality' shows their audience. And when he said, "I'm going to sing opera..." there were audible titters from the audience.

Then the unexpected happened.

Out of this shy and unassuming, sad-sack of a man, there came a voice of such beauty that tears sprang to the eyes of the judges and people in the audience were crying openly. Partly, of course, it was the romance of it all... little down-trodden phone salesman Paul Pottsie makes good on TV. He sang the last part of Nessun Dorma (Let no Man Sleep) with defiance and passion - it was as if he knew it was his one chance to make it or go back to his humdrum existence.

Everyone loves an unlikely hero and it seems Paul Potts fits that mold. His resulting CD 'One Chance' is a best seller both in the UK and here in North America and you can see his face almost every day on the US and Canadian talk show circuit. And, I noticed the other day, now even on The Shopping Channel hawking his CD. You can't blame him - this is his fifteen minutes of fame and it won't last forever.

Sadly, the reason it won't last forever is that he isn't really that good. Oh, his voice is indeed pleasant and when infused with the passion and desperation he showed on Britain's Got talent, it tugs at the heart strings.

But...

I've heard him sing 'Nessun Dorma' a dozen times now. Each performance is blander than the last. Very little of that bravado is now apparent in his voice and it comes across as weak and wavering. His largely untrained instrument is unpolished and his lack of breath control lets him waver slightly off key in places. In addition his poor phrasing appears to result from a palpable lack of confidence that makes me agonize that he will not reach the next note. Instead of simply listening to the music, I find myself feeling slightly sorry for him. His Italian would make a native Italian commit suicide.

I grew up in a family that prized great singers. My father was a baritone with a superb voice and my sister is a retired operatic mezzo-soprano. I have probably listened to Puccini's opera Turandot a hundred times... and Nessun Dorma a thousand times, sung by the best tenors of all time... Pavarotti, Gigli, Caruso, Domingo, Schipa, Campanini, Lanza, Björling, Boccelli. If you want to hear the aria properly buy a recording from one of these accomplished tenors.

Or, buy Paul Potts' CD and keep the romance, if not the music, alive.

November 18, 2007

The Shortstop

The Shortstop - David E. Malone - November 16, 2007

One fine fall evening Smitty and me were doing the rounds of all of the local pool halls looking for some cash action.

I probably should mention that I make my living playing for money, so you could say I'm a professional although I don't play much in tournaments and I like to keep my head down. Fame or even notoriety is bad for business in this business. Smitty's a real good player too - specializes in one-pocket. There are so many players out there that think they know how to play one pocket, it's not even funny. And, fortunately for Smitty, most of them don't. My personal speciality is nine-ball... and my second speciality is matching up with pool-player wannabees and taking all their hard-earned money. So we get around quite a bit looking for pool players with inflated egos and wallets.

You could look at it as a kinda community service. Robin Hood used to take from the rich and give to the poor - we take from the rich... and it keeps us from being poor.

Things were quiet that night and no potential pigeons were apparent until we ran into young Charlie Mason at 'Le Spot'. Le Spot is a public pool hall that used to get a bit rowdy on a Saturday night and, as a result, has been turned into a private club. That just meant that they have given themselves the authority to throw out any troublemakers or, indeed, anybody else they considered a pain in the ass. We both knew Amos the bartender and he'd always let us in if he saw us buzzing the door. Nice place... up a long flight of stairs, with a well stocked bar, reasonably decent Asian and truck-stop diner type nosh, and some nice 9 foot Gold Crowns as well as the obligatory CPA league bar tables. There was even a snooker table at the back for what Smitty always referred to as the pin-prickers... a snide reference to their needle thin cue tips.

Le Spot was usually a last resort for us because we knew everybody there - and everybody there knew us, which means they all knew enough not to play either of us for money.

"Hi, Charlie..." I said, "Anyone new in town?"

He knew exactly what I meant and pulled us to one side. He pointed.

"See that fat guy with the beard and the leather jacket on table fourteen..." He said. "He's never been here before but I know him. He's flush and plays quite a bit for money..."

"What speed is he...?" said Smitty.

"He's a shortstop." said Charlie flatly.

In pool terminology, a shortstop is a player who may be the best local player around but isn't quite in that top one percent that includes the pros and the road agents like fer instance Smitty and me. In other words, Charlie was saying he could be taken for a few bucks but it would be relatively hard work.

"D'ya think if I gave him the eight and out, he'd go fifty smackers a game or is that a bit rich?", I said.

"I don't know him all that well, but I do know he thinks he's pretty good. Maybe he'd go for that if you... um... needled him into it..." said Charlie.

I moseyed on over while Smitty made himself scarce - didn't want the pigeon to think he was being ganged up on. Since the guy was alone just banging balls around, I stopped for a while and watched him play. He wasn't bad, but got careless and missed from time to time. He was practicing long cut shots along the rail and drilling them over and over again. Nice easy stroke with a long follow-through and decent speed control - a fair to middling shortstop just like Charlie had suggested. Nice playing cue... a Titlist conversion if I guessed correctly... and an old two-piece Dufferin banger for a breaker. Soon he became aware he was being watched and after another few minutes, without even raising his head, he said nonchalantly,

"Anybody 'round here looking for a game?"

"Yup...", I said.

"How much?"

"I don't want to waste anybody's time", I said. "We could piss around talking about it or we could go twenty a game, even up, for a few racks and see how we match up. After that, if you're still interested, we could talk about it some more..."

He nodded and started racking the balls.

Seems his name was Norman something or other. I nicknamed him Stormin' Norman after the General. We played a half dozen racks and I didn't try to hide my speed - ran out a couple as I got loosened up. He ran one as well and looked quite sharp doing it, but his break wasn't on and he gave me the table back a few times when he shouldn't have missed. I came out $40 bucks ahead and I bought us both a beer with his money. The rehearsals were over, it was time for the opera...

While I was sipping my beer, he wondered over to Charlie and they had an earnest little heart to heart conversation. I pretended not to notice. When he came back he told me, as if I didn't already know, that he'd been talking to Charlie and that Charlie had told him how good I was.

"Not that I hadn't noticed..." he said, with a grin. "I'll play you some more, but you have to give me some serious weight."

"Well, shit..." I said. "You play pretty sporty yourself. It was a toss-up who won those games - how about I give you a ball and we up the ante to a hundred a game? You get the eight and out..."

"A hundred..." he said, doubtfully. "A hundred's a bit rich for my blood... even if you let me have two balls, I have a feeling I'd still be in trouble. Tell you what... give me two balls, I'll go fifty bucks... ten ahead wins..."

I laughed good naturedly.

"Norman, old son... " I said, "Charlie didn't tell me you were a nit. I guess I'll have to go look for someone who has the balls to play for money instead of pocket change..."

His face reddened slightly. I am the master physiologist if I say so myself.

"You're not that good..." he said. "I'm in... but if I lose, you have to give me a fair chance to win it back."

"No problem", I shrugged, hiding a grin.

He started off strong with a couple of run-outs but his weaknesses eventually kicked in and he gave up the table on a break. I started doing what I was good at, running tables and piling on the points. Took me a little while but eventually and inevitably I got ten ahead and he ponied up the dime from a thick billfold in his vest pocket. That gave me the opportunity to notice that there was more left in that wad than had been taken out.

Hmmn...

At this point, he looked a bit distressed, so I reminded him I'd promised him a chance to win it back. And, I thought, a chance for me to get my hands on the rest of that loot.

"Double or nothing...?" I suggested hopefully.

He wasn't that dumb, but he thought about it for a while and then said,

"Look... you play a sight better than I thought. I'll make you a sporting proposition... give me the seven and out and I'll play you a race to eleven for two dimes. Hey, you win, you get my last two thousand bucks and I go to the poor house. I win and I get my money back plus a lousy dime to pay my rent and keep my girlfriend in lace underwear..."

I pondered this for a while. And especially I pondered the part about the girlfriend in the lace underwear - it gets kinda lonely on the road. And Smitty's not exactly my type. An inadvertent mental picture of Smitty in lace underwear came into my mind and I shuddered. Concentrate for Christ's sake. This guy Norman might be a shortstop but he wasn't that bad a player either and giving him the last two balls might be a bit of a shaky deal on my part. On the other hand, I've given up bigger handicaps before and still won easily. That's the thing about matching up at my level... If I'm running racks, he isn't gonna get to the table anyway and you can't win if you're sitting down.

"You're killing me..." I said, shaking my head ruefully. "But I'll take it.

I called Charlie over to hold the stakes and then continued.

"This is it though... you don't get another chance to get even... one race to eleven and the game's over - win or lose. Okay with you?"

"Okay." he said.

We lagged for the break and I won by the merest fraction, thank God. I always like to get out ahead and I don't like sitting and waiting. I broke and got a nice spread with a clean shot on the one ball. It was an easy rack and a good start - no real problems... I came up dry on the third rack but ol' Stormin' Norman was hooked on the one and didn't have a shot. His push-out put me back at the table but with no easy shot. I was going to give it back to him but thought he might have a chance to play a decent safety and so that's what I did. Take that, sonny boy. He managed to clip the one ball and left me with an even tougher safety. We traded safety's back and forth until I finally had him by the short hairs and no reasonable shot left. The lad didn't seem to be too upset, after all it was early in the match, and he went about measuring angles and such as if he knew what he was doing. I just wished he'd get on with it and miss like he was supposed to. I get impatient with these technical types.

To my surprise, he didn't miss... three fricken rails with a precision that was hard to believe. And not only did he contact the one ball clean, he sank it and left himself in shape for the two to boot.

That seemed to give him confidence and suddenly his attitude changed. He appeared more self-assured and even slightly cocky. I didn't know what had gotten into him until he ran out that table, and the next, and the next. Could it be that he had been dogging it up 'till then...? Surely not... but...

After that it was no contest. Shortstop my ass... this kid was out of my league and most other guys I've played with. I don't think he missed a makeable ball in the whole set. The long and short of it is that he won eleven and five and stopped only to shake hands and take the cash from Charlie on his way out. I thought I saw the sonnova bitch slip a couple of bills in Charlie's front pocket but he had his back to me and I couldn't be sure.

One thing I was absolutely sure of though, was that Charlie had misrepresented the truth of the matter... he'd lied like a dog. I stormed over to him and grabbed him by the front of his shirt. I was so mad I was shaking.

"Screw you, Charlie... I said, heatedly. "I thought you told me he was a shortstop?"

He gently pried my fingers loose, looking puzzled and a wee bit hurt all at the same time.

"I wouldn't lie to you, Mully..." he said, "He really is a shortstop... I know that for a fact.

After all we're on the same baseball team."

November 15, 2007

Offensive Driving

I drove to work this morning. I left the same time I always do but arrived around 20 minutes later than usual. The reason for that is simple... an inspired collection of dumbass drivers who don't know the one primary rule of the road...

"Don't do anything to inhibit the traffic flow."

I indentified seven different annoying driver types this morning that really make my blood boil. There may be others. It's not, as you may suppose the aggressive, pushy drivers (who knows, I may actually be one of them) but an additional assortment of mental midgets. I've labelled them 'mr.', but take it from me, I'm an equal opportunity complainer and there are 'ms.' versions of all of these as well.

Mr Passive Aggressive.

This sweetheart drives along in the fast lane on the highway at 60 miles per hour and makes everybody drive around him. It never occurs to him that he's holding up traffic, or, if it does, he's just bloody minded and enjoys the fact. His mantra is "I'm doing the speed limit so how can I be doing anything wrong?". Tell you what, buddy... if you're holding up traffic, regardless of speed, you can be ticketed here in Ontario. There isn't a permanent cure for this type of idiocy but people (not me, of course) have been known to pull in front of them and gradually slow down until they are forced to pull over or get in the slow lane where they belong.

Mr Hanging Butt

You're casually tooling along in the fast lane on a one or two lane street when the guy in front decides he wants to turn left. There's a middle turn lane for exactly that but instead of pulling into it parallel to the traffic, he turns sharply sideways and leaves his sorry butt hanging out in the middle of the driving lane holding up traffic until he finally gets a chance to cross. I've been tempted to use my bumper to nudge the back of his car out of the way before and one of these days when I can claim senility as an excuse, I'll actually do it.

There's another kind as well. This one wants to hang a left but there's already a lot of cars in the turn lane. So instead of simply pulling in behind the last car and getting out of the way, he sits half blocking the fast lane he was in and waits until enough cars have turned the corner before he finally pulls over. In the meantime, he's apparently blissfully oblivious to the honking and yelling going on behind him.

Mr I'm too Rich to Wait in Line

This particular putz burns my shorts. I labelled it 'too rich to wait in line' because the only people I've seen doing this are usually driving big Mercedes, Lexus, Cadillac, or Rolls Royce sedans. They see a line-up of cars waiting to turn left at a traffic light that doesn't have an advanced red, so it takes a while to get around the corner. These morons are too important and impatient to get on the end of the line... instead they drive to a point maybe second or third in the line-up and put on their turn signal hoping someone will let them push in. What really burns my ass is that some people actually do let them in. While they are waiting, they block an entire driving lane and make people like me froth at the mouth.

Mr Last Minute Larry

Last minute Larry's are devil-may-care adventurers seemingly willing to die for their art. They wait until absolutely the last possible minute before forcing their way over into the next lane to turn - this can be either left or right. It's like they enjoy the challenge of cutting off a few people every time and still making it into the turn lane before being struck. It doesn't seem to matter whether you 'let' them cut in... they are coming willy-nilly and they usually leave you with the choice of either braking hard or actually hitting them. My advice, if you have the time to spare getting your car fixed (retirees, independently wealthy, etc) is to just cut off the gap between you and the car in front and let them hit you instead.

Mr Hard Shoulder

This guy may be a relative of the rich guy who hates to wait in line. You've all seen it. You're waiting in a line-up of cars at a traffic light or driving slowly in a traffic jam, and suddenly someone comes bursting up the hard shoulder and either tries to time the green light and cut back in, or cuts back into a gap in the slow moving traffic. Someone I know has been known to burn rubber out of a stop-light and force a driver off into a ditch to prevent the former. Don't these people know it's illegal... and just how much time do they save anyway?

Mr Politeness

Traffic is moving smoothly along and there's a car coming out of an auto dealership or a restaurant parking lot, for example, when the car in front of you stops suddenly... just to let the guy get into the stream of traffic. In order to do this, he has made another twenty drivers brake violently and interrupted the flow of traffic. I always give the offending SOB a blast of my horn and maybe a few 'traffic' signals with one finger. They look at me like, "Well, how dare you... I was just being polite..." and wave at you. "Have a nice day..." One of these days, someone is going to very politely kick your ass.

Mr Schmucker Trucker

Finally, a common highway hazard. Two massive and ponderous semis are tooling along at a leisurely ten miles an hour over the speed limit, however the truck in the rear is doing 0.00002 miles an hour faster than the one in front and catching up. Because he's apparently in a huge hurry, he pulls out and occupies the fast lane for a half hour or more while trying to pass the other truck. In the meantime, the rest of us that could pass both of them in a milisecond are stacked up like cordwood behind the inconsiderate bum.

I should mention here that most truck drivers are good and safe drivers and it's not their fault that they have a schedule to maintain... although how much impact driving 0.00002 miles an hour slower for a few miles is going to make on their overall schedule, Deity only knows...

November 9, 2007

The Intruder



I was warming up for my pool league in the pool room yesterday evening and Chico the dog was scratching at the door because he wanted to go out. It was darkish outside but in the moonlight I saw a shadowy figure move across the neighbour's back yard and into the back corner of the fence. I knew it wasn't Leon (my neighbour) or his son, because the person was tall and lightly built. Oh, my... a burgler or a fleeing felon perhaps?

Remembering another blogger's (Neon John) scary experience the other day, I thought perhaps he might be armed, so I picked up the nearest weapon I could find... which was the butt end of a very expensive pool cue... and dashed out into the garden.

"Hey, you... " I yelled, waving my butt (no jokes please). "What the hell do you think you're doing?"

The intruder had a flashlight and turned it in my direction briefly before hopping over the fence and making his escape.

Now that he'd gone, I turned my attention to Leon's house. Everything seemed to be in order - no sign of a forced entry or anything else. Satisfied, I came back inside and wondered if I should call the police - after all it was probably just some local kid taking a short cut through the garden as they were in the habit of doing.

I did call Leon, however, and oddly enough, his 'phone didn't dial - it made a strange noise, not like a busy signal but an intermittent beeping sound. Shoot, maybe the son of a bitch had cut their phone lines before killing everybody in the house... I went out to the front of the house but there didn't seem to be anyone home. Not that anyone would respond if they were all lying dead in a pool of blood inside. My wife said not to worry about it. I mean it's not exactly a high crime neigborhood and we should just wait until they got home and phone again. I reluctantly agreed but continued to fret about it. I had this ominous feeling in the pit of my stomach and I just knew something bad had happened...

Later that evening I went to get a snack... and saw a light go on in their kitchen... for sure somebody was home. I picked up the 'phone again, and this time it rang normally. It was Leon - I explained to him that I had seen an intruder in his garden earlier on and wanted to make sure everything was okay.

"Oh, you saw him too, did you?" he said, "I was having problems with my phone line all day so I called the phone repair guy from Bell Telephone. He came a couple of hours ago and went out into the garden to trace the phone line and try and find out what was wrong with the line...

He said while he was out there he was attacked by a thug with a baseball bat and he had to jump over the fence to get away."

October 10, 2007

Frank Correnti Cigars

Frank Correnti Cigars - David E. Malone - Oct 10, 2007

Any cigar smokers out there?

I don't smoke and my wife quit about 10 years ago... but she still likes to puff on a good Cuban cigar on special occasions. I suspect she enjoys standing around outside after a good meal with some of our cigar smoking friends - I know she doesn't inhale the smoke, just enjoys the taste.

Prices of good Cuban cigars are ridiculous - I recently spent a small fortune replenishing her humidor stock with Montecristos, Romeo & Julietas, and Bolivars. So I was suprised and pleased to get a note from one of our cigar afficianado friends recommending these people...

http://http://www.correnticigars.com/

It seems they make great cigars from imported Cuban leaf and their prices are less than half of what I'm paying for similar Cuban imported cigars. They claim they make a robusto that tastes the same as a Montecristo and it's a half or a third of the price.

So Saturday, we decided to take a trip downtown and visit Frank Correnti Cigars. I'm not fond of downtown traffic and this particular Saturday, the traffic was stacked up at Spadina and the Lakeshore and we slipped into Front street and then down Portland to get to King and Portland. There was no parking, so I found a residential back street and parked there. When we got to the intersection, there was no sign of 'Frank Correnti Cigars' at all. But there was a dark alley-way beside the first building and we decided to try it... about 40 feet down the alley, the ceiling was covered with a white tarp on a scaffold like an outdoor restaurant space but with nothing inside it. Very odd. We found out later that it was a 'smoking space' they use when hosting large parties.

At the very end of the alley, there was a small sign and a door. I thought, "This must be it, but it doesn't look like much...". Inside, it was gloomy with a few offices on each side of the corridor. There didn't seem to be a retail space so we just kept walking until we came into a well lit space with work benches and the smell of cigars. Two women were making cigars - one rolling the filler and another wrapping the finished cigars. Interesting to watch... the woman doing the final wrappers is a genius. They were making Churchills at the time. There was a humidified warehouse at the back where they say they age the leaves for at least 5 years, and a storage humidor room where they keep the finished cigars.

I said something intelligent like,

"Um... is this where we can buy cigars?"

and the woman making the wrappers said,

"Of course... what can I get you?"

She explained what was available and the different types of finishing leaf, Caro and Maduro. Ortelia was quite taken with the robustos which are quite short but have a ring size of 50 - very stout and a substantial cigar. The woman making the fillers was Spanish, so Ortelia had a conversation with her and asked her advice. Basically she said the cigars were all first quality and you can't go wrong with any of them. She smoked them herself at home.

While we were still discussing what to get, a guy wandered in and said,

"Hi, Rita... can you get me a robusto...?"

He looked familiar and after he turned around, I recognized a former senior manager from my office. He recognized me at the same time and I introduced my wife to him. Apparently he is retired and had sold his big house in the suburbs to move to a condo on the Lakeshore. It was his habit to stroll down to the cigar factory every weekend, buy a big cigar or two and then go home and smoke it on his balcony overlooking the lake. He recommended the Caro wrappers as being mild and easy to draw. I bought a half dozen for Ortelia to try - made as Rita mentioned 'last Wednesday'...

Ortelia loves them. She says they smell great, and taste wonderful. But all was not perfect in paradise - the robusto is rather too big for her little hands and now that she's gotten into smoking the Bolivars, she would prefer a cigar with a bit more 'bite' to it. So they are making us up some half-coronas for her with the Maduro wrapper which should be perfect. It's kinda nice that you can 'customize' your cigars. They'll even make you up custom personalized 'rings' and boxes/tins if you want to give them as a gift to somebody.

They looked so good that I (almost) thought about trying one myself.

September 7, 2007

Tribute to Luciano Pavarotti

A tenor voice for the ages - Sept 7, 2007

My grandfather was born in Athlone, Northern Ireland and his best friend growing up was a scrawny kid by the name of John McCormack who grew up to become a world famous tenor. My father therefore grew up in a house where music and particularly opera was part of his daily life. Because of McCormack, he wanted badly to be an operatic tenor but around eleven years old when his voice changed he was chagrined to find that nature had instead endowed him with a nevertheless rich and musical baritone instrument.

He sang in various stagings of comic operas, Gilbert and Sullivan for example, and amateur productions of some of the classic Italian operas but making a living and the advent of WWII prevented him from taking up singing as a career. Instead, he regaled us with his recordings of basses, such as Paul Robeson, baritones like Tito Gobi, and a huge collection of recordings by tenors.... McCormack, Caruso, Gigli, Secombe, Schipa, Lanza, and Campanini among others. He always loved Beniamino Gigli's voice and said he was the most musical of all the great Italian tenors.

One day we were listening to classical music on the radio - I think Dad was doing the crossword puzzle and my sister and I were sprawled on the rug playing chess - when the announcer mentioned something about a new Italian tenor. He then played a new recording of Luciano Pavarotti singing 'Che gelida manina' from La Boheme.

My father sprang from his seat and turned up the sound, standing in front of the radio as if bracing himself against a powerful wind emanating from the speaker, his legs slightly spread, leaning forward, and his arms spread to capture the sound.

When it ended and he turned around, his eyes were shining and tears were running down his face.

"That's it..." he said simply. "That's it."

And he walked out into the garden... we could see his shoulders shaking as he stood there for what seemed like an eternity.

I had never seen my father cry before (and only once since) so this made a great impact on me. Our turntable thereafter became the platform for every recording ever made by Pavarotti and my Dad played the best arias over and over again. Gigli was relegated to a role as a sometimes actor on that stage and the Caruso recordings were left in the cupboard.

Dad loved Pavarotti's voice so much, he even forgave him for "Yes, Giorgio"... something I was never able to do

Pavarotti's voice is imprinted on my soul. I'm not a religious person, but it's my belief that the most beautiful song ever recorded is Luciano Pavarotti singing the Gounod version of 'Ave Maria'...

Requiescat in Pace, Luciano.

May 9, 2007

Universal Billiards Theory

Scientists at the Hamster Institute of Technology (HIT) have recently postulated that the known universe may actually be a three dimensional pool table. This theory was also documented in the well known scientific journal JAM (Journal of American Misinformation) by a consortium of international scientists.

The theory seems preposterous at first but initial scepticism should be re-evaluated against the fact that most, if not all, heavenly bodies are perfect spheres and that, in addition, there are black holes (pockets) at regular intervals in the fabric of space.

Central to this theory, of course, is the radical assumption that the entity we call the Creator has someone to play against, but this is considered likely because as we all know everything in nature has an opposite eg. up/down, yin/yang, male/female.

HIT Chief Unclear Scientist David Edward Malone explains that as far as they can see at this stage in the proceedings, the creator has apparently won the lag and executed his break (also known as the big bang). The make of his cosmic cue is so far a mystery although some scientists are hypothesizing that the tip may well be a milk-dud, pointing to the so-called 'Milky Way' as a convincing argument. Others poo-poo this theory and maintain that the Milky Way is merely billiard chalk or talc dust created by quantum chaos.

Once the universe stops expanding ie. the balls stop rolling, and always assuming he sank a planet and the balls are not in an entangled state, the creator's first shot is likely to be the one ball (yellow ball... also known as Sol) into a corner pocket. And, since a supreme being likely plays rotation, the number two ball (blue ball... ie. Earth) will be next and then Mars (the red planet) and so on. A complete game will mean the end of life as we know it, of course, but the scientific community is confident they'll rack 'em again for a second game.

It's likely that it'll be a race to infinity...

January 12, 2007

Pun Country

This is just a little exercise to see how many bad country puns it's possible to get into one short story....

I felt a little Hungary so I went to the bar to eat, Taiwan on, and play some pool. Guy saw my Mali with the Gabon ebony and wanted to play me for a few Guineas. I said, "OK... but Iraq. Why don't we Sweden the pot and play for some real cash?" He said, "Oman, Oman... it's kinda Sudan but I'll play..."

Iran the table.

Egypt me... leaving me holding just a Cuba chalk.

After that, I drank too much hurting my Bahrain and said to the bartender,

"Give me Samoa, Chad...".

He said, "I'll have Nunavut."

That upset me, so I said,

"Did I tell you I had sex with your wife Rwanda the other day...? She really knows how to shake Djibouti..."

He said, "You Turkey! Did Jamaica?"

I said, "No, she wanted to... it was just Guam of those things. Makes Uwanda, eh?"

He looked at me funny and said,

"Ok, I Bolivia. If I was in a bad mood you'd be Honduras. But just Kuwait... your Korea as a Laos is gonna be over soon. She was out with a Paraguays the other day and got a dose of the Hong Kong clap... "

Well, that explains the burning in my Burundi. I could feel his Spain, so I said,

"Uraguay - you know what women are like. I'm sorry but I don't think I'll Romania..."

He said, "So long... Abyssinia. Make sure you're Ghana long time..."