Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: November 2011

    • The Gossip Fence

      Posted at 2:53 am by kayewer, on November 27, 2011

      In the past week, I’ve been privy to more chatter about other people than I have all year.  Being the week of a holiday, it’s a prime time for social situations and the inevitable cluster of rumor spouting blabbermouths looking for a sense of what is right or wrong about the human condition.

      Gossip is a strange human habit, and rarely beneficial.  It usually happens when people are in a situation in which they feel the need to talk about topics that disturb them.  Even if somebody brings a piece of good news about somebody else to the conversation, the tide soon turns to observations of character foibles and other negative things about folks who are not even present to provide a defense or justification.

      I have been the subject of gossip, I’m sure.  Who hasn’t?  Our vulnerability to gossip starts when we get put into diapers and sometimes doesn’t end, even past the grave.  Usually the gossip begins when somebody makes an observation, and the others nod in agreement, even when they don’t agree.  The idea of gossip is to unite everybody present against those not present, by airing dirty laundry and speculation that seems to be designed to equalize some sort of societal playing field.  Our best athletes, actors and other public figures are the highest form of gossip fodder; the rest of humanity simply doesn’t get into the magazines or television.

      Human errors, and our struggles to adapt and grow in a world which alters the rules of life as fast as we can keep up (and faster), outnumber the successes, as William Shakespeare similarly noted in Mark Antony’s speech in Julius Caesar.  We tend to bury good people, having taken advantage of their moments of goodness and only remembered the times they didn’t meet our expectations.

      One person with whom I was discussing some human missteps by an absent third party, pointed out that sometimes it is better to talk with the topical person about such observations than discuss them behind their backs.  On a day like this past Thanksgiving, how could some people’s lives change if somebody would point out to Uncle Ted to his face that his tee-totaling family is disturbed by his annual alcoholic binge after the turkey dinner (especially when he staggers around and wrecks at least one table setting every year)?  Or if some unthinking person asks the others nearby if it is okay to take the incoming call causing their cell phone to blast its ringtone, and everybody responds, “let it go to voice,” wouldn’t we be on the path to greater kindness and truth and the chance for true change?  We often complain when we gossip, but the way to resolve complaints is to take it to the source of the problem, not confine it to the circle of nodding heads.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged gossip
    • Theatre Woes

      Posted at 3:17 am by kayewer, on November 20, 2011

      Why are movie theatres becoming auditorium versions of our own cable dominated living rooms?

      Yesterday I went to see Breaking Dawn Part 1, the first half of the split Twilight fourth book movie adaptation (don’t worry:  no spoilers herein).  The movie was fifteen minutes late in starting:  the rest of the time was taken up by an onslaught of features that amounted to nothing.

      First we were subjected to cinematic-centralized programming that was designed to hold the interest of patrons who arrived early for good seats.  The portion I saw was a behind-the-scenes look into an upcoming movie, the title of which eludes me.  A quick segment mentioned the latest stuff available on eBay.  I don’t shop on eBay, so I busied myself with the theatre’s free literature, which I wisely picked up before entering the coliseum that is the latest movie house layout.

      After the usual warnings to leave our stockpile of toted-in devices turned off for the feature, an advertisement for Coke and a polar bear saving campaign came next, even though a blurb assured us that our feature presentation would begin momentarily (it turned out to be a very long moment).  Since I do indulge in Coke products, I’ll probably save a polar bear now that I know about the program.  Score one for the marketers.

      Next came the fire department mandated blurb about how to locate exits in the theatre.  Each is marked with a red “Exit” sign, and we learned where to find three of them, one by one.

      Next came some quick logo time for the people who bring high-definition theatre experiences into our lives.  One was called Cinedigm, which is apparently a digital camera system company.  I don’t know why we need to know that, but at least the name stuck with me.

      As to the ten or so (maybe 20) movie trailers, none of them caught my eye except for, maybe, the new Muppets movie (who couldn’t like them?)  Sure, call me strange, but I didn’t feel compelled to see any of the other movies plugged while I was held captive in my seat.  There was sci-fi and adventure and horror, all rated for “appropriate audiences” by the ever-vigilant MPAA.  By the way, the color of the screen on any MPAA rated trailer means the content has been planned and edited for the viewing audience.  If you’re a curious movie fan, you can find more at  http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/09/the-color-of-the-background-preceding-movie-trailers-actually-means-something/, so nothing was shown that would freak out Twilight fans or their parents.  Unfortunately they also didn’t impress anybody.

      Maybe I was bound to have issues about this movie-going experience because, having read the Twilight books, I knew, in terms of the film’s content, what I was going to see.  I didn’t know how complicated it would be just to get to the point where I would actually see the 117 minute movie.

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      Posted in Commentary, Theatre/Movies/Entertainment | 0 Comments | Tagged breaking dawn part 1, movie previews, trailers, twilight
    • Holiday Saving Time?

      Posted at 3:13 am by kayewer, on November 13, 2011

      On the first Sunday in November (which used to be the last Sunday in October), the country went back to standard time, one hour earlier than we had observed it for the past seven months.  It appears we also added an extra month to the holiday shopping season.

      Sure, some places like Hallmark start putting ornaments on display in July to lure desirous collectors and send shivers down the trunks of nascent fir trees in forests everywhere.  Christmas in July offers us that early taste of the winter experience at a time when the summer sun is toasting us.  Somebody apparently felt that we needed more than the usual allotment, and the media and malls happily obliged.  They erect banners with festive words like “Joy” and “Merry” scrolled on gilt with blue or red and green.  Seasonal stores spring up, like Hickory Farms and Brookstone.  Fake snow fills store windows.  On television the commercials are already touting holiday sales.  In Pennsylvania Lottery ads, snow is a foot deep and scratch-and-win tickets have gone elf and snowman themed.

      The malls already have Santa Claus on duty, for goodness sake.  Sure it gives men jobs in a troubled economy, and they stay warm all day in that velour and fur, but the poor fellow I saw at the mall the other day evoked pity.  My friend and I were almost ready to drop our facades of adulthood and help him out of his funk by discussing whether he could listen to our lists.

      Other than the poor folks who man merchandise carts in the middle of the walkways (and they get to walk away and leave “Back at 8:30” cards on their seats), Santa was hurting for business.  The gilt throne where the jolly old elf would normally sit and field want lists from scores of little ones was vacant, and he was standing at the entrance to the magical world erected around the carefully placed queue ropes, simply and interminably waiting.  There were kids in the mall, because Friday was a day off from school, but nobody had their list ready for the man in the red suit in the early days of November.

      Then there was the music.  Make no mistake:  I’m a music lover, but there is something about holiday music that gets very old very fast, and if it’s starting to assault us right after October, imagine the damage it will have done before we even pop the turkey in the oven for Thanksgiving.

      Let’s face it:  the old standards are so entrenched in our musical culture that every song artist in the world and their old maid aunts sing them, re-do them annually, and we simply nod our heads resignedly and prepare for the onslaught.  Once the songs start up, it’s a plodding race to December 26 when every shopping facility with a sound system throws their collection of holiday tunes in a box and unceremoniously locks it away until next year.

      I prefer to choose my tortures.

      Last week I had the misfortune of being trapped in a line at New York City’s well-traveled Port Authority bus station, waiting for one sure to be over-packed bus out of town.  The staff at the terminal has added a three-part safety message which plays on a loop at the escalators to heighten the senses of harried users, and which I can recite by rote in my sleep because I heard it about 10,000 times during my wait in the queue.  Sure I’m complaining about the holidays, but I would rather hear one bad Christmas song the rest of the season than that safety recording ever again in my life.  Just not this early.

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    • Key Bored

      Posted at 2:45 am by kayewer, on November 7, 2011

      Now that virtually everybody has been indoctrinated into the computer age, it appears we are dealing with a major problem:  the shrinking keyboard.  The smaller the keyboard, the harder it is to navigate.

      I don’t normally like to text while on public transportation, but the other day I was seated next to a fellow who had me pinned by my elbows while I was trying to type 1,700 words in a window seat with a keyboard the size of a candy bar.

      So why was I so frantically trying to text under such conditions?  I decided to sign up for the writing challenge of National Writing Month (NoNoWriMo for short), which tasks intrepid writers with producing 50,000 words in the month of November.  This requires about 1,700 words a day.  Unless I wanted to cheat and just freely type a bunch of words into the computer to get the required word count, some planning and time to create was required.  The time I had on this particular day, I found on public transportation.

      Which brings us back to the shrinking keyboards.  Even our best cell phones have teeny little keypads.  Some are QUERTY (typewriter style), while some simpler (and some might say dorkier) versions use the telephonic letters on the number pad to text.  Netbooks also have small keyboards, which is how the manufacturer gets the computer to be as small as a novel.  Which is what I’m trying to write.

      There is nothing more infuriating than trying to use human fingers on inhuman sized buttons.  The error rate is ridiculous, especially for folks like me who learned to type 65 words per minute in high school on a regular size keyboard.

      Touch pads and screens and thumbs don’t get along very well, either.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve accidentally hit a touch pad with a stray thumb that is just hanging on my hand waiting for a summons to use the space bar.  After considerable time spent on the road trying to defeat the restrictions imposed by my seat partner, my thumbs are now cramped and sore.  I don’t know if there are carpal tunnels in my thumbs, but they hurt as I’m typing this.

      I hear that there is voice recognition software out there.  Maybe that’s the answer to my situation.  Heck, I can speak 1,700 words into a mouthpiece and the folks around me will just think I’m on my cellphone (which I can’t text on).

       

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