Archive for the ‘Coffee & Cigarette Break’ Category

HALLE BERRY MAY HAVE GOTTEN HER OSCAR BUT I’M STILL AFRAID OF TIDAL WAVES

Sunday, January 20th, 2008
 
I was reading an article recently in which Halle Berry talked about the risk she took doing that controversial sex scene with Billy Bob Thornton in “Monster’s Ball,” the gritty, graphic film for which she won the Academy Award.  The scene involved naked prison guard Billy Bob and Halle having sex following the Death Row execution of her husband. It was an intense scene for an adult, never mind for the 5 year-old sitting in front of me in the theatre. I guess the child’s parents were too busy on their cell phones to realize how inappropriate the film was for their child.
 
My first movie-going experience wasn’t much better, but for a different reason. The first film I saw in a theatre was “Krakatoa, East of Java” – a jarring motion picture that recounted the 1883 annihilation of a volcanic, Indonesian island by one of the loudest explosions in human history and the ensuing tidal waves that killed over 35,000 people. Although “Krakatoa” did prepare me psychologically for first, “The Poseidon Adventure,” and, later in life, “The Perfect Storm,” it resulted in my life-long fear of tidal waves.
 
The experience has affected all areas of my life, and the fear is not confined to the recurring tidal wave dream. I’ll never travel to the Big Island (if you’ve ever seen the opening credits to “Hawaii Five-O,” you know why). Nor do I feel totally comfortable driving past water parks that have those large wave pools. Moon-lit, romantic strolls on the beach are inevitably ruined; even a Beach Girl feels insecure with a guy who keeps squinting into the dark, looking for exceptionally high and aggressive breakers. I don’t mean to diminish tsunami threats, but my phobia is irrational for someone who lives at the edge of the North Georgia Mountains, 4 hours from the coast.
 
Car washes are a challenge but also are oddly exhilarating. There’s the tremendous downpour of water, which frightens me, but there’s something empowering about guzzling the private label, bottled water while waiting for my ride to emerge (That reminds me, one of these days I need to ask the car wash manager about the sign that brags how they “recycle 100% of the water.”)
 
I have no way of knowing how the 5 year-old at “Monster’s Ball” has fared in life. I cannot even begin to imagine what phobia developed from seeing bare-assed Billy Bob going at it, but he’s not the only one I am worried about. My own research leads me to conclude that “First Movie Paranoia Syndrome” is widespread. A number of years ago I was in a NoHo Army-Navy Store looking for a World War II-era trench coat and black knit mittens (with the fingertips cut off) to complete the Echo and the Bunnymen look I was cultivating. I overheard a young guy exclaim to his friend: “I hope I never run into one of those mother-fuckin’ zombies in an alleyway.” Judging by his age, I immediately deduced that the first film he saw in a theatre was “Night of the Living Dead.”
 
Scooby-Doo must have had a similar movie-going experience because he too was very afraid of zombies. Although lanky stoner Shaggy was something of a slacker, he was a first-rate zombie spotter. His prescient warnings like, “Make tracks, Scoob, it’s a zombie!” would cause Scooby to nervously gulp and exclaim: “Rom-bie?!! Rut-ro.”
 
Unlike Scooby, zombies don’t scare me at all. In fact, I’d love to run into some zombies in a Chelsea alley one night, dragging their twisted limbs and butchering the English language as they pathetically reached out - all stiffed-armed - to strangle me. Talk about telegraphing it! I’d taunt them with Frankenstein metaphors before putting the Chuck Taylors into high gear and, like the skulls of the subterranean dwellers in “Beneath The Planet of the Apes,” I’m gone.
 
After smokin’ their sorry asses, I’d rent the Oscar-overlooked, zombie-classic “Night of the Comet,” and chomp on a bucket of day-old chicken wings.
 
Tidal waves, of course, are a different story. One of my best friends once tried to alleviate my fears with his theory that all I would need to do is wrap myself around a pole (or some similarly grounded object) and wait for the wave to pass. At first, I doubted I would have the arm strength to hold on, but Red Buttons survived in “The Poseidon Adventure” and he was a slightly-built man with no muscle tone to speak of. I had the chance recently to sort of test my friend’s theory. It was my first time at a W Hotel and their powerful “rain” showerhead caught me by surprise. Wrapping my arms and legs around the towel rack, I was able to hold on long enough until the Bath Butler arrived and lowered the water pressure.
 
I’m not a big fan of Disney, but maybe they have it right making movies about fairies, animals and princesses. What if my first film had been “Mary Poppins” instead? What’s the scariest thing in that movie? Dick Van Dykes’s teeth? That candy-striped jacket and straw hat? I might have become a song and dance man but at least I wouldn’t spend the rest of my life looking over my shoulder.

MAID CART THIEVERY

Friday, July 20th, 2007

I once heard someone say it is conceited to hold yourself out as an expert in anything. Label me narcissistic, but I cannot restrain myself from proudly proclaiming that I am highly skilled in hotel maid cart thievery. Once you have declared yourself an expert, however, I believe you have a solemn obligation to share some of your knowledge with the succeeding generation.

Here’s how you can become skilled as well: 

  1. You’re Either Born With It Or You’re Not. If the desire isn’t there, give it up; you’ll never make it. In my case, even after 20 years, I still have the passion. 200 small bottles of hand lotion and over 50 mini-sewing kits simply aren’t enough. (Remember: taking towels from the room is for amateurs, so don’t bring that shit here).
  2. Picking The Best Time To Strike The Target.  This is a sixth sense you will develop over time but I will let one tip out of the bag. Find a maid who has the TV tuned in to soap operas while she cleans. A perfect time to strike is just before a commercial break as a cliff-hanger unfolds. Every time the words “You’re not my brother … you’re my son!” are uttered, a plastic shoe horn is swiped at a hotel somewhere around the world.
  3. Size Up The Maid Well. Some housekeeping employees aren’t very concerned about guarding those miniature Scope bottles with their lives; for others, it’s actually their mission in life (as if they had filled each one by hand). Put your machismo aside and walk away from a hard target. It just isn’t worth it. Trust me. I know what I’m talking about (and I have stacks of Thom McAnn shoeboxes overflowing with mini shampoos from the 1970’s turning orange to prove it).
  4. If You Must Attack The Hard Target, Work In A Team. If you’re a cocky upstart that ignores my previous advice, at least work with someone as a team. Who you select as your accomplice is, of course, up to you. I have found that girlfriends and spouses make loyal Maid Cart Thieves. At first, they scoff at the thought, but fairly quickly, they have their own shoe boxes stuffed with cotton balls, Q-tips and Bliss Spa facial cleansers that, blown up to normal size, would cost $35 a bottle. (By the way, if they ever start loading women’s shoes onto maid’s carts, all hell will break loose). The best role for the novice accomplice is that of “The Distracter.” A trip to the ice machine is perfect for two reasons: (a) it gives The Distracter an excellent cover (“I need some ice for my Diet Coke”); and (b) in extreme cases, when the shit hits the fan, The Distracter can barricade themselves in the ice machine alcove.
  5. Now You’re Ready For A Sophisticated Move. After several scouting missions, casually locate your prized possession on the cart. If you’ve made it this far, you are ready to attempt the rarest of maneuvers – “The Agent 44.” Considered too dangerous by today’s Young Turks (who foolishly call the concierge with their toiletry requests), The Agent 44 is named after the Control spy from the “Get Smart” television show. Agent 44 was a master of undercover disguise, often secreting himself in couch cushions, wood-burning stoves and mail boxes. For our purposes, it means hiding between the linens and pillow cases neatly piled on the inside of the cart. While the bewildered housekeeper is wondering why someone has barricaded themselves in the ice machine alcove, stealthfully nab that coveted bath mat with the embroidered Ritz logo or the combination Hilton ball point pen/letter opener. Similar to a Kung Fu Deathblow, for your own safety, The Agent 44 should only be attempted by experts.
  6. Don’t Let Yourself Get Soft. When I stay at a luxury hotel, I always refuse the “turndown” service but then moments later steal a bath towel and 4 chocolate squares from the cart.
  7. Rich Targets. Hotels in foreign countries are rich targets because naïve Euros are unaware of Maid Cart Thievery. The exception is Nigeria, where your identity will be swiped by the maid as you gleefully crouch beside her unattended cart.
  8. Lasting Fun. Maid Cart Thievery is not just a skill to pass on to your children and grandchildren; it’s actually a lot of fun. While I do admit I have more “Tampa Bay Today!” magazines than I will ever need, other swiped items have led to secondary hilarity. For instance, stationary comes in handy when you want to impersonate a hotel manager to scare the shit out of a buddy by sending a letter to his wife: “It has come to my attention that some inappropriate and unnatural things occurred during your stay here at The Knights Inn in Las Vegas, including, without limitation, an incident involving bestiality. Yours truly, A. C. Pennypacker, Proprietor.”

 

UNGRATEFUL

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

I hate it when I save some ungrateful person’s life. Some people are skilled in the Heimlich maneuver, while others have been professionally trained in CPR. I, on the other hand, have a gift for saving middle-aged women in hotel pools and old men in the ocean. It happened three times during my first twenty-one years. Such God-affirming experiences taught me the following three rules of life-saving, which I still utilize today:

RULE NO. 1: NEVER LET NOT BEING A GOOD SWIMMER STOP YOU FROM SAVING ANOTHER PERSON’S LIFE.

My first save was at the Howard Johnson’s motor lodge in St. Petersburg Beach, Florida in 1978. I’m not a bad swimmer but I can’t tread water. In addition, for some inexplicable reason, my body does not float. I was busy swimming laps (width-wise) in the motel pool just beyond the point where the water crested from 5Ft on its way to 8Ft. Coming up for air, I noticed a flowered bathing cap bobbing in the water like a spastic buoy. A middle-aged woman, flapping her arms and falling backwards, was quietly muttering "hel-pep, hel-pep" in the pathetic way humans do when something is happening to them over which they have absolutely no control.

Moving swiftly, I placed my hands firmly on the woman’s back and gave her a powerful shove into the shallow end. Being that I couldn’t tread water, there could be no slow wading to the side of the pool with the woman in tow. With both of us safely in the shallow end, I asked her if she was okay.

"You made me swallow water," she said with the same bewildered tone she had used to cry for her life.

"What?" I asked.

"You made me swallow water," she repeated.

My mother, who had witnessed the entire event poolside, interceded on my behalf.

"So what, you’re alive, aren’t you?" she said.

That summed it up for me. I went back to my laps, pushing myself even harder, and dreaming of the $2.99 "All-You-Can-Eat Fried Clam Dinner" I would be having at the HoJo’s restaurant that night.

RULE NO. 2: IF PRESENTED WITH THE CHOICE OF SAVING SOMEONE’S LIFE OR CAUSING MINOR INJURY, IGNORE THE INEVITABLE CRITICS AND CHOOSE LIFE.

My second save occurred under nearly identical circumstances as the first, except that as I darted to rescue the floundering lady, I was hit by a debilitating toe cramp. I’ve discovered over the years that the only way to alleviate a toe cramp is by guzzling Yoo-Hoo. With no Yoo-Hoo handy, I gutted it out and sprung into action. I’m the first to admit I overcompensated because of the toe cramp, and unintentionally gave the woman a pretty good shot to the shoulder blades, causing her to clumsily flip over the safety rope.

Considering that I had saved her life, however, her ingratitude was mystifying.

"You made me swallow water," she said.

This time I was ready: "Not as much as you would have swallowed if you had drowned."

"I also got a rope burn," she whined in the direction of my mother, who, as usual, was seated poolside with a pina colada and The National Inquirer, and had observed the whole commotion.

"So what, at least you’re alive," my mother interjected, having no patience for the woman’s foolishness.

I didn’t doubt the woman’s skin got chaffed, but she showed absolutely no grace by denying me the opportunity to explain about the toe cramp. Instead, she gave me a dirty look and stormed out of the pool. I summarily concluded that Baywatch had unrealistically raised the public’s expectations of real-world life-saving.

RULE NO. 3: NEVER LET A B-MOVIE ACTOR LOOK-A-LIKE DETER YOU FROM A RESCUE.

My third (thus far) rescue, and the one I’m most proud of, occurred at a majestic, Aztec temple-style hotel in Acapulco, Mexico. Unknown to the naive guests, there was a powerful undertow in the gulf that had been surging all morning. Sitting on the beach and thoroughly enjoying my book, Foucault’s "Discipline and Punish," I heard the screams of lost souls getting pulled down in the water. Unlike stacked milk bottles at a boardwalk game of chance, three-quarters of the sixty people in the water tumbled down. I instantly set my sights on rescuing a woman who held a coconut shell rum runner drink with both hands and wore a yellow visor and over-sized glasses. She was only in knee-deep water but a riptide quickly slammed her down hard; the coconut shell knocked her indispensable eye-wear to the continental shelf. Totally unprepared for life, she didn’t stand a chance.

Another Good Samaritan beat me to her, however, and grabbed a hold of her arm. Something of a Sauro Family Vacation Zelig, I recognized the Good Samaritan from the breakfast buffet, the bullfight tour, the hotel disco, and the cliff divers’ show. A large, lumbering man with disheveled white hair, he looked exactly like the actor George Kennedy — "Naked Gun" George Kennedy that is, not "Cool Hand Luke" George Kennedy.

A powerful wave came in and rudely knocked George to the surf. Too heavy to carry, I grabbed him under his arms and dragged him out of the water and to safety. Once the dust (sand actually) had settled and the shouting had subsided, I vaguely deduced that, at the moment I imprudently interfered, Mr. Kennedy was performing his own rescue procedure – apparently some type of "fall down and tug" maneuver of which I was unaware – on the Visor Woman. He made it quite clear that, having fought in World War II, he did not ever need to be rescued from anything.

This time, with the rescues being old hat, my mother didn’t get involved. I did, however, receive a empathetic look from a midget who had heroically stepped in and saved Visor Woman at the time I was towing George through some kid’s sandcastle. The dwarf’s low center of gravity and crouched stance were the perfect tools for combating the undertow.

At something of a makeshift Mass the hotel held in a conference room the next morning, both the little person and George Kennedy were seated behind me and my mother. When it came time to exchange handshakes during the "Peace Be With You" segment, the heroic little man heartily shook my hand, but George Kennedy blatantly ignored me, first kissing his wife, and then clasping his hands together and bowing his head in the direction of an Asian man standing in the row in front of me.

Rest easy, however, because although I have been accused of battery, crippled by toe cramps, and even royally snubbed, I will be there when you need me.

END OF UNGRATEFUL

OLD NEWARK BLUFF (ONB) TIPS

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007
ONB Tip: Free Coffee

Find a full service gas station. On your way to the restroom, locate the Mr. Coffee machine used by the mechanics. Invariably, it will be located near the back office. On average, you can rely on the "Sorry, I thought it was free coffee" line 4-5 times before being asked to never show your face again.

ONB Bonus Tip

If at anytime you hear "It puts the lotion in the basket" coming from the back office, ditch the coffee and GET OUT OF THERE FAST. There are limits to what one should do for free coffee.

ONB Tip: How Coffee Can Protect Your Infant From McDonald’s

Caffeine combats the addictive chemicals fried into McDonald’s French Fries. Therefore, generously feed your infant drops of coffee to give her a fighting chance not to become a McZombie.

SOME GREAT PLACES TO ENJOY COFFEE

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Cafe Du Monde, New Orleans

With the sun rising and the fog clearing over the banks of the Mississippi, not much beats a cafe au lait as the city starts to come alive. Catch a riverboat, mime, fortune teller and jogger all in one glance just before you take the first creamy sip. (more…)

THE TRUTH BEHIND FLUTIE’S HAIL MARY PASS

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Some might think the key to Doug Flutie’s success on the football field was his superior vision, impeccable timing, or other well-honed skills. Only I know the truth: the source of his excellence is the lucky charm he took from me over twenty years ago. I don’t think the initial theft was premeditated, and once the power was unleashed, I can’t blame him for not giving it back.

It happened at Boston College in the summer of 1983 — no Flutie heroics had yet been performed on the national stage; no last-second "Hail Mary" pass to beat Miami in the Orange Bowl before a national television audience; no Heisman Trophy, no catapult into the all-time lore of college football.

I was at home in New Jersey working a summer factory job filling nail polish bottles by hand. Hanging from one of the fire sprinklers of my dorm room throughout the 1982-83 school year was my lucky charm: a "W.C. Frito" pencil topper eraser. Three inches long, green and bearing a striking resemblance to W.C. Fields, the eraser had my life on a serious upswing. Vastly superior to the Frito Bandito eraser that was part of the same marketing scheme, WC Frito had been solely responsible for making my sophomore year the best ever for me. It cleared my head of the acetone fumes that had soaked in at the factory the summer before to the point where understanding Hegel’s dialectic became as second nature to me as solving Rubik’s Cube (if you consider slamming the torture toy up against the wall until it shattered a "solution").

When I left school that June, I made the biggest mistake of life and left WC behind. All summer I was paranoid that someone would abscond with my lucky charm. But, not too worry; no one was allowed in the dorms during the summer. My plan was to simply get back to BC before classes started and retrieve my future.

Turned out, the football team got back to school in August for summer practice. Turned out, Mr. Flutie had moved into the dorm room I had occupied the year before. Turned out, Mr. Flutie was in my old bedroom when I arrived but Mr. Frito was not. (This is the part of the story where my psycho-therapist tells me to calm down and visualize that Mr. Frito is actually helping an abandoned child who is really in need).

I was surprised to find the door to my old dorm room ajar when I arrived on campus 3 days before the beginning of the school year. A Hall and Oates song floated from the room like a pleasant smell; that made me realize I hadn’t seen my "Private Eyes" album in some time but I won’t even go there.

Seizing the moment, I walked in but was quickly met in the front hallway by Doug. I calmly explained that I had lived in the room the year before and had forgotten something in the bedroom. I was mildly surprised when he immediately answered that there was nothing in there. I further explained that it was silly but it was a small good luck charm that he wouldn’t have even noticed hanging from the ceiling. I must admit, I felt a connection with him at that moment, especially given that we both were sporting attractive MacGyver-style mullets.

I was able to get past him — neither his offensive line nor his blocking fullback were home at the time — and made it to the bedroom. WC was gone. I took Doug at his word that he "hadn’t seen it," and then scurried around campus asking if anyone had seen a janitor whose luck had recently changed. Given his performance that day, years later I wondered why Doug had never crossed over into acting like Howie Long or The Boz.

Everyone I tell this story to thinks I’m crazy, and they mistakenly lump it in with some other theories of mine that, I admit, I have not been able to completely substantiate (such as that Giant Pandas are actually Chinese men dressed in Panda suits — a goodwill marketing promotion orchestrated by the Communists. Sure, they’re awful on human rights, but they can’t be all bad because they have those cute Pandas; or that Harry Connick Jr. shows up at my hotel every time I go on vacation; or that being able to throw your voice is ultimately the key to being successful in business).

My lone supporter from my Boston College days called me excitedly one afternoon and relayed the following: He was watching Doug manufacture a 4th Quarter come-from-behind victory for the Buffalo Bills and noticed how the other players gathered closely around him in the huddle. The announcer stated the reason was that Doug needed to keep his hands warm in order to keep his passes crisp. As the camera zoomed in, my friend said he caught a glimpse of Doug rubbing the WC Frito prior to the crucial third down play. What starts as a trickle can become a river.

I know many of you think I am a loser, or a pathetic whiner or both. But, I am neither a sloth nor a slacker; in fact, I have expended great energy over the years trying to replace WC instead of just sitting around and sulking. My first attempt was the plastic mannequin leg I smuggled out of the nail polish factory late one Friday night while my co-workers drove-off in rusted Oldsmobiles to blow their entire paychecks in Atlantic City. Though I had some jovial times with The Leg (it was a family favorite), it never brought me the luck that WC Frito did. Eventually, I got sick of the incessant comparisons to the "Leg Lamp" that tormented the wife and embarrassed Ralphie in "A Christmas Story" (the only movie, by the way, to have appeared on TBS more times than the ferret action-packed classic, "The Beastmaster"), and tossed the Leg in a nearby dumpster. (Even the addition of a rubber, beautician’s practice mannequin head and top hat to the top of the Leg to give it more of that magical "eraser-effect" didn’t help).

My second attempt at replacing WC was a faithful, talking stuffed bear named "Rudy," who had accompanied me and several friends on a road trip from California to Chicago, via Las Vegas. Rudy brought me good luck at the roulette wheel, although he could be a little foul-mouthed at times (which nearly resulted in me getting my ass kicked at a North Platte, Nebraska Best Western). Yes, this was before the football movie of the same name was released glorifying a diminutive football overachiever named "Rudy Ruettiger." Rudy the Bear was promptly retired after I had to tell the 50th person that no, he was not named after Rudy "the football player from that movie" (although, I will say I thoroughly enjoyed the movie, which is essentially a testament to how spite alone can motivate a person to accomplish great things; if you rent it, fast forward to the scene where one of my favorite actors, Charles S. Dutton, ridicules Rudy with a tirade that includes, "You’re 5 foot nothing; a hundred and nothing; and not a speck of athletic ability." Mr. Dutton’s character, the cynical, self-righteous grounds crew member whose misguided pride cut short his own Heisman Trophy-worthy career, eventually is won over by the sheer power of Rudy’s obsessive behavior).

I realize that the WC Frito Eraser isn’t the greatest luck charm in the world, but they just aren’t that easy to come by (see, among others, the Holy Grail, unicorns or wedding day brides, and I Dream of Jeannie bottles). I don’t begrudge Doug all his success, and I know life still has many challenges for him. However, I can’t help but wonder how things might have turned out; not that I could’ve beaten Miami, won the Heisman, or led a team to 3 Grey Cup Championships, but maybe I would have enjoyed more athletic success than the 5-4 record I have amassed over the years in pickup wrestling matches (I carry my singlet and headgear with me at all times). At the very least, maybe I wouldn’t have had to hear a poet-friend of mine who doesn’t follow football interrupt my telling of this story to excitedly say, "Wait. You mean the guy who did that awesome drop-kick?!"

Doug, if you happen to read this, I won’t say another word if one day WC Frito shows up at my door, tenderly protected in bubble-wrap, in an envelope bearing no return address.

END OF THE TRUTH BEHIND FLUTIE’S HAIL MARY PASS

A GUIDE TO PRE-1985 VENDING MACHINE COFFEE

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Always wondered where to get day old coffee? (more…)