Bzzzzzzzz
March 9th, 2010

Why I won’t be watching Shutter Island…(Spoiler warning)

Shutter Island.

I was half-excited for this film, an adaptation of a book I’ve never heard of because I am an uncultured swine. Or it’s unreadable, generic pap…one of the two. The film is coming out in a bit of a dry season for good cinema, with nothing on the schedule really catching my eye. ‘The Crazies’ is out could be interesting, but I missed any hype there might have been for that, and a few lacklustre reviews means I’ll probably wait a few months for Lovefilm to drop it at my doorstep. Kevin Smith’s next directorial shot, ‘Cop Out’, is miles off because I happen to live in the UK and Warner Bros hates me. No other films have really jumped on to my radar in a meaningful way. ‘Alison Wonderland’ looks like a ridiculous CGI-ridden mess, and the pairing of Burton and Depp is wearing as thin as a celebrity girlfriend.

Plus the last film I dragged myself to was ‘The Wolfman’, in which Del Toro gives a masterclass of looking thoroughly bored and Hugo Weaving plays a talking moustache. It was so horribly bad I wanted to, ironically, grow fur and maul everyone.

So when I saw Shutter Island was out this week, I was a little bit interested. I made plans to go and see it, checked times, and sat feeling smug that I had an alterative to spending my Friday night eating pizza and throwing Southern Comfort down my throat. My liver did a little dance. I also re-watched the trailer, which I first saw before a screening of ‘Moon’, and it was suitably creepy, building tension days before I would even see the film proper. I was very interested. I love those precious few ghost movies that mess with your head and burrow into your psyche so you jump at every shadow on the way home. I even thought ‘The Sixth Sense’ was good, though it wasn’t exactly a horror film. There are precious few of these films, because even when they start off well, they’re usually ruined by a bloody stupid plot twist towards the end.

Except I will now never bother to watch ‘Shutter Island’, and this pre-emptive review (er…preview?) will tell you why. I’ll try not to swear loads, but can’t promise anything. Also, obviously, spoiler alert.

Yes, I read the story outline on Wikipedia. Couldn’t help it. I effectively ruined the film for myself and I’m so incredibly glad I did, because it would have only made me angry. The ending is the type you joke about over your popcorn during the trailers, pre-film and post-’Dallas’. You’ll be whispering quietly, hazarding guesses at what direction the plot will take, and someone will undoubtedly say “It’s all a dream! DiCaprio will wake up in the shower!” and you’ll all politely laugh at your friends rubbish joke.

Now, it isn’t exactly that, but it’s about on par. Basically, the story decides to eat itself and winds up screaming “It’s all in his head!”, whilst shoving it’s foot firmly down it’s own throat. Faux-psychology wrapped up in a supposedly intriguing plot that makes me want to throw up on whatever bored writer thought ‘Yep, that’ll wrap it up nicely’. It’s a twist designed to shock you, much like “Bruce is dead!” in The Sixth Sense. Except all it really does is kill the rest of the film, making all the scares up to that point entirely redundant. As it’s all in his head, it doesn’t even nearly exist, and only he sees it…so what, exactly, are you being scared of? The notion that some other man’s lack of marbles is giving him a bit of a shiver? Ooo.

If a man approached you in the street, and told you the most harrowing tale you could ever imagine, full of terrifying depravity and laced with supernatural happenings, and somehow managed to convince you it was all entirely real, but then ended by saying something like “and that’s when I woke up!”, would you be pleased? You’d be thrown back into reality, and you’d be pissed off at the crazy man for wasting your time. Dreams are boring when recountered, regardless of the content. Do you really want to give upwards of £7 to a cinema so you can learn that, no matter how expertly it was told, a mental patient had a bit of a nightmare?

Assuming it was a well made flick (which, being Scorsese, it probably is), it’s likely the film doesn’t exactly hint at it before the final reveal, otherwise it’d ruin the movie even more. So it might be entertaining right up until the final scene, but if I’d been sat in the cinema, gripped by every scene up to that point, I’d have been absolutely livid by the pointlessness of the ending. Saying “It’s all in his head” negates any impact the film might have had up to that point, and effectively kills what interest I’d had. Knowing full well it’ll send me into an irate rage, I’m going to give it a miss. They should put a warning on the poster, underneatht the tagline: “Warning: The Ending Is Retarded”. You could have the best sex of your life, but if your partner hops off you before climax, and slaps you in the face, you wouldn’t be ecstatic about it. Well, unless you’re into that. Whatever. Anyway.

It makes me angry simply because they could have mentioned it at the start, and we could have all gone home early. It means every scene that preceeded the big finale was rubbish, pointless, and only the character played by DiCaprio knew any of it was going on. I’d be expecting to see people wandering around with cups of coffee, reading the newspaper whilst he ran around screaming and pointing at figments of his own imagination. Imagine the exact same film from another characters point of view (except, maybe, for any of the ghosts, as they don’t exist at all). Say, one of the doctors in the mental home. There might be a layer of sinister intent to the whole thing, but you’d be watching Leo chase around an innocuous building, probably humming his own dramatic soundtrack.

“It’s time for your meds, Leo. Sit still a second…”

“NO! I can’t! I must avenge my dead wife! Dum dum, dum dum dum dum…do dooooooo dum dum dummmm…”

The reason I hate this sort of ending is because it reeks of laziness – I understand it’s based on a book that probably uses the same tired ending, and I am basing my entire opinion on a Wikipedia plot summary, but still. Why can’t we just have a straight-up ghost story, one that takes all the shocks, scares and psychological trauma of the genre and then doesn’t fuck it up at the end? No trickery, no contrived Scooby-Doo twists where the mask is yanked off, revealing a series of utterly fucking useless events beneath the glossy, latex sheen. I want a horror film that uses ghosts to their full, nerve-shredding potential, without a caveat at the end that drags them back in to the real world with a boring, often obviously-signposted explanation, or into the mind of someone you don’t really care about. Or if you are going to do that, make it interesting. Watching a film that largely takes place inside a man’s head, helping him deal with his problems and come out of it a better man at the end? That’s not scary. That’s a session on a psychologists couch.

And ‘Mirrors’, ‘House On Haunted Hill’, et al don’t count, because they were shit.

I want to be scared without having to wait around to have the film ruined for me.

I think, basically, I just want to sit in a cinema and play Silent Hill 2.

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March 5th, 2010

Rant!!! Not mine, either.

An email send around in my work earlier.

Hi Guys
 
Sorry, but can you please stop taking Milk that belongs to other people.
 
We buy this Milk for our Breakfast, so that we don’t use the Milk provided by the office for Coffee & Tea.
 
If you are going to use someone else’s Milk, can you at least have the common decency to ask first.
 
Thanks
 
XXXX XXXX
Payroll
XXX
 
Now, I don’t go anywhere near the fridge so I don’t know, but it seems like a big deal to some people. I’m still going to mock it. I like how ‘Breakfast’ is capitalised.
Here:
——————————————————
Hi Guys
 
Sorry, but can you please stop taking Dick that belongs to other people.
 
We buy this Dick for our Breakfast, so that we don’t use the Dick provided by the office for Coffee & Tea.
 
If you are going to use someone else’s Dick, can you at least have the common decency to ask first.
 
Thanks
 
XXXX XXXX
Payroll
XXX
———————————————–
Hi Guys
 
Sorry, but can you please stop taking former WWE Wrestler X-Pac that belongs to other people.
 
We buy this former WWE Wrestler X-Pac for our Breakfast, so that we don’t use the former WWE Wrestler X-Pac provided by the office for Coffee & Tea.
 
If you are going to use someone else’s former WWE Wrestler X-Pac, can you at least have the common decency to ask first.
 
Thanks
 
XXXX XXXX
Payroll
XXX
—————————————————
Hi Milk
 
Sorry, but can you please stop taking Guys that belongs to other people.
 
We buy these Guys for our Breakfast, so that we don’t use the Guys provided by the office for Coffee & Tea.
 
If you are going to use someone else’s Guys, can you at least have the common decency to ask first.
 
Thanks
 
XXXX XXXX
Payroll
XXX
Feel free to add your own. Most imaginative wins an emailed picture of a cookie with the word ‘cunt’ written on it with icing.

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by Chris | Posted in Life | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
February 11th, 2010

One Man & A Baby

Tomorrow, I’m being tasked with looking after my little 4-year old sister for an entire day. It’s the first time I’ve ever had to mind her on her own, having usually enlisted the help of my little brother who is better with this sort of thing. Sadly, that little bastard has gotten out of it by only being six years old and in school. I am tremendously under-prepared. This is the first time I’ve ever really been called into action as a responsible adult in charge of a smaller person’s life. For an entire day.
Now, if this was the early 90’s, I wouldn’t be writing this. No, instead, I’d be putting together plans for either: a) a film starring Ted Danson or b) a TV show, probably starring Ted Danson. A fish-out-of-water story about a man with a pouffy hair-do dubiously looking after a baby that is not his own, handily side-stepping the paedophile thing by making the baby kick-ass and street-wise. A light-hearted comedy where everything happens ‘With Hilarious Consequences’.
She’s going to smash something expensive. With Hilarious Consequences.

She’s going to eat too many sweet and throw up all over me/the dog. With Hilarious Consequences.

She’s going to go missing. With Hilarious Consequences.

I’m going to be in horrible over my depth. With Hilarious Consequences.

I’d have called it “With Hilarious Consequences”.

I’ve looked into it, and any kind of restraints for a full day is illegal and against her tiny little human rights. My problem is that she’s too quick, and she knows her house better than I do. I don’t know if there’s a way into some sort of crawl space between the walls, but she will. My day tomorrow will likely end in a country-wide manhunt, and she’ll just be sat in the shed all along, playing with the power tools. My day will end with my parents returning home to a fresh-faced, wide-awake little sister and me, covered in my own blood and dirt, falling asleep at the dining table.

With Hilarious Consequences.

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February 8th, 2010

‘On an Island in the Sun…’

A few weeks ago, whilst enjoying an extremely exhilarant converse  at a gathering hosted in a dear friend’s dwelling, I found myself holding court with a group of freshly-made acquaintances. The chat bustled back and forth as we all excitedly traded tales from our pasts. Where we were schooled, relationships that we may have formed, both romantically or otherwise, our preferred past-times etc etc. Oh how we enjoyed probing each other, digging deep with the aim of unearthing yarns detailing embarrassing endeavours of days gone by, giggling at the preposterous parallels that our life paths had inevitably taken. With the second chalice of red Wine starting to infiltrate my already merry mindset, making me even more at ease with my new friends (not to mention susceptible to mockery), I started to really open up and explain my love of Artistic expression. Once i’d exhausted my somewhat tedious spiel on Music journalism and reinforced my desire to one day craft a piece for Rolling Stone Magazine (a topic that i’ve been throwing out at parties for over five years, usually to the very same stifled laughter, traditionally followed by the feigned encouragement that could only be expected from a gaggle of  drunken minds you’ve just been introduced to/encouraged to engage with), I commenced the obligatory speech on what I was doing to achieve this lifelong ambition of mine. Naturally it wasn’t long before I regaled the masses with the details of this very site you have stumbled across/been forced to view by Chris, Mick or myself. I chatted animatedly about the wonders of ‘blogging’ and the courageous pursuit of flinging the thoughts and feelings I would so desperately like to have the stones to convey in the real world into cyber space.

As I reached for the cheesesticks, feeling somewhat superior that my drunken desciples were hanging off my every word, my reality was inexplicably ravaged down from upon the charismatic cloud my bragging had elevated it to.

‘Well, I just don’t see what you could possibly write about all the time Marty. How do you keep readers coming back every week’?

That was a sudden slice of sobriety I could have done without.

As we grabbed our coats and headed into the bitter evening air I started to do what no aspiring writer should ever do, I started to THINK!

When it all comes undone, i’m rather like any other single, caucasian male  hurtling towards that most maudlin of milestones ‘Thirty’! I’m still as foolhardy and frustratingly forlorn as I was a decade ago. I can be found frequenting the very same dankhole bars I probably should have outgrown midway through the ‘noughties’ and, perhaps most depressingly of all, I am still an underappreciated, nah, underachieving office Monkey who makes his own lunch everyday as a cost-cutting exercise and wears Captain America briefs to convince himself he is still, y’know, a ‘zany’ type of guy. Shirley was right, what on earth did I have to say that anybody would ever have the slightest shred of interest in? Worse still, how was I even going to convince my friends to tune into my latest entry? My confidence was shot, the unthinkable had happened: I’d lost the power to boast!

The next couple of nights consisted of tossing and turning and panic-stricken scribbling that resulted only in nonsensical noodlings so awkward it could have been torn straight from an adolescent Adrian Mole diary. This was quite a slump. What the hell was I going to do?

Then, it hit me. OF COURSE! I had a wealth of wisdom that was just waiting to be tapped into. A set of stories so scintillating, so spectacularly scandalous that I could dine out on it for months. All I had to do was lift the lid on one of the most embarrasing episodes of my young life thus far. I guess  enough time had passed to share with the World (Wide Web) MY TRAVEL DIARY!

For you see dear reader, I spent ten monumental months entertaining guests from all over Europe as part of an Animacion team in the enviable location of Spain. My time there was unquestionably the most adventurous journey, not to mention an unprecedented period of self discovery, that I have ever had the pleasure to undertake. Needless to say it was also inhabited by a cast of characters, unsavoury serpents and weird and wonderful wimseys. A troupe of theatrical treasures you very seldom have the chance to cross during the rather dull nine to five existence.

I hereby officially announce the commencement of a five-part mini series, my account of those heady hedonistics right here at ‘OnlyBees’.

So if you’d like to learn about how I was almost killed by Spanish gangsters, my days spent in Canarian crack dens, my brief romances with German goddesses and Slovakian princesses, how I was touched inappropriately by a five foot homosexual choreographer or the night I finally got to see my idols Boney M perform ‘Daddy Cool’ stay tuned to ‘ONLYBEES’.

Episode one to follow…

Ciao bella

Marty!

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by Marty | Posted in Life | 1 Comment » | Tags: , , , , ,
February 4th, 2010

Achievement Unlocked: One Superpower

I was watching Watchmen last night (answering that most iconic of questions) and a thought occurred to me. Specifically, it was during the scene where the physicist, John Something, is trapped in the room with the *SCIENCE EXPERIMENT* that eventually turns him into Dr Manhattan, the all-conquering blue boy with a taste for replicating himself whilst doing his missus. He goes through a bit of an ordeal to get there, but the end pretty much justifies the means.

He’s accidentally locked in a room alone, with his colleague and girlfriend panicking outside. There’s even a little countdown clock, dripping the seconds away to his impending doom. He’s screaming, shouting, banging on the 6-inch-thick glass and generally waving his arms in an effort to, I dunno, take flight or something. Men in white lab coats are dashing about outside. Then nothing much happens, except he’s zapped away and crumbles to dust in a glorious flash of blue. Later, he’s powerful and yadda yadda but it got me thinking.

Having been raised on comics and science fiction etc, I don’t think I’d panic in quite the same way if I found myself trapped in some sort of experiment about to go wrong. I’d assume I’d come out of it at the other end with atleast some sort of useful superpower.

Example 1. Doc Ock, atleast in Spiderman 2, was given huge powerful arms by an experiment . Granted, he really pissed that opportunity into the wind by annoying Spider-Man and practically handing control of his body over to the arms (which was his own fault for putting the inhibitor chip in a prominent place next to a sign that said “Don’t smash this chip please thanks”), but HUGE POWERFUL ARMS. METAL ONES. THAT YOU COULD CLIMB BUILDINGS WITH. I’d go for that.

Example 2. The Hulk. Who is awesome. Who wouldn’t want that?

Most well-known superheroes are the result of some sort of scientific or medical accident/experiment gone awry. So being in such a situation wouldn’t be the end of the world. Well, unless the experiment caused the end of the world, but that’s a different story. It wouldn’t usually be immediate atleast, giving you time to hone your new found power and have a bit of a play about.

Worst case scenario? Sandman. Who, erm, gained all the fantastic power of Sand. Or Daredevil who, although not exactly the result of an experiment, was made slightly less blind and shoved into a pansy red suit. I know he can’t exactly see it, but you’d think someone would tell him he looks daft. Like a special kid who’s allowed to dress himself, and leaves the house wearing nothing but orange stockings and a cape.

Even Dr Gordon Freeman, in the game Half-Life, comes out of his huge scientifical disasterpiece a fucking hero. He doesn’t die horribly, he gets zapped about the universe a bit, then grabs a crowbar and gets fucking busy. He went from boring scientist, shoving carts into boxes at the behest of some disembodied voice, to being SUPER AWESOME COOL MAN and smashing head-crabs like it ain’t no thang. He was even able to keep his silly little beard.

Even if you die, completely and utterly, there’s still the chance someone might rebuild you with *SCIENCE* and make you stronger. Your body might have been fused with incredible amounts of Superidium, or whatever.

In short, if you want to be a hero, get yourself to a lab and hang around a bit. Poke some things. Stick your head where you shouldn’t. Even if you only come out of it with something like a giant hand, it’s still a giant hand. Fer smashin’.

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January 28th, 2010

The Airhorn Principle

I, Chris, have developed a new theory.

There are a few things I believe every human being should own, ‘just in case’. On the off-chance they might come in useful one day. They’re not important objects, but they’re things that might improve your life immensely, even if it’s only for an hour or two.

Pointless things, at first glance. Things that only really come into their own in very niche circumstances.

I’m calling this theory ‘The Airhorn Principle’, and it applies to a great many things.

 
The Airhorn

Let’s start with it’s name-sake, the airhorn. The only possible reason to own one of these is attract attention to something. More often than not, that ’something’ will be the person you’re about to absolutely terrify with a blast from the airhorn. It’s otherwise completely useless, and it may sit and gather dust for months on end. Until the time comes.

It might be a sleeping housemate, or an unsuspecting shopper browsing the bread aisle in Asda. It might be a lonely man, slowly raising his pint to his lips at the end of a long, hard day. (Note: ‘honking’ the last one might get you beaten up, so beware). From this perspective, the Airhorn’s possibilities are endless.

Regardless of the target, an airhorn will improve that hour of your life. It’s never not funny. Whether the man simply turns around and calls you a cunt, or drops to the floor, writhing in the midst of a cardiac arrest, you’ll still laugh. Even a total non-reaction from the target is funny.

 
Megaphone

This is almost the same as the airhorn, but with one important difference: The loud, blaring noise can be almost anything you want it to be. As a comedy prop, it’s invaluable. Even the unfunniest line from the shittiest comedy would be funnier if the speaker suddenly screamed it through a megaphone. It’s practically science.

The Megaphone is just one of those things that’d be handy to have. They even come in small, portable sizes that you can clip for your belt, for on-the-go screaming. At a BBQ? Is the garden a bit crowded, blocking your path to yet another hot dog? “HOT DOG PLEASE!” you can shout to the cook. He’ll hear you. You’ll get your fucking hot dog. Crowded bar, struggling to be served ahead of the kind of bell-end who relishes ’shoving in’? Megaphone. Easy.

So come on, reclaim the megaphone from those crazy street-preachers.

 
Chainsaw

Just the act of buying a Chainsaw will give any man a warm feeling in their rock-hard erection. Almost anything from a DIY shop will, actually. It’s just such a manly thing to do.

It doesn’t even matter what you use it for.

“This tree needs to come down. I’ll get my Chainsaw.”

“There’s a bit of thread hanging off your sleeve. Hang on, I’ll fetch my Chainsaw.”

“Why won’t this printer/scanner work?! I’ll fetch my Chainsaw.”

Also, it’ll turn out to be incredibly handy come the dawn of the inevitable zombie apocalypse. Don’t be caught short – get yourself a chainsaw.

 

There are more, but you get the idea. Paintball gun, BB gun, Spraypaint, a dog with the face of Roy Orbison. It’s all good.

 

 

 

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January 27th, 2010

Will Using Twitter Make Me An Internationally Famous Star?

No.

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by Chris | Posted in Life | No Comments » | Tags: ,
January 14th, 2010

Holy Almost-Finished Story, Batman

Oh crap.

I started writing a story around six months ago. A completely fresh one, that started out as just something to pass a few hours of boredom, that went and grew into a great big yarn that I was actually enjoying writing.

And I’ve almost finished it already. Yep, the end is in sight. I know what I need to write and it won’t be long before I’m sat with a complete, fleshed out and readable story in front of me. I sat for two hours today and meticulously planned out the ending. There’s a helicopter and an explosion. You can’t have an ending without those critical elements.

Okay, It’s going to take longer than a week or so to write up, then I need to either learn to draw or find someone else who’ll do it, but I’m nearly there. Nearly.

I’m only posting this up here because I’m excited about it and want to document this feeling. I’ve never finished anything before. Not even close. I’ve got 100+ pages of an epic zombie story sat in my drafts folder that I’ll probably never finish, aswell as 70% of a story that I realised was far to depressing to carry on with. They’re not unfinished because I don’t think they’re good, I just don’t know if anyone else would think they’re good. My newest one is about a Superhero, which is something everyone loves. So it’s target audience is everyone, as opposed to a reduced-number of zombie-nerds with an affinity for classic movie cliches and references. If you’re part of everyone (as everyone is) then it’s aimed at you. Unless you’re a cunt. I’m not writing for cunts. It’s a stupid, quirky, weird yarn about the trials and tribulations of a not-especially-interested Superhero. He only has one nemesis that he knows of, and his only goal in life is to rescue The Girl. He’s set in his ways, and relies on familiarity to get by. The story takes a turn for the worse when someone starts to fuck with the dynamic. And yadda yadda yadda.

It’s never going to find a publisher and I’m not kidding myself into thinking it ever will, but I’ll post it up here when it’s done (probably in installments) and I hope people will read it. I’m also going to print it through Café Press if I can get my head around how that works, just so I can have a copy all nicely printed up for myself. I’ll send it off to some smaller publishers, though, in the hope one of them goes “Meh, s’not awful” and goes with it.

I really want nothing more than my name on the spine of a book I wrote; published and printed for the public to buy if they so wished. That would make me very, very happy.

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by Chris | Posted in Life | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
January 5th, 2010

SNOWDAY

There is a fuck-load of snow in Liverpool today, causing mass panic like a giant, softly-descending flakey monster bastard. Trains have stopped, buses are cancelled and the River Mersey has exploded in a flurry of white. Or something.

Really though; people have run screaming from the city centre, crying about schools being closed and the threat of maybe having to drive slightly slower than normal. A slightly out of the ordinary weather phenomenon has occurred (same way it does every year) and the entire populace has gone straight to the rafters to end their lives out of fear they might slip and fall on their arse.

Except me. I’m stuck in work. I have the unfortunate attribute of living in the City Centre, therefore my risk of falling over and hurting myself is reduced. Possibly because I’m already familiar with the surroundings. Luckily, they’re letting me go early (at 3pm, which is roughly 15 minutes away at the time of writing) and I cannot wait to go and frolic. Yes, frolic.

In fact, I’m only writing this to pass the time until I’m let out and I can go and build a giant phallus out of snow, as is customary. There’s enough snow to build an entire orgy though. Tonight is going to be a cold, sexy night.

Chris

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by Chris | Posted in Life | 1 Comment » | Tags: , , ,
December 31st, 2009

The Year In Full (ish…mainly Viz’s dead mother).

Wow, fuckadoodledoo. That was a weird little year wasn’t it.

I want to write a big retrospective of all the things that have made it as such, but I’d end up pissing people off or revealing way too much about myself. Also, it’d be boring and introspective. So I’ll gloss over the rubbishy bits and concentrate more on the good/funny/embarrassing parts.

Last new years eve, pretty much exactly a year ago, was a big let down. I spent it in the capital wasteland, notching up even more hours in the monolithic time-chewer that was Fallout 3. As the clock struck and those 12 special chimes rung out (somewhere) I was taking down a handful of super mutants with an automatic machine gun. Fun, right? The plans to organise a last-minute party fell through and everyone abandoned me. Well, everyone except Mick, but he doesn’t count because he’s small and looks like Pee-Wee Herman (not really).

Anyway, I have higher hopes for this years dawning of a new year. I might even be sociable or something.

2009 was also the year I started writing things on this website, which currently attracts around 2 people A DAY (!!). Plus some very odd Russian commenters who I’ve decided to block on the basis they’re not playing fair with the choice of language and they’re probably spam-spreaders anyway. Bloody Communists.

————————–

Top of the list of year-moments is the story of Viz. I’m putting it in print now, thereby securing the rights to make it into a film one day, because it really is that fucking funny. All I can do is hope that none of the boy’s workmates or family ever read this (which is, sadly, very unlikely to happen). Maybe I should have changed the names of the people involved, but it’s too late now. I’ve already typed his name and editing is for schmucks.

After an incredibly messy night of drinking, shots and the effect of being around Helen Maguire (i.e. – more shots), coupled with the lack of sleep on a week night, Viz was awoken by a phone call from his boss around an hour after he was supposed to be in work. Which he answered, still festering in a drunken haze. Now, he didn’t tell us immediately what had happened or why he was suddenly okay to stay off work for a few days. He just moped about a little bit with a distracted, almost ‘ashamed’ look spread across his face. It was only at a BBQ a few days later, with a handful of beers and burgs down him, that he broke the news.

He had told his boss that his mum had died in the night. This is why he was currently absent from work.

I know, funny.

I imagine the call went something like this:

“Matthew! Why are you not in work? It’s almost 10:30!”

“Errr…………Mum’s dead. Night!”

“Oh….Oh I’m so sorry…just…okay…er…”

“Zzzzzzzzzzzz”

On the face of it, it’s the perfect excuse. No employer on this Earth (not counting 3rd-world) is so heartless as to question it, and they certainly would forgive you for not having the presence of mind to call-in in a timely manner. The only real response they can give is “Oh” followed by rushed condolences as they scrabble to get off the phone as quickly as possible, acutely aware that saying the wrong thing could culminate in a massive PR disaster and a weeping Viz on the other end of the phone.

It’s only when you stop to think about it, does the excuse really fall apart. Clearly, his mother wasn’t really dead, but he would now have to present a front whilst in work that suggested she was, in fact, deceased, and definitely not alive and healthy. Not an easy task for a man who meets his mother every week for lunch.

We all had a good laugh, naturally at his expense, and suggestions of what he could do started to fly around. He’d left it too long at this point to come clean, and any attempt at telling the truth would result either in dismissal or a slap from previously concerned workmates. So that wasn’t an option. The most popular choice seemed to be to actually kill his mum, so his grief would be accurate and believable. The main problem with this, regardless of laws and morals, was that he isn’t really sure what she fictionally died of, so he would be unable to enact it.

It was only really a matter of time before someone voiced a suspicion. There was no way he’d really said that. There had to be another reason why he was off work. Had to be. Telling your boss that a parent had snuffed it was just too big a disgusting fuck up, even for Viz. Doubts were forming.

Except there was a card. Signed by everyone in the office, offering condolences and best wishes in his time of need. Apparently, the secretary had cried when she heard the news. “Poor Viz!” she probably wailed “How will he ever manage?!”. The card was signed with genuine empathy; which made it all the more brilliant.

Probably the best bit about this whole story is telling it to others. It doesn’t work so well in written form, I’ll admit, but it’s an excellent campfire story. Like an urban legend that just so happens to be perfectly true. It’s also made better by a slip of the brain from Mr Stephen Bum-Lar, who, because Viz’s first name is Matthew, jumped to the conclusion that his mother must be Mrs Matthews. Because he is an idiot. Anyway, that spawned a song by Marc which I’ll put up when I find it.

edit:

It also led to some imaginative Halloween house décor.

(She isn't really dead...)

Hopefully, the retrospective I write at the end of 2010 will be taken up with the time Viz let slip to his workmates that his mum was alive.

Little Mick and his frequent habit of drinking himself silly brought about a big laugh too. A night out in Manchester, with hotels all booked and a group of people all drinking more than they probably should, Mick over-does it and ends up a whole bottle of Vodka heavier before 7:30. By 7:45, he’s throwing up, and by 8:00 he’s disappeared only to be found a short while later curled up in his bed, convinced he’d already been on a night out and it was early morning. So much so, that he shouted at Marty, his room-mate, to go back to bed when he ventured in to grab his wallet. Needless to say, he woke up with a chair on his bed the next day.

That’s that, really. All I can be bothered documenting of the year. There is loads worth mentioning, but it’s either too damning of me, or far too personal for me to really want to share. I had a great time with The Hulk ride in Florida, followed by a terrible few months, followed by some less terrible months. Many nights out occurred over the course of the year, very few of which were any good, and Marc coined atleast 3 new catchphrases. “That’s what she said” is now obligatory after almost every sentence, and similarly you can expect to hear “Hardly knew her!” uttered after every word that ends in an ‘er’ sound. For example: “Computer? Hardly knew her!”. Lots of new people were met to make up for the amount of people who stopped talking to me, and this new lot seem slightly more amiable than the last bunch, whilst still finding topics such as rape and cancer funny. Win/Win.

There were other great bits but they’re either too niche or you’d need to know the people involved. I’ve stuck to the more populist stories, in the vain hope that a stranger will stumble on the site and find the heart-warming story of Viz’s dead mother. As I write this, a morbidly obese woman is fighting with a computer chair next to me, adjusting the settings to get the height just right. If I’m lucky, she’ll crash right through the floor next time she tugs on the lever and plummets downwards like the Tower Of Terror.

Feel free to comment with other good bits.

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by Chris | Posted in Life | No Comments » |













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