20 Questions Tuesday: 284 - House Guests


 Last week we had a houseful of peeps… 4 delightful guests living in the house with us for most of the week.  They all arrived between Tuesday and Thursday and we kicked them to the curb yesterday.  They are all amazing people and were really wonderful guests.  They actually left the place better than when they got here, because they are awesome.  So… this week’s topic is “House Guests.”

Thanks this week go to my delightful house guests, but also to my lovely wife, L Pithy, Lsig, and Chris Corrigan (one of the delightful guests).  Onto the questions!

1.  Fish and Family go bad after three days...how about adored friends?  When will we want to give them the boot?
About Sunday, so Monday worked out just fine.

2.  Can't help the next question:  What ever happened to Kato Kaelin - the most famously maned house guest of all time?
I think he is staying in someone’s guest house right now...

3.  Someday my mother will be our permanent "house guest", ie she'll move in with us.   What should we do before she gets here that we won't be able to do after?
Enjoy the lack of true crime and crime scene investigation shows that will constantly be on the TV when she gets here.

4.  Related question: What should we make her do to earn her keep while she's living under our roof?
I think she needs to cook occasionally.

5.  Who's house do you want to be a guest in?
Aisha Tyler’s... for reasons

6.  Should we turn our garage into a guest house?  I mean, there's already a fireplace in that bad boy.  It's basically begging to let people sleep in there.
I think that building could be a great office/studio that could be turned into a guest house.  When we have the crazy cash just laying around, let’s make that happen.

7.  Do you feel the need or desire to plan activities to entertain your house guests every moment they are in your company?
Nope.  But I also do not feel the need to plan out my own vacations.  I like to let activities emerge.

8.  When you are a house guest, do you want to just sit around and enjoy visiting, or get out to see the sights of the area?
Yes.. a little of Column A and a little of Column B.  If it is a place that I have been before, I typically just want to hang.

9.  “Guests, like fish, stink after three days.” Does it really take three days?
Fish stinks, like day .5… oh, you meant the guests.

10.  What would it take to earn the status “Worst House guest ever” in your book?
I am not giving you people any ideas just in case any of you actually guest star is this house show.

11.  In a money-is-no-object scenario, what would be the best host gift you could hope to receive?
An Xbox One

12.  On average, how often do you have house guests?
Not terribly often… typically I would say, on average, that we have 2 people stay for 2 weekends on a 52 week year.

13.  Do you prefer to have house guests or be house guests?
I think I would rather be a house guest, mainly because that means I am traveling and I love traveling.

14.  Do you like guests to do stuff like cook and wash the dishes while they are there, or do you prefer to give them a full vacation experience (by which I mean, keep their hands off your stuff and out of your cabinets)?
The first 2 days I like to host the shit out of house guests, but day 3 and beyond house guests are treated as family and should pitch in, and be ready to be ignored.. Papa's watching his stories.

15.  What is the longest you've hosted someone and did you want to kill him/her/them at the end of that period?
This time around was a pretty good amount of time to have non-family in the house.  in general, I have not had house guests stay too terribly long... Don't get any ideas people. 

16.  When are you coming to visit?
The fam needs to travel more.  Your place is on the map now and forever.  Maybe we can scoot down this summer...

17.  At what point in an extended stay with friends is it possible to complain about their idea of cleanliness?
Day 3.  Day 3 = Family.

18.  How should house guests endear themselves to the hosts’ children, to ensure cool times and a lingering memory of “the best adult sleepover ever?”
With the girl, I would say one needs to give her space, because she is overwhelmed even though she doesn't look like it.  With the boy, talk Legos and Plants Vs Zombies: Garden Warfare.

19.  What is an appropriate gift for a pair of introverted hosts that will probably put on a good face but will be happy to see the door shut on four backsides on Monday?
The best gift is to be engaging and delightful people… and then to get the hell out of my house.

20.  Can I sleep in that Yogi-bo thing?
Nope, the wife has laid claim to it… it is truly hers.

and one to grow on…

21.  If your houseguests effectively prevent you from doing your 20 Questions Tuesday post on time, does that reflect poorly on them or on you?
Oh, on me.  Totally on me.

To recap:
Lots and lots of people in the house last week
Soooo many people
Finally got to a Crew game
It has been over 2 years since the last game I went too
Oddly went with the same folk plus a few other peeps
The Crew were 3 and 0 going into the game
And then could not find the back of the net regardless of pretty much controlling the game
It was like they forgot how to make runs at the gaol when they got into the box
Defenders can react better when you aren’t moving
Anywhoo… they lost 2 - 0 to crappy assed Toronto
Captain America the Winter Soldier is a fun movie
It is not earth shattering
and there are some minor flaws that could have been dealt with
But I found it delightful
Have a great week!



20 Questions Tuesday: 283 - Spring


March 20 has come and gone, and it is now officially Springtime.  Yeah!  Springtime!  Woo-hoo! Springtime!  Yet, here we are below freezing again… stupid Springtime and its stupid cold mornings.  Today’s topic is “Spring” because Spring has sprung, bitches!  Oh, God, why is it so cold then?

Thanks today go to birthday boy Chris Ring, some other guy who is quite annoying, and the Internet which is both broad and deep…  Onto the questions!

1.  For me it's the smell of cut grass, what screams Spring to you?
Goddamn annoying birdsongs when I am trying to sleep.

2.  Spring is FINALLY here, I'm going to ______________?
Air out my car, so stale and stinky…. /shudder

3.  Spring brings the Ice Cream Truck, jingle jingle, favorite truck treat?
Favorite truck treat?  Pulling an audible here and eschewing the ice cream truck for a food truck.  At this point I will say BBQ pulled pork from Ray Ray's Hog Pit.

4.  Ideal Spring temperature?
Morning of around 50° F and afternoon of 72° F (10°C to 22.22° C for my metric folks)… this happens for about 1.5 days a year.  I am often dealing with less than ideals.  

5.  All that snow melted and we found a ______________ in the front yard.
Dead yeti….  you heard me right… dead Himalayan Sasquatch… dead.

6.  What is your least favorite thing about springtime?
Working… now ask me what my least favorite thing about Winter, Autumn, and Summer

7.  So, Winter is pretty much one thing, Summer is pretty much one thing, Autumn is pretty much one thing, and Spring is a whole bunch of things (coiled metal that stores and releases energy, water coming from the ground, and a season)... What’s up with that?
I don’t get it either. The season should have a seasonal name instead of a description.  Fall is the colloquial name for Autumn… Spring should be the colloquial name of something.

8.  So, on the Vernal Equinox can you actually balance an egg on its nose?
Yes, yes you can.  You can also do that on May 25th.  It turns out it is just balancing an egg… can be done everyday, equinox or not, it just requires good balancing and patience. 

9.  Best kind of bed spring?
Well… I use a “space age memory foam” mattress bed thingy… so I am not sure which bed springs are the best. Last I saw via a commercial is that a squared off coiled spring works best.

10.  Is it any surprise that most religions have a rebirth holiday associated in the spring?
No.  It is not surprising at all… Is this a question?  It seems more rhetorical than anything.  Are you just using me to get your question on the Internet? self-obsessed jerk…

11.  What is the best season to have a birthday?
It is a tie between Spring and Summer.  My fam knows why…. 2 Spring and 2 Summer… I guess all of you know why now.

12.   Are springs potential or kinetic energy?
I believe it is a special instance of elastic potential energy.

13.  Would it be better to have 2 seasons such as a rainy and a dry season?
I imagine it is for many since many people live in areas with wet v dry seasons… Since I have only lived in temperate areas, I cannot comment on the value of living in a rainy v dry season.  That being said, I enjoy having 4 seasons… not the 64 microseasons we are having this year in Ohio… hot, cool, hot, cool, cold, cool, hot, cool, hot, cool, cold, cool, cold, cool, cold, cool, cold, crazy-ass-cold, cool, crazy-ass-holy-shit-cold, cool, screw-it-your-car-won’t-start-cold, cool, cold, cool, cold, etc….

14.  If it’s Spring, why is is goddamn snowing?
To eff with runners and my sinuses.. mainly my sinuses though.

15.  What puts a Spring in your step?
Adequate sleep… so that doesn’t happen

16.  Who would you like to have a Spring Fling with?
Um… well… It would be awkward if I picked anyone in the real world, so I think I will stay away from real people.  Gonna go with Ming-Na Wen… She is just rocking it lately  Agents of SHIELD tonight… Well… I will catch it tomorrow on Hulu+

17.  So the seasons are flipped in the southern hemisphere.  Does that mean the names of the seasons are flipped as well, or is Winter warm down there and Summer cold?
Nope, it is Autumn in the southern hemi.

18.  What is the biggest spring you have ever been to?  The hydrological kind, not the coiled wire kind.
I have been to Blue Hole, Florida once, but that was long ago.  It was gorgeous and springy

19.  Oingo Boingo, Springy, yes?
That does have a Spring kind of flair to it.  Danny Elfman does not have a springy flair to him.

20.  Favorite Springtime song?  and GO!
ah… ah… gimme a second.  um… “I Can See Clearly Now.”   Oh, God, I’m old.  Let me try that again.  Um… let’s see...crap… I’m still old.  U2’s “Beautiful Day.”

To recap:
It is supposedly Spring
I find that dubious at best
I need to post this and read some for my class
I also need some more people to ask some questions
Happy Birthday Mr Ring!
Man, I am tired
Have a great week everyone


20 Questions Tuesday: 282 - Family Emergency


Last week was a bear of a week.  Let me walk you through it.  Sunday morning I got a call from my mom.  She tells me that my dad has a kidney stone, and that it has blocked his bladder, and that blockage caused and infection, and the infection went septic…  Way to bury the lead, mom.  So my wife and I partially pack a bag and drive 10 hours to Birmingham for hospital boredom.  My wife leans into the box and takes one for the team.  Not only is she the non-caucasian part of our interracial relationship heading into the Deep South, but she is also in the midst of a particularly nasty chest cold.  

We get to Birmingham and my dad is doing better.  Still has the blockage in the bladder and hopped up on goofballs and antibiotics, but pretty much no longer in a threatened state.  We spend all day Monday in Birmingham.  I am at the hospital with my mom, and my loving wife is stuck at my parents house because she is not really allowed to bring her chest cold to the ICU.  All the docs are happy with Dad’s progress and no one is worried that he will not have a complete recovery.  So, Tuesday we saddle up for the 10 trek back home to our freaked out kids and a rather over-worked Mother-in-Law.

Wednesday rolls around and I head off to work.  That evening I get home and due to the lingering chest cold, my wife’s breathing seems pretty seriously compromised.  We go to the ER that night.  Now my over-tired wife is placed on oral steroids and antibiotics.  Thursday night rolls around and we get word that one of the adorable flower girls from our wedding 17 years ago has died from an OD on heroin at the age of 24.  So… that was this past week.  How are you?

Thanks this week go to L Pithy, Maj Mc Armypants, some other guy, and my wife.  Let’s get to the questions.

1. Do you keep an emergency bag packed with essentials in case you have to leave the house in a hurry? If yes, what is in it; if no, why not?
Nope, but I do have a 10 minute box at work.  If I need to leave work all permanent-like I can be out of there in 10 minutes.  Surgical.  

2. What is the worst possible clock time for the phone to ring?
Between the hours of 11 pm and 7 am… you better not be putting that in your calendar...

3. Do you have an ICE contact on your phone?
Nope, but I have my wife clearly labelled.

4. Why can't family emergencies ever be slapstick routine, like on TV?
I have been in some that are much like sitcom situations.  For example, 16 years ago in the first year of our marriage my mother-in-law ran into some allergen that she has yet to determine what it was.  He face and eyes became increasingly swollen and we started driving to the ER.  While driving my wife looked back at her mom in the back seat and winced at the hideously swollen visage that looked back.  We get to the ER, and there is no room in triage, so they pull out someone who is in an exam room so quickly that the curtain is hitting that person in the face and dragging over there face and body as they rapidly remove them from the room and leave them in the hall to attend to my mother-in-law.  That person was there for a psych eval because she felt that no one took her and the voices in her head seriously.  Get out of the way Sybil, and allergic reaction is coming through.

5. Who was your favorite actor on television's "Emergency"?
The dark haired firefighter/EMT mainly because his name is Randall Mantooth!  That is an actor’s name if I have ever heard one.

6.   Questions about "FAMILY EMERGENCY"?  That is not really a fun topic.  No really, I have a lot of questions that I would love to ask, but I think they are just soooo personal.  Uhhh I don't get it?  uhhmmmmm.... Do you uh not like them...Family Emergencies I mean?
This question sucks.
 
7.  For instance, throughout your life who surprised you the most during a family emergency with their impressive composed acts and who sorta flaked out?  Feel free to go back to childhood or cousins thrice removed....in fact I would prefer it.
Hmmm… this is a tough one.  All in all I think I am pretty good in these things.  I feel I do a pretty good job of holding my shit together.  But my wife is pretty awesome and I am required by law to mention her.
 
8.  Ever have to bail a family member out of jail?
Nope, pending on the circumstances, not sure I would.
 
9.  Ever have to perform emergency surgery?
I have had to reset someone’s dislocated elbow.
 
10.  Fight off a burglar or a wild animal?
I would like to fight off a burglar by using a wild animal.

11.  Which of the kids has caused more family emergencies?
That would be Little Man.  His asthma early on really tripped some emergency alarms… that being said, I think injury and risk behavior-wise, Q will outpace him in the next few years.

12.  What food items denote “family emergency” when you are out of them?
At the moment… blueberries, Peanut Butter Cap’n Crunch Bars, Lime-Aid, and Mt Dew

13.  What constitutes “Family” in a “Family Emergency?
Direct nuclear family, family I grew up with, super close friends, and Aisha Tyler.

14.  Do you have a Zombie Survival Plan?
Not really… zombies aren’t real.  Pathogens that could potentially cause zombie-like symptoms would lead to chaos and I would do what I could to live my life… my life of sleep apnea, gastric reflux, borederline blood pressure, gluten intolerance, lactose intolerance…. without pharmacology, I would not last long anyway…

15.  Have you ever used “Family Emergency” as an excuse to get out of doing something you don’t want to do?
Nope, but I have used family as excuses before.

16.  Are you a “Good Samaritan?”
I am not always a Good Samaritan… there are times when I give help unbidden, and there are others when I am crazily selfish.  

17.  So, what constituted a “Family Emergency” when you were 7?
That is a good question.  At the time, other than medical stuff that did not happen often for the family (at least that I recall), the biggest emergency that I can think of is when Dad would travel for a whole week for work over a payday Friday and we would not be able to get the paycheck until he got back midweek… oh, direct deposit and electronic banking, you are a welcome addition to society.  

18.  What was up with Little Man’s online “Emergency” this evening?
Background:  Little Man is all about the Plants Vs Zombies, Garden Warfare right now, and we had some Internet hiccups tonight causing him not to be able to play.  He built the idea of playing this game up in his head all day long.  This was an activity, nay!  AN EVENT! that he has been building up to epic portions for the past 24 hours.  When this did not come to fruition because the game needed to update and the bandwidth kept chucking him out of the game, his fantasy of how awesome it was going to be pwning the n00bs and jacking zombies with his sun beam was shattered by stuttering internet and required updates.

19.   What is your particular “take-away” from this past week’s events?
My parents are much older than I remember, and I need to voice my concern over my wife’s asthma regime more strongly.

20.  So, what is the next family emergency?
Little man’s adoptive grandpa is in the ER because of TIA’s… now we ride this ride, that’s how we roll!

To recap:
Tomorrow is my brother’s birthday!
For your birthday, please don’t cause a family emergency
I am currently dealing with a lactose issue right now
I did get some BBQ whilst in the Bama last week
It was glorious
I have homework to get to tonight
A 45 minute lecture on the politics of online content management strategy
Sleep will come easily tonight
Super easily
Stay out of the hospitals if you can
Have a great week everyone


20 Questions Tuesday: 280 - Illness

So the little girl was sick yesterday and the illness was lingering today.  Nothing major, she had a fever and a bit of a cold.  She is 5 and goes to a petri dish known as kindergarten 5 days a week.  I am doing what i can to not be sick, but that might be a losing battle.  I am okay with that.  

Therefore today’s topic is “Illness.”  Thanks this week go to Andrew Miller, Lsig, and some other guy.  Onto the questions:

1. Illness, why? It's like Mosquitoes - why?
I do think there is a biological reason for illnesses… I am not quite sure what that justification is, but I am sure that it exists.  I would say that it is about culling the herd and making the species stronger in general due to natural selection reasons, but modern medicine is taking a bit of that argument away in an immunological sense.  Mosquitos are here for high-pitched buzz sounds.

2. Who is the best at being sick in your house? Who's the best at nursing the sick?
I am the best at being sick in the house because I like to go off into the proverbial corner, curl up in a ball and convalesce.  That being said, my wife is the best with dealing with sickness in the house.

3.  Waterborne brain eating organisms aside, I was always a fan of the neti pot until I got turned onto the Sinus Rinse where you actually get to shoot hot saline up in there. What sort of witchcraft do you subscribe to?
I have been known to use the neti pot from time to time.  I am a big proponent for using ZICAM for prevention purposes, to keep myself from getting as sick for as long.  I understand that zinc calcium and magnesium is truly witchcraft, but if the placebo effect works for me, who are you to judge me,

4.  I still feel like crap, and some of the above are compound, we'll say multiple even, questions - so get off my back already - I made it into work yet again, isn't that enough?
Making it into work is definitely enough.  Well-done.  In fact I am at work today and accomplishing absolutely nothing, but I am here, gotdammnit!

5.  Wait, I've got it, now that you're a dad, have you found that sometimes it is a better choice to deal with the children at work when you're sick than to stay home and deal with the children there?
I have never brought my kids into work, sick or otherwise.  I would not want to expose my children to the nastiness that is my work environment.  There is no reason to see where papa’s malaise comes from.

6.  What's the worst sickness you've ever had?
I had the influenza when I was a kid.  I was down for about 4 days…  There was also this one sickness that ran through my wife and I during either our first or second year of wedded bliss. She went down first for about 2 days and required going to the ER for dehydration and to stop the “loss of liquids.”  I went down a day later and bounced back from it a bit faster, mainly because I knew what was coming.   

7.  Being sick while parenting is pretty much the worst. What's your least favorite aspect of this horrific phenomenon?
How needy the wee little beasties are… especially Little Man because he refuses to nap when he is ill.  SLEEP IT OFF, KID!!! SLEEP IT OFF!!!

8.  While I hate being sick, before I had kids I would get a lot of enjoyment out of a sick day now and again (it's delightfully self-indulgent even if you are miserable).  Have you, like me, lost the joy of the sick day because small needy people hang out at your house?
Sick days did start to be better once both kids were in school. It was amazing to be at home and sick and capable to actually sleep it off.

9.  Do you ever actually use the word "ill" or "illness"? I tend to use "sick" almost exclusively.
For the dad humor, I go with “illin.” ill illin

10.  Is there any illness that you particularly dread?
Tons… there are so many illnesses I dread… so many ways to be sick… so many ways

11.  How often do you get sick?
Well, if by sick you mean big old full head of crap or a belly that needs to get everything removed in a myriad of manners… ugh I hate the different methods of getting things out of my body.

12.  Remember in the 80’s when people used “ill” as something good? The 00’s made it that into “sick.”  The 10’s dealt with “viral” as being a good piece of digital stuff for blowing up.  What will be the negative malady related term turned positive be for the 20’s?
I do remember the 80’s… because I am old and decrepit.  For the 20’s I think the word will be… “afflicted?”

13.  Pestilence?  One of the horsemen, really?  What would you replace Pestilence with?
Put Godzilla on a horse and have him wreak some havoc… He would ride on a lizard horse and his name would be Hubris.

14.  How many times do I have to throw up?!?!
Three, unless you tuck back into that old crab meat… and then the sky’s the limit!

15.  Is there a superhero/villain who uses illness/nausea as their power?
I am now going to draw a character named “Agent Brown.”  His side kick is named “Number 2.”  This will happen, even if I have to commission someone with more talent to do it.

16.  Are you a quiet vomiter?
Yup… My wife, however, could potentially wake up the neighbors.  

17. Audibly strain while evacuating your bowels?
This 20 Questions just went to a weird place… I am not comfortable answering that one.

18.  Favorite colloquialism for vomiting?
I have always been partial to “yarf.”

19. When should someone see a doctor about a fever?
When it is for the Flavor of the Pringles.  Once you pop, you can’t stop.  Seriously though, if you are coming to this website for medical advice, you should go ahead and schedule that appointment.

20.  Ever hallucinate due to a fever?  Fevered dreams and the like?
Not that I know of.  When our little girl was 3.5 or so, we were staying at a state park lodge when she got sick.  We did not have any tylenol or advil with us so we thought we would just ride it out that night and leave early in the morning.  At about Midnight-30 Q was up and talking about AND TO the Imperial AT-AT’s in our room.  3 yr old and she hallucinates about Empire Strikes Back, arguably the best of the hexology.  That, my friends, is parenting done right.

To recap:
Me = awesome dad, because she hallucinates content from the best Star Wars movie
I would be a failure if she hallucinated Jar-Jar
I almost typed “film” instead of “movie” when referring to Star Wars…
Nope, that wouldn’t have been right
Sorry about the no-post last week
I was incapable of the posting
Ergo the lack of post
I have so much stuff due on my class on Thursday
But after Sunday, I am one class closer to getting this UXD degree
Until then I will go back to my QA/QC for the holes in the ground for Morgan County Ohio
Jealous?
You should be
Have a great week everyone


20 Questions Tuesday: 278 - Fortune Telling


Sunday was “Groundhog’s Day” a day in North America where the length of our winter is prognosticated by a rodent.  The tale is that on February 2nd if a groundhog comes out and sees its shadow there will be 6 more weeks of winter, if the animal does not see its shadow there will be an “early spring.”  Personally I think the way it is set up is that if the animal sees its shadow there will be 6 more weeks of winter and if it doesn't see its shadow there is only a month and a half left of winter… It is a 6 weeks vs 1.5 months vs 42 days kind of thing.  Because of this bizarre ritual, this week’s topic is “Fortune Telling.”

 

Thanks this week go to Andrew Miller, Aunt Linda, Katie, Wes, Bruce, Nadolny, Chris Corrigan, Tues (my wife), Sandy, AnnMarie and Some Other Guy .  Onto the questions!

 

1.  Given the bad fortune told by that rodent Sunday - what are some of the good fortunes you could tell us about from your life yesterday?

That the future is bright for gluten free living…. that being said, I predict some bad odors until gluten free becomes even easier.

2.  Have you ever thought back on the fortune teller machine from the movie Big and wonder what kind of sadistic adult would taunt kids into thinking there was something worthwhile to becoming an adult?

They are just milking a market.  Kids crave autonomy and the autonomous people they are modeling their ideas after are adults.  They do not know that adults typically have responsibilities.  The people selling things don’t want you to know the drawbacks to your potential investment.

3.  Speaking of which, do you ever put a coin into those fortune telling machines? And why oh why did they ever stop making the somewhat racist but at least artfully done machines with genies and gypsies in them and instead just go the the ones where you stick your finger in it and a bunch of boring red LED's would provide the prediction.

I have never spent money on that kind of contraption.  I think the whole Zoltar machine thing is compelling because of the clunky animatronics… take that away and it is a more cryptic Magic 8-Ball.

4.  Also, what about when Grandpa Simpson became the Love-matic-grandpa. In the future, when your time comes, would you prefer your soul (this is making an awful lot of assumptions) went to some sort of nirvana or would that nirvana be haunting a fortune telling machine stuck in the back of a bar somewhere, allowing you to mess with people into infinity - or at least until some drunk bashed you to pieces?

Depends… could I be funny?  If I could be funny, I might go with the messing with people in the back of a bar dispensing hilarious love advice.

5.  Have you ever had a fortune come true?

One would need to actually have a fortune given to one for one to have a fortune to come true.  I write my own fortunes, baby!

6.  Astrology: Real or mumbo jumbo?  Is your future in the stars?

While we are all made of stardust, our existence is not determined by stardust.  

7.  Have you ever just wished “to be big?”

I am working on fulfilling that wish right now… eating eating eating

8.  Per Domino (Bond girl from Thunderball) and the Delphi Oracle, is virginity required or helpful?

It is a delightful plot device, but most likely not a requirement.

9.  Favorite prognostication method? i-ching, tarot cards, crystal ball, palm reading, phrenology, seance, numerology, astrology, cootie catcher, entrails, rune stones, “the bones”, etc…?

I am always partial to movie scrying associated with entrails.  Reading the future should be a dirty, questionable act.

10.  Of those, the best/most reliable method?

None of those… does that mean I don’t believe people cannot see the future… not necessarily.

11.  Favorite fictitious fortune teller? Whoopi Goldberg in Ghost, Domino in Thunderball, the mutants in Total Recall?

Kuato for the win.

12.  Does sci-fi predict the future or inspire it?

It inspires it.  

13.  Who are the most notable fortune teller busters? I know that Arthur Conan Doyle did some...

I think you can add Harry Houdini to that list and more recently The Amazing Randi.

14.  Guesses on the Crew’s new crest and name?

I think the Crew moniker will stay, but the official name might become CCFC for Columbus Crew Football Club.  The crest will be more generic much like the new Earthquakes logo.  

15.  What thing makes you sure you know how something is going to turn out?

I rarely know how things will turn out.  I am a relatively fear based mammal so I tend to catastrophize.  When a catastrophe does not occur, then I am pleased that my expected outcome did not occur.

16.  Best thing you've ever heard from a psychic?

Hmmm… That things were going to get better.  You stay unemployed for 18 months and you talk to a psychic.  She was right.  Vague and right

17.  Tell someone else's fortune…

I foresee a bag of gas in someone close to me’s future….. ooooh spooky!

18.  Is the mysticism around the teller (scarf, cards, ball,) necessary? Would it feel as believable if she wore a baseball hat and chewed gum?

People are suckers for ritual and really respond well to having their own beliefs reinforced.  People expect pychics to look and act a certain way, if they don’t, many people will doubt their credibility. It also helps if they are attractive, but attractiveness is always helpful in everything.

19.  If you worked for the Psychic Hotline, what would your professional name be?

The Great Josiah Extraordinaire

20.  Prognostication or Proboscitation?

Proboscitation scares me as an idea… scares and intrigues…



To recap:

I knew you would all ask these questions

And thanks for asking them

Winter Storm Warning is in effect until 10 AM on Wednesday

I hear beyond here there be yetis

BBQ pulled pork for dinner

I had it on nachos

It was delightful

Little Man and I went to the grocery store

We drove past where we used to walk every afternoon to watch trains go by

Something lodged in my eye at that time

There may have been a tear

but that was because of the something in my eye

That’s it for this week

I should have an interview ready for next week

Have a great week everyone

20 Questions Tuesday: 273 - Tom Merritt v2.0

On Thursday, December 5th of this year, previous 20 Questioneer and tech news enthusiast, Tom Merritt announced with grave sadness that his contract with the TWiT network was not being renewed and that on 1 January 2014 (today) he will no longer be an employee of TWiT.tv and done with the podcasts Tech News Today and Framerate (2 podcasts I listened to/ watched religiously).  Much sadness, gnashing of teeth, Internet grumbling and general consternation ensued.  I found my reaction to be surprisingly emotional and disproportionately strong, considering my actual interactions with Tom have been relatively few.  I found myself having difficulty sleeping and so I tweeted at him my condolences. He responded and asked if I was interested in asking him 20 more questions… so here we are.  Without further ado… Tom Merritt’s 20 Questions v2.0

Onto the Questions!

I was let go from a job of 9+ years back in 2009.  That company was a victim of the economic downturn, so me and another 10% of that company found ourselves boxing out stuff up and going home early one day.  About 9 months after that I got a completely different job at a large non-profit.  The non-profit job was clearly a bad fit and just didn’t work out.  Summarily I was canned from there rather quickly.  After each of these changes in employment my wife and I went and had celebratory dinners together.  These dinners were used to celebrate the release of the increasing tension associated with the obvious stress in both professional environments as well as the new possibilities for my future employment.  Question 1:  How did you and your wife mark this particular employment event?

Answer 1: On that Tuesday I found out and couldn’t tell anyone publicly I stayed up until she got home from work because she worked late that night , heh. Then there was the Thursday announcement and that fallout. Finally on the weekend, we found a nice place to have a cocktail and some delicious food. She has been unceasingly supportive and cheering me on to whatever comes next.

It is always nice when the support system really kicks in. I had the luck/misfortune of knowing that things were going to happen at some point in time at my previous employments.  It really was a double edged sword... while I knew I would not be completely surprised when the hammer dropped and I was let go, I was also living in a world of anxiety.  I had been absorbing the tension  in my environment and knew that at some time, any time, maybe even the next phone call, something was going to happen.  Question 2 Was there any indication that your contract was not going to be renewed or were you effectively blindsided by this?

Answer 2: It was unexpected right then. I really thought we were about to reach an agreement but they decided to terminate the contract which took me by surprise. Still, I knew it was always a possibility. I had heard Lisa offered my job to someone else in May and of course Leo had made it clear all along that he didn't like my having to move to LA and preferred to have his hosts in studio. So it wasn't a shock that they let me go, and I understood why. It was just surprising at the time how abruptly it happened.

I figured it was something similar to that, just from the tone of the announcement and people’s reactions to the news.  It truly is unfortunate because one of the things I really enjoyed about Tech News Today is how it embraced the changing business culture and demonstrated how a team could effectively work together without being geographically constrained to the same office.  It showed that telecommuting is a viable collaborative work environment.  That will be sorely missed when only the guest is non-local.  

Question 3:  Was there a difference between how you thought/hoped your personal support network, friends, co-workers, etc... would respond to your situation and how they actually did?  In what way, if any?

Answer 3: Somewhat? I mean I guess I hadn’t really thought about it but I had a core group of friends right beside me the whole way, texting calling and telling me things I needed to hear both good and bad. It was *extremely* helpful and I wouldn’t have handled it nearly as well without them. My co-workers were sweet too. In fact Jason, Sarah and Iyaz packaged up the show logo plaque that a fan in Hawaii had made for us and sent it to me. Plus a bunch of other little notes of support and facetime calls and such. Best of all was Eileen, my wife. Right there with solid support telling me not to worry and just keep on. She is the best ever in the world.

You seem like a very genuine person, at least the limited interactions I have had with you have been grounded and enjoyable, so it does not surprise me that your support system really, well… supported you.  Question 4: How about your fan-base?  Did you realize that you had a fan-base prior to this (because you clearly have a fan-base)? and how would you describe how this fanbase has reacted?

Answer 4: Yeah that blew me out of the water. I knew we had fans of the show and I love hanging out in the chat room and talking to folks. And back at Buzz Out Loud we had a great tight community of folks whom I still love. But I never was sure how many people were along for the ride with me because they were just TWiT fans in general, or NSFWShow fans or what. The response was overwhelming. They organized and began spreadsheets to help me keep track of everything and sold weird shirts with my face on them and all kinds of crazy stuff. I’ve always said we have the smartest audience in the world but they showed they were also the most supportive too. I am honestly not deserving of this audience. Too amazing.

There is something here to say about self-organizing systems, but that is the forte of my wife and her mates.  I have to say that I was surprised with the rapidity and vehemence of the organization.  I figured there would be moral support and a bunch of “Man, sorry that happens” kinds of messages, but the actual mobilization of a network supporting you and just getting shit done is pretty amazing.  That is something I have never seen, and I have to say, I did not expect to be a part in.  I am a proud owner of a Merritt Militia shirt and am awaiting my Current Geek perks.  Having a fan-base must be both humbling and wonderful.    

Now, enough of the dour past and how that chapter of your work life has finished, let’s get into more enjoyable topics of what you are doing and what you will be doing in the near future.  You have announced a few items that you will be generating as you ramp up your independent productions.  But before we get into what will be new in this year of 2014, Question 5: What from your previous undertakings are still continuing?  Many people know you from your TWiT properties, but that is not all that you have been producing.

Answer 5: Sword and Laser is the science fiction and fantasy book club I do with Veronica Belmont. We have an amazing community at Goodreads, an audio podcast and a recently-funded second season of video! I also hope to continue writing the comic TenState with Len Peralta. We kickstarted the first 5 issues and have them for sale *finally*. I also have a few seasonal podcasts which means we only do 12 episodes at a time and usually one or two seasons a year. Those are all continuing, including Autopilot, a show about TV pilots, FSL Tonight, which is an imaginary fantasy sports league populated with teams from the great scifi and fantasy franchises. And It’s A Thing which is a trend commentary show I do with Molly Wood. Finally East Meets West which is my recreational podcast I’ve been doing with Roger Chang since 2005 will continue in its sporadic fashion. I also do a guest spot Wednesdays on The Morning Stream where I used to promote my daily tech news show and probably will again. I also appear on KFWB radio in LA every Monday morning as well. That’s all the stuff I had pre-existing that I’ll keep doing.

So, you have all these different properties that you are associated with and you have books that people can buy on your website tommerrittbooks.com.  You have audio podcasts, video podcasts, print media, you are on the radio… Question 6: What aspect of media have you not done (interpretive dance?) and is there a type of creative product you want to focus on or enjoy more?

Answer 6: I have not now, nor will I ever inflict interpretive dance on the world. That is a comment on my own dance skills, not on the form. I quite like a good interpretive dance when done well. I really enjoy writing fiction these days. I don’t seem to be able to stop. I woke up this morning and wrote the beginning of a story. I’m not certain I’ll ever be any good at it, mind you, but I do love to do it right now.

I have never found interpretive dance to be very good… if it is just dance in a broader narrative it makes sense to me, but just interpretive dance does not work work for me… much to my wife’s chagrin.  I have a copy of “Lot Beta” on my Kindle app right now, but due to my class readings, I have not been able to get into it just yet.  One of these days I will finish the book I started a handful of NaNoWriMo’s ago.  Lot Beta is in the chamber as soon as I am done with DogBoy: Den of Thieves by the delightful Bill Meeks.

I have a love of the words “whilst” and “ergo” (as well as some others) and have been trying to reintroduce those somewhat archaic words into everyday vernacular.  You are clearly a lover of words and quite capable of stringing together wonderful sentences in both the spoken and written word.  Question 7: Is there a word that you want to reintroduce and bring back to popularity? Could you use it in a sentence?

Answer 7: Luncheon. Lunch is a verb. The proper usage of luncheon is for the event we attend whilst we eat. Ergo, I would like people to say I lunched on sandwiches but say I went to luncheon. This is a sad and pathetic dream that will never occur and likely serve only to annoy people if pressed. But it is my dream.

That is honestly something I did not know.  I always thought of “luncheon” as a specific kind of lunch event, usually in a larger room and with a speaker droning on about a topic no one there is truly holds any interest.  The speaker's name is usually Carl or something like that and the topic is usually some new data collection method… at least that is how I see it.

You clearly enjoy the history of tech…. You had a mini-podcast called Tech History Today where you outlined significant tech history news everyday for a whole year.  You are producing tech history books monthly illustrated by Scott Johnson (Scott was also 20 Questions Tuesday: 219)  Basically you are generating multiple methods for people to consume tech history.  Question 8: Is there anything specific within tech history that you gravitate to more than other aspects of tech history, or is it the whole of tech history for which you find yourself fascinated?

Answer 8: I’ve always loved history. I love to discover how people did things in the past, how they changed and didn’t changed in the future and how our world came to be as it is today. I also have always been a sucker for anniversaries. I always had those “Today in history” books when I was a kid. And I obviously am very interested in technology. So this is just me combining all that into one happy package. It started with me helping Molly Wood research her tech history show on CNET way back in 2009. Then I kept doing it for my own fun. Then I did the podcast you mentioned for about three months, but they couldn’t figure out how to sell it effectively and it was a lot more work than it looks to gather all the video and stuff so I retired it. But I decided to turn it into a blog post and then that made me want to make a book and then the rest has just cascaded out from there.

Question 9: So where do you consider the beginnings of “tech” history to be?  Is it the advent of the modern transistor, is it the creation of the Gutenberg press, is it the creation of the astrolabe by the Greeks a long long time ago?  Where does “tech” start for your consideration in the historical context?

Answer 9: Fair question and one I don’t have a definitive answer for. I kind of center my attention around computers and the 1950s. Anything that sprang from that obviously is fair game for the chronology. For prior stuff, anything that was essential goes in, like the development of electricity, audio recording, video recording, anything that was necessary to have the things we all love to mess with today. The grammophone is the ancestor of the iPod. Then there’s also the stuff that’s just geeky or fed our technological mythos, like the Library at Alexandria which is sort of the ancient idea of universally accessible information. But to answer your question, “tech” starts March 30, 240 BCE with the first recorded observation of Halley’s comet. Astronomy bloggers FTW!

Heh, I have never thought of ancient texts as the equivalent of blogging… this changes the whole idea of what I am doing right now…  The idea of this being an artifact as a legacy of this century is a little chilling.  Chilling indeed.  Scares me a bit.  Hellooooo archeologists, how’s things?

Question 10: You have a bajillion podcasts, write books, do a radio show, etc… what do you do with down-time? Do you have down time or are you addicted to the workahol? Does the amazingly prolific Tom Merritt have any hobbies?

Answer 10: I try to turn my hobbies into my work so the line is all blended. Reading tech news, watching TV shows, all that stuff is now part of my work and it’s still fun. I’ve been doing a lot of cooking lately though which is only tangentially related to my work in that it keeps me alive. I was inspired by reading Darya Rose’s “The Foodist” to start eating better. It was rough the first couple of weeks but I’m getting good enough that even Eileen says I’m good, and she’s picky. I try to make three meals at home every week and all my lunches at home unless I have an appointment. It has the beneficial side effect of saving money. I’m going to sound like a freaking hippie but I’ve been making a lot of Kale salads that rock. But I also do pork chops, steak and chicken ok. OK?!?!? And sometimes Quinoa.  BUT ALSO BEEF! AND STEAK! WITH DRY RUB. sheesh.

I find that kale has a hard time getting rid of the dirt taste.  I have used it in some juices and such, but I have never had it in a solid form that was palatable.  I do most of the cooking at home but I cannot bake to save my life… well maybe to save my life, but I am much less inclined to bake now that I have gone all gluten free and such.  Gluten free sucks, by the way.  I miss donuts more than any other baked good (well, other than crusty breads meant for sandwiches), the other gluten free stuff works pretty well, but I have not found a bread that works well just yet.

Question 11:  So will there be a tech of cooking show coming up or is the cooking going to stay more of a private thing?

Answer 11: Well never say never but right now I have no intention of doing a cooking show. Just for me and the wife. Though I will say massaging the kale in a lime and miso dressing softens up and almost eliminates any dirt taste. (Kale Radicchio Superhero Salad with Farro)  I also like it pan-roasted with pecans. My god!  What have I become!

You’ve changed, man.  You’ve changed. I don’t even know who you are anymore. Kale, lime and miso, pan-roasted pecans…  Oddly enough this is the second 20 questions interview that I am doing currently that has brought up pecans… Growing up, we had two pecan trees in our back yard.  I am still pretty tired of pecans.  Yep, even now.  I do love cashews though…  not sure I would want some cashew production plant in my backyard.  Mainly because cashew trees are weird.  

Ah, Question 12: Top dozen podcasts, in your opinion…. and go.

Answer 12: NO!  I will not fall into that quagmire. You trickster god with your seemingly innocent question. That way lies peril. WITH the caveat that I don’t listen to VERY FINE podcasts because Veronica makes me read too many books, here are the podcasts on my subscription list. WARNING: These do not constitute a list of Tom’s favorite podcasts nor should be taken in any way as a ranking of value. OK. In alphabetical order: The Angry Chicken: A Hearthstone Podcast, Common Sense with Dan Carlin, Dan Carlin’s Hardcore History, Do We Need This?, The Economist All Audio, The Instance: World of Warcraft Podcast, Jawbone Radio, NASACast: This Week @NASA, The Shakespeare Sound, Tangential Convergence.

Fine, question dodger, just go ahead and dodge the question, like, like, like a question dodger…  When I posed this question in a slightly different format last 20 Questions, you only mentioned 3 podcasts that you regularly consumed.  This time, 10 podcasts in alphabetical order… slowly I will get a ranked list out of you.  I feel that I am wearing you down, eroding your podcast ranking defenses.  I am surprised you did not just list 12 of your current and past podcasts and just be smugly self-referential… that’s what I would have done… except I have no podcasts and only this one blog… this one lonely blog.  All of that being said, I will take on the mantle of the trickster god.  I am Coyote, I am Loki, I am Lugh, I am Mercury ascendent, I am not Anansi… spiders creep me out.  /shudder…

Question 13 is usually all about superstitions and rituals, but we covered that in our previous 20 Questions foray.  So today we will make this question all about the year that was.  We will put 2013 to rest with Question 13.  Question 13: What is the best thing that happened to you this past year? and to what do you want to say goodbye (and/or good riddance)?

Daft Loki

Daft Loki

Answer 13: I’m up all night to get Loki. Best thing that happened to me this year was getting to spend the summer with my nephew. He interned with me and we got to hang out and drink beer and go to the beach and generally have a fantastic time. I would like to say goodbye to dramatic life changes. Moving cities. Major job changes. Family deaths. All of that and other stuff piled itself into 2013 and I’d like to be mostly clear of that when I leave 2014. So goodbye and good riddance to 2013.

2013 was, all in all, a perfectly respectable year for me.  I am now two semesters closer to my degree in User Experience Design.  My job is still full-time employment with pretty good benefits.  The kids both made it another year, and my wife's work continues to grow and thrive.  This was our first full year of living in our house, and the old house now only inhabits my memories when I  stop and think about it.   It was a pretty good year.  There was nothing especially groundbreaking that happened either positive or negative… which means it was a pretty great year.  There is nothing I can honestly say goodbye or good riddance to from 2013.  The more I think about that, the better I feel about 2013.  

So… 2014 is nothing if not filled with potential.  I have good feelings associated with this upcoming year, and, honestly, it is time to start looking forward in these 20 Questions.  We have looked back enough.  Question 14:  What are you getting ready to say “hello” to for 2014?

Answer 14: Independence. Frightening, unexpected, independence. On a less heady note, I’m looking forward to making four fantastic shows. Sword and Laser’s second video season kicks off this year thanks to generous Kickstarter support. I can’t wait to head back to the space castle and chat with more amazing science fiction and fantasy authors. Cordkillers is already underway and Brian (Brian Brushwood, 20 Questions Tuesday : 210) and I are enjoying its regeneration. My Daily Tech News Show is only going to get better as well. And Current Geek with Scott Johnson may have the most potential to surprise and delight people of any show I’ve ever done. That and my casual efforts to write interesting fiction are all plenty to keep me really interested in 2014! I welcome my new year.

I too am looking forward to your 2014.  I truly do think of this as a year for you to creatively thrive.  The rest of these 20 questions are going to focus on the future, so for all you readers out there in the Internet who don’t like the future, I suggest you put down your printed out copy of this blog post and stop reading now.  Question 15:  Since Current Geek will be posting in a matter of days, if not hours, can you give a hint at the awesomeness that you and Scott have in store for the rest of us?  Or are you just going to tease us for 2 more days?

Answer 15: Yes of course. Although I really have no idea what we’ll end up doing, I’ll tell you the aim. Scott Johnson has created a pretty amazing association of kind, talented and entertaining people covering all aspects of things geeks like. From comic books to tv shows, to movies to tech to all the things, you can find a Frogpants show with good people having interesting conversations about it. So Current Geek will gather together people from that group each week along with special guests to talk about the interesting things happening that week. It should be really fun, at least for us, and hopefully the audience gets something out of it too.

That sounds pretty darn amazing.  One of the things that I am looking forward to with Current Geek is the lack of constraints that you will have this time around. You did seem pretty hamstrung in the previous version due to your non-compete clause with CNET. Iffens I remember correctly, by the time you did not have that non-compete, Current Geek had been relegated to a segment for Scott’s The Morning Stream, and it was clear that it was withering a bit on the vine.  I think it is an interesting and exciting concept to see Current Geek being a potential hub tying together all the spokes on the Frogpants Network. At least that is how I am viewing it, and you cannot tell me otherwise.  

Now I am going to go old skool Fourcast on you for this next question in regards to this new chapter in your professional life.  Question 16: A: What is a short term, B: medium term, C: long term and D: crazy-ass prediction for your professional career post 2013?

Answer 16: Yes you remember correctly and I think you’re viewing Current Geek right. And Current Geek will have a little Fourcast in it! A: This year I’m going to have a lot of fun. It’s scary, because nothing is guaranteed but it’s amazing for that same reason. By the end of this year I hope to have figured out a main direction. B: In the medium term I want to get in a rhythm of what things work for me and what don’t and be able to do fewer things but do them a lot better. I also want to write. Not because I think I’m any good at it, but because I love coming up with stories. C: Eileen and I retire to Hawaii/NewZealand/Island somewhere and continue to make amazing independent things that support our geritol. D: Crazy ass prediction. All this independent stuff that you and Scott and Brian and Dan Benjamin and everyone else are making becomes the dominant way of making most things from real products to entertainment and beyond.

I love that your long term is not your crazy-ass prediction.  Many people would not consider retiring to an Island paradise as merely “long term” when “crazy ass” is an option for the prediction.  I would bet that your short term and medium happen in a time-frame you were not expecting.  I also think your crazy ass prediction seems to be more and more reasonable.  There are some ideas I have had with this blog to change it up and kick it up to a different level of multi-media. I have toyed with the idea of making this a podcast, with my wife and myself.  She would play the part of asking the questions and I would take the time to obtusely answer them.  Then, when I could, I would create an interview with interesting folk, such as yourself.  I think this is an idea for when I am not also in full-time classes for this UXD program.  It is a medium term goal to be sure.

So we are rounding the corner on these 20 Questions.  Question 17: is there a question that I have not asked you that your are surprised that I haven’t, or feel that I should have?

Answer 17: Nope.

MWahahahahahaha. I kid. Although in all honesty I always have a hard time with this. You know, like in the interview for a job and they say, “what questions do you have for us?” and you cast about and can’t think of anything. I guess you could ask me “How were you able to marry such an amazing person like Eileen?” but then I would say “I don’t know, she must be insane but I’m glad she did,” or something sappy like that.

Marrying up is the way to go.  I did it for sure.  The wife (20 Questions Tuesday: 262) was actually patient enough to do one of these 20 Questions as well.  I. Clearly. Married. Up. No one doubts that.

Question 18: With your new Daily Tech News Show, who is a dream guest outside your normal cadre of dream guests (you have so many great friends and delightful colleagues)?  Who is your elusive white whale of a tech news podcast guest?... and do you have aims at landing that whale?

Answer 18: Well now I feel odd answering because you’ve cornered me into unavoidably comparing my dream guest to a whale. So very carefully, and pointedly NOT comparing these people to a whale, these are folks I’d love to interview. Jeff Bezos to chat about his unique take on what’s important in a tech business. Linus Torvalds, to get his perspective 30 years on about what open source means. Same for Tim Berners-Lee about the semantic Web. Tony Hsieh to talk about HIS perspective on what’s important in business compared to his boss Jeff. Marissa Mayer on how she has formed her guiding principles for Yahoo. Ian McKellan, because Ian McKellan. David Tennant because he just sounds like a fun chap to talk too.

Ooooh, all of those are great.  I would also love to corner any one of those “whales” and ask them 20 odd questions.  I think comedically I would love to get Jimmy Pardo, Patton Oswalt, and John Hodgman to answer 20 Questions.  There are so many actors I would love to get… weirdly, Emma Thompson, is near the top of that list… but there are so many others… I got whales to the left of me, and whales to the right…

Anyway, now is the time on this blog where I let the tables be turned.  Question 19: Do you have any question you would like me to answer?  You have been crazy candid with your answers and I will strive to do no less.

Answer 19 that is actually a question: What is the one thing (or three) you think you need help with to make your projects really work the way you want to? I don’t just mean time, or money, either. Our community of creative types has proven themselves willing and more than able to help each other out. All of the Internet is listening. What do ya need buddy?

I honestly can say that this question caught me off-guard.  It is most certainly not an unwelcome question, but definitely an unexpected one.  To be able to answer it fairly, I first had to sit down and contemplate what it is that I actually wanted.  I need to know the direction and desire before I can consider the obstacles involved.  After much deliberation I decided to just focus on what I would like to do to make 20 Questions Tuesday a thing.  It may be a bit of a cop-out, but I have no idea what I want to do professionally and feel it would be wise to be further along in the UXD program before thinking about professional goals.  Plus, my job is the one with benefits, and until there is a single payer system in the US, I will need to be gainfully employed with benes. So, for the time being, let’s simply consider making this a thing.   

I have been doing 20 Questions in some way shape or form since August of 05. Holy Crap!  That is a long time.  Other than the aforementioned time and money (of those 2, time is the more salient issue… not that my fam is proverbially “rolling in it,” but we are doing okay) the hurdles are mostly very typical… I need to...

  • get a url (Done)
  • find hosting and have a plug and play template (ie squarespace) (Done)

  • consolidate my content from the blogger days and the more current tumblr run onto the new platform (Done)

  • get an audience

  • switch up with a monthly podcast where the Wife reads the questions and I obtusely answer them...as my classload subsides, maybe ramp this up a bit

Of all these, the finding an audience is the most daunting of the tasks.  I think some of this is due to the relative randomness of the content.  One week I have an interview.  Some of the interviews are of relatively well-known people.  I got Clark Gregg (20 Questions Tuesday: 202) of Agent Coulson fame to do 10 Questions and then asked comic book artists 10 questions about the character Agent Coulson.  That one was super popular.  I have done a sizeable number of comic book artists.  Primarily they were young up-and-comers and now are drawing marquee books and becoming fan favorites.  I have done a handful of stand-up comedians.  Some of those 20 questions have been absolutely stunningly wonderful, because comedians typically have a depth that most people don’t see.  I have done a goodly number of Internet personalities that seem to have orbited around the TWiT network either as hosts or as guests. Coupled with these I have also done local people I know and find interesting from my Wife to a local mommy blogger nutritionist to the local Baklava Fairy (20 Questions Tuesday: 260 - Ann Marie McCallister).  In-between these interviews I ask friends, colleagues and some people I only know on the Internet for 20 questions for me to answer obtusely.  I give this bevy of questioneers a loose topic and they collectively send me 20 questions.  Last week’s 20 Questions about Christmas was one of them.  

Many action items I will be taking care of soon after I post this.  I will have a url and a squarespace site, and slowly building the site for public consumption. The piece that I have no idea about is the gaining an audience.  The technical aspects of creating a podcast and getting that feed going are also a bit daunting.  At one time I was acutely technically savvy, but 1995 was a looong time ago, and I need mentoring along that process.  Technical support mentoring as well as moral support.  So… of the list I have presented, the two obstacles that I need some motion and help with is the audience building as well as the technical aspects of adding a podcast to the mix.

Enough about me…

Question 20:  What are you taking from these 20 Questions that you did not bring in with you?

Answer 20: Calm. As you probably noticed I had to rewrite those first few answers a few times to make sure I meant what I said. It’s hard to keep your answers straight sometimes when you’re emotional. 19 questions later and I’m relaxed. I feel hopeful about 2014. Nothing is certain but at least I know what direction I’m headed and like you, have had to do a lot of thinking about what things I want. Now it’s a matter of doing them. Thanks for helping me out in that thinking process Scott.

You know, it’s easy to have convictions when they’re never tested. A lot of virtuous people both famous and not, get by on that one fact. I’m not saying they’re not good folks, just that circumstance can make it easy to be one way or another. When you’re thrown out of your comfort zone, you find out what things you really believe and what things you’ve really learned. Losing my job in December is far from the worst thing that’s ever happened to me, but it was not easy and it was not fun. I’ve been lucky enough to be supported by amazing friends and an insanely awesome audience. I keep reminding myself not to forget how lucky I am to have that and never to take it for granted.

I’m a kid from a town of 5,000 who’s Mom wouldn’t let him ride his bike more than one block away. A trip to downtown Greenville was a big deal for me. A trip to downtown St. Louis seemed the pinnacle of existence. That certainly has changed for me, partly, maybe mostly because of the Internet. The Internet has opened the entire world to lots of kids like I was and I want that to continue to be a net positive. (Pun! Sorry) We’re all in this together. Let’s go make something great!

On my blog, you never have to apologize for a pun.  Speaking of making something great… Where can people find what you are doing now, and how can they consume what you are producing? (an unofficial Question 21)?

Answer 21: Well the easiest way to find everything is tommerritt.com. I collect all the linky things there in a page called ‘subscribe to stuff’. There’s even a link where you can subscribe to all the stuff in one go, if that’s your preference. I also chatter a lot on Twitter @acedtect and Google +. I have a fan page on Facebook but I’m embarrassingly absent from it.

Everyone should follow what this man is creating.  He is a voice of reason in a sea of chaos when it comes to the things that could be labeled tech and/or geekery.  But you should also follow what he does because of more than just his professional capabilities.  Tom is a nice man, and I do not say this lightly or flippantly.  He is genuine and all of my interactions with him have been just delightful.  He is witty, enjoys both good and bad puns (probably bad ones more than good), knows when to be silly, and brings out the best with whomever he is working.  I know this personally because in the two times that I have interviewed him, he has made me better.  He continues to do so through example and through my hopeful continued interaction with him.  I often say that my interview “was a delight” and sometimes to say “delight” is stretching it just a bit.  With Tom I can easily and without reservation say that this interview was a delight.

 

To Recap:

Tom Merritt = Awesome

A new year is upon us

“Let’s go make something great” is a great mantra for a new year

The kids really need to get back into school

They are running around like caged monkeys in the house

Thursday they go back to school… that will be good

We had a delightful Christmas

And it is a new year full of promise and opportunity

Tom Merritt made me get 20QuestionsTuesday.com

Made me…

With his forcefulness

The site will become more visual as the weeks progress

Check back early and often

Happy 2014

Have a great year, everyone!

<>

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 272 - Christmas

Merry Christmas to all of you celebrating Christmas tomorrow.  To all of you who may not be celebrating Christmas. I hope your Wednesday is hopeful and bright and that if you celebrate any holidays this season that they are wonderful. Since tomorrow is Christmas, the topic for today’s 20 Questions is, unsurprisingly enough, “Christmas.”

Before we go any further. Let’s get the boring old tiresome questions out f the way.  I have received many best gifts and the worst gift was from my Grandmother in Florida who really wanted me to be a girl.  The tradition on Christmas is that the family opens Santa gifts (Santa is still blessedly real in our household, probably for the last year :-( —boooooo!) and empties stockings.  Then I make cinnamon rolls for breakfast (which will be interesting this year with the gluten thing).  After breakfast Little Man and Q play the part of Santa’s Elves and pass out the presents.  Then we sit and open one gift each in turn.  It then becomes snack time.  Following the snack the Wife and her mom start up with Christmas dinner prep for a standing rib roast, twice baked potatoes, and a vegetable of some kind.  That is the end to the structure.  From there the house descends into chaos and napping.   

Thanks this week go to Mike, Lord Pithy, Nadolny, Dr B-Dawg, Wood, Lsig, and Newbold.  Enough of this claptrap.  On to the questions!

1.  Eggnog: Yes or no?  Yes, definitely the non-alcoholic kind as a kid.  Barber’s Egg Nog was that bomb.  I have not been able to find anything comparable since leaving Alabama so many years ago.  I cannot imagine that adding rum to it would make it better, but I am not much for the alcohol.

2.  Do you now ~ask~ for socks and underwear for Christmas, or are you still holding out for toys and major electronics?   More cookware then socks and underwear, and I gave up on electronics years ago.

3.  Every year I think we should just promise each other great Christmas presents and go spend all that money on awesome boxing day/week/season sales, but that never happens because WHO IN THEIR RIGHT MIND WOULD PUT UP WITH THAT MADNESS. Discuss… Oh, Boxing Day, you non-US shopping time.  Your Boxing Day is analogous to our Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving here.  Ours seems to make a bit more sense scheduling-wise… being before Christmas and all.

4.  Which was your fantasy holiday getaway as a child, Christmas in Eternia, or Life Day on Kashyyyk? Has your answer to #2 changed now that you’re an “adult?”  I missed the Star Wars Christmas Special that only happened once, so I would have to say that I am leaning towards the joint She-Ra/He-Man Christmas in Eternia.  It does not hold up.

5.  Say you were given the office of Santa for 1 hour. To whom would you deliver what? Now, say you were given the office of the Doctor for that same hour, who/what would be the villain of your Christmas episode? Hmmm… As Santa, I would bring gifts to kids whose parents couldn’t get them anything.  (awwww, he has a heart… not really, but I couldn’t think of anything else). As The Doctor I would stay the fuck away from that “Are You My Mommy” shit.  That stuff was terrifying.  I would probably have a run in with mannequin Santas for my Doctor Who Christmas Special… I would, of course have to regenerate at the end of the episode where I would say, “Well, That’s that” as my last words and then turn into the next doctor who would happen to be Emma Thompson.  Boom!  and scene!

6.  Is Christmas under attack? Nope

7.  What is your favorite pagan part of Christmas that the Christians have merged into it? The whole thing… the Mithra story, the coopting of the Wodin’s Wild Hunt, the Yule traditions… oh I could go on.

8.  Are white Christmas’s better?…Aside from weather, are there any major differences between the Christmas celebrations of your childhood and those of your family now? Is this a racist question… I would imagine that Christmas is better on average for white people.. oh, wait, you mean weather wise… I have never experienced a white Christmas.  So far the big difference between the Alabama Christmas and an Ohio Christmas is tolerance and about 5 to 10 degrees F colder.

9.  Who does the wrapping? You or the better half? The Wife primarily does the wrapping, but I wrap her gifts.

10.  If you could invent a new Christmas tradition that everyone just adopted, what would it be? First everyone must wear a cap, and then people must politely doff them upon meeting, primarily so I can write the word “doff.”

11.  Do the kids give you a formal wish list or is it just picking up on what they are interested in? We had then snap some pics at stores of things they wanted and then made Pinterest boards for them.

12.  Which is your favorite reindeer? Blitzen… for reasons.

13.  Why the North pole and not the South pole? Because modern Western Culture are primarily in the Northern Hemisphere

14.  Does Santa pay his elves or are they working for free it is some form of socialism? It is a form of socialism?  Elves serve at the pleasure of Santa (and most likely to pleasure Santa as well… the fat man wants to get his jollies).

15.  Santa: Charming addition to the magic of the holiday season, or parental lie that will undermine your children’s faith in humanity when the truth is discovered? It is delightful to watch the kids believe in fable and magic.  They light up when thinking about it.  I love that.  Most likely that will end soon, and I will miss the magicalness.

16.  What’s your favorite Christmas special? Do your kids concur? I have always been partial to the Rankin and Bass specials, but I think that has to do with the whole childhood/nostalgia.  The kids like this show called “Gotta Get Santa Claus” where William Shatner is the voice of Santa Claus.  It is an odd show with crazy plot holes.   

17.  Does anybody actually eat fruitcake? I have never seen a partially eaten slice of fruitcake.  Either no one eats fruitcake or once someone eats a little bit of fruitcake they have to eat the whole thing.

18.  One christmas me, my brother and 3 redneck friends took a 2 wheel drive car out in blizzard basically. There was already 5-6 inches of snow on the ground.  We drank 2.5 liters of jack daniels and skied on doors of the car because no one was on the road.  This is an epic story of which I will spare you until you join the campfire some night. What’s your most memorable christmas story? Hmmm… Nothing so crazy as that.  Really cannot think of anything other than gifts and food… Drunk blizzard door skiing takes the cake.

19.  Is the christmas story of Jesus based on the ancient story of the sun god? Mithra, for the win! Met an unwashed dude named Mithra on a ferry from Dover to Oostend… beat that, bitches!

20.  I’ve been in foreign countries for their holidays and…. Its frikkin weird.  What about US consumer-christmas do think outsiders might see as weird? Everything about it. Our version of Christmas is so insanely consumer driven it is obscene.  Crazy obscene due to the crazy amount of just crap people buy.  It is less a religious holiday and more an excuse to run up credit card debt.


To recap:

A good friend of mine from freshmen to the second semester of my junior year is losing her battle with breast cancer

She and I drifted away from each other long long ago

She has an amazing wit and really helped me through Art History 1, 2, and 3

Those classes were god awful boring and a group of us would pass our notes around trying to make each other laugh

Good times

She is a good person and will be missed

Holy crap!  It’s Christmas

Merry Christmas one and all

Next week is an “exclusive” interview with one Tom Merritt

He and I talk about his departure from the TWiT network

Then we talk about what is coming for him in 2014

It is a great conversation, and a wonderful 20 Questions

Have a happy and safe holiday, all

More next week!

20 Questions Tuesday: 271 - Music... the second... on a Wednesday

Crap, today is Wednesday, isn’t it?  Anyway….part 2 of the “Music” topic.  Last week I waxed eloquent about earworms and other stuff associated with music… this week I add to that conversation.  In other news, my class is over for the semester and I am happy about that.  Since the class finished I have already poured through half of a book by an Internet friend just for fun.  Reading for fun?  What the hell?  I have to finish that book and read another book that has been published by another Internet friend.  More on these in the recap…


Thanks this week go to StPierre, Dr B-Dawg, Maj McArmypants, and Grapes.  onto the questions!


1.  First question, would you listen to this song and “follow” Clusterfudge on Spotify? http://open.spotify.com/track/2U9dLiaCGQ3kYrnwKvKWHC Disclaimer: Clusterfudge is my new music project by myself and my friend Devin who lives in Portland, OR. This track is over 10 years old, but since it’s one of our better ones off my first record, and it’s just us I figured I’d link to it. Right around the start of the year there should be frequent new tracks. Also, we’re in the iTunes store, but I don’t expect anyone to be paying for this stuff just yet.

I am not on the Spotify services, so I will not listen to it that way.  Might I suggest pimping something new when you have it.  I cannot imagine that the point of view you had 10 years ago is remotely similar to your current point of view.  Move forward and let us enjoy your journey as it happens.


2. Beatles or Rolling Stones? Yes they can coexist as two amazing bands, but for some reason it’s a popular question so I figured I’d be unoriginal and ask it.

If I have to chose I go with the Stones.  They have a significantly larger catalog due to their continued existence, plus many people don’t realize how poor the filler songs are by the Beatles… “A Touch of Honey” is a crappy song, and I will hear no other analysis of that.

3. Should I buy a bass guitar?

You going to Clusterfudge that bass?  If so, buy it and create.  Then let me listen to it.


4. If you could draw well, write well, or play music well, which would you choose if it meant not being able to do any of the others ever again?

Going to go with drawing… I cannot play music and I am only passable at writing.

5.  I thoroughly am enjoying the latest Pearl Jam record. What was your favorite band in High School?

Oddly enough, Pearl Jam.  Haven’t heard their most recent, but I am waiting on an iTunes gift card that I usually get on Christmas.


6. Are you more doo-wop or bee-bop?

Bee-Bop

7. What songs would be on the soundtrack to your life?

That is an interesting one… I would imagine some combination of James Brown’s “I Feel Good,” Katrina and the Waves “Walking on Sunshine,” Smashmouth’s “Allstar,” The Police with “Every Little Thing She Does is Magic,” Joan Jett and the Blackheart’s “Bad Reputation,” and Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World” would grace the trailer for the movie of my life with the dramatic parts punctuated by the “Bwaaaaaa” score from Inception.

8. If you family suddenly formed a band, what instruments would they each play?

The Wife would be on bass guitar, because there is nothing hotter in a band than a woman slapping sweet rhythms on a bass.  Little Man would be on the keytar, Q would be on drums, and I would play the electric xylophone.  We would kill it. I would be on lead vocals because who doesn’t want someone banging on a xylophone and wailing some sweet sweet lyrics.

9. Kanye West might be putting out some of the best sounds right now, but why does he have to turn the crazy to 12 and make it almost impossible to listen to?

It does make it difficult, doesn’t it?

10.  How can you dislike Elvis?

I actually think it is pretty simple.  Take an attractive young white guy, have him rip off a whole genre of music created by a disenfranchised population and make a shit ton of money from that without ever giving credit to the forebearers of that hitherto unpopular musical style.  Add substance abuse, adultery, and consistent debauchery.  Bing Bang Boom, Ta-Da, Easy Peasy Lemon Squeasy, and Bob’s Your Uncle.

11.  What is your favorite “bad lyrics” song?

Hmmm… Bad Lyrics… I can’t think of anything off hand.. let me listen to something real quick… go on reading and I will get back to you…

12.  I understand playing the jug when you …only have a jug.  However, there are still people who take it up.  What gives?

They wear skinny jeans and have handlebar mustaches… of course they are going to play the jug.  That jug will be “vintage” and cost tons though.  It is the way of things.

13.  How awesome would it be if all concert pianists had to play on a giant keyboard like they did in “Big”?

I am not sure I would want to watch aerobic instructors doing concerts.  

14.  I have friends who work at a record store. They try to find the most annoying song to clear out everyone at the end of the evening (which is becoming increasingly hard when people think they like things “ironically”). What song would you suggest to flush the riff-raff out?

“Rubber Biscuit” by the Blue’s Brothers.  I am not sure it would clear the place out, but it would make the right people leave.


15.  Have you ever had a band you loved blow up and, in doing so, lose your support? If so, name them.

Not that I can think of.  This is a typical thing about anti-establishment music.  When punk group is young and hungry they are revolutionary, but as they get more popular they become embedded within the very system they rail against.


16.  Which makes a better instrument, a band-saw or a rock/bucket of water combo?

Rock/Bucket of water combo… and just got finished listening to a few songs and my answer to 11 is “Give up the Funk” by George Clinton & the P-Funk Allstars… It was almost Get Lucky by Daft Punk, but “Give up the Funk” edges it out with only 3 verses constantly repeated.


17.  Do you own any vinyl (records-not pants)?

Nope (and nope).


18.  Why are bands from NYC and LA so disappointing?

They are a dime a dozen, while only the better ones make it to the broader market, they still are the products of over saturated and incestuous markets.


19.  What gauge guitar string do you recommend when constructing a garrote?

The thicker the better.  As the garrote gets thinner there is a better chance that the string will cut into the flesh and cause lacerations and require a messy clean-up when the whole point of the garrote is to be quiet and leave no trace.


20.  What is your favorite Ohio band (Excluding OSU’s Best Damn Band in the Land)? Why?

the Ohio Players by far simply for “Love Rollercoaster”


To recap:

Who brought the funk?

I guess I brought the funk

Wow, Tuesday just ran by me like I wasn’t paying attention

I am seriously UN-motivated at work today

By that I mean that I am motivated like the UN

I have passed some toothless resolutions that will create an unenforceable embargo on not doing stuff

I am voluntarily complying with the international mandate

Get the blue hats out of here so I can go back to doing nothing

So there is a holiday coming up

So, if one of the interviews I am doing finishes up, I will post it next week…

The following week?

Oh, I have something planned for Dec 31st/Jan 1st

It is a good plan and it will come to fruition

Oh, yes, it will

Cannot believe it is Wednesday…

Have a great weekend, everyone




20 Questions Tuesday: 270 - Music... the first

I missed last week’s post… sorry bout that.  I have a few interviews going on and I thought one of them was going to get done last week.  We are stuck on question 17… So close, and yet so far…  So yesterday I was listening to the Nutskanker Sweet by the Reigning Monarchs.  It is a surf/ska christmas song mashing up some Nutcracker stuff (“The Dance of the Sugar Plum Ferries”, and “The March of the Nutcracker”) and thinking something akin to “Music… yeah.” I immediately thought that a great topic is “music,” just simply “music.”

I guess I touched on a nerve because I got soooo many good responses, so many that I will be answering questions this week about music, and next week as well.  For those of you who have sent in questions… if don’t get to your questions today, I will next week.

Thanks this week go to Lsig, Lord Pithy, Ringer, and Newbold.  Without further ado… The questions.

1. Do you and your spouse share taste in music?

Somewhat.  Her tastes tend to span more genres where mine tends to focus on quirky humorous stuff as well as dour grunge and folk-rock.

2. Have you evolved your musical tastes, or do you still like your favorites from high school/college?

I still like many of the things from the high school/college years, but recently I listened to a boat-load of songs from that era that were decidedly grungy… I was amazed at how just not good many things I used to like are.  That being said, the really good bands are still really good.  I have been trying to stay somewhat current with some musical tastes, but since I am old, I have found that I consider my “new” music to be about 5 years old.

3. What is your favorite “Wailing along in the car” tune?

I have found myself singing along with “Obvious Bicycle” by Vampire Weekend as of late.  I also find myself bobbing my head in a rather cliche fashion to Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky.”  Then I can always find myself listening to the aforementioned Reigning Monarchs.

4. Do you enjoy live  music? Big or small venues?

Nope, I find live music to be too expensive and have too many people.  

5. Do you get songs from your kids’ shows stuck in your head? I sing "Sofia the FIrst" songs incessantly.

Of course I do… but more than anything I get bad earworms stuck in my head from YouTube vids the kids love.  The worse of which is “Baby Monkey (Going Backwards on a Pig).”  At my previous job, I once caught a co-worker humming “Fruit Salad” by the Wiggles (who my wife says are really a much better concert band).  I busted him on this and then he made fun of me for recognizing it. One of us died that night… and I am writing you.

6.  Can you please explain for me what distinguishes rock music from pop music from bubblegum pop music?

Rock: strong presence of a lead guitar in the bridge, typically made up of lead guitar, bass guitar, and drums

Pop: Add in a keyboard and the music becomes more danceable.  

Bubblegum Pop: More synth, the drums become a drum machine, the acts become younger, and potentially more auto-tuning.

7. What would be your dream pairing of musical piece with instrument (for instance, “Darth Vader’s Theme” on slide whistle)?

“Marche Slave” by Tchaikovsky with only a triangle.

8. Do you play any musical instrument? If no, any regrets? If yes, any regrets?

I do not play any recognizable musical instrument and I have no regrets about that.

9. If life were a traditional jug band, what instrument are you?

The one string washtub bass

10. Fess up, you love “Beach Blanket Bingo,” don’t you?

Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon don’t even like “Beach Blanket Bingo.”  It is horrible.

11. American Pie, great song. American Cake, never heard of it. Suck it again cake eaters!

This is less a question and becoming more of statement of one’s personal philosophy… but is American Pie that great of a song?  Iconic, surely, but “Great?” That might be pushing it.

12. Favorite type of music?

I tend to enjoy music that has a bit of grungy tones with some unhappiness.

13. Genius gets tossed around too much, anyone in music you think has earned the title?

Prince is genius musically.  There are boatloads of really good and great artists out there, but few can be considered Genius in popular music.

14. Beiber or Typhoid Fever, CHOOSE!

One thing that I have found is that when looking at set theory and the union or intersection of sets as well as the operations that generate mutually exclusive sets, the nullset is always a member of the resultant set.  So, say the universal set for this question is popular music and the sets of Justin Beiber and Typhoid Fever.  I choose the nullset.  When optioned with two poor options in a set theory question, I choose the third option or nothing. (BTW’s I was not and am not aware of anything by Typhoid Fever… oh wait, you meant the disease… in that case I definitely choose nothing)

15. “And in the end the love you take is equal to the love you make” is that true? (Thanks Chris Farley … oh, and the Beatles)

That is not quite true, there are many people who are incapable of love who are loved by people.  They end up taking way more love than they make… psychopathic jerks.

16. There’s a theory the key of earth is f#.  Thoughts on that?

F# is is awesome… I am just glad it is not in b minor because that is the key of the fugue

17.  I Iike just about all music, but foreign rap is god awful.  Is there a type of music you disdain?

I dislike, and forcefully so, country and western music.

18.  What music would be played at your funeral if it were tomorrow?

Who wants to Live Forever by Queen.

19.  Beans, the musical fruit?

The more you eat the more you toot.

20. What kind of music inspires you?

Angry music



To recap:

A guy I kind of know and respect got the short end of an employment stick last week

It affected me more than I think it should have

All is becoming better now

Things have actually shaken out for me from this

I gots myself another 20 Questions Interview… so there is that

I have some mail to get out

It is the holidays

I have 6 other interviews going on right now

Two Canadians (one originally from South Africa and the other originally from England), an Australian, a West Virginian, and a Michigander

What’s good for the Michigoose is good for the Michigander

All of them are in various stages of completion

Next week we have questions from StPierre, Dr B-Dawg, Maj McArmypants, and Grapes

There are some great ones… just waiting to be answered in there

To the Bat-Cave, Robin!

Ooooh, yeah!

Have a great weekend everyone



20 Questions Tuesday: 269 - Thanksgiving

This week is Thanksgiving Week here in the States, so today I am very thankful for everyone who read this here site and especially the people who have allowed me to ask 20 questions and the people who send me questions to ask.  Enough of this hornswaggle though let’s stop this simpering and get to it.


This week’s topic is actually “Thanksgiving.”  Oh, Thanksgiving… so much more fun when I could eat the glutens.  I actually am not really looking forward to the actual Thanksgiving Day meal…  No stuffing, potentially no gravy, and no pumpkin pie…. so all of you can shove it.  Let’s get to it.


Thanks this week go to Chris Ring, Lord Pithy, Dr B-Dawg, and Chris Corrigan.  Let’s do this.


1: Travel? or Hosting?

We are traveling because we don’t like having to go through all the hassle of the clean up


2: Macy’s Parade YEAH! or UGH!?

leaning more towards the UGH.  Parades are always just the wrong side of enjoyable for me… But I always THINK they should be enjoyable.  Alas and alack they never are.


3: Any non-traditional items on the menu?

Not that I can think of.  We are really pretty beholden to the restaurant in the lodge we are going to be staying at.


4: Any annual TV/Movie must see?

Nope.


5: PIE! No question JUST PIE! (suck it cake people)

I wish I could just take on some pie without efforting to have the pie all gluten-free.


6. Do you find you change your “What are you thankful for” answer depending on the audience?

Nope.  I screw that up regardless of audience.


7. If you could assign other people’s “thankfuls,” what would Wifey be thankful for?

The internal combustion engine… you should be thankful for that as well.


8. Day of the Doctor — totally awesome TV or what?

I have only heard good things about that… but I am not a Whovian.


9. Popcorn, toast or jelly beans for favorite traditional Thanksgiving food?

Hmmm… those the only three choices?  Gonna go with popcorn because one could make it sweet or savory.


10. I’m thankful to have you for a friend. Is that enough to warrant a free lunch?

Sure… let’s set it up


11. Did the OED proclaim “Thanksgiving” as its word of the year in 1621?

Nope, the word of the year was the phrase: “Ye Daye of Gratitvde Gifting”  It was all the rage that year.  It took the sea-lanes and trapper trails by storm.


12. Would you ever prepare and butcher a live turkey for Thanksgiving?

Nope, I am honestly not a big fan of bird on the bone.


13. Electric or human-powered knife for carving the turkey?

Electric.


14. How long after Thanksgiving do the Christmas decorations appear?

The weekend after.


15. When do the preparations for the big meal begin?

We leave town tomorrow.


16. So what do you do in your house to deal with the cultural appropriation issues of the US Thanksgiving holiday and the romanticized view of history that the typical narrative presents to the American public?

Well, this year Little Man did a study of the Wyandot and both the Wife and I feel that we might be able to mention the more controversial aspects of this anglo holiday.


17. Have you ever been at a Native American Thanksgiving?  Hint: it’s awkward.  Pro-tip: Black Friday was a good name for what followed.

Nope… I imagine it is about as popular as Columbus Day with the Native Americans.  Things Native Americans are not thankful for? European swine based illnesses.


18. “The US is the only country in the world where people run over each other in the quest for cut rate material acquisition the day after a celebration of gratitude for everything they have.”  Discuss.

The holiday season is nothing if not ironic.


19. People have been rightly excited about the convergence of Channukah and Thanksgiving this year.  But it is also the beginning of Advent.  Which is not a holiday where we get to vent at the ads that come our way over the next month. Are these holidays overdone?  Shouldn’t we just ratchet back the whole thing and celebrate humbly and privately with friends and family around and narry a credit card to be seen?

I don’t think you know how to celebrate extravagance very well.  See, you do that by over indulgence and consumption.  The holiday season is for overdoing it and for infusing the economy with a shot of hot spicy cash.


20. What would a small, deep, simple, pressure-free and beautiful Thanksgiving actually look like in your house?  In my house high on the list would be my gratitude for you guys being in my life.  Just sayin’.  And pie of course.

It would involve bunches of naps and phone calls to friends and family… but mainly naps.


To recap:

Lsig and her hubby spent the night at Casa Del Me last night

It was great to see them both

So much fun

My homework schedule just got a reprieve

Yeeee-haw!  Reprieve!

US Thanksgiving this Thursday

Turkey shall be consumed

and probably mashed potatoes

And some corn of some sort

…. but no stuffing

Crap, I miss stuffing

and deserts

Missing both of those

Have a great weekend everyone!

 

20 Questions Tuesday: 268 - Iyaz Akhtar

image

This week is a treat.  I am going to ask one of the hosts of one of my favorite podcasts 20 questions.  Iyaz Akhtar is one of the hosts of Tech News Today on the TWiT network… He has his degree in law and has been know to actually read the EULA for tech products and services.  He actually reads the EULA?  Who the hell does that?  Anyway… he often takes the counterpoint of previous 20 questioneer, Tom Merritt. Often I cannot tell if he is just being a devils advocate, or if he is actually taking the side of the argument he is making. I believe he is able to do that so ably because he is/was a lawyer… we will get into that with some of the questions, but anyway, Iyaz is a genuine delight to hear and his opinion is almost always very well thought out and well informed. Very rarely does he get it wrong.  I cannot think of any specific instance where I felt he was wrong, but I am sure there have been some.  He is human and fallible and don’t let anyone tell you differently…

So without further ado, let’s get to the questions.

So I make maps for a living and have always been interested in the stories of place and space.  For example, I was born just outside of Oklahoma City, the fam moved to Montgomery, Alabama when I was three and moved up to just outside of Birmingham, Alabama when I was 5. I lived there until I went off to school in Kent, Ohio.  There I met my future wife and moved to Columbus, Ohio for grad school and moved just outside of Columbus proper last year.  Question 1:  What is your geographic story?

I was born in Brooklyn where my dad worked. My parents and the three kids lived in an apartment until the fourth child showed up. When my younger brother was born (and I was around three years old), we all moved to Queens where I stayed until I was about 18 years old. My mom still lives in Queens. After that, I headed to Boston where I attended Boston University. After I graduated, I stayed in Boston for a year with an honest-to-goodness job.

I decided to make my way back to Queens to figure out my next step. That brought me to Wallingford, Connecticut - a small town that was nearby my first law school, Quinnipiac University School of Law. I transferred out to Vermont Law School in my second year sending me to Randolph, Vermont. I lived there for about three years. An interest in tax law brought me to Manhattan, New York for even more schooling.

After that wound up, I headed upstate to a town called Croton on Hudson — a town so dead, that I wanted to leave. The house was sold and I was headed to Manhattan again except I got a job offer in Petaluma, California. A deal for a Manhattan property fell through which made it easier to take the gig in California. Now I’m in Petaluma and have been here since March 2011.

I’m sorry, I think I just read that you moved to Manhattan because of “an Interest in tax law.”  This is a pretty particular statement.  I would imagine that there are not terribly many people who have ever written, much less, said that statement.  I want to assure you that I am not casting stones here. My undergrad degree is in mathematics, with a focus on geometric topology, and my grad degree is focused on spatial analysis methods and analytical cartography, so I understand that different things interest different people.  Question 2: What interested you in tax law? Do you still harbor any of that interest still?

What interested me in tax law? I took an income tax course at Vermont Law School and I was hooked. People have the most creative arguments when it comes to money. I enjoyed reading all the arguments made over the years fighting taxation. I also took an estate and gift tax course while serving as a research assistant for one of my professors. That only strengthened my interest in tax law.

I wanted to be a tax law professional and the top place you could go for a Masters in Taxation is New York University’s School of Law. So, I worked really hard and managed to get into NYU’s program. Money is the biggest game in the world; the structures you can create to make your money work for you are fascinating to me.

However, I wound up in tech because the job market was a mess when I got out of school. The market was flooded with professionals who had been in the business for years seeking employment. Cost cutting methods meant experienced attorneys were vying for the same jobs as recent graduates.

I interviewed at a number of places while also applying for tech jobs. (I was a writer for a tech blog while in law school). I happened to get a tech job before getting a law job, so I wound up in that field. I don’t actively keep an eye out on tax law, but I do still find tax law very interesting.

I have never thought about looking at tax law from the perspective of how to avoid tax laws.  I imagine that can become rather interesting.  I have lost much of my interest in mathematics.  I still think I have the beginnings of a hypothesis for a different type of mathematics that would set the table to help clear up one of Russell’s paradoxes, but I really only understand that when I am drunk, so that is a hypothesis for another more drinky time.  

Here we are at the point that everyone has been waiting for, Question 3: Cake or Pie?  Which kind and specifically what kind?

I usually go with pie. My favorite is apple pie, but I like lots of different fillings. I feel like I’m going to sound like Bubba from Forrest Gump - I like pecan pie, cherry pie, even savory pies like chicken pot pie. When I moved to Petaluma, I was delighted to find that my place of work was within walking distance of the Petaluma Pie Company (yeah, too perfect, right?).

We live near a place call “Just Pies… “ I have recently discovered a gluten sensitivity… boo gluten sensitivity.  I too tend to lean towards pie, but I think that has to do with the fact that my mom baked and decorated cakes for a living… I am nothing if not oppositionally defiant concerning the fam of origin.  So much so, that sometimes I end up not doing things I should just because it is something my parents would do.  It is a classic “cutting your nose to spite your face” situation, but that is a story for a different time.

Question 4: So you grew up on the East Coast and moved recently to the West Coast, where do you feel most “at home?”  For example, I grew up in Alabama, but I feel most at home in Columbus, Ohio, and have even before my kids were born.

Interesting question. I usually feel most at home in a walkable city. So whether it’s New York, Boston, or San Francisco, they all kind of feel like home when I’m walking around. I’ve lived in a bunch of small towns and suburbs over the years and while I do enjoy most of them, I think I was made for a city with a mass transit system.

I don’t think geography makes me feel at home as much as having options to do things in a location. I guess having options puts me at ease. My least favorite place to live was Croton on Hudson in upstate New York. There were very few restaurants and maybe one or two that were any good. It seems like the town was built for people to live in, but not enjoy anything in that town. You’d have to drive twenty minutes to find something remotely interesting.

I’ve been fortunate to live in some small towns that have nice downtown areas like Wallingford, Connecticut and Petaluma, California. You’d have to drive to the downtown area, but then you could walk around for a couple of hours seeing things.

That sounds like a great living philosophy.  My fam has been lucky to date as to the neighborhoods we have lived in.  The first place my wife and I lived in was across the street from a Dairy Queen.  We could look out our front window and see what the special was.  To tell the truth it was both a good and a bad thing, but that proximity to hot eats and cool treats (Dairy Queen, we treat you right) can help one to shed the idea of Sweet Home Alabama.  Our previous house was also very walkable.  Now we live 2 blocks away from a thriving little town square with restaurants, places to eat, and eateries.

Question 5: So, what genre of food is your “go to” in your relatively walkable area?  For us, it is an English style pub around the corner (The Old Bag of Nails) that has great fish’n’chips and delightful shrimp as well as the beers. That being said, a few pizza places have opened recently that the kids are partial to.

I’ve been called a picky eater, but I do try to sample all kinds of foods. I think my “go to” food is American food - so burgers, sandwiches, that kind of thing. You can usually get them anywhere. As I’m also a beer fan, you can get that kind of food with a nice beer. I quite enjoy pizza — even a bad slice of pizza is usually a good bit of food.

Question 6:  So your self assessed pickiness with food, does that stem from predominantly flavor issues or is a texture issue?  For example, I love the flavor a banana gives you, however, the mushiness of it keeps me from eating it… similarly with avocado…

If I had to pick one, I think my pickiness comes from flavor issues. For the most part, I don’t like to be bored by my food. If you’re going to be ingesting something for your body to have fuel, it should taste good. I’ve been told I’ve got good sense of smell and that’s pretty important when it comes to tasting. Depending on the day, I try to keep an open mind when it comes to trying out new foods. I’d love to be surprised to find a new favorite.

Textures can bother me, too. Cottage cheese is a food that I can handle sometimes — other times, it just grosses me out thinking about it (like right now, ew).

I have never been much of a cottage cheese fan myself… it… looks squishy /shudder

Enough of this food talk.  Let’s get down to important business, let’s tech this up just a little bit because I really do enjoy the Tech News Today podcast.  Question 7: How long do you give Blackberry? It really has been one of the more spectacular falls from prominence in the tech age.  I am sure it has not hit rock bottom yet, but it seems to be picking up speed on its way down right now.

I figure the BlackBerry brand could go the way of the Polaroid brand. I doubt it will ever truly die as it still has a lot of value as a name. As for the company surviving, I believe its enterprise services and back end services will outlast the handset operations. I think BlackBerry as we know it will not exist in two years. However, that isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

image

When RIM went dormant for a year and then re-branded themselves as the company Blackberry, the writing was on the wall.  I personally feel that it has only been a matter of time especially after the z-10 flopped. There was too much time between products and places found other options.  The office where I work is a perfect example. This was a blackberry shop for the longest time (I work in the government, it’s okay, we are here to help), but in RIM/Balckberry’s stagnation our department shifted to iPhones… a horrible solution, but a solution nonetheless.  

One of the things I enjoy in Tech News Today is how you and Tom are often on different sides of a story.  Question 8: How much of that difference of opinion is an actual difference of opinion and how much is manufactured to give the show a counter-point?  Do you play devil’s advocate to Tom and vice versa?    

Ah, a familiar question. First up, it should be known that Tom and I are friends and have known each other for a number of years before I wound up at TWiT. I have the utmost respect for him and his ideas. All that being said, we both like constructing and deconstructing arguments. I’d say most times what appears to be a disagreement is simply presenting a different viewpoint to the other person to test the validity of that argument. To put it more simply, sometimes you want to know if your idea is any good, so you bounce it off your pal. We just so happen to do it on the air and have some fun with it. We both play devil’s advocate from time to time to try to make sense of whatever is going on in tech.

I figured that both of you play devil’s advocate to each other, and I think it is very clear that the two of you are fairly good friends and at least happy co-workers.  I cannot imagine how boring a show would be everybody agreed with whoever spoke first.  Bunch of “Dittos” and “What he/she said.”  It would be fantastically horrible if all of you came out and just agreed with each other on camera for a show.  The show would be over in 20 minutes, and most of that time would be Jason dropping the segment title screens.  I think it is very clear that each host of Tech News Today brings a strong set of skills to the plate as well as a pretty well defined point of view.  It truly is a great show.

image

Question 9: Fill in the blanks:  I feel that I am mostly ______. Others feel I am mostly ______.

nice

sarcastic

There is a bit of an inconsistency between your response and other people’s response.  “Nice” and “sarcastic” are not necessarily mutually exclusive categories, but there is some separation between the two responses.  Question 10:  Why do you think there is such a discrepancy between your nice view of yourself and others’ sarcastic view of you?  Are people misconstruing your genuine concern and care for sarcasm?  

I think the discrepancy comes from a number of things like my awkwardness around people. Some of my closest friends have had trouble understanding when I’m being sarcastic or serious. From what I’ve gathered, it’s generally a tone problem. Then there’s the curious case of my face. I’m either not very good at emoting concern or if I am, it is incredibly similar to my annoyed face. Let’s just say I’d be a terrible actor. Combine awkwardness, tone issues, and facial arrangement and you get the nice/sarcastic combo.

It is helpful to recognize that within yourself. I have a trouble of often choosing funny over nice.  Wherein you are nice, which some misunderstand as being sarcastic, I am sarcastic at the expense of nice.  It is my cross to bear.  Heavy hangs the head with the crown and all that.

I have been trying to get the word “shiny” into the modern day colloquial language to mean “cool” or “awesome.”  Question 11: Do you have a word or phrase that you want to interject into modern culture?  If not, can you think of one?

I have a tendency to use the words “nifty” and “neat” both on IM and IRL. I doubt I’m trying to get others to use those words. This relates back to my mistaken sarcasm — most people don’t take either term sarcastically in my experience.

“Nifty” and “neat” are great words and should also be infused into the modern day lexicon.  Lexicon is also a word that should be used more often, because, as you well know, lexicons are nifty.  

So I noticed this morning I had to set 3 different alarms on my phone to wake me up.  These alarms span an hour of time, and sometimes I still have issues waking up with them.  When I was a grade schooler, I remember having the hardest time getting out of bed because I was a sleepy kid.  I also remember, vaguely,back when I was young, spry and in college, I would typically wake up when my radio alarm clock began the preliminary hum 3 seconds before the alarm went off.  Now, some of this difficulty with my waking has to do with the constant sleep dept I am in due to my schedule (kids, job, school…. simultaneously) but I think some of this has to do with just being more middle aged.  Question 12: So, how has your waking routine changed over the years?  or has it?

When I was a kid, I guess I’d pop out of bed like a normal child. Once I became a teenager, I just wanted to sleep in all the time. I eventually put my alarm clock across far away from my bed so I’d have to get up and walk to it. Eventually, I could kind of do that routine while half-asleep. I learned to hate that Sony Dream Machine clock radio alarm buzzer. I can hear it right now in my head - it makes me cringe. I eventually made the switch to waking up to music because I despised that alarm sound. However, that didn’t work so well because sometimes the music that would be playing on the radio would seep into my dream and not wake me up.

I also took great advantage of the snooze button through high school and college. I’d set my alarm for about 30 minutes before I had to really get up so I could hit the snooze button a couple of times before getting out of bed.

Eventually, I realized that the extra sleep wasn’t worth it and started putting my alarm for a time I really should get out of bed. Nowadays, I avoid hitting the snooze button and turn off the alarm at 6:30AM. It’s a slightly risky endeavor — the alarm is off, so if I somehow doze off again, there will be no alarm to wake me up. However, that hasn’t been too much of an issue.

When it comes to weekends, I usually get up pretty early (around 7:30AM). I don’t like wasting the day asleep when I can be doing things.

I am not a morning person, but these darn kids make me get up early all the time.  Darn kids.

This being Question 13 and all, it is time to get superstitiony.  So, when I was in high school I had a ritual to get ready for a soccer game… a sequence of getting dressed that got me ready to play the game.  Some considered it a superstition or belief in luck, but it was more of a process to get my mind in the right place for the game.  More of a ritual than a superstition.  Question 13: Do you have any superstitions or rituals?  

I don’t think I’m superstitious as I will walk under a ladder without fear. I don’t know if I have rituals as much as I have routines like my pre-workout routine. Before pretty much any workout, I’ll look at motivational fitness quotes and pics then play a playlist of music that gets me fired up to beat my body up.

For general everyday stuff, I end up using routines to make up for my lousy memory. I was always amazed in movies when people in court scenes would say “Where you the night of October 18th, 2011?” I have trouble remembering what I did within the course of a day let alone remember years ago. However, my routines let me figure out what I’d likely be doing at that time. (And to answer that question - On October 18th, 2011, I was probably scouring the news for Tech News Today in my home office before heading to the studio).

I have never understood how people on the stand could remember where they were on a specific date.  The only thing that I can think of that would trigger the memories is that something odd occurred that created a mental timestamp. I know there have been times that I have made a mental note to remember something odd for later.  That way when the news crews came to me I would be able to expound upon their request with a surprising amount of information.  That has not happened…. yet.  Let’s just put it this way, I am currently putting this memory in the vault, for I am sure you are about to do something newsworthy that will involve me taking the stand.  Who am I kidding?  I will have a tough time remembering my name tomorrow.

Question 14: Is there a specific piece of technology that you would like to see made?  Is there a magic technology that you would like to see in reality (even something that already exists but is not mass produced or reasonably purchasable)? Holographic projection, reasonable and exact Virtual Reality stuff, jet-packs, self-driving cars, teleportation, personal robots etc…

I’d like for wireless power be a reality. I know we have these wireless power mats that you can place your device on, but they require close proximity. It’d be nice to not have to plug in all the time. My gadgets die far too frequently.

I had completely forgotten about the mere idea of wireless power.  That truly could revolutionize how objects could be used.  That would be really pretty awesome.  I personally want to have ubiquitous and efficient alternative forms of power.  Reliance on fossil fuels is something that we, as a planet, need to reduce.  Crap, I am soapboxing.  What I meant to say is I like 3-D printers and rapid prototyping.

I can imagine that the constant amount of research and the aggressive production schedule associated with a daily  technology news program is a difficult schedule to juggle.  You enjoy exercising and have a family. Question 15: How do you try to keep your work/life balance in an acceptable ratio?  I am asking for a friend who has 2 kids, a full-time job, is in school full-time and whose wife travels for her work and feel his work/life ratio is all over the place.  Are you content with your work/life ratio?

Keeping my work/life balance in an acceptable ratio requires a bit of discipline and practice. I’ve never really considered myself a morning person, but when I wake up, I’ve got to get right to work researching stories for “Tech News Today.” I try to get eight hours of quality sleep so I can wake up and go full tilt.

When I’m not at work, I read a bit of tech news. I’ve kept up on gadgets and tech since I used to read magazines like EGM or Nintendo Power (so since I was about ten years old). At times, I’ll try to force myself to draw a line and do things that aren’t tech-related. The nature of my work affords me the opportunity to develop good habits or be super-lazy if I want.

Am I content with my work/life ratio? Content is such a great word. I’m a tinkerer — I’ll probably keep tinkering with ratios like that forever.

It really is a hard thing to get right and super-easy to get wrong and very easy to get off-balance after having been balanced for a good while.  It really is a delicate balance.  I am a bit out of whack currently, but trying to get that balance back… Hopefully that can happen fairly soon, because being out of balance is difficult, especially when one has the childrens.

image

Question 16: So, is there a question that I have not asked you that you think I should, or that you are surprised I have not asked?

Hm. You haven’t asked me about what tech I use every day.

Okay, I’ll bite, Question 16A: What tech do you use everyday, and do you find any one piece of tech indispensable in your daily life?

My iPad (fourth generation) has become a device that is almost always on me. I use it to prep for shows. At times, I use it to take a look at my rundown for “Know How…” I end up watching my workout videos on it since it’s portable. Plus, since it’s on the Verizon LTE network, it frequently accompanies me when I’m on the road. It has a super-low cost data plan and it’s also a hotspot. I’m a big fan. My laptop and desktop get used during the workweek, but sometimes I won’t touch either on the weekend because of the iPad.

I regularly use an Ooma, a VOIP box, that lets me make phone calls over the Internet for a really low rate. That’s always connected to my home network and I find myself on the phone far too often. I’m still not a cell phone fan, though.

There’s also my Pogoplug, which gives me access to my 3TB of media files anywhere. I’ve got plenty of movies on there, so if Netflix is down, I can watch one of those movies. My workout vids are also on there, so I do end up using the Pogoplug app a lot.

For my home theater, I end up using my Media Center PC and Apple TV quite regularly. My video files are set in a redundant way so if either the Media Center or Apple TV fails, I can watch content on the other machine while fixing the other. The PS3 is used as the ultimate backstop.

At one time in my life I was technologically saavy… not so much anymore.  That is why I watch TWiT.

Question 17: So, since you are on a few podcasts, do you listen to podcasts, and if so, what podcasts do you listen to?

I used to listen to lots of podcasts back when I had a long commute (pretty much anything from TWiT and CNET). The HTGuys’ “HDTV & Home Theater Podcast” and “Buzz Out Loud” were two of my favorite podcasts to listen to on my old commute. These days, my commute is a whopping one mile drive, so I don’t listen to shows like I used to.

However, I do wind up watching a whole lot of podcasts when I’m home. I regularly watch “All About Android,” “90 Seconds on the Verge,” “Fw: Thinking,” and “Pro Wrestling Report.” I can’t help but watch some shows when I’m in the studio. I’ve watched plenty of “iPad Today” and “Social Hour” episodes, but I don’t get to see the show like you guys do. I get to see the back of the hosts’ heads while I listen to the show. That’s an oddball thing.

That does sound odd… I imagine it is a very different vantage point.  It sounds a bit discombobulating… I don’t get to use that word very often.

The tables are turning, so Question 18: What questions would you like to ask me?

Have you ever sat down and read a EULA or a wireless carrier contract?

I have read one.  I read the first EULA associated with World of Warcraft. I read the whole thing, although I am certain that the last half of the doc I was skimming more than reading and I would have failed any test associated with the content of what I was reading.  I was not able to turn on the switch in my brain that would make it comprehensible, so that really was the first/last/only EULA I have ever read.

Question 19:  What are you taking from these 20 questions that you did not bring in with you?

I haven’t really given it much thought as to what kind of place I like to live in until these questions - and it turned out to be a walkable town or city. I hadn’t bothered to find a common thread to all of the places I enjoyed living until you asked.

It is always interesting to see when threads weave together into something recognizable. In doing all of these 20 Questions interviews that I have done through the years, I often see people recognize patterns that they did not see before.

and the final question… Question 20:  What’s Next?  You can be as short-term or as long-term as you want, you can be as concrete or as vague as you want.

What’s next? Around the house, I’ll probably keep going after my garage so I can fit a car in there. As a content producer, I’d like to create some more shows and finish up a documentary I’ve been working on for a while. I’ve been tinkering with the idea of recording some more music (I haven’t done that in a long time). I like to make creative works, so I think that’s really what’s next for me in my immediate future. After that, who knows?

That was delightful.  Everyone should follow Iyaz on twitter, and listen to his podcasts! Know How, Tech News Today, Podcast without Pretense, and Two and a Half Geeks.

To recap:

I really enjoyed this conversation with Iyaz

Hawai’i is awesome

I have tons of homework to do

And a pic to finish for Iyaz

I offered him a pic since I draw things as a way of thanks

He asked for something from “The Preacher”

I chose Saint of Killers

Should have done this while I am watching presentations/lectures

Presentations and lectures about Bottom-Up Information Architecture

We are focusing on faceted categorization schemes tonight

Faceted like a diamond, Baby!

I think I will have another 20 Questions interview ready for next week as well

Have a great weekend everyone

20 Questions Tuesday: 267 - People's Choice II

This week is the continuation of last week’s randomness.  So without further ado…


Thanks this week go to Chris Ring, Lsig, and Yahoo answers



Topic: Halloween

1.  Pagan rituals, All Hallow’s Eve, All Saints Day, Night of the Dead etc… Where do you stand on the birth of Halloween?

An amalgam of Pagan rituals and the Christian


2 - Favorite Halloween costume as a kid?

I went as R2-D2 and my brother who was 5 years older than me was C-3PO.  It was delightful.  My brother’s favorite costume of mine was when I wore an actual jack-o-lantern on my head.


3 - Favorite Candy?

Butterfinger


4 - Worst excuse for candy? (As in this ain’t candy!)

in the 80’s there was this awful peanut butter candy that was in this heavy red or black wax paper… if you are over 35, you know what I’m talking about.


5 - Favorite Halloween tradition (besides candy)?

We don’t really have many traditions for Halloween.


6.  Sand worms, ya’ hate ‘em right?

How can you not?


Topic: exercise

7.  I exercised for 30 minutes today. Are you working out regularly?

I am trying to.  I have been doing 30 minutes or so on the treadmill every other day and on the off days I am doing just a little calisthenics.  I am noticing improvements, so that is good.


8.  What kinds of exercise do you like (if any)?

I have not found one that I like as of yet.


9.  Do you have specific fitness goals or just general improvement?

Yes, I have both


10.  Do you count activities like mowing or house painting against your weekly exercise quota?

Nope, well maybe mowing… our back yard is gigantic.


11.  Are all these exercise questions obnoxious?

A tad bit, but only because it makes me realize how little I am doing.

Topic: First 9 Questions from Yahoo Answers.com right now….

12.  Explain why signal detection theory is sometimes necessary to help determine a person’s absolute threshold?

Um…. no.


13.  Got a new kitten, now my older kitten is puking and sleeping all day?  What’s going on?

Well, your older cat is sick, most likely from something the new kitten brought in with it.  I am sure that the stress of having  a new cat in the environment has not helped, but the cat is sick.


14.  What is a creative synonym for Devil, Demon or Fiend?

Ted. Creative AND incorrect


15.  Would you prefer a restaurant to serve Coke, Pepsi or RC Cola products?

Pepsi… who the hell likes RC Cola?


16.  Can anyone give me a healthy diet to follow?

Yes…many people can.


17.  What is your strategy for staying socially awesome?

Well, I expose people to my awesomeness, and then just reap the social rewards.


18.  What are good baby names?

Names that are accessible, yet different.  My suggestion is to look at old names and then create a simple variation of that older name.


19.  How can I really enjoy my senior year?

Don’t take it so seriously. It is only high school, and more important portions of your life will happen later.

20. How do I find the area of the radius of a circle?

Your question makes no sense. Please rephrase it.  I cannot tell if you are looking for area or radius.


To recap:

Interviews coming up in the next few weeks

Those should be fun

Some people I have reached out to have expressed interest in the interview process

Woo-hoo!

I have so much homework to do

So so much reading and analysis

And I have not been getting enough sleep

Watching a show on Siberian tigers right now

Tigers are beautiful

Beautiful beautiful badasses

Have a great weekend everyone