Showing posts with label not gay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label not gay. Show all posts

4.21.2011

House of Titans

Written for Mel Favara's wonderful 1000 Words PDX.

=====

HOUSE OF TITANS

Part One.

Former CEO Donald Einhorn had decided there was nothing about his crumbling empire twelve or thirteen scotches couldn't fix. Over the third, he castigated his visionless board of directors. He toasted number five to greasy VP Skip Chestersonberryfield, which good look filling old Donald's Farragamos, kid. He celebrated his tenth by writing a check to himself in the amount of "Golden Parachute", including the phrase "cunning linguist" in the memo line. By the time he took his final swallow, Donald had achieved military-grade intoxication. He lurched through his spinning home, shoulder-checking walls and fumbling with doorknobs, unable to locate any of the estate's reputed fourteen bedrooms. With his last conscious thought, Donald cursed the general practice of architecture and passed out in a hallway.



He woke to the discovery that the seed of a giant redwood tree had taken root between the lobes of his brain and erupted overnight to towering maturity. A truly majestic headache. A survey of further damage included: icepick pain in back and shoulders; a split in his trouser's crotch; and, he realized, unease with his surroundings. On rare visits to a room that wasn't his study, Donald sometimes registered a manner of faint surprise, a "who put this here?" kind of feeling. But the vaulted ceilings, artwork, even paint color in this particular hallway seemed totally unfamiliar. Maybe he was somewhere in the northeast wing. Lined with doors, the hallway seemed to stretch for miles, even to have a perceptible bend along the curvature of the earth.



=======


Part Two.


Donald's money had always been a faithful friend. Always told him how valuable he was, always complimented his skill prognosticating the markets that made other men jump out of high windows. And, despite Donald's portly frame and face that looked like an exit wound, his money had always brought beautiful companions to his side. But it also bought this house, where each door opened into a room with three more doors, or into another interminable hallway. Donald wandered through anonymous bedrooms, libraries, four different kitchens, but couldn't find so much as a throw pillow he recognized. He passed the same Victorian fainting couch three times in an hour, and started leaving a Hansel and Gretel trail behind him of the items in his pockets: cash, keys, coins and cards.


The final nail in the coffin of Donald's composure was his discovery of the trophy room. The son and stepson of two veterans, Donald had never hunted in his life, in fact had always been fearful of nature's ability, with a frightened animal or slight tectonic shift, to swiftly and permanently erase all a man's achievements. Yet here was a room, in his own home, filled with glass-eyed animals frozen in various stages of roaring or flight. Eagles, cheetahs, gorillas, groundhogs. Mounted on the farthest wall was a handsome flintlock rifle with a solid silver butt into which was engraved in swirling, ostentatious typeface: "To Richard- Keep showing 'em who's boss. Love, Charlton Heston."



======


Part Three.


In being forcibly unburdened of the weight of his (and his shareholder's) expectations, Richard Halifax had found freedom. In the decade since being bounced from the corporate garden, he'd built a comfortable routine of untied bathrobes and lunchtime scotch. On the occasions when he needed to feel strong and useful again, he put on one of his fraying Savile Row suits, propped his feet up on the desk, and dictated letters to the obediently silent animals mounted in his trophy room. Any nagging psychospiritual stuff about loneliness or personal value to society he'd learned to smother or drink away. Or else he filled the hole inside with a white truffle and mayonnaise sandwich, which was the method he'd chosen today. Richard cut it into 16 bite-sized cubelets, arranging them into a smiling face.



He gathered his happy plate and happy glass of Bushmills and tottered off toward the study, singing "Peter and the Wolf" and marching in time, when something small and green registered at the edge of his vision. A crisp ten, right there on the floor. And ten steps later, a dollar. Ten more, an AMEX card. Richard had a wispy memory of a cartoon rabbit being lured into a trap by a trail of carrots. The trail ended at Richard's trophy room where, inside, he found a disheveled man admiring the antique monkey rifle Chuck Heston had given him in Botswana. Richard set his smiling plate on the oak cabinet by the door. The disheveled man turned. "What are you doing in my house?" they asked each other.


======


Part Four.


EPILOGUE


Donald and Richard greeted the discovery that they'd lived in the same mansion for thirteen years with trademark bottom-line clarity. They determined the fiscally responsible thing was to keep living together as mansion-mates, and the arrangement pleased them far more than either could have predicted. It wasn't like living with a family to which they felt no real connection; unbridgeable division was replaced by mutual empathy of the struggles of rich white men. The drone of Donald's snores proved a comfort Richard hadn't known he'd needed.


They started a business. Based on the truth that everyone loves puppies but far fewer people like dogs, they conceived a subscription service by which customers could purchase a puppy, return it when it got too old to love, and receive a new one. Donald convinced an overseas vendor to sell bulk-rate puppies for pennies on the dollar. As co-CEOs of PuppyLease, LLC, they became like paternal twins, finishing each other's sentences, sensing when the other was in danger.



Hundreds of billions in revenue later, Richard Halifax developed Alzheimer's. Richard's acumen drained until he became a well-tailored husk of undefinable antiquity. He started believing Donald was his ex-wife, forcing Donald to make the most heart-wrenching power-grab of his life.


"Richard, the board has decided to buy you out."

"But Sally, no, why?"

"They just… I just believe you're no longer mentally capable of the job. I'm sorry."

"Whether my head is good or bad, Sally, only it can save us now."


Richard Halifax leaned in to kiss the old billionaire he believed was his ex-wife, and Donald Einhorn, his friend, couldn't bring himself to pull away.



8.05.2009

Variations on a Theme: Inverted Idioms


ORIGINAL IDIOM:

Let sleeping dogs lie. 


INVERTED:

Never permit a conscious cat to stand. 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
And a few more. ARE YOU BRAVE ENOUGH TO CRACK THE CODE?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.) I am feeling as wrong as rainlessness. 


2.) When one is mentally ill, one goes to the serious metropolis. 


3.) You don't know the ridges in your skull from a mountain range. 


4.) Hey buddy! Take a low 1/5 from me!


5.) Frantic feet are God's impediments. 


vengeful-god.jpg picture by nickcarter03


6.) You'll take my land under my living soul!


GetOffMYLAND.jpg picture by nickcarter03


7.) I can't work today. I am as a hardy as a cat. 


8.) This taco pizza is the worst of neither world. 


tacopizza.jpg picture by nickcarter03


9.) The smaller they are, the softer they stand.


10.) You aren't what you throw up. 


11.) How do I know? An enormous fish told me. 


12.) I can't dance because I have 1/2 of a right hand.


iStock_000005523851Small.jpg picture by nickcarter03

13.) I am slovenly dressed, with many appointments to keep. 


casual_atty.jpg picture by nickcarter03



7.23.2009

Time to Unpack the Adidas.



My name is Nick Carter. I am 6 feet and 3 inches tall and weigh something like 170 

pounds. I was a writer at Wieden and Kennedy for a little over fourteen months, and 

held that position until about 2:30p this afternoon. If you are most of the people who 

work at Wieden, I did not say one word to you during any of those 624,970 minutes. 

Please don't feel like this is your fault. It takes me between 14 and 16 months to feel 

un-shy enough around a new person to talk to that person, so the math just didn't 

work out in our favor. 


And now I'm about to walk out those silly huge metal doors one last time (I'm sitting 

at my cleaned-out desk right now, about to post this and leave), and I'm deeply 

regretting that I wasn't brave enough to meet and know more of you. You are all 

exceptional people. People worth knowing. 


Maybe my guilt- and regret- twinges will stop if I tell you some things about myself 

I might have eventually told you in person, had we become friends. Maybe then I 

can feel like you knew me a little, so you aren't just all "Why in the world did someone 

hire Backstreet Boy and former Paris Hilton infatuate Nick Carter to write advertisements 

for the best advertisement agency in the world? This place thinks so far outside of the 

proverbial box in terms of hiring that they can't even see the box anymore, not even as 

a distant point on the horizon, because they have thought themselves so far away from 

and outside of it (the box)!"


No, I am not that Nick Carter, and no, you are not the first person to notice that my name 

is the same as a formerly famous person's. Let's just say it was difficult for me to 

comfortably buy CDs ("Wow, you don't look ANYTHING like Nick Carter. Just how thick 

are your glasses, by the way?") in the mid- to late-90's, and move on to more fertile 

conversational ground. 



bike-1.jpg picture by nickcarter03

1.) This is me (I am not nearly this cute anymore) riding my first bike down a 

street in Saudi Arabia, where I lived for a year while my dad installed and 

repaired A/C systems in the Riyadh Airport. One afternoon, my dad took me 

to a white tent out in the desert and we watched a cobra fight a mongoose. 

I think this is the Saudi Arabian equivalent of a cock-fight. A cobra and a 

mongoose are pretty evenly matched (what a mongoose lacks in venom and 

general scariness it makes up for with speed and teeth), and they're probably 

about tied in the cosmic series of un- and organized fights since evolution made 

them hate each other, but that afternoon, I watched at thigh-level in a crowd of 

yelling, dusty men as the cobra won with stunning authority. 


Cobra_16b.jpg Cobra/Mongoose picture by nickcarter03


2.) In high school, I played the tuba and defensive tackle. Yes, I was as fat 

as that makes me sound: 270 pounds! The other thing I played in high school 

was professional paintball. That is not a lie.


"Wait a dadgum minute here Nick, you weighed 270 pounds, played the tuba 

at an all-district level, played defensive tackle for a terrible football team at a 

second-string level, and you were on a professional paintball team, and you 

were on the school Math Team, AND you spent most of freshman year carrying  

around a protective plexiglass box of Magic: The Gathering cards? You must 

have been quite popular, especially with ladies!"


Yes, I was like Clark Gable, if Clark Gable had been way overweight with a 

penchant for deeply uncool hobbies and interests which penchant led to Clark 

Gable being not at all popular or attractive to anyone, particularly ladies. 


This is what professional tournament paintball looks like, for those of you 

who've never watched Versus (The network for dicks! ©) at 3:30a. PLEASE 

PLEASE PLEASE mute the terrible music:



3.) My middle name is Wade. I cannot give you any insight into why my parents 

selected that name as opposed to the literally millions of more un-stupid middle names. 


Nicholas Wade Carter. 


4.) Right after I went to college, my dad died. He was big too, bigger than me. After 

that, I decided it was a better idea to not be that big, and so I ran every day and ate 

like a slowly shrinking bird until I was roughly the size I am now. One day at the gym, 

after I'd shrunk, my friend Charlie handed me two 50-pound dumbbells and said 

"That's what you used to weigh. Can you believe it?" Meaning my current weight plus 

the dumbbells. I could barely carry them, the dumbbells, basically had to Heave-Ho 

and swing them back on the rack one at a time, the impacts of which made the whole 

wall-length iron rack shudder and ring.  


5.) I didn't realize I wanted to seriously write until I read this book by David Foster Wallace 

called Infinite Jest. 


infinite-jest.jpg Infinite Jest picture by nickcarter03


I know it's almost a cliche for people my age to point to this specific book as the one 

that opened their literary eyes, but cliches are usually true, so deal with it. Who are you, 

Commissioner of the Cliche Police, running for re-election on a platform of Harshing 

My Buzz? I found this book by accident in a Sam Goody of all places, just sitting there 

on the bottom shelf, taking up most of it (1079 pages long and like four inches thick). 


Reading this book, it occurred to me how incredible and unlikely it is, when you think 

of all the words that make up our language, and consider the literally infinite number of 

ways to arrange those words, what staggeringly long odds a person who wants to arrange 

them in ways that are pretty, sad, funny, or true (or all those) truly faces. And how brave 

it is when they go ahead and face them anyway. Since I read this book, read for the first 

time writing that spins beauty from air as if magic was easy, makes you forget it's writing 

at all, really, and not something that's happening in front of you, right now, for real, I've 

wanted to try and write like that too. 


I tried to do it WK, but never felt like I was doing it particularly well. In my opinion. I just

don't have the mental cajones to handle the Chaos and general hair-on-fireness. I admire the 

people who do. So I'm going to go try and write somewhere else for a while, somewhere more 

peaceful, and see if that works better. 


And maybe someday I'll come back here with my hat in my hand and ask for another shot. 

And if the folks in charge give me one, I can almost guarantee I will not talk to you then 

either. But it won't be your fault. That's just how I am out there in the world, as opposed to 

here, typed out.



-nick


*********

Post Script:

*********


Some of those things up there I have not told anyone but my closest friends. And even 

though you didn't ask me to tell you those things, you now officially owe me some dirt on 

your own personal self. This isn't just about you guys knowing dumb shit about me, it's about 

me using a medium where I feel comfortable to make a lame attempt at 11th hour bonding 

with people around whom I was too timid to bond in real life. So play along, if you can 

temporarily shrug off the feeling that everything earnest is lame and uncool. I know this is 

hard for people in advertising to do. 


In the comments, tell me/everyone something I/we don't know. Just one thing. Use your name.


7.21.2008

My lawnmower needs to learn some accountability.

ME: Ok, so just for the record, what is your full name and title?

"task" "force"


TASK FORCE: I'm a Task Force© manual lawnmower with 20-inch blades. My title would I guess be: Nick's Lawn Mower, but I'm not sure since I was never furnished with a written job description. 


ME: Ok. Easy. There's no need to get defensive. We're just talking, here. Just two dudes being friendly.


TASK FORCE: Sorry, it's just the title of the post makes it seem like you've got it in for me a little bit.


ME: Oh, you know. It's just to compel people to read further. Give it a little sizzle. What do you expect, I'm in advertising!

So would you way that you're a good lawnmower?


TASK FORCE: For the price, yeah. I mean I only cost $40, whereas even a bottom of the line gas-powered mower would set you back like $300. So, value-wise, yeah, I'd say I'm a pretty good mower. 


ME: Thanks. Now I'm going to show you a couple of pictures, and I want you tell me what you see. Here's picture one:


IMG_0668


TASK FORCE: That's an area of your backyard. 


ME: Anything else?


TASK FORCE: No. I mean. It's just some grass. 


ME: Ok. I understand it's probably not the best picture ever, but I'm no Annie Liebowitz! Let's try this one. Same angle basically, just a little closer.





TASK FORCE: Oh. 


ME: What do you see?


TASK FORCE: I see some tufts of grass. 


ME: Well, I think "tufts" is a bit of an understatement, don't you? "Clumps," maybe, or "chlorophiliac monuments to mediocrity," or "things that if you had a Lawn Mower Father, and he saw these chlorophiliac monuments to mediocrity, would cause your Lawn Mower Father to throw his whiskey glass into the fireplace and scream, "I HAVE NO LAWN MOWER SON!"" 


All of those are more appropriate terms, I think. 


TASK FORCE: ...


ME: Was I right to assume that you have no Lawn Mower Father?


TASK FORCE: I was assembled by a series of machines at a plant in New Jersey.


ME: Ok, orphan. So why exactly are there still huge tall clumps of grass all over the yard after you mow it?


TASK FORCE: Like I said before, I AM A MANUAL MOWER. I don't have an engine to help turn my bl...


ME: Oh sure, blame everything on the lack of a gas-burning engine. You're like the opposite of Al Gore.


TASK FORCE: It's simple sci...


ME: Greenpeace is going have a field day with that one. Now I'm going to have pontoon boats full of lunatics blocking my path every time I try to mow the lawn. Thanks.


TASK FORCE: I just think you need to temper your expectations a little bit.


ME: I should temper my expectation that a lawn mower should mow the lawn?


TASK FORCE: It's just that the grass gets pretty thick in some places.


ME: THE GRASS GETS PRETTY THICK. So what's the cutoff point exactly? You won't cut anything that's thicker than what, a cherub's kiss? A single dandelion seed floating on the breeze?


TASK FORCE: You know, if you mowed more often, the grass wouldn't get that thick, and I could cut it better.


ME: Yeah, maybe you're right. And maybe the car wash would work better if my car was already clean. Maybe my physics teacher's job would have been easier if taught myself a unified field theory.


TASK FORCE: You have a real talent for self-serving exaggeration, you know that?


ME: Hey, you want a glass of water?


TESK FORCE: No, I just finished a big thing of Aquafi-


ME: THEN IT'S THE PERFECT TIME FOR MORE WATER! You should always drink water when you're not thirsty! Just constantly drinking water preemptively, glass after glass, until your insides adopt their own ecosystem, supporting all manner of deep sea life, kelp and dungeoness crab, WE COULD OPEN OUR OWN AQUARIUM INSIDE OF YOU, we could sell little stuffed kelp in the gift shop, and charge extra to see the dolphin show, and we'd make so much money, all thanks to your foresight regarding hydration!


TASK FORCE: I knew it was a mistake to trust you. I'm leaving.


(TASK FORCE removes mic, exits studio)


ME: Hey, come back! We can name the aquarium after you if you want! The Task Force Manual Lawn Mower with Useless 20-inch Little Girl Blades Memorial Aquarium!


TASK FORCE: ...


ME: Get your ass back here! Where are you going to go? Who's going to love you?


TASK FORCE: ...


ME: YOU DON'T EVEN HAVE A DAD!

4.10.2008

(Girl I'm Gonna) Fight for Your Love Tonight

Lyrics by Nick Carter

beach_sunset_picture_t0762.jpg sunset picture by nickcarter03

(piano intro)


The sun is settin'

Goin' to bed for the night.

Another day is gone,

Gotta wait eleven more hours 

just to see the light.


And I'm sitting here alone, 

waiting for darkness to come.

And there you are,

wherever you are,

waiting for your shiny-armored knight.


Well, wait no longer, girl, because:


(chorus)

I'm gonna fight for your love tonight.

Girl you know I'm gonna fight for your love tonight. 

I'm gonna put on my Armor of Kisses, baby

and then I'm gonna show you the sights.

(end chorus)


(spoken)

Like the St. Louis Arch, baby.

You ever seen that? 

I didn't think so.


(guitar solo)

250px-Ibanez_dbl_neck_jem.jpg doubleguitar picture by nickcarter03



(end guitar solo)


(sexily spoken)

Knock, knock, knock.

Well, who's that at your door, baby.

Oh no one special,

no one special at all.


Just your SOULMATE.


(chorus)

Just the man who's gonna

fight for your love tonight. 

You know I'm gonna fight for your love tonight.

I'm gonna sharpen my Sword of Promises 

and then I'll bet you'll see the light.

(end chorus)


(spoken)

Bask in that light, baby.

Absorb it like a hothouse flower.

Yes. 

Photosexthesis.


knight1.jpg knight picture by nickcarter03


On Love's pockmarked battlefield,

I will face your Love.

My shield gleams in the moonlight. 

I can see the fear in Love's eyes. 

But girl don't be afraid.

This battle won't last long.

I'll overwhelm you with my loveweapons

AND WE'LL RIDE OFF INTO THE SUN...


(chorus)

Because girl, I'm gonna fight for your love tonight.

You know I'm gonna fight for your love tonight.

I'm gonna polish my Shield of Marriage

And we'll both go home happy tonight.


(spoken)

'Til death do us part, girl.

And you know what?

I don't plan on dyin'.


(repeat chorus)


217326.jpg driveoff picture by nickcarter03