Posts Tagged ‘Nonesense’

Wage War on Christmas – A Warped Holiday Story

Friday, December 25th, 2009

(In keeping with a holiday tradition started last year, I will post our Christmas video here.  This year, I add to the tradition by writing a warped holiday story to go with it.)

Legal Notice: This story, video and all the contents therein are purely for entertainment purposes. We are in no way affiliated with the actual Christmas, actual war, punditry, the extreme left, the extreme right, the extreme middle or any other group with any agenda other than humor. Joseph Coaler Productions did not set out to offend anyone, but sometimes, feelings get hurt. We hope it’s not yours, but if it is, we take absolutely no personal responsibility for your level of outrage.

All rights reserved.

Several years ago, little Joe Coaler started noticing a trend that he thought was interesting. People in stores began saying “Happy Holidays” starting around December 1st and going through January 1st. (Some stalwarts started saying it in late November and continued until mid-January, but little Joe thought this was a bit extreme.)

Along with the greeting came bright lights, exciting and wonderful music with moving harmonies and extravagant instrumentation. There were brightly bedecked trees that smelled of lovely pine forests, large golden Menorahs with their nine flames, choirs in festive outfits, sculptures and dioramas in different sizes of an open stable filled with amazed animals and a small child in a straw bed, and everywhere he looked he saw the same large bearded man dressed in bright red. Snow, both real, plastic and flocked, lay everywhere.

Every movie, play, television show and radio program seemed to be either about the transformation of a fellow named Ebenezer Scrooge or a large green beasty called Grinch.

And shopping. Everyone was shopping. Money was being spent in amounts that boggled his little mind. He liked his mind being boggled, it felt all tingly, so he thought that this must be a good thing. The economy could always use the influx. The moving around of wealth from one to another. It made his tiny heart glow with pride in his fellow man.

But a darkness was lurking. People started talking about a war on Christmas. First in small whispers, then with louder and more strident voices. It frightened little Joe, but he could not see who was waging this war. He looked and looked, but there was no war against the season. No war against Christmas. No war against Hanukkah. No war against Kwanzaa, which had been born to Dr. Maulena Karenga in 1966. The season seemed completely unaffected by any kind of war against it. With a little study and research, he found that the warning had been being raised almost yearly since the late 1880s, but there had never been an actual war on Christmas. Little Joe was a good capitalist and realized, where there is such a need, there is a product, so he decided to take matters into his own hands.

The War On Christmas is being waged by Joseph Coaler Productions.

Joseph Coaler Productions is the brainchild of Steve Mancini and Geoff Hoff. It’s a problem child, of course.

Geoff and Steve have written the highly-touted, critically-acclaimed, laugh-out-loud-funny, satirical-serial novel, Weeping Willow and they’re currently writing the knee-slapping-hilarious, widely-popular, sure-to-be-a-legend, online-series, Poor Paul. They’re also exceptionally humble and despise hyphen abuse.

Happy Holidays to all and to all a good nightcap!

(Video first posted on http://www.WageWarOnChristmas.com in December, 2008.)

_______________________________
Geoff Hoff is co-author of the best selling satirical novel Weeping Willow: Welcome to River Bend

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Flying with Toothpaste

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

I used to love flying.  I’d sit by the window and revel in glorious creation, both Divine and human, as I sat both ensconced in it and removed from it, watching, thrilled, as the farmland, villages, mountains, lakes and cities went by under the wings that cut through wispy clouds.  It was true heaven as far as I was concerned.

And then America went crazy and tried to retroactively stop a bunch of zealots who turned a jet into a very lethal weapon.

I made my peace early with the illogic and humiliation of having to remove my belt and shoes to join a friend for lunch in their office building or keep my appointment with my cardiologist.  I try to interact like a human with the poor people manning the portals of a system designed to be very inhuman and inefficient.  I talk and joke with them and most will talk and joke back, or at least smile.  Some just give me that bureaucratic blank stare to let me know this is not a time for levity, thank you very much, but I feel it is part of my job to bring a ray of sunshine into people’s lives whenever and wherever I can.  Okay, I also always wanted to be the teacher’s pet.  You might try it, though.  It makes my day easier than if I grumbled through them.  I must go through, I might as well do it with a smile on my face.

A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of flying to San Antonio.  At Terminal Seven of Los Angeles International Airport I checked in at the little computer console with my e-ticket.  Wonderful convenience, those, you do everything on-line, put your credit card in a slot, print out your boarding pass and you’re on your way.  The first console didn’t work.  Nor the second.  Nor the third.  Finally, one of the people behind the counter, whose load these consoles are supposed to lighten, came out, opened one of the consoles up, waved her hands voodoo-like over its innards and printed my pass.

I had packed my bags fulfilling all the regulations I was aware of for carry-on.  Not too heavy, not too big.  Only one suitcase and a shoulder bag.  They could both fit in the overhead or under the seat in front of me.  On the way to the main screening station at Los Angeles Airport, or at least at Terminal Seven, you must pass several mini check points.  It’s sort of akin to what I understand entering a country behind the Iron Curtain must be like.  Yes, there still is an Iron Curtain.  I joked and chatted with each person at each point and got my requisite smile, albeit sometimes patronizing, from most of them.

I was happy to travel and secure in the thought that this minor inconvenience was stopping a child, somewhere, from starving to death.

After the last checkpoint, where you present your photo ID and prove you have a boarding pass, there are four lines to choose from in order to wend your way up to the row of abattoir that are the x-ray machines.  All four rows looked to be about the same length, so I chose the outermost one.  You don’t actually see the screening stations until you wind around the line a bit.  It’s kind of like Disneyland that way, without all the cloying music.

I started realizing my line was moving more slowly than the others.

I chatted and joked with those around me, in my line and the one across the rope.  Finally I saw our x-ray station.  The portal.  The conveyer belt.  The man, staring at his little x-ray screen.  He was stopping at every second or third bag to call his supervisor over to examine some supposed piece of heinous contraband.  The supervisor let all of them through.  No wonder we were the slowest line.  All the other screeners were looking intently into their screens, but letting almost everything by.  Our man had a look about him.  He was big.  He was angry.  He was bitter.

I got my shoes off, my belt unhooked and unlooped, took the laptop out of the shoulder case, took my toiletry bag out of the suitcase.  All my metal, coins, money clip, neck chain, into the plastic bin.  I was ready.  I knew the routine.  After all my stuff went through, the fellow at the controls stopped the conveyor belt and opened my toiletry bag.  Uh oh.

He took out my tube of toothpaste.

“This is over three ounces,” he said.

I sort of didn’t understand.  “I’m sorry?”

“It’s over three ounces.  No liquid over three ounces.”

“But it’s half empty.”

“It’s over three ounces.  The container is over three ounces.”

I was flabbergasted.  It’s not like I was going to blow up a plane with toothpaste.  I doubted even an experienced demolition man could do that.

“I’m going to blow up an airplane with toothpaste?”

I actually said that.  And I didn’t get arrested.  At least we can speak our minds, still.

I insisted there was far less than three ounces of toothpaste in the tube, but he was adamant.  He finally told me I could go back and check it if I wanted.  I’d been in the line for this moment for over forty-five minutes.  A short time, granted, given the state of some airport screening stations, but still.

This is a man who has little or no control of anything in his life and wields his petite power like a demagog.  It never even occurred to me to try to bring a ray of sunshine into his life.  The ray would have been instantly sucked into the black hole that is his void.  A complete waste of a good ray.

“I’m not going to check a tube of toothpaste,” I said to him with a heavy coating of sarcasm that was lost in that same void, never to be seen again.  Hey, it was Tom’s of Maine toothpaste!  “Keep it.”  He did.

I gathered my stuff with quick jerks and snippily put my shoes and belt back on.  That’d show him.  I still haven’t bought a new tube, either, just for spite.  I’d rather brush with salt water.

_______________________________
Geoff Hoff is co-author of the best selling satirical novel Weeping Willow: Welcome to River Bend

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The War on Christmas

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Every year, I get more and more annoyed at the tendency for people at all points on the political spectrum to manufacture issues about which they can become angry (and about which they can rile their “base” into a frenzied pitch.)  It must be part of the human condition (or at least the Western psyche, I’m not versed enough in the Eastern mind to know if it percolates there, also) to need to be outraged.

There is one manufactured issue that crops up every year, (and has, I find from my study, for over a century, with some variance in particulars) and that is the supposed “War on Christmas.”  In the last several years, this banner has been hoisted mostly by a television commentator and pundit by the name of Bill O’Reilly, who is offended, OFFENDED, by the fact that some folks have decided to be more inclusive in their holiday greeting and say “Happy Holidays” instead of the more traditional “Merry Christmas.”

There is so much wrong with this stance that it’s difficult to know where to begin.  At a store, the time of year is, by definition, a buying season, not a religious one.  The more people you include in your greeting, ipso facto, the more people available who will shop.  Also, most of the Christmas iconography (Crèches aside) are pagan, or at the very least secular, not Christian.  It can be argued (and has, often, by many Christian scholars) that The Christ was actually born in the spring and that the day of Christmas was chosen to mollify locals in Northern Europe in the Great Conversion.

Okay.  Enough logic and seriousness.  Even I am susceptible to the need for outrage.  (Damn it, why, Lord?  Why?)  In the spirit of anti-outrage, we have created something that, I think, finally brings the War on Christmas home.

http://WageWarOnChristmas.com

Now.  Let’s see if we can all become angry about something that really matters.  Like wearing pants below your underwear to show off your boxers or combing your bangs straight up to show off your forehead.

O for a Muse of Fire

Monday, November 24th, 2008

O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend
The brightest heaven of invention,
A kingdom for a stage, princes to act
And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!
 - William Shakespeare, Henry V, Prologue

If I have a muse, she seems to have fallen asleep. I wish her good dreams. That she can convey to me once she wakes up and has her first cup of strong coffee. I’ve had my coffee and my pen is poised for the flow of genius.

What interests me about the creative process as much as those times when you can’t stop creating are the times when you don’t seem to get much done. I used to get nuts when I was in that seemingly stagnant place until I realized that it was a necessary part of the process, that I’m always creating and in those times it’s just more subtle. A gestation, perhaps. There are several stories and a couple of novels coalescing in there. Am I mixing my metaphors? Ah, well. As Walt Whitman said:
“Do I contradict myself?
Very well then I contradict myself,
(I am large, I contain multitudes.)”

I am also, I fear, repeating myself. Old Walt has conveyed my feelings on a number of diverse occasions. His passage seems more elegant, somehow, than Emerson’s oft quoted dictum about a foolish consistency being the hobgoblin of little minds. It’s also much more apt to the subject at hand.

Yes, now I am simply rambling, using other poets words to appear knowledgeable and creative, and doing it without any orderly theme or plan. Of course, A. A. Milne said, “One of the advantages of being disorderly is that one is constantly making exciting discoveries.” And as soon as my muse awakens, I’ll convey some of those discoveries to you.