Thursday, February 24, 2011

Jokes That Have Never Produced Laughter

If you are hosting a dinner party or looking to spice up a speech given to your coworkers, these jokes will not help you at all:

1. "A man goes into a bar.  He has a dog with him.  The dog is wearing an eyepatch.  The man says to the bartender, "Ask me about my dog."  Unfortunately, the bartender does not hear him, because he went deaf in one ear as a child.  He serves a woman at the other end of the bar.  When the bartender comes back to the man with the dog, the man forgets what he was going to say about the dog.  He orders an imported beer and enjoys the rest of his evening."

2.  A priest, a rabbi, and a nonreligious man are all on a plane flying across the Atlantic Ocean for different reasons.  The plane experiences some engine trouble, and one of the wings catches on fire.  The plane starts to go down.  Luckily, there are enough parachutes for everyone, and evacuation is orderly.

3.  A duck walks into a pharmacy.  He says to the pharmacist, "I need some soothing ointment for my beak.  It is very chapped."  The pharmacist replies, "We have nothing here for ducks."

4.  A dog goes into a bar.  He is wearing an eye patch.  The dog says to the bartender, "Have you heard the one about the one-eyed dog?"  The bartender, who is deaf in one ear, thinks the dog is making fun of him.  He asks him to leave.  The dog says, "Don't you have a sense of humor, deafie?"  At the end of his shift, the bartender is tired of all the jokes.  Today it's the one-eyed dog.  Yesterday it was the horse with rickets.  The day before: ants.  He lives in a small room above the bar.  He spends the night alone there, as he does every night, listening to his battery-operated radio, which picks up only a bad jazz station.  He listens to bad jazz with his bad ear.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Omegle

With the popularization of the internet, so many things have been made easier: shopping, staying in touch with friends... child predation.  Yes, it's no secret that the internet is a veritable playground for child predators - just watch Dateline NBC.  So the other day when I stumbled upon a curious website called "Omegle," I was intrigued.  This is a website on which two users are matched up randomly and can chat in real time.  To me, this screamed child predation.  So I decided that, being an intelligent 17-year-old young adult, I would confront these child predators head on - I was going to beat them on their home court (meaning Omegle, of course). 

I sat down at my computer and began my first conversation.  Here's the transcript:

You: Hello.
Stranger: age
You: You want me to give you my age?
Stranger: yeah
You: Well this got creepy in a hurry.
Stranger: no i just dont wanna be talking to some 35 year old pervert or some 10 year old
(against my better judgment) You: Well I can assure you I'm neither - I'm 17.
Stranger: me 2 - 18 soon
You: That's quite the coincidence.  Or are you just saying that you're 17 to establish a connection between us which, as a 35-year-old pervert, you will later use to obtain my personal information and "become friends" with me?
Your conversational partner has disconnected.

Mission accomplished.  One (assumed) pervert down,  many more to go.  As I progressed, though, I realized that my first conversation might very well end up my most successful.  Here are a few of my other conversations:

Stranger: Are you a hot 18 year old girl with a video camera?
You: No.

Stranger: hey asl
You: Ask Something Lengthier.
Stranger: AGE SEX LOCATION
You: Shouting doesn’t help.
You: Also, may I suggest a question mark?
Stranger: soory
Stranger: age, sex, location?
You: Better, but a capital letter to start would be just peachy.
Stranger: Age, sex, location/
Stranger: ?
You: Now, if you would be ever so kind as to phrase the questions as a full sentence, I would be much obliged.
Stranger: Hey, may i have your age, sex, location?
You: That’s much better
You: No. 
 
Stranger: talk dirty to me
You: Okay.
Stranger: do it
You: So I haven’t showered in 8 days, and I get some really oily peanut butter and…
Your conversational partner has disconnected.
 
Stranger: check out this omegle thats only hot girls www(dot)BabesOfOmegle(dot)com, works on iphones too
You: That sounds plausible.
 
Stranger: I'm looking for that guy I talked to from canada earlier.  is that you?
You: No, but thanks for appreciating me for who I am.
Your conversational partner has disconnected.
 
Clearly, Omegle is a strange but powerful tool - you get a certain rush from talking to a total stranger.  However, the people you meet are not always the most intelligent, open-minded, or, quite frankly, normal.  It certainly was not a hotbed for child molesters (though that first person was pretty shady), but rather a hotbed for eccentric people.  I can't tell you how many weird conversations I had in just an hour of using Omegle - I'm not sure if I'll ever use it again.  I'm afraid. 



Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Ron Swanson's Pyramid of Greatness

Although I like the new requirement of a picture for every blog post, to be honest it hasn't really contributed that much to the posts.  Pictures are thrown in at the end of a post, a quick afterthought added to fulfill a obligation.  I'll admit to doing this a few times.  With that in mind, I decided for this post to use a picture as the focus of my blog.  First, some background - I was watching t.v. last week, flipping through the channels when I stopped on a show I had never seen before, called Parks and Recreation (on NBC, I believe).  What I saw, and what you are about to see, blew my mind:
 
This, my friends, is the Ron Swanson Pyramid of Greatness.  Ron Swanson, a character in the show, used this diagram to coach young children in basketball.  Because I found it amusing, I'll go over some of the more humorous elements of this pyramid.  I'm aware that it's difficult to read some of the smaller writing (this is as large as I could get it), so just click on the picture to see a larger version of it.

I'll examine the implications of a few squares here and there: 

Level One: Poise: "Sting like a bee.  Do not float like a butterfly.  That's ridiculous."
Analysis: Swanson brings up an excellent point here.  Although stinging like a bee is helpful in nearly any situation, floating like a butterfly has never helped anyone.  No one is afraid of butterflies.  Bees kill people.

Level Two: Masonry: "Building walls makes you strong.  Defending them makes you even stronger."
Analysis: Examples - The Great Wall of China, defended against the Mongols.  The wall in my backyard, defended against bears, neighbors, and hobos.

Level Two: Crying: "Acceptable at funerals and the Grand Canyon."
Analysis: Swanson ensures that his basketball players will be true men by banning crying in nearly any emotional setting.  All their unexpressed, pent-up emotions will make them play harder, albeit at the expense of their long-term emotional well-being.  He's not their therapist, though, he's their coach.

Level Three: Intensity: "Give 100%.  110% is impossible.  Only idiots recommend that."
Analysis: Thank you, Ron Swanson, for solving one of the great mysteries of modern science.  Why do people say you should give 110% when that would clearly be ridiculous?  If we could give more of something than we have then all of the problems in the world would be solved.

Level Five: Attire: "Shorts over 6" are capri pants.  Shorts under 6" are European."
Analysis:  Shorts. Must. Be. Six. Inches.

Level Five: Skim Milk: "That's right.  It's on here twice.  Avoid it."
Analysis:  Skim milk is clearly the drink of the devil.  It looks like milk, feels like milk, smells like milk, but tastes like water.  The skim milk industry must be brought down.

Level Seven: Weapons, Wood Working, and Welfare Avoidance.
Analysis: Collectively, level seven contains the three pillars of a great man.  Weapons: for protection from enemies, wild animals.  Wood Working:  Allows you to live off the land, make chairs or tables as gifts.  Welfare Avoidance: A true man needs no assistance, particularly from the government.

Level Eight: America: "The only country that matters.  If you want to experience other "cultures," use an atlas or a ham radio."
Analysis: There is a reason people in other countries speak English better than we speak their languages.  It's because America is the greatest country on Earth.  I could learn Chinese if I wanted to.  How would that benefit me?

Level Eight: Buffets: "Whenever available.  Choose quantity over quality."
Analysis:  Another hallmark of American society - anyone in their right mind would choose an unlimited amount of terrible pizza over a few slices of "good" pizza.  There's a reason Cici's Pizza is still in business - fat, intelligent Americans that recognize a good deal when they see it.

Level Nine: Honor: "If you need it defined, you don't have it."
Analysis:  Honor is greatness.  'Nuff said.