Interview Fails

Interview with Waldo

Interviewer: Where are you?
Waldo: I’m right here.
Interviewer: I can’t see you.
Waldo: But I can see you.
Interviewer: Come on, give me a hint.
Waldo: I’m wearing a red and white striped shirt.
Interviewer: Is that you peeking out between that elephant’s legs?
Waldo: You mean the elephant wearing the red and white striped shirt?
Interviewer: I’ll take that as a no.

Interview With a Zombie

Interviewer: What do y…
Zombie:
Interviewer:
Zombie:
Interviewer:
Zombie:
Interviewer:
Zombie:
Interviewer:
Zombie:

Interview with Vladimir Putin

Interviewer: Is it a law in Russia that when you ride a horse you have to be half-naked?
Putin: Also in Crimea.
Interviewer: Does it matter which half?
Putin: As long as you look sincere. And don’t fall off
Interviewer: When dining in a Moscow restaurant do your choices for salad dressing include Russian dressing?
Putin: Was Ivan the Terrible terrible?
Interviewer: Do you have a set of those Russian nesting dolls?
Putin: Is Ivan the Terrible dead?
Interviewer: When you take your pants off at night, do you empty out your pockets and toss all the loose roubles and laundry receipts and grocery lists and broken golf tees and stolen Super Bowl rings and finger picks and Swiss Bank Account numbers and business cards from Chinese aluminum siding salesmen and the torn envelope from last month’s electric bill with Edward Snowden’s phone number on it into a huge pile on top of your dresser?
Putin: Don’t forget the nesting dolls.
Interviewer: Do you know Tennyson’s “Charge of the Light Brigade?”
Putin: Hum a few bars.
Interviewer: Did you know it was set in The Crimea?
Putin: You are pulling my poop.
Interviewer: Who is your favorite Pussy Rioter?
Putin: They’re all a riot. But we have a law against that. Also against singing. And laughing. Especially laughing in my general direction.
Interviewer: What book do you have on your night stand?
Putin: Where’s Waldo?
Interviewer: What a strange choice of book for a world leader.
Putin: Ah, Waldo. Escort this borscht-head to the curb. And bring me the head of someone I don’t like.

Interview with a teenager

Interviewer: Where do you think…come back here mister!
Teenager: What?
Interviewer: Where do you think…come back here mister!
Teenager: What? What?
Interviewer: Where do you think…come back here mister!
Teenager: What? What? What?
Interviewer: Where do you think…come back here mister!
Teenager: Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat?
Interviewer: Where do you think…come back here mister!

Interview with Steve Ballmer

Interviewer: You just paid $2 billion for the Los Angeles Clippers. Are you nuts?
Steve Ballmer: Yes.
Interviewer: Your total fortune was put at $20 billion before you bought the Clippers. That means you’re down to a mere $18 billion. Are you nuts?
Steve Ballmer: Yes.
Interviewer: Let’s say you’re walking down the street and an emaciated, down-on-his-luck guy comes up to you and says he hasn’t eaten in days. He asks if you can spare $1 billion so he can buy a sandwich chain. Would you give it to him?
Steve Ballmer: Yes
Interviewer: Are you nuts?
Steve Ballmer: Yes.
Interviewer: How many fingers am I holding up
Steve Ballmer: Yes.
Interviewer: You really are a nut boy aren’t you?
Steve Ballmer: Yes
Interviewer: Are you nuttier than a fruitcake?
Steve Ballmer: Yes
Interviewer: Nuttier than a fluffernutter?
Steve Ballmer: Yes.
Interviewer: Nuttier than Dennis Rodman in a wedding dress in North Korea?
Steve Ballmer: No.
Interviewer: No?
Steve Ballmer: Yes.

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in F.A.Q., Mockery and derision | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

You know what?

You know what makes me laugh? Looking out at the rain when the Weather Channel app for my Smart Ass™ phone says the chances for rain right now are zero. In other words, no chance. Like the odds of swimming without getting wet–although the app makes that a 3-2 bet. Keep in mind, these forecasts come from professionals of such candlepower that they don’t know enough to come in out of a hurricane. Makes you wonder how they ever get out of the shower in the morning.

You know what is getting old? Saying that X is the new Y. Examples:
• Sixty is the new forty.
• Ninety-five is the new ninety-four.
• Dead is the new alive.
• “What complete crap,” is the new “What partial crap.”
• Horsehair is the new memory foam.
• “Going with undies, for crying out loud,” is the new “Going commando.”
• “Mother of Stonewall Jackson!” is the new “For crying out loud.” ( Also replaces “Gee, that makes me mad,” and “I’m telling my mother on you and she got jiu jitsu lessons for Christmas.”)
• “Chemical weapons are outlawed under the Geneva Convention, Dude” is the new “Somebody step on a duck?”
• “Shhhh, not so loud, you’ll wake everybody up,” is the new “She gonna open up a can of jiu jitsu on you.”
• And the completely over-used “Today is the first day of the rest of my life,” is now replaced by “Hey, there was a meatball with my name on it in the fridge last night. Who ate it?”

To all of these, I say “Stop it whenever you feel like it,” which is the new “Stop it or I’ll come up there, for crying out loud, and open up this can of whatchamcallit as soon as I find the can opener.”

You know what is getting worse? Hard to believe but it’s sports broadcasting. I refer to my notes from recent months of watching blather-ridden ex-jocks and cliché-barfing, cliché-barfers calling TV sports events.

I noted many poetic turns of phrase such as “His athleticism and quickness are so great,” and “He’s a great physical runner.” My all-time favorite: “He knows how to smell the end zone.” The term “gifted” just doesn’t do these announcers justice.

Speaking of gifted, last night on TV, the Cincinnati second baseman jumped up to snag a line drive, moving the announcer to moan, in italics, “What verticality!” Might have been me moaning.

You know what doesn’t make sense? The other day I noted a familiar sign on the back of a fire truck, warning drivers to “Keep back 500 feet.” As a good Catholic boy raised under the authoritarian dictum “obey all rules or say holy frijoles to hell,” I considered dropping back to give the truck some room.

But my bad Catholic boy voice said “Hold the phone, 500 feet is about 160 yards. That’s more than one and a half football fields. At that distance you wouldn’t be able to see the sign without those gift binoculars you got for subscribing to Yard Trim Today.” Reminds me of those cruel bumper stickers that say “Banjo players keep 500 miles back.”

You know what I want to be when I grow up? That’s such a long way off that it’s idle speculation to consider it now. I mean I’d probably say something like I want to be happy and have a lot of toys and great kids and grandkids and a billion dollars and have someone like K-Mac to share it with–as long as she didn’t spend too much on gardening gloves.

Now that I think of it, the actual K-Mac would be perfect because she already has a new pair of gloves. Besides, I think it would cost at least a billion dollars to find another one of her. Talk about scarce.

I mean I could just forget the billion dollars and go with what I have now. Wow. Who would do that? (Shhhhh, not so loud.) Maybe by the time I grow up, they’ll have a Get-a-Billion-Bucks-and-Stand-Pat-on-Everything-Else app. Perfect for a guy name Pat.

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in News You Can Use (Sort of), The human comedy | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

‘s up with that?

Normally, life is rational, logical and so tastefully appointed. But even in a perfect world crap sometimes takes your breath away.

1. In the checkout lane the clerk asks cheerfully “Did you find everything you were looking for?” You say “I couldn’t find the canned corn.” The clerk blinks three times and says “So, do you think it will ever stop raining?” What is up with that?

2. At lunch, a colleague says “Lemme borrow one of your napkins.” You grant his wish. The next day you realize that the colleague never returned your napkin. You confront him and he says “Dude, I threw it away.” What the hell is up with that?

3. Someone asks you to pick a card. Any card. Oop, they say, not that one. No, not that one either. Okay, they say, look at your card. Put it back in the deck. No, not there. Right there. Under my thumb. Okay, close your eyes. Now turn around.

So you close your eyes and turn around and you start thinking about canned corn and how there’s always one little kernel left on the plate that refuses to be picked up on your fork no matter how many times you threaten it. You see yourself looking around the table and all the other members of the Clean Plate Club have their heads down like dogs, licking up every last morsel. The urge to follow the crowd is powerful but then you accidentally knock your corn kernel off your plate and onto one of theirs. A six-foot tongue slithers out of nowhere and slurps it into oblivion.

Finally you turn around and open your eyes and the guy with the cards has vanished. Because you’re still upset about the colleague who threw your napkin away, you say “Damn.” And since you already paid the guy $10 to do his card trick, you are left to ponder: what is up with that?

4. You’re at a job interview. They’ve asked about your qualifications, your work ethic, your punctuality, your zipper (which you promised to have fixed), who won the French and Indian War, your favorite Lil Wayne number, and your attitude toward mimes—which you mistakenly hear as mines and you ask like land mines or the ones you go into and come out with consumption which is what killed your grandfather who, ironically, was a mine sweeper who survived World War II but ended up croaking because, as everyone knows, things are bad in the mines—and everybody chuckles and they say let’s move on.

All of your answers seem to have gone over big, lots of laughs, especially when you explained why your clothes smelled like bear manure. Then they pull the pin and toss out that deadly grenade of a question: Why do you want this job?

What is up with that?

Hellooo. I need the money.

You’re pretty sure they want you to say you believe in the company mission, you’re sure you can make a difference, you’ll work like a dog and never fall asleep in the men’s room.

But you couldn’t care less about the company or its stupid mission and you’re not going to work like a dog or a cat or a gerbil and you’ll be dozing in the men’s room maybe eight times a day. Also, the people interviewing you are fat heads because why else would somebody want a job?

They stop chuckling and start frowning. You say “Uh oh, was I using my inside voice or my outside voice?”

The head fathead says “Outside.”

You start to say something but the head fathead barks “Now!”

So, what is up with that?

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in Mockery and derision, The human comedy | Tagged , | 3 Comments

The Grumpy Incident

He says “Hey, listen to this.”

In another room, in another realm, his sweetie says naught. She’s used to his random public address system blurtations of dubious merit. Hence the wall between them. She, on the sofa, playing “Words With Friends” on her device, and he at the kitchen table surfing the web on his Smarty Pants™ Phone.

He’s reading the local paper’s review of the police blotter. “Someone was disorderly Thursday at blah…” “Someone was disorderly Sunday at blah…” “Someone was disorderly Tuesday at blah…”

Hardly worth a shoutout to the device diddler. Still, he can almost hear the All Points Bulletin going out: Calling all cars. Calling all cars. Be on the lookout for someone, repeat, someone. First name unknown, Last name unknown. Not to be–repeat–not to be confused with anyone.

Then his eyes jump on the next blotter item like jibber on jabber. He raises his voice.

“Someone was disorderly on Monday,” he reads aloud, “at Grumpy’s”

Nothing.

“Did you hear that?”

“I heard it.”

“Disorderly at Grumpy’s,” he says.

“Who’s Grumpy?”

There are a lot of ways he can answer that, but he congratulates himself for choosing the high road.

“It’s a bar.”

Not a peep from the audient. (Just as certain bugs have developed a resistance to antibiotics, his sweetie, he fears, has figured how to tune him out—or worse, tune him in on a white noise frequency like the sound of 1955 TV static or Niagara Falls in any year and/or century.)

“Get it? Disorderly…at Grumpy’s.”

“Got it,” she replies.

Here he feels an odd sense of deja vu, almost certain he’s been here before, said this before and felt grumpy before in a previous life. (Most likely when he was Napoleon or Salluzzo of Gloversville.)

Anyway, he goes back to surfing. And he is thinking—he picked up the thinking-while-surfing trick in a Multi-Tasking webinar—that a lot of marriages unravel these days because of a lack of communication.

That makes him wonder how marital unraveling works. He imagines a loose thread hanging from a metaphorical sweater. He innocently pulls on it and the whole sweater collapses into a metaphorical pile on the floor, like wet spaghetti fumbled during the pot-to-collander transfer.

Thus does he grasp the essential rule of marriage: You never pull loose threads.

Still, he asks himself, what if there’s a thread hanging off somebody’s metaphorical hem line. And when somebody asks “How do I look?” well, wouldn’t he logically remove it? Of course, although wisely he would not “pull it,” or “yank it,” which could cause unraveling.

Logically, he would grab a steak knife from the kitchen.(Somebody left the good scissors outside in the garden and it rained and they got all muddy and rusted. He names no names, as this is all metaphorical/hypothetical.)

Granted, somebody might say or even shriek “Put down that knife” as his blade glinted beneath the fluorescent light. And though he would sever the offending metaphorical thread handily, he also would have to weigh the look of horror on somebody’s metaphorical face—post slice.

Probably he should offer a pre-slice warning such as “Don’t worry. I’m just going to cut off your thread.”

“Cut off my head?” somebody will almost certainly shriek, punching in 911 on her cell.

Duly noted. Without careful articulation and enunciation, a lack of communication could occur, causing an unraveling of a marriage. What irony.

He says “Hey, here’s a headline.”

Silence.

“It says ‘Australians are getting fat.’”

Silence.

“And this one. On the same page: ‘Antarctica is getting colder.’”

Silence.

“Do you think anyone bothered to check if those two things could be connected?”

“Damn,” says his love interest. “Mary just played a word worth 173 points.”

“I mean it’s kind of obvious, no?”

Silence.

“What idiots,” he says. “I bet they are connected.”

“That Mary,” she says, her words almost immediately drowned in a shusshing, rushing sound in the background. He knows that sound by heart. Niagara Damn Falls.

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in News You Can Use (Sort of), The human comedy | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Seven Warning Signs That You May Be Dead

More and more companies these days are pressured by shareholders to cut staff. The result is that Big Bosses at hundreds of companies have been delivering a “Get Rid of the Deadwood,” speech.

In the old days deadwood was a euphemism for staffers showing marginal productivity and such a lack of energy as to appear lifeless, sometimes to the point of gathering cobwebs. When examined by the company nurse or a Skype-based, freelance coroner, many of these employees qualified for a sans-a-breath classification and were discretely removed by the janitorial staff.

Others, however, were found not dead, but merely involved in long-range projects that required lots of silent, strategic planning. While silence is a symptom of deadwood, it alone does not support a prima facie case of “Nobody home, Jerome.”

Today, deadwood includes those who eat their breakfast, lunch and dinner at their desks. Those who seldom say anything during meetings–in fact they don’t attend meetings. They skip parties and never chip in for somebody’s going away gift. They are always there late at night when the Big Boss tosses them a wave while cutting out shamelessly before midnight.

Management gurus now say why wait six months or six years to find that Ziggurat is taking so long on the Ferguson report because he’s as stiff as a torque wrench. Thus, the new “Get Rid of the Deadwood” mandate means sending someone from cubicle to cubicle to have employees sign a “Proof of Life” statement.

Some companies try to lighten up the somber mood by ordering pizza and staging a festive “Bring Out Your Dead” Day (or BOYD which, ironically, reads BODY if the last two letters are switched.)

In order to avoid the embarrassment of hauling off dead workers only to discover they are still thinking about the Ferguson report, companies are issuing employees this convenient check list:

Is this you?

Seven Warning Signs That You May Be Dead.

1. You don’t think you are dead. You get up every day and put on the same cargo pants. You go to work and do nothing. You come home at night and your wife asks what’s new and you have trouble remembering. She asks “Any new cargo in your cargo pants?” You ask what’s for dinner. She says leftovers. You ask leftover what? She says what do you care? You say Good Point. She says this isn’t working; we need to talk. You say what’s not working, the stove? She says “It’s you. You act like you’re dead.” You say I’ll call a repairman and have him stop by tomorrow. She says I had drinks with the guy across the street. We’re going to Vegas tomorrow. You say I’ll have the repairman come next week. She says I may not be here. You ask what’s for dinner? She says leftovers. You ask…

2. You can’t remember the last time you had to use the men’s/ladies room. In fact, you can’t remember which one you are.

3. Every now and then the night janitor vacuums your clothes and dusts your hair. Often he brings in a pal and the two of them stare at you, giggling, taking pictures on their cell phones and occasionally pinching your cheek.

4. Your Irritable Bowel Syndrome has suddenly cleared up.

5. You have 24,238 unanswered e-mails. 21,112 of them are from someone named Ferguson.

6. Elvis Presley walks past your desk and says “You aint nothin’ but a hound dog. A dead hound dog.”

7. You hear voices singing “Sixteen men on a dead man’s chest.” You count the men standing on your chest. There are only fifteen. You want to breathe a sigh of relief but you notice you can’t breathe. Then the dwarf jumps off his brother’s shoulders. And now there are sixteen.

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in News You Can Use (Sort of), The human comedy | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Stuck fast in the crock of delusion

This morning, as usual, I stood at the bathroom sink deftly maneuvering my 75 horse power, Mark IV Tusk Titan® (aka: electric tooth brush). I noted with satisfaction that I was still young and alert enough to have applied the thing to my teeth and not my hair.

The doodad’s buzzy drone, reminiscent of a vacuum cleaner that has thrown a rod, put me into a dreamy state. No, not Norph Dakota. I mean the kind of state where you appraise your mirrored self and can’t keep from thinking: not bad for a guy who survived four years of Latin.

I wondered if today would be the day my ship came in. Many years have I stood with nose pressed hard against the windowpane, scouring the suburban horizon (pretty much the house across the street). I long for the cry “Sail ho! Make way for McGuire’s ship. Hey, McGurk, keep your hands off. I said McGuire’s ship.”

Will it be a galleon loaded with gold and jewels? A packet ship stacked with barrels of chocolate pudding and fried Spam? A Schooner of Pilsner with chips, Chipotle salsa and refried magic beans?

A niggling thought intruded on my musing-while-brushing. I tried to shunt it aside with the handy Thought Shunt™ that K-Mac gave me for my birthday. While handy, it is also a tricky device to master. With my mind stuck fast in the crock of delusion, I fumbled the gizmo and the thought broke through.

And it said “Hmm. Have you noticed that you’re brushing your teeth from right to left today instead of left to right?”

My eyebrows shot up to my hairline, a near impossibility since the hairline decamped years ago. Shaken, I shut down the Tusk Titan.™ Since forever my morning brushing ritual has started at the upper reserved box on the left side of my jaw. Today, for some reason, I started high in the stalactites of the right (ironically, the wrong), going completely against the grain. As we well know, grain doesn’t like to be gone against.

To help orient you, picture my head as north, my butt as south, my left ear as west and right ear as east. On a normal day, with bristles pointed inward, I begin on that upper left grinder, the Holy Molar. Slowly, I Zamboni my way east across the sheer face of the deadly front range incisors–known ominously by tooth jockeys as the flat irons.

Upon reaching the Far East and without missing a beat, I perform the complicated maneuver known to World War I dog-fighting pilots as an Immelman. I flip the Tooth Titan™ upside down, pivoting slightly so that the bristles now face in the same direction as my nose.

With care I drop the Tusker one sixteenth of an inch. Moving east to west (aka: here to there) I dig into the backside of the front pearlies. When done, I drop down to the lower chewbies, crossing the International Jaw Line—meaning it is now yesterday, but only until tomorrow.

You may ask “So? Are you daft? Do you think we care how you brush your teeth? Are you a loon? Have you considered a rubber room? Are you stupid? Where can I get one of those Thought Shunts™?”

The fact is, I don’t know if I’m daft. I don’t know why I suddenly went against the grain. I’ve checked the yellow pages and the internet for psychologists specializing in tooth-brushing pattern disorders and/or grainyopathic behavior. Turns out there are several, but they all list the same 800 number in Sri Lanka.

Meanwhile, I press my nose hard against the windowpane and search for an answer. I hope this doesn’t delay my ship.

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in The human comedy | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Absurdly Existential Standup

Welcome to our new feature, Interviews With Famous Dead People You Probably Never Heard Of But Would Have If You’d Only Paid Attention In School Instead Of Screwing Around And Becoming A Bitter Disappointment To Your Parents Who Did The Same Exact Thing When They Were Young And Had Fertilizer Between Their Ears.

Today’s guest is dead jibber-jabber philosopher Albert Camus

PMcG: Is it true your last name does not rhyme with famous?
AC:

PMcG: In the opening sentences of your novel “The Stranger,” your character, Mersault, says “Mother died today. Or maybe it was yesterday. I can’t be sure.” She didn’t make much of an impression on him did she?
AC:

PMcG: Left completely unmentioned in that book is Mersault’s pony. For instance, did he have a pony? Was its name Jimmy? Did his mother ride it to the store? Side saddle? Did she ever race Jimmy against other ponies? Did she have a bookie? Did she smoke? Is that why she’s dead? When did Jimmy die? Did Jimmy smoke? Is Jimmy still alive—because that would be one really old pony, even though it’s just make-believe.
AC:

PMcG: You say very little about Mersault’s sister Summersault beyond her biting riposte “You are a very sick poodle, Mersault.”
AC:

PMcG: Is it true that you and the famous French mumblebore Jean-Paul Sartre were once friends—until he wrote you a letter that began “Dear Camus, you botulism spewing son of a drain spout.”
AC:

PMcG: Did you spew botulism or something that may have just looked to Sartre like botulism? By the way, did Sartre’s name sort of rhyme with Star Trek? Did his friends call him Jackie-Paulie Sartre?
AC:

PMcG: I have read that you were an alumnus of the School of Absurdism. Where is that school? Do they give tours? Didn’t they have a basketball team with the cheer

A-B-S-U-R-D-I
Ism Ism
in your eye

AC:

PMcG: You once wrote “The absurd is the essential concept and the first truth.” Not to sound absurd or anything, but what is the second truth? By the way, are all truths numbered? If so, where can I order a wallet-sized complete list of truths? (Would make a great stocking stuffer.)
AC:

PMcG: What about hair growing on your palms if you were naughty with your body parts? Is that absurd or is it a truth? Should we still carry hand clippers just in case?
AC:

PMcG: Speaking of absurdity, your ex-pal Sartre wrote a snore called “Being and Nothingness.” Did the man ever have a thought of less than 400,000 words?
AC:

PMcG: Don’t you think “Being and Nothingness” sounds like the title of a sit-com? Like “Big Bang Theory.” Get this: Several dorky philosophers hang around their apartment talking about nihilism, and Pinkleman’s theory of stupidism and the worship of technology versus the worship of absurd sex. They snap off clever lines like “I think my life is of great importance, but I also think it is meaningless without gravy.”
AC:

PMcG: So, their girlfriends go back and forth between wanting to kill themselves and rejecting that as anti-breathingism, not to mention boring. They begin to wonder why these dopes are their boyfriends. They start dating sailors and get tattoos, making their boyfriends even more convinced of the dualism that life sucks the big one, unless it doesn’t. Is that what Jackie-Paulie had in mind?
AC:

PMcG: Just between you and me, did any of that stuff ever really make sense to you? Or was it like, just a gig and, well, a gig is a gig and you play the cards you’re dealt?
AC:

PMcG: In your writing, you espoused a strong belief that happiness is ridiculously improbable and that our main purpose in life is to be hit by a speeding bus. Other than that, did you enjoy your miserable existence?
AC:

PMcG: Oh, can you get me a sweatshirt that says “Property, School of Absurdism?” Size Extra Existential. Will I pay you back? Don’t be absurd.
AC:

©Patrick A. McGuire and A Hint of Light 2013-2014, all rights reserved.

Posted in News You Can Use (Sort of) | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments