What?

It’s been a while since I shared some fun Facebook Marketplace ads with you, so given that not much has happened this week, aside from me taking on teaching a workshop series on writing short stories, getting ready to job shadow at the radio station, scoring the motherlode of designer bags to sell at the market, hitting 20 000 words on my new manuscript, and preparing to publish a fantasy novel Ghost Bride of Gum San by JF Garrard, a terrific Toronto writer, as well as the brilliant new poetry collection Smatterings of Cerulean by the amazing Susan Richardson of the A Thousand Shades Of Green literary podcast and Stories From The Edge Of Blindness blog—well, it’s actually been a busy week but none of that was funny enough to write about so here we go:

WHAT

Me: What? Ken, what is this?
Ken: What?
Me: Exactly. What.
Ken: What?
Me: No, what’s on first.
Ken: I don’t know.
Me: I don’t know is the short stop.
Ken: What?
Me: What’s on first.

I could literally do this all day. What is a fun game. That’s a statement, not a question. But seriously, what is what? An un-defrosted freezer for $100? Or…a coffin? What?

There are a couple of things wrong with this ad. First and foremost, the grungy tile with the weird still life of the coffee pot, mushrooms, and broccoli. Next, the ugly kettle—I mean, who would want a kettle like that on top of your stove for the world to see? And of course, calling it ‘the ultimate cooking companion’ is so pretentious. Does the oven talk, or like, help you with recipes? And ‘style’? Dude, it’s just a plain, white stove. There might be some other things wrong with this ad, but I think I’ve covered the big issues.

These chairs might be comfortable, but wouldn’t they sink into the sand? I can’t see myself under a palm tree, enjoying a pina colada, listening to the sound of the tropical surf while sitting upright on one of those puppies. Give me a hammock or a comfy lounger any day. Or maybe the island you live on is in the North, but then I would think you’d prefer a Muskoka chair (which is the proper name for Adirondack).  

This ad is an enigma, albeit a very angry one. 6 words (well, 5 words and 1 number) that absolutely seethe with fury. But here’s the enigma—who posted this? Is it the person in the photo, who is ashamed of marrying a fourth time to yet ANOTHER loser? Is it the person who recently got divorced from the person in the photo, and is upset about being the fourth victim of this errant woman? Is the photo being held for a $500 ransom? Has this woman failed to win the lottery four times? It’s a mystery. You really have to wonder about the mindset of someone who would post this publicly—I’ve seen similar types of ads, but they’re usually more tongue-in-cheek. This one just seems mean…and definitely not worth $500. I didn’t even bother to blank out the location because I don’t think the person who posted it really gives a sh*t at this point.

Finally, there’s this one:

This guy wants you to have absolutely NO DOUBTS, and has pre-emptively answered all your questions:

Is it for sale? Answered.
Are you the person selling it? Answered.
Is it in good condition? Answered.
Is it brand new? Answered.
Does it work? Answered.
What brand is it? Answered.
What size is it? Answered.
Is it for hoses? Answered.
Does it crimp things? Answered.

Can you repeat all that below? Definitely.

See? The guy thought of everything…or he thinks he did, because you know at least three people will respond to the ad with “Is it still available?”

And here’s the cover teaser for Smatterings of Cerulean. Look for it later in March!

Hold Your Horses!

I like watching television. If you’ve been reading this blog for a long time, you’ll know that I’m at my most blissful when I’m horizontal, glass of wine in hand, bingeing on a mystery. And this week was no different—Netflix told me that a show called “Missing You” was right up my alley, based on what I’d previously watched, and I was like, “Aw, Netflix, you know me so well!” It was a limited series with five episodes, so I climbed into bed, ready with wine and anticipation. The show began—the opening scene takes place at night. It is dark and stormy, and a handsome man dressed in a business suit is riding a horse that is galloping at breakneck speed across the moors of England. He looks terrified, and there are flashbacks of a beautiful woman that he is apparently madly in love with and desperately wants to see. Suddenly, the horse stumbles and the man is thrown off the horse, landing badly. Cut to daylight—the man is now hobbling down a country lane as fast as he can. A tractor appears behind him and starts to run him down. He falls—another man leaps out of the tractor and tasers him. You soon find out that the first man is the victim of a kidnapping. Intense, right? And it gets better—the main character is a female detective with a tragic past. She works in the Missing Persons Unit and she’s tasked with finding the man, as well as other people who’ve also gone missing. This show has it all—abduction, catfishing, a man called Leslie, a crazy-ass dog breeder and his puppies—you name it. It was really good.

Then I got to the end and something occurred to me, something that I just can’t get off my mind. And it’s this…where the f*ck did the guy get THE HORSE from?! They NEVER explain it! The detective traces him to a Bed And Breakfast in a town with nary a horse in sight, and he ends up at a farm—but NOT a horse farm—a DOG BREEDING FARM, again, with nary a horse in sight. And I have SO MANY QUESTIONS! Where did the horse come from? Whose horse was it? How come it already had a saddle? How did the businessman know how to ride a horse? Did he steal it? Was the horse reported stolen? Where did it go after it kicked him to the curb? All I could think was that there had been some very questionable decisions made in the screenwriting room:

Head Screenwriter: I have the best idea to open the show! Let’s put the East Indian guy ON A GALLOPING HORSE!!
Screenwriter 2: Where does he get the horse from?
Head Screenwriter: What? Who cares?
Screenwriter 2: People might wonder…
Head Screenwriter: NOBODY will wonder, STEVE. Besides, we can deal with that in the last episode or whatnot.

5 months later, at the premiere…

Screenwriter 2: I feel like there’s something we forgot to do…
Head Screenwriter: Are you going on about the horse AGAIN? I keep telling you, STEVE, no one will care!

Well, I care. And my OCD brain has been spinning, because Ken mentioned that I have a habit of falling asleep during TV shows and maybe I’d missed the very tiny reference to the horse. But I don’t think so, KEN. So if you happen to be watching “Missing You”, can you watch out for any horse references? Steve and I need to know.

Radio Gaga

You may all remember a few weeks ago when I was interviewed on a local radio show. It was a lot of fun and I posted pictures of the haunted factory building where the station is located. Well…earlier this week, I received a newsletter from the organization that runs the show. It turns out that the host is taking a leave for several months and if they couldn’t find a second host to fill in, the radio show would be cancelled. I thought about it for a minute—running a live radio program all by myself in a studio at the heart of a haunted warehouse? That sounded super stressful. So I did what any normal person would do—I immediately composed an email to say that I would be happy to fill in. Then I hit send…Then I had a panic attack. Was I going gaga in my old age? What was I thinking?! Didn’t I already have enough on my plate? So I poured myself a glass of wine, and consoled myself by thinking that probably a ton of people would have offered to do this—I mean, who wouldn’t want to be on the radio? They were probably inundated with emails for this very cool gig.

The next morning, I was feeling less stressed…until I got a reply. Yes, it would be amazing if I could fill in—I felt faint. But it’s only one afternoon a month, my logical brain reminded me. Then I talked to my daughter, whose equally logical brain reminded me that I’m a very competent person, and that I shouldn’t let my anxiety get the better of me. “Mom,” she said, “you’ve been a radio host before AND a club DJ—you can do this!”

Well, yeah, sweetie, but that was 40 years ago—believe it or not, my first actual DJ-ing job was at the exact same radio station when I was in university, a job for which I had to audition in their sound booth (which was located on the university campus as opposed to a building that could use a good exorcism). I did well enough for university radio—I’d been a club kid for years and was pretty familiar with that scene—and was given a position subbing in for a friend when she was unavailable—her show was called “Your Grandma’s Tractor”, and it was alternative music featuring bands no one had ever heard of. Then I was offered my own show. This might sound amazing, but they needed to meet some kind of broadcasting regulation, and they’d just lost their Classical Music DJ. Yep. Classical music. Luckily, I’d grown up on that sh*t, and my parents had enough albums to start their own record store, so “Symphonic Gestures” was born. I did that gig for over a year, putting together intro notes from the backs of record covers, then just letting the music play for the next half hour. I didn’t have any listeners per se—I know this, because one time, the radio station ran a contest during my show for prizes but the only person who “called in to win” was my Mom, to whom I’m forever grateful for making it seem like I had an audience. I was like, “Hey random caller, guess what?! You just won a five dollar gift card to Tim Horton’s” and she was like, “Oh wow! This is my lucky day!”

It was great experience back then, but being a DJ now is most likely very different from the days when I had two turntables and a microphone. However, I will be receiving professional training, and I’ll be able to job shadow the current host, so by the time I have to fly solo, it should be fine. More than fine, because I’ll be interviewing other writers and listening to them read their work, which is always a fun thing to do. And I’ll be in a super-haunted factory, so be prepared for some wild stories. And if you want to read more about my illustrious and DJ-ing history (and why I once shut off the music and walked out of the club), you can go to My Week 81: When I Was A DJ.

Recent Movements

As I’ve gotten older, I’ve been having a harder time getting over jetlag. I’m fine going overseas–I can stay up as long as I need to and then my body adjusts to a new clock. But on the way home–it takes weeks before I readjust. And a certain bodily function seems to have a clock of its own, one that takes forever to revert back to regular movement, and has been waking me up in the middle of the night, telling me it’s actually morning. If you don’t know what I’m talking, the following will soon make it clear.

Today’s topic is something that we’re all very aware of. We do it every day. We were fascinated by it as children—in fact, some children like to make art with it. As adults, we examine it, consider it, pretend it never happened, or fixate on it, but we rarely discuss it. It goes by many names: dump, turd, doodie, dingleberry, fudgebunny, rosebud, or in my own family’s case, trump (which makes sense, considering…) Yes, I’m talking about poop. Admit it—we all, in our own way, are interested in this subject, at least our OWN subject. Most people really don’t care to think about other people’s sh*t—well, their LITERAL sh*t anyway. In fact, most people are FAR too interested in other people’s figurative sh*t for their own good, and are always happy to express their opinions on things that never concern them.

At any rate, I’ve come to realize that I may just be weirdly interested in poop. It started years ago, when I was in the hospital after having major surgery. In the bathroom, there was a chart that had images of different kinds of poop on it, and descriptions of what each one meant. Like there was the “normal” poo that looked like a sleek log, then there was the bulky poo that looked like really long, dry cookie dough and was described as “a sausage shape with cracks in the surface”, which meant the person was somewhat dehydrated. (If you’re interested in more of this, just google “Bristol Stool Chart”—I know you’re saying out loud “No way”, but we both know you’ll secretly look at it). Then, a few years ago, I saw a giant poo in the doorway of a defunct sushi restaurant in town. Right away, I was like “Whoa! That’s the biggest poo I’ve ever seen! Also, its owner needs to drink more fluids.” Later, it was still there and I tried to point it out to a friend, but she was like “No! You need to stop. I do NOT want to see an unhomed person’s poop.” I realize some people are just really uncomfortable with random feces, but this was like World Record stuff—it literally haunted my thoughts for days, and every time I passed the doorway, even though it was long gone, I pondered the size, and diet, of its owner.

Sometimes it occurs to me that just maybe I should keep my fascination with poo to myself, but I can write about whatever the hell I want, and you can judge me, but you can’t argue with the fact that deep in your secret heart, you also think poo is, if not cool, at least interesting and informative. Seriously, nobody is watching as you nod and smile. Or when you look into the toilet in the morning to inspect your offering. The other day, I felt the urge, and afterwards I snuck a peek. My reaction? “Huh. Impressive!” Then I giggled a little, because I said it out loud, but no one else was in the bathroom to hear me.

And please don’t try to tell me that you have never passed judgement on your own sacrifice to the porcelain god, because we all do it. We’ve all gone, “Holy hell! What did I eat yesterday?” or “Why doesn’t corn digest like regular normal food?”, “Alcohol sure does a number on my bowels”, or just “Good one!” I think the world would be a much happier place if we all discussed our poop on a regular basis—after all, no matter what colour, gender, or religion you are, it’s something we ALL have in common. I was thinking last night about how best to use modern media to bring us all together via bodily waste and I came up with a TV show that would address the issue :

A beach scene. People in uniform milling around. A body lying on the sand. Camera pans to a large poo beneath a palm tree. Cut to Danny.

Danny: It’s not looking good, boss.
Horatio: Tell me what you’ve got, Dann-o.
Danny: Large male, judging by size. Probably a vegan, based on the amount of broccoli and self-righteousness smooth texture. Well-hydrated. Looks like the Number 2 Killer has struck again.
Horatio: (gazes sternly into distance). I’m making the Number 2 Killer my Number 1 priority. He won’t get away with this shit again. Let’s roll.

Camera cuts away and credits roll to the sound of “Squeeze Box” by The Who. The title appears: CSI: Excremental.

I know, right? There’s also a twist on the new Sherlock Holmes drama which I call “Alimentary”. It’s the same basic premise as CSI: Excremental, but with more deductive reasoning:

Sherlock: I’ve come to the conclusion that our victim is indeed a beet farmer.
Watson: How could you possibly know that?
Sherlock: For God’s Sake, Watson—look at the colour of his scat. That slight pink tinge is a dead giveaway. Have I taught you nothing?!

So the next time you secretly poke through your dog’s crap with a stick to see if he ate some tinfoil, or jump with joy at your baby’s ginormous diaper dump, know that you’re not alone. Here’s a vintage cookie jar for you that looks just like the poo emoji.