Thursday, May 12, 2005

My Traffic Court Experience

Mr. Pabulum assigns me a staggeringly large amount of work, and his other associates don't do it when I'm not around, and he's been known to accidentally spill hot coffee ("With EQUAL! Not Sweet-N-Lo!") into the laps of his associates who fall behind, so I didn't want to take a vacation day to go to fucking traffic court. So I signed up online for the earliest time they could see me, and they gave me an appointment of at 8:30. I'm supposed to be at work at 9:00, but I thought maybe if I showed up early I could get in, make my case, tell them who I work for, have the matter dropped, and get out of there in time to get back to the office before our Master Plan of Domination fell too far off track.

(Yeah. And maybe I'd also meet Bill Gates and Angelina Jolie in line, and one of them would give me a bajillion dollars while the other one gave me ahummer. (Before you ask - No, I don't particularly care which one does which. When I'm getting a bajillion dollars and a hummer, I don't get nitpicky about details.))

So I get to the court at 7:00, an hour and a half before my scheduled appointment, in the hope of being able to see the judge early if someone else misses their appointment or something.

Except the building doesn't even open its doors until 8:00.

So I have to wait outside with the other people like me who don't know how the system works. There's a rolling hotdog cart, but I see neighborhood dogs backing away from it with hackles raised and teeth bared, so I decide not to risk it. I spend my time listening to the hare-lipped guy wearing the Papal miter made of bloody newspapers, carrying poster boards with a lot of big emphatic writing on them, trying to convince me that God is dead and that Life is God and that American Imperialism is driving us toward WWIII. Check, check, and check. Preach it, my harelipped brother.

People start lining up at the front door at about 7:30, which confuses me because the sign says they open at 8:00. So, feeling superior because of my highly-evolved reading skills, I stay semi-comfortably seated on the concrete planter. By 7:45, though, the line is over 100 yards long, so I wander overto stand with the rest of the huddled masses.

At 8:05 the doors are opened. We shuffle bovinely past the Bloody Pope, who is chanting "Imperialism is dead! Imperialism is dead!" and trying to get us to chant it with him. I know it's uncharitable of me, but I note that one shouldn't try to chant "Imperialism is dead" when one has a harelip. It kind of ruins the effect.

Inside the courthouse is the security checkpoint. I suffer through the body cavity search with, if I may say so, stoic aplomb. I just kinda wish theyhadn't done it right there in front of everyone. It reminded me too much of work that way.

It's now about 8:15. My plans of getting in before my appointment time are pretty well dashed by now, but I hurry upstairs (I'm in Division 102, which after some searching I am able to find out is in room 705, which after further searching I find out is on Floor 3). I finally reach the door, to find about half of the people with whom I was in line waiting there too.

Okay, now, those of you who have been to traffic court have probably been laughing at my naiveté this whole while, but I thought when you got an*appointment,* that appointment was for *you.* Apparently that's not the case in the lower intestine of our fine judicial system. EVERYONE gets an appointment for 8:30, which makes all of my clever plans amount to a small pile of stinky nothing. I would say that God was laughing at me, but I'm not sure if God is dead, or Life is God, or what. I'm pretty sure about the American Imperialism thing, but that point doesn't seem useful at this juncture. American Imperialism didn't give me a speeding ticket; American Bureaucracy did.

At 8:35 I call Mr. Pabulum's 2nd Secretary to let them know I'll probably be late today, and to apologize for being stupid enough to think that I could get through this experience with a minimum of fuss and bother.

The doors to Division 102 open at 8:45. We shuffle in, Spanish speakers to the left, English speakers to the right. There is no special section for people who work in the Entertainment Industry.

We sit.

We wait.

They play a recording about what Traffic Court is really about. It's actually an arraignment proceeding. If you plead Not Guilty, you're done for the day -- you'll be given a court date at which the ticketing officer will appear (and be paid time and a half for doing so) and demonstrate to you that there's no fucking way you can ever possibly argue your way out of a traffic ticket. Then the judge will tell you why a $100 fine actually requires $875 to pay off. Governor Schwartzenegger's name will be mentioned, with at least one reference to the Terminator.

If you plead Guilty or No Contest, you may see the Cashier and pay your fine. If you got a fix-it ticket, you may show proof that you indeed have fixed-it, and you will only be charged $10 in court costs. There is no eating, drinking, gum chewing, speaking, arguing, flag waving, or Constitution-invoking permitted. ThankYouAndHaveANiceDay.

We wait some more.

...And some more.

The court reporter and translators and a couple of lawyers desultorily do some business, but they seem to be moving underwater. There's a distinct lack of urgency or even alacrity in any of their actions. Every move is under the watchful gaze of two armed bailiffs, whose gaze could be described as "steely-eyed" if they weren't quite so mind-numbingly bored. Maybe if we go back a couple Ages and refer to them as "bronzey-eyed," that would be more accurate. "Sleepy-eyed" is just petty.

A dude in a long black dress comes in. One of the bailiffs says "Stay seated and come to order. Yadda blah blah yadda." The judge (who is apparently referred to as a Commissioner at this level, buy I'll continue to call him Judge because I'm in a frigging COURT, damn it, and I want to talkto a JUDGE, not a farking COMMISSIONER) seems pleasant and good natured. He opens with a joke that isn't very funny, but at least he's trying.

The Judge says he knows that everyone has a story. If we want to tell our story, we should inform him of such up-front and then go wait in the back to get our chance. There are a lot of people here who just want to say "Not Guilty" and get their court date, or to prove that they've fixed whatever was wrong with their car, and it's not fair to make all those people with quick transactions wait for you to tell your sob story about how your dog ate your speedometer or how the laws of this nation don't apply to you because you are a sovereign state unto yourself.

He asks if we understand. We all nod solemnly. The Spanish translator asks the left side of the courtroom if they understand. They cabaceo solemnemente.

We get to work. They do things alphabetically here, and since Mr. Pabulum required me to change my legal last name to Associate, I'm the second guy to see the judge.

Being one of the people who nodded solemnly just a few moments ago, I say I'm guilty of the offense but would like to give an explanation. The judge asks me to wait in the back of the room, and he'll get to me in 20 minutes or so. It's now about 9:30.

I sit in the back of the room.

There are maybe 50 people here.

Maybe half of them have very simple and quick issues.

The other half have explanations.

All of those with explanations - every stinking one of those goddamn people, who nodded solemnly right along with me - launches into their explanations right there. And the judge listens, in some cases discussing the issues with them for up to 10 minutes, without making them wait in the back of the room like I am. He listens to their pleas and passes down his rulings. Typically, good-looking girls with pretty smiles have most or all of the charges dropped, while anyone who shows any lack of deference is hit with the Judicial Hammer of Wrath. At one point the judge says to a disgruntled person who will have to pay $950 because he procrastinated in getting a headlight fixed: "Oh, well. Justice is in the eye of the beholder."

Well, I suppose honesty is good. Sure would have preferred impartiality,but, hey, whaddaya want out of life?

By 11:00 they finally run through the people with appointments. I gather up my folder with my evidence, in hope that I will get to present my case and be rewarded for being the only guy who actually obeyed instructions ... and then they start calling up the walk-ins. These are people who didn't bother getting appointments, but rather just wandered in.

There are maybe 30 ofthem.

About half of them have very simple and quick issues.

The other half have explanations.

Now, they weren't there are the beginning when the judge informed us how things are supposed to work when you have an explanation. And, frankly, by that time I'm not at all surprised that he lets them ramble on about how they failed to appear at court on 3 different dates because they slept through the alarm clock each time. Cute girls get a slap on the wrist, everyone else gets either the full penalty or gets something extra tacked on for failing to show respect.

Finally, they're finished. It's nearly noon. I've been waiting five hours to state my case, which is two-and-a-half hours longer than it would have been if I hadn't been the only solemn nodder to obey the wishes of the court. I am finally allowed to approach the shaky podium with the 1960s-era microphone to present my case.

My crime was this - going 55 in a 35.

My argument is thus - this particular piece of road is very wide, and has no crossroads for half a mile ... and all different kinds of conscientious drivers tend to speed up through it. I have photos showing how the road becomes much wider than the road leading to it. I have satellite pictures showing the large median and how the right side is bordered by the LA River, and so any pedestrians or cross traffic would have to cross more than 50 feet of open road before being in any danger of collision. I have charts from when I drove that same stretch of road several times the weekend after I got the ticket, showing that *everyone* (soccer moms in minivans, limousine drivers, grandmothers, guys with small dicks in big Humvees) tends to drive around 55 miles an hour on that 1/2 mile of road.

The judge nods sagely. He clears his throat and peers at me over hisglasses.

He says "If this is the argument you wanted to make, you shouldn't have waited around. You should have pled Not Guilty and made this argument in court."

Well, gee, thanks for telling me that now. Trying to keep the frustration out of my voice, I say that I did indeed break the law, and so I thought a Not Guilty plea would have been perjury or something.

He shrugs, not giving a shit. He says he can't drop the case, but he'll cut the fine in half and allow me to go to Traffic School. I don't mention the fact that he COULD drop the case if he wanted to, but that I didn't expect him to do so because I'm not a cute chick. That's the kind of thing that has caused him to rule with an Old-Testamenty rod of ironin the past.

I visit the Cashier. The fine has been reduced to $25, so I have to pay them $152. If you ask me why, I'll be forced to mumble something about Governor Schwartzenegger, and make at least one reference to the Terminator.

Thus ends My Traffic Court Experience. Thank you for your time.

-- Mr. Pabulum's Associate, Minor Offender

....Oh, have I mentioned that three weeks after I got the speeding ticket in question, I got ANOTHER speeding ticket on the exact same stretch of road?

Hm, I wonder if I should just pay the thing, or if I should go to Traffic Court again? Maybe if I get there early I can still get to work on time...

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

In Which It Is Recalled That Disabilities Trump Snot

Mr. Pabulum just reminded me that the only thing the Academy loves more than snot is disability. If you smile through a disability, you're almost a lock to get the bald gold guy.

So, sorry Clint, looks like it's Jamie's year.

(Because, not only does he smile through a disability, at one point his character has EYE SNOT. So all his Oscar-bait bases are covered.)

In related news, Mr. Pabulum is now looking for writers for his new idea - a weepy drama about a hospital in the 1930s that caters solely to paraplegics with severe allergies.

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

The 2005 Academy Award for Best Actor will go to...

You know who's going to win the Oscar for Best Actor? I'll tell you:

Clint Eastwood.

You wanna know why? I'll tell you:

Snot.

When Eastwood cries in $1M BABY, there aren't any tears, but torrents of semicongealed snot pour out of his nose. It's embarrassing and kind of gross ... and the Academy LOVES "embarrassing and kind of gross," especially when it's from a toughguy like Eastwood.

My proof, you ask? I'll tell you:

Russell Crowe.

Gladiator.

Few tears.

Lots of snot.

Embarrassing.

Kind of gross.

Academy Award, for an otherwise mediocre perf.

You heard it here first.

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Snow White and the Seven Dwarves

When I was 6 or so, my mom and my Aunt Cookie took me to see Snow White at the theater. It's one of my earliest memories, because I was so traumatized by the movie.

Okay, remember the ending? Snow White is "dead" in her glass casket, all the dwarves are standing around her body, sniffling, and along comes Prince Charming to kiss her and carry her off and marry her and they live happily ever after...

All the kids in the audience started clapping and cheering ... and I burst into hysterical, chest-heaving, so-hard-they-make-you-hiccup sobs. Poor mom and Cookie, they hug me and ask me what on earth could be the matter. Snow White wasn't dead, she got to marry the prince and live happily ever after? Why was I so terribly upset??

Through my wracking sobs, I managed to cry out --

Me: "WHO...?"

Mom: "Yes?"

Me: "WHO'S GOING TO...?"

Cookie: "What, Steve? What's wrong?"

Me: "WHO'S GOING TO TAKE CARE OF THE DWARVES??"

That fucking bitch Snow White goes off to live in a goddamn palace and the poor lonely dwarves get shit-all. That selfish whore.

That's the day I realized the world is an evil place.

Thursday, December 09, 2004

We Should All Be Psychic

Mr. Pabulum is in the lab right now, working on a brain implant that will allow us to beam Hollywood movies directly into your brain. The current problem is that it's erasing your current memories in order to do it. We had one "volunteer" recently who can't remember his first kiss, his mother's funeral, and whether or not he left the iron on, because that area of his cerebellum has been overwritten with selected scenes from Armageddon 2: Armageddoner.

This whole process has made me consider what it would be like to be truly psychic, and I've come to this conclusion: I think it would be nice if everyone was psychic. Not psychic enough to read people's minds, but just psychic enough that you would know when someone was thinking about you when masturbating.

You don't even need to know WHO is thinking about you while pleasuring themselves, just that someone is. It would give you a rosy good feeling of well-being and joy, to know that you've brought some pleasure into someone else's life.

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie would have a constant glow of happiness, since pretty much every second of every day, dozens of people think about them while whackin' it.

Even unattractive people would benefit - admit it, sometimes when you're in the middle of manipulating your own erogenous zones, your mind wanders. Well, if you're rubbin' the nubbin one day, and your mind switches tacks to your To-Do List for that day, just think of the brief moment of happiness you will bring to your friendly neighborhood grocer, butcher, and bank attendant.

If you see someone having a bad day and want to cheer them up, all you gotta do is find some semi-secluded area and rub yourself (and him or her) to happiness. It's a win-win.

It could even be a path toward world peace - imagine a million Israelis and a million Palestinians all jerkin the gherkin while thinking about each other. Everyone would be too happy and content to bother fighting. (Not to mention, have you ever tried to fire an AK-47 with just one hand?)

People in general would be nicer to each other, because nice people get fantasized about more than assholes. (Well, more than people-who-are-assholes, not necessarily more than ass holes themselves. There's a lot of fantasizing going on about that wacky chocolate starfish.)

I've been fine-tuning the implant Mr. Pabulum put in me as one of his first "volunteers," and I think I'm ready to test this. Everyone, quick, start playing with yourself while you think of me. I'll report back if I get a rosy glow of well-being and joy.

C'mon, what can it hurt? You might like it. I know I will.

Thursday, December 02, 2004

Not Good Enough For Google

Mr. Pabulum just got a politely-worded email from Google, saying we don't meet their criteria for having ads on this blog.

Which is a shame, because Mr. Pabulum was hoping that the revenue from Google AdSense would allow us to get out of the human trafficking business.

Oh, well.

Monday, November 29, 2004

Bleeding For Your Art

So I'm 17 years old, playing Bernardo in a production of the musical West Side Story. It's opening night, with a full house (maybe 1500 people).

We get to the Rumble, which is the big fight scene at the end of the first act where my character (who is the analogue to Tybalt in Romeo & Juliet) fights Riff (Mercutio) and is eventually killed by Tony (Romeo).

Here's what's supposed to happen - I berate Tony and start pushing him around, but he won't fight me. Riff jumps forward, throws a stage punch at my face. I fall to the ground, jump up, check my nose for blood, pull my switchblade, and Riff and I start the choreographed fight scene.

Here's what actually happens - I berate Tony and start pushing him around, but he won't fight me. Riff jumps forward, throws a punch at my face. I fall to the ground, jump up, check my nose for blood...

... find blood ...

... find more blood ...

... realize I can't see out of my left eye because it's full of blood ...

... pull my switchblade, and Riff and I start fighting.

Now, I was kickboxing at the time, so I wasn't all that disturbed about having a bloody nose. (White guys tend to bleed a lot.) I was a little concerned about the whole blind-in-the-left-eye thing, but I figured I could worry about it when the fight was over and we went to intermission.

The guy playing Riff, though, had no idea what was going on in my head. All he could see was some dude with blood all over his face waving around a (fake, but still sharp) switchblade. Add that to the fact that he was really skinny (maybe 110 pounds) and that he knew I had the hobby of repeatedly punching and kicking people for fun, and you can guess that the poor guy had no idea if I was going to stick to the choreography or break him over my knee like a twig.

But I stick with the choreography. We go through the whole fight the way we're supposed to, but with one difference -- any time I get near the guys playing the Jets I toss my head and splatter blood all over their fancy costumes. Just for kicks, you know. Those pussy Jets just can't stand the sight of blood.

The good news is, around this time my left eye clears up and I can see again. Ah, the joys of depth perception...

Anyway, we get to the end of the fight. I stab Riff, and he goes down. Tony leaps forward and stabs me; I go down. The general rumble starts, with both sides trying to kill each other (and the Jets trying not to slip in all the blood I had left on their side of the stage).

So now I have about five minutes to lie on stage and play dead while the rest of the scene plays out. I'm in a fetal position on my left side, my head downstage.

I don't know how many of you have had bloody noses, but one of the first things you do is blow out a sharp breath to see how bad it is. I'm expecting either one or both of my nostrils to bubble, so I would know where the damage was.

Instead, I go blind in my left eye again.

Blinking, and starting to get a little concerned, I close that eye and trying snorting out again. I feel a warm splash on the outside of my eyelid, which relieves me that it's not an eye-socket injury. I'm still playing dead, so I can't move my hands to touch my nose, but I tilt my head a little bit so my nose is pointing more toward the ground, and I blow outward again.

A stream of blood squirts from the top of my nose (near where it connects with my left eye socket) and splatters all over the stage. And, I don't know about you, but I don't usually have an opening in my face through which such a stream could emerge.

By this time, the fight scene is winding down and intermission is about to start. I have a widening pool of blood around my head, maybe eight inches across, getting in my hair and filling up my ear. We weren't using a proscenium curtain, so I was just supposed to wait until the lights go out, and then run off stage.

The lights go down and a few grips run on stage to pick me up, having no idea if I was unconscious or what. I'm on my feet before they can get to me. I grab a towel from one of them, say I'm okay, and ask them to mop up the stage.

I go to the dressing rooms, surrounded by a bunch of Sharks who are concerned for my welfare and a bunch of Jets who are pissed about the whole blood-flinging thing. I look in the mirror and see a quarter-inch of bone sticking out of the top of my nose.

Two years of full-contact boxing to my name, and I get my first broken nose in fucking musical theater.

Fuckin' great.