Saturday, January 30, 2010

Family Night was a success!


For the last few weeks, me and mommy and daddy have been kicking around some ideas for Family Night.  Now that football season is over (almost), we need something to look forward to on weekends.  Daddy wanted us to all to join a gun club, which I was all for.  Mommy, however, only selectively approves of the Bill of Rights.


Mommy's idea was for us all to help feed the poor on Family Night.  Both me and daddy had a good laugh at that one.  Finally, I spoke up.  "Look, folks," I said.  "Family Night should mean fun.  It should mean games.  It should mean great food.  It should mean a trip to The Incredible Pizza Company."

So The Incredible Pizza Company it was.  I had heard about this place on the radio, and it definitely lived up to its name.  There was pizza everywhere and games and rides galore.   Oh yes, there were rides.  Rides designed especially for little kids like me. 


The first ride I went on was pretty uneventful.  It was a sad looking alligator.  "Hey, fella," I said.  "Cheer up, why don't you?"  He didn't respond.  Poor guy.  I felt sort of bad, but then my mommy paid for the ride and I forgot all about whatever this guy's problems were.  Better him than me, I figured.


Next was a ride on the Merry-Go-Round.  There is only one word to describe this ride:  BORING.  I just sat there and spun in a circle.  I can do that on my own at home!  And it doesn't cost a dollar! 

Finally, I was allowed to go in the ride I'd been itching to get on all night:  the race car.


Oh man, was this a great ride.  It went around in a nice little circle and was reasonably fast.  That is, until my mommy frantically dragged me out of it.  See, I tried to climb out of the car because I thought it would be a good idea to try to stand on the hood like a stuntman.  Mommy, who can be a little bit of a spaz sometimes, jumped onto the track and dragged me out of the racecar.  Immediately after she dragged me out, she stopped paying attention to the racecar, which was making its rounds.  And then BAM!  The racecar hit her, and she stumbled forward, crying for my daddy to rescue her. 


So we got mommy off the track and gave her some ice cream to calm her down.  I patted her head because I knew that the racecar really scared her.  "Do you want to go home?" I asked. 

"Mmm-hmm," she nodded.

I turned to daddy.  "She's had a long day.  Maybe we should get going."

"Good idea, Lucy."

So Family Night was over.  Even though my mommy got hit by a car, I'd classify tonight as a raging success. 

Friday, January 22, 2010

Don't be an Avatard.

I know that I've already reviewed Avatar.  And I thought I'd said what I had to say about it.  But then the piece of crap goes and starts winning awards, and everybody in Hollywood starts falling all over themselves to make every movie in 3D.  Still, I was going to let it go.  After all, I'm just 14 months old.  What do I know about the movie industry?  More than you might think, actually.  I know a good movie when I see it.  And Avatar wasn't it.

So why am I so fired up, you ask?  Shouldn't I be playing with Emilio and Esteban?  Shouldn't I be walking on the treadmill?  Shouldn't I be learning how to say things other than "hi", "dada", and "ba"?  All of that can wait!  This needs to be said now.

James Cameron is a hack.

People who like Avatar are idiots.

2009 saw not just one great science fiction movie released.  It saw two.  And both were from first time directors.  The higher profile of the two was Neil Blomkamp's District 9.




District 9 was made for just over $30 million dollars and asks what would happen if one million extraterrestrial refugees were stranded in Johannesburg, South Africa.  The answer probably doesn't surprise you, but the movie takes a tired allegorical premise and makes it completely enjoyable.  Sure, the movie has stuff to say about apartheid (it's no accident that it takes place in Johannesburg), but it also has a lot to say about aliens blowing people up with totally awesome weapons.  It's funny, sad, and action-packed.  And it was made for about 1/10th of the budget of Avatar.

The second great science fiction movie of 2009 was Duncan Jones' Moon.



Moon was made for $5 million dollars, and it may very well be the best picture of the year.  Sam Bell (played by the criminally underrated Sam Rockwell) is a solitary lunar employee nearing the end of his three stint harvesting a new form of energy from the lunar soil.  His only companion is GERTY, a robotic assistant reminiscent of HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey (but don't worry, this ain't 2001: A Space Odyssey, and no one will flash random patterns of light at you for ten minutes).  During his last several days on the dark side of the moon, Sam begins to experience a series of personal crises that I don't want to spoil here.  My only advice to you is this:  watch it.    It was made for 1/60th of the budget of Avatar.

I've spelled it out for you.  I've done the math for you.  For what it cost to make Avatar, we could have had 10 movies like District 9.  We could have had 60 movies like Moon.  But instead we got $300 million dollars' worth of 12 foot tall noble, blue cat-monkeys worshipping a tree and some mixed message about how technology is bad despite the fact that the whole point of the movie is to showcase the advanced technology used to make it.  Huh?

I'll get off my soapbox now.  It's late, and I have a long day ahead of me.  Tomorrow's Saturday, and that means daddy's home.  And that means I'm going to have to spend the whole day entertaining him.  I would never tell him this, but at about 3 o'clock on days like tomorrow, I just start counting the minutes until it's his bedtime.  I mean, I can only take everything out of the cupboard and spill uncooked rice everywhere so many times.  It just gets exhausting after awhile.


Avatards are everywhere, not just in Hollywood.
Your neighbor could be one.  Or your mother. 
There could be an Avatard in your home right now.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Something is wrong with Bailey

I was watching this great channel the other day.  It's called Animal Planet, and they had these great shows about these people who have problems with their pets.  And them some weirdo comes in and teaches them how to beat their pets into submission or something. 

Photobucket


You see that?  That's a dog with a broken spirit!  It wants the cupcakes so bad!  You can see it in the doggy's eyes!  But its more afraid of what its owners will do to it if it takes the cupcakes.  Torture?  Likely.  But the real question is what form that torture will take.  Waterboarding?  Thumbscrews?  A simple beating?  Forcing it to watch Oprah?  That's the best part!  The doggy has no idea what will happen if it disobeys, but it knows that it will be bad.

I've tried to put what I've learned from Animal Planet into practice with Bailey, and it isn't taking.  I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong, but Bailey just won't act like Cupcake Dog.  She's stubborn and doesn't listen at all.  It really makes me angry.  Sometimes I just want to eat my pear and be left alone.  But in trots Bailey, tongue hanging out of her mouth and tail wagging.  She looks all cute and cuddly, but she has one mission: take Lucy's pear.  To wit:



Wednesday, January 13, 2010

I am in training


I'm just going to go ahead and address the elephant in the room.  The IOC denied my many requests that they allow me to participate in this year's Winter Olympics.  Look, IOC, I said, I'm almost half as old as those Chinese girls who won all those medals in gymnastics a few years ago.  Of course, they denied me.  They hid behind their "rules" and told me to take a hike.

But don't think for one second that I don't know what's going on here.  The IOC is terrified of the beatdown I would put on all the crap countries out there (I'm looking at you, Portugal), and they've decided to stonewall me.

This won't stop me from competing in 2014, though.  I'll be five whole years old.  Until then, I'm going into training.  In fact, I had my first session today with my daddy.  He told me that if I stick with him, he'll turn me into an absolute war machine. Portugal won't know what hit 'em.  


Saturday, January 9, 2010

I miss my mommy



You know, mommy gets a bad rap around these parts sometimes.  I've accused her of being a terrorist, I've thrown things at her, I've bitten her.  But guess what?  When she leaves for the weekend, things around the house really change.  And I'm not sure I like it very much.

See, daddy's in charge.  Don't get me wrong.  I like daddy just fine.  He makes me laugh.  We play hide and seek.  He lets me stand on things that mommy won't.  But there are, uh, differences.

Take today for example.  Things started off fine.  I got my milk and a nice breakfast of eggs and sausage.  Things were going swimmingly.  Then we ran out of milk.  Normally when this happens, me and mommy take a trip to the store. 

But not with daddy.  He took my bottle and filled it up with something called "Red Bull" (which is like milk, I guess?).



It didn't taste terrible, and I finished the whole bottle.  I don't really remember much about the next two hours except that I spent most of it chasing Bailey with a stick.  My doggy can't even look at me without flinching now.

And after that, I didn't really feel too good.  So what did daddy do?  Did he give me medicine for my tummy?  Did he hold me and tell me that everything was OK?  No.  He handed me a hunk of cheese and told me to walk it off.

Mommy wouldn't have let any of this happen, and I really miss her schoolmarmishness.  She may not be as fun, but she's just a little more thoughtful.  She wouldn't have given me Red Bull and cheese for dinner.  She wouldn't have made me watch horror movies and football all day.  And she certainly would've changed my clothes when I spilled apple juice all over myself instead of making me wear a barrel the rest of the day.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

It turns out that mommy is not a terrorist after all



Being a kid is rough.  People just assume that you know basic things.  Take snow, for example.  No one ever bothered to tell me what that stuff was.  So it's only natural that I got curious over the last week or so.  I would look out the window and watch this strange white powder fall from the sky. 

There had to be an explanation!  And, after lots of thought and analysis, I reached the only reasonable conclusion I could reach given my limited understanding of how the world works. 

It was anthrax, and the terrorists were dumping it all over my yard.  But why?

Then the pieces started to fall into place.  It was an inside job orchestrated by none other than mommy. 

Oh, I was surprised too.  She seems so sweet and loving when you meet her.  But that's exactly what a double-agent terrorist would have you believe.  They gain your trust, and then WHAM, terror is knocking at your front door.

The missing piece of the puzzle was mommy's endgame.  Was it simply to elicit terror?  What could she possibly have to gain by aligning herself with the enemy?  Money?  Unlikely.  She seems to have a limitless supply of that on a little plastic card she keeps in her wallet.  Power?  Perhaps.  But to what end?

Questions abounded, and answers were few and far between.

Just as my suspicions were reaching their zenith, my mommy and my daddy bundled me all up and took me outside.  At first I thought it was just another routine trip, but as soon as they put on my mittens and boots, I realized that this was no ordinary trip to the gas station to buy scratch-offs and butane. 

They intended to put me IN the anthrax!

Unconscionable!  I started to scream in--you guessed it--terror.  I was scared and I felt betrayed, especially by daddy.  How could he be in on this?  Was he a terrorist too?  Mommy, I could buy.  But not daddy.
Anyway, as I'm sure you figured out by now, it wasn't anthrax on the ground.  It was snow.  And you know what?  Snow ain't that much fun.  It's cold.  It stings.  It's slippery.  If I wanted to get frostbite, I'd hang out in the freezer.

So, yes, mommy isn't a terrorist.  But believe you me, this whole incident is going in the dossier I keep on her.