Archive for October, 2011

Man’s Best Friend?

Posted in General, News on October 12, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

We own a beagle. She’s a beautiful dog. Most beagles are. They have that classic hound look – droopy eyes, fat paws, short, barrel like bodies. They can melt you with a well-timed gaze.

But, as nice as they are to look at, they are stubborn, selfish beasts. I love my dog and I’d like to think she loves me back, but beagles are soulless manipulators. All they want, all the time, is FOOD. They’ll do stupid dog tricks for food, but only for food. They could care less about pleasing their human owners.

The dog even went so far as to eat my kid’s dinner (though to be fair, my kid left her food on her bed at beagle eye / jumping level)

Now, a Labrador Retriever or a good Terrier (there are tons of types of terriers!)? They thrive on keeping their humans happy. They will do sweet, cuddly, kind things to assure our affection. They reciprocate something like love. They want you to like them and this (mostly, but not always) even transcends food.

Eager to please…Sweetly disposed..Content just to lay by your feet and follow you around… You good dog owners know what I’m talking about. You probably take it for granted sometimes (go pet your dog and appreciate the little sucker).

But when you have a beagle?

Ugh.

This may not apply to ALL beagles. It is possible there is a loving, human-pleasing beagle somewhere, but we’ve owned two, and spent some time at beagle rescues observing their behaviors, and, well, they all seem pretty similar to me.

Our last beagle, the super-cute Oliver is way awesome in retrospect (he died getting stuck in a gate in 100 degree+ summer heat while trying to squeeze his fat butt through iron rods to get at a Koi pond – ;-( he didn’t deserve to go out like that). He put himself to bed around 9pm every night, waddling off to his crate. If the crate’s door was closed, he’d use his paws like hands and open it right up to let himself in.

He was sweet too. He didn’t have a mean bone in his squatty, little body.

But, now that he’s gone to doggie heaven (lots of humping and eating I’d imagine), it’s easy to forget how BAD he was!

Escaping, digging, knocking plates of food from the dining room table and then wolfing down as much food as he could before we could scold him. Oliver, God rest his soul, was far from angelic.

So it goes with our latest headache – Lola. Say it with me. Low-la. It’s fun. I make it more fun and call her, Low-low. She’s gangsta. She’s about five years old and she’s mellowed some, but she’s still a pain the butt.

Escape? Check.

Digging? Check.

Sleeping on couches she is forbidden to jump on? Check.

Laying on said couch like a fat turd, staring defiantly while chastising her to “Get down!” Check.

 
(Nefarious! Devious! Unassumingly…difficult!)

But, then, as much as she infuriates me, she makes the cutest little grunts and groans, and when she pants and her tongue hangs just so and her brown eyes squint ever so slightly, she looks like she is smiling at you. She looks too happy to not think, now, that is one cute dog.

Don’t be fooled, Loyal Reader. It’s pure survival. Hound dogs, an obnoxious breed if you’re not into hunting small game, have been bred with purpose. That they’re cute is mother nature’s way of sparing them. A dog that irksome has to be cute or their line would die off. Folks wouldn’t put up with their crap.

Since we’ve given away one dog, Furio, (a Lab / Chow mix, and a real people-pleaser named after Furio the enforcer from Italy from The Sopranos, is currently brightening up a 12 year old’s world – our friend Jenna took him for her son, Tai), and our WONDERFUL cat, Pericles, passed on, Lola has actually been happier. She needs to be the only dog or she gets too jealous and acts out.

Acting out usually involves cleaning something up.

My wife and I swear we are never getting another pet. They’re messy. They smell. They add more responsibilities to an already hectic life. You gotta worry about them. You gotta love a creature that might not love you back. You gotta love, unconditionally, an animal that given the chance, and starving would probably eat your face right off.

Ugh (again).

Still. Let’s take some odds, Loyal Reader – though betting against me would be stupid, because I assure you, no matter how we protest, we will end up with another pet. I know my wife too well. When she says, “We are never getting another pet ever, ever again!” what she means is, “We are never getting another pet ever, ever again, right now.”

Which is fine by me. I may agree and add, “Never, ever, ever!” but what I really mean is, “Never, ever, ever, until the right little beast gives me the right look, and the price is right, and my girl holds me tight and coos adorably until we’re pulling out hair out, teaching a creature the difference between defecating on grass as opposed to soft carpet or clean floor tiles.”

Whatever happens, it’s all about quality of life. The thing inside of me that turns my back on English Bulldog puppies (apart from balking at the $1000+ price tag) is just sense being sensible. When we jump again, we gotta make sure we can give the pet 100% of our time, effort, and love. Their lives are short and it’s our job to make it as awesome as possible. Nothing’s worse than a lazy pet owner (guilty, but working on it).

Philosophically picking it apart, pet ownership can be pretty deep stuff.

Okay, time to stop thinking. Unplugging in 3…2…1.

Woof! Woof!

Poor dog! Don’t worry – you’ll get your revenge. One day, you’ll eat your owner’s face off!

Trying To Sneak One By, Eh?

Posted in Books, General, Movies, Raves on October 11, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

No. Of course not. I am one blog post behind schedule so I have to do this quick post to catch up.

My brother is visiting so I should get off the computer and hang out.

Here is a quick link back to an earlier blog that melted my heart into a pool of pure jelly. Presenting (again)…Sofia!!!

My wife and I went to see the cancer comedy 50/50Seth Rogen is super enjoyable as the cool, best friend. He’s the funniest dude alive. The lead, the kid from 3rd Rock From The Sun (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), is good. I could relate to a lot of the stuff what with my own cancer experiences. The movie does a good job of conveying what it’s like. They don’t over do it or get too sentimental. Recommended!

So go see a movie with a loved one – whatever you’re doing, it’ll improve your mood.

Okay, go watch my niece’s video one more time. Listen to the way she enunciates and try not to smile your face in half.


(I’m glad I never shaved my head. Despite some gnarly treatment, my hair actually hung in there. It’s getting thicker and fuller as we speak, enhancing my devilishly good looks!)

Best Promotional Blog Ever!

Posted in Books, General, News on October 11, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

This just might make me rich, Loyal Reader…

Watch awesomeness. I’ll wait for you…

Now how can you possibly say ‘No’ to that? There is absolutely no way. And that disturbing brain. How can you resist? You know what you gotta do…

7 Brains
(Click me!)

7 BRAINS
by: Michael Louis Calvillo
Chapbook, 60 pages
ISBN: 978-1-926611-14-3

Thriller / Filler

Posted in General, Rants, Raves on October 9, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

This year’s Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween Horror Nights was a smashing success. The mazes were heart-stopping fun and the vibe was foggy-freaky. Everything worked out perfectly for us (but not necessarily for the bigwigs at Universal).

You see, the economy sucks, and lucky for those shelling out, the crowds were way tolerable. Though we upgraded to a front-of-the-line pass, had we braved it with the general admission drones, things wouldn’t have been as bad as they had been in the past (where we waited almost two hours to board the backlot tram!).

Still, even though the park’s streets and alleyways weren’t crazy congested, some of the more popular lines posted wait times in excess of 80 minutes! Without the upgrade, we’d probably get through two mazes, and another attraction or two. With the pass, there was absolutely NO waiting for anything. We walked right on up. It was pretty sweet. When we do it again next year, we’re definitely doing it with front-of-the-line passes. It’s totally worth it.

(Up close and personal with a groovy ghoulie)

Here are the best and worst things about the event.

1. Rob Zombie’s House of 1000 Corpses in 3D was the best terror maze by a mile. The 3D effects worked out nicely with the day-glo, neon, go-go splatter of Zombie’s signature look. The movie is an underrated gem (IMHO) and the maze does a great job of pulling the best parts of the movie together, whisking nervous walkers along on a swift jaunt to hell and back.

You begin by venturing through Captain Spaulding’s Murder Ride, then end up in the Firefly’s demented residence, then you wrap things up with a descent into the bowels of the earth to tackle Dr. Satan’s sadistic lair.

The effects were top-notch and the actors scared the bejesus out of me. It was fantastic. If you go, it’s a must-see.


(Though his head is humongous, Rob Zombie’s vision goes hand-in-hand with haunted mazes)

2. La Llorona is a creepy Mexican fable about a woman who drowns her young son and daughter so she can be with a man who doesn’t want anything to do with her kids. When the man finds out what she has done, he rejects the woman. She kills herself in the very lake where she dispatched her kids. Together, the three spirits roam, and moan, and do a whole lot of ghostly crying.

The maze was aptly atmospheric. Catholic imagery, eternal wailing, and a bunch of dead kid dummies got the blood pumping. The screaming Llorona got things jumping.

If you go, be sure to pin this one at number 2, right behind Zombie.

3. The studio tour tram was converted into a SCREAM 4 themed snoozefest. Monitors ran video footage of Stab 8, the new movie-within-a-movie from those “clever” Scream writers. The idea is that YOU and your tram-mates are extras in Stab 8 and fodder for ghostface’s sure knife. It’s a nifty idea (they did the same thing with Jigsaw last year).

Unfortunately, everything feels half-baked. The experience is disjointed at best. Creative doesn’t follow through, even dropping the kinda cool, live action role-playing (we were sort of LARPing) midway throught the ride in favor of a series of commercials about upcoming Universal horror movies.

The tram doesn’t go through any of the cool tram stuff either. No King Kong, no Jaws, no spinning ice tunnel. They simply drive you down to the Psycho House, let you out, and then make you hike through some pretty gnarly, dirt-trailed terrain. With so many feet trudging along, dust rises to mix with the piped in fog and things get almost unbearable. It’s sort of…miserable.

At the end of the tiring trek, you pass the Psycho House (unceremoniously) and then descend into a left over WAR OF THE WORLDS set – the gruesomely impressive aftermath of a plane crash. Effects wise things aren’t too shabby, but a lame ZOMBIEZ ON A PLANE theme cheapens the thrills, sucking the creepy right out of the plane crash scene.

At this point you reboard the tram and ride back with another round of commercials.

And that’s that.

Not too cool.

What’s scarier? Being run down by club wielding maniacs or being exploited as test-marketing cattle (though to be fair, I’ll probably see every movie they advertised).


(Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!)

4. Oh, how I hate power tripping freaks.

Universal hires hundreds of actors to roam the park and scare patrons. Some of them have the right attitude. They scare folks in good fun. They do their freaky thing, then run away, (probably) giggling beneath layers of latex.

But then, some of these seasonal actors are real douchebags. There’s a mean-spirited vibe to their antics. They seem to enjoy making others uncomfortable. It becomes less fun and a bit weird.

My wife doesn’t help. She spent a good part of the evening supposing that Universal may have accidentally hired a wacko ready to freak out and start stabbing people with a real knife.

Which is totally possible when you think about it…

Anyway, the worst of these sadists, chainsaw wielding skull-heads – their chainless chainsaws harmless – are obnoxiously loud and extremely unnerving. The bastards use the impotent saws to torment patrons and drive hysterical, screaming women to their knees. They tend to really work it and push things as far as they can.

I suspect, that had this been some sort of no-holds-barred bloodsport, a few of these guys would have gladly took up a real saw and embraced the violence…


(Running on crutches brings out the beast in me!)

Here’s a good litmus test for cruelty: while most of the freaks are instructed to feign brutality, swinging fake scythes, and machetes, and clubs, pulling away at the last possible second, some of them take things too far and go for the low blow (in my case, they targeted my legs the moment they noticed that I was hobbling around on crutches).

One dude even followed me for a while, mocking my unsteady gait, basically gimping it up and making fun of the way I walk (I feel self-conscious enough already – I don’t need some zombie lackey rubbing my handicap in).

A note to upper management: please encourage horrific savagery, it drives the event, but please insist upon respect. This may seem oxymoronic, but this is a business. Employees should never offend guests no matter their specific, scare-all directives. There’s a fine line here. Being intelligent enough to make the simple distinction should be one of the job’s primary prerequisites. Meatheads need not apply.


(The only way to fly)

5. The live-action, musical show, Bill & Ted’s Halloween Adventure, is, as Roger Ebert said about THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE 2, “An affront upon human decency.”

This is not an exaggeration. I’m sure Ebert was exaggerating for effect. I am not.

I steal his words and repeat them back with supreme sincerity. This live-action debacle was the worst theme park stage show I’ve ever had the displeasure of squirming through. Nothing made any sense. The production forewent coherence for idiot rambling and awful celebrity impersonation.

It’s hard to believe that somebody somewhere put this thing together. It’s even harder to believe that somebody approved it. And even harder to believe a whole cast of wannabes actually perform the dog five times a night.

I can’t even find the right words to slag it.

There’s bad dancing, bad lip sync, bad writing, bad acting, unfunny racism, and it drags on and on far too long.

Oh, and once you’re in, you’re trapped for the duration. There’s no disrupting the “performance” with early exits. I’m not the type to stir the pot – I’ve sat through some bad stuff in the name of civility – but if I had the opportunity to go back, I’d grab my wife’s hand and insist upon being let out. It really was that horrendous.

Okay then, Loyal Reader, repeat after me: I WILL NOT WATCH BILL & TED’S EXCELLENT HALLOWEEN ADVENTURE!

Take my word for it and stay away!

Despite the thirty agonizing minutes wasted on Bill & Ted, we had a great night. I look forward to doing it again next year.

How Valuable Is Your Time?

Posted in General, News, Rants on October 8, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

This time of year, the pantheon of Southern California amusement parks – Knott’s Berry Farm, Magic MountainUniversal Studios, and even king of the ring, Disneyland (though to a somewhat lesser degree) – get into the spirit of the season by offering Halloween themed attractions. Disney decorates nicely, has a parade or two, hosts a party for the kiddies, and revamps The Haunted Mansion with props from ex-Disney animator, Tim Burton’s seasonal mainstay The Nightmare Before Christmas.

Magic Mountain, Knott’s, and Universal, take things a step further and go the mature route (13 and older only) by adding a number of terrifying mazes to the mix. They also re-theme their rides, generally giving them silly, spooky names and turning out the lights or something equally lazy. They decorate adequately (nobody trumps Disney in the decorum department though) and then hire a few hundred folks to dress up as ghouls so they can run around and terrorize their guests. It’s great, cheesy fun.

 


(Hangin’ with the freaks!)

Tonight, Michelle and I are going to Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights. Knott’s Berry Farm’s Halloween Haunt is actually the premiere Southern California event. They’ve been doing it for thirty-nine years and they sell-out mostly every night and they do a hell of a job, but, man, oh man, are they ever crowded. It gets pretty ridiculous. Try any Saturday in October and chances are you’ll get on one, maybe two rides, and get through one, maybe two mazes, and that’s that.

If you like waiting in line for hours upon hours, you’ll love every tedious minute. As for Michelle and I? It takes the fun right out of fun.

Our choice, Universal, isn’t much better. Their otherwise wide walkways are teeming with rambunctious teens. Lines take one, two, sometimes even three hours a pop! Being a movies studio, they do an incredible job of outfitting their roaming beasties, and their mazes use the very latest in gruesome technology (though Knott’s is the haunted attraction industry leader, Universal does it even better), but standing in line for two and a half hours? For what? A five-minute experience? Oh lord, it’s miserable on top of miserable.

 


(Universal always has pretty cool promo stuff)

But what can we do?

We love the atmosphere.

We love that an entire thrill park dedicates its evenings to scaring the crap out of people.

The lines, the hassle, the human clutter – it’s almost worth it.

Almost.

And we almost decided to throw up our hands and say forget it.

But then, each park (except for those greedy, money-grubbers at Disneyland) offers a front-of-the-line pass for a sales premium. You pay the standard admission plus an additional fee (forty bucks or so) and you get to skip the lines and retain your sanity.

This is our first time trying it out – hopefully it’s worth the extra cash.

So long as there isn’t a crazy, long line for front-of-the-line pass holders (they only sell a limited amount of premium tickets) all should be well.

We’ll see. I’m still a bit leery, because if I’m willing to pay extra, tons of other folks are probably willing to pay extra, and something’s gotta give.

They claim they sell a limited amount of premium tickets, but when it comes to amusement parks and money and limiting admissions, they favor large amounts of cash over customer satisfaction. They figure you’ll be back, and hey, if you finally turn your back and write them off, no biggie, more consumers are born every second…

I’ll report back tomorrow and let you know how things go. This may be our last haunted amusement park visit (depending on how well these front-of-the-line passes work). In the meantime, why don’t you get out of the house and do something seasonal?

In three more weeks another Halloween will pass us by and then you’ll have to wait a whole year for the freakiness to return. Get off your butt and patronize a haunted maze or house. Go see THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE 2: FULL SEQUENCE. Roger Ebert calls it an “affront to human decency” so it’s gotta be good. Get out there and scare some kids (legally, please). Spend some money at an over-priced Halloween store. Whatever you do, take advantage of the season and have some ghoulish, Halloween fun. Life’s too short not to.

 

The Human Centipede II (Full Sequence)
(Great poster, huh?)

Lullabye

Posted in General, News on October 7, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

I’m already asleep.

 

See you tomorrow, Loyal Reader, wherein me and my girl tackle Universal Studios’ Halloween Horror Niights!

Obligatory Make-Up Blog

Posted in General on October 6, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

No, that’s not the name of the new Radiohead album (it sounds like a Radiohead album name doesn’t it?). That’s this and this is that. I missed yesterday’s blog due to a doctor’s appointment (honestly – this wasn’t a pretend appointment). It was raining hard. My wife drove us (and did a great job) through zero visibility patches. She pulled lots and lots of offensive manuevers.It was…intense.

So then, like a car cutting through the rain, this blog is too fast and reckless to continue. It’s been out-doctored, and out-rained, and over-tired, and it’s time to put it to bed. All it wants to do is snooze.

Good night, blog.

Good night, Loyal Reader. Here’s to a good, deep sleep.

 


(Zzzzzzzzzzzzz…)

Soup, baby!

Posted in General, News, Raves on October 6, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

My girl is cooking soup. It smells incredible. Garlic, onion, celery, sauteing. Mmmm. It feels like fall. I love the fall. And I love it even more because my girl loves it. We enjoy it together.


(Mmmmmmmmmmmmmm...)

’tis the season for goblins and ghoulies, demons, and pumpkin spiced candles. See, that’s why I’m so damn lucky. My girl makes all of this happen. She buys things like candles and fall-ish decorum. She celebrates seasons.

As a lazy dude, I would never think to buy these things and I’d totally be missing out.

This is my favorite of all the seasons. I like certain things about each cycle. Summer heat feels nice from time to time, and winter’s chill, bundling yourself in jackets and sweaters in cozy refuge, can be pleasant. Nothing tops a chilly fall night at Disneyland. Everything is crisp. Lines are a little more tolerable (I really, really, really, hate lines).


(Jack & friends take over The Most Expensive Place on Earth)

I get around pretty good on crutches, but they can get super tiring, so this year we are thinking of taking my wheelchair. So long as my whole party can go along with me, I’ll do it. Maybe we’ll even get shorter lines. Do they have handicap lines? We’ll see.

The coolest thing about this particular trip to the uber-expensive park is that we’re going with my sister, her husband and their three, awesome kids (with my wife and daughter and mom. Fun!). Their daughter is two and their twin sons are one. They’re gonna flip out at all the lights and castles and characters. It’s gonna be a special experience – viewing Disneyland through a child’s eyes. That’s what it’s all about.

My girl and I will sneak away and ride some big rides. Two year olds prefer It’s A Small World and Dumbo (can you believe the original Dumbo cartoon feature was made in 1941!). I think there will be parades and fireworks and that killer light and water show, Fantasmic.


(The best haunted house ever. A timeless classic.)

Then we got Halloween and all of the Halloween time things. Scary movies. Scary mazes. Scary costumes. We got big plans, Loyal Reader, big plans. Two theme parks (we are going to try and hit up at least one of the haunted maze parks – Knott’s or Universal), a maze at Storm Stadium (Field of Screams), that actually rocks really hard – they set up two, super well-done mazes featuring all of the latest in Haunted Attraction freak-out technology. It’s way rad (as I used to say when I was eleven).

My writing career stuff gets a little boost. This is definitely the season for horror book giving. When considering a season appropriate gift, horror books are the perfect choice. It seems as though folks read more in the cooler months. They talk about beach reading, but the reading at home during the fall and the winter rocks. There’s nothing like curling up with a good book on a chilly, wintry night.

Oh, and I’m gonna get some pumpkin pie.


(I’m gonna eat you up.)

As we inch closer and closer to Thanksgiving break, school is getting ready to jump into hyperspeed. The breaks come fast and furious over the holidays then we get the president’s days and spring break and poof! We’re done. Two months of summer to kick back and enjoy the long, hot sunny days.

But for now, it’s all about the awesomest season of them all.

Happy Halloween, Loyal Reader, let the mayhem commence!

Soup’s on!

Today Was A Good Day (I Didn’t Even Have To Use My AK)

Posted in Books, General on October 4, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

No verbal smackdowns today. Everything went easy. Students were well-behaved and mostly on-point. They did cute things like make GO MR. C signs and then hold them up while I’m teaching class. You could go two ways with this. You could browbeat them and tell them to pay attention and get all grumpy, or you can just stop, raise the roof a bit, and claim your props. Point it out to the class. Enjoy it. Encourage kindness. Then, after a minute of laughing, get started soothing the beast. Then work your way back into the Epic Poetry of my man, Odysseus.


(Lost at sea + sweaty oarsmen = one stinky boat!)

I love Odysseus. He is the most awesome of the awesome. There’s a cool arrogance about him. He can be icy. He don’t take no crap. And he’s of exceptional intelligence (which is why the Gods toyed with him so much).

We are in Book 9 – New Coasts & Poseidon’s Son – in which Odysseus and a crew of 720 men are lost at sea and looking for home. They encounter hostile forces, mind-erasing flowers, and a grisly, man-eating cyclops called Polyphemus.


(On the grind)

We left off right where Odysseus and twelve of his best warriors are trapped in a cave with a demented, overgrown, hungry devourer of man flesh. How do they get out? Is Odysseus able to out-wit the beast and free his men? Things get messy, but, as not to spoil too much Loyal Reader (there are some of you who have yet to read Homer’s THE ODYSSEY – this needs to be corrected), I’ll save it for the classroom.

And this is why I love my job.

Sure I have to teach it five times a day, but each run is kind of a practice run. By the end of the day, I’m on fire. The force is strong with this one.

Hopefully tomorrow goes as perfectly. Sometimes you have one of those sucky days where nobody wants to listen. Sometimes it’s like pulling teeth to get them interested. Good days like today keep me happy though. There are usually plenty of them to keep me going all year long.

Anyway, go read some classics and get cultured. Or, better yet, screw all that and buy my latest novella 7Brains – it’s like junkfood for the soul.


(This the movie I show after we finish reading – Armand Assante is actually really, really good!)

Here’s a great clip of Odysseus falling into Calypso’s grasp…

The Wit & Wisdom of Michael Gary Scott

Posted in Raves, Television on October 3, 2011 by Michael Louis Calvillo

Who memorizes The Pledge of Allegiance to the tune of Old MacDonald?

Who prefers Eddie Murphy in Raw to his performance in Daddy Day Care, but still asserts that both films are “Great movies”?

Who attempts a Survivorman type wilderness adventure, cuts off his slack’s pant legs because it is too hot, then tapes them back together with duct tape when the sun begins to set and things cool down?

Oh, Loyal Reader, I’m sure most of you are well-acquainted with The Office’s endearing, dumb Michael Scott (if not, you’re missing out), but man, I love, love, love the guy!

I watch the show in primetime and then watch episode after episode in syndication and I never get tired of it. I’ve seen some episodes five, six, seven times and I’ll still sit there and watch. The jokes work again and again and again. Michael Scott has me laughing aloud again and again and again.

Understand – I am not a rube. It takes a certain effort to make me laugh. I am a pretentious, jerky, cerebral, pop-culture snob. I am more likely to dislike a show than like it. If Facebook had a dislike button, I’d proudly push the sucker over and over again. Most sitcoms have me grinding my teeth in irritation. But Mr. Michael Scott? That dude is comedy gold.

 


(It never gets old…)

The Office has a whole bunch going for it. I was worried that when Michael Scott left at the end of last season that the show would suffer, but, two episodes into the new season, and they’ve done some wondrously funny things with their bevy of talented supporting players (the Nard-dog is shining).

The addition of James Spader as Robert California, a man so smart that when applying for a managerial position he ends up talking the CEO out of her job and stepping in, has been a brilliant addition. He inspires and debases without impunity (and often in the very same quip). Mainstream sitcoms rarely kick so much comedic butt.

And while I am looking forward to each new episode, and enjoying laughing at some solid writing, nothing can hold a candle to the wisdom of Michael Scott.

No matter what happens with the show, he will be missed. His pathos, his sad-sack, over-eager doofus offends, then cracks you up, then breaks your heart, all in equal abundance. The poor guy simply wants to be loved. Everybody can relate.

Steve Carell has gotten miles and miles out of the character. He’s done such an incredible job I actually wish the character was real. I wish Michael Scott was one of my friends.

 


(Groucho Marx: “Dying is easy, comedy is hard.”  Michael Scott: “That’s what she said!!!”)

Remember the time he visited a kindergarten classroom in an economically stressed neighborhood?

During a career-day type event, he enthusiastically promised a class of at-risk kids that he’d put them through college so long as they made it to the big day and graduated from high school.

Twelve years later, each and every one of Scott’s Tots has made it to the big day and they are expecting a full ride. Michael shows up, basking in the fanfare, milking the false glory for all of its worth, dragging things out until the last possibly second when he has no choice but to admit (during a particularly painful speech) that he can’t follow through with his financial obligation. As a consolation, he gives each student a brand new laptop…wait for it…wait for it…battery!

Ouch!

Best episode ever.

Okay then, Loyal Reader, without further adieu – I am proud to present the wisdom of Michael Scott…

Awesome quote #1

Would I rather be feared or loved? Easy, both. I want people to be afraid of how much they love me.”

Awesome quote #2

I love babies. I think they are beautiful in all sorts of different ways. I try to pick up and hold a baby every day, if possible, because it nourishes me. It feeds my soul. Babies are drawn to me. And I think it’s because they see me as one of them. But … cooler and with my life put together a little bit more. If a baby were president, there would be no taxes. There would be no war.

Awesome quote #3

I don’t want somebody sucking up to me because they think I am going to help their career. I want them sucking up to me because they genuinely love me.”

Awesome quote #4

Yes, money has been a little tight lately. But, at the end of my life, when I’m sitting on my yacht, am I gonna be thinking about how much money I have? No. I’m going to be thinking about how many friends I have, and my children, and my comedy albums. I mean, I have a yacht, so I obviously did pretty well money-wise.”

Awesome quote #5

My philosophy is basically this. And this is something that I live by. And I always have. And I always will. Don’t ever, for any reason, do anything to anyone, for any reason, ever, no matter what. No matter … where. Or who, or who you are with, or where you are going, or … or where you’ve been … ever. For any reason, whatsoever.”

And so it goes, on and on and on…

I could post these things all day, but that’s what the Internet is for, right? So, get out there and search for some more Michael Scott quotes. If you are in need of a smile, they work wonders.

See you tomorrow, Party People.

 

The man can’t help it…