Category Archives: Staring Into A Cobalt Pool

When People Aren’t On The Internet: A Study

Hugo De Naranja and yours truly hit the town last night investigate a little bit of what happens when people aren’t on the internet. The following events transpired in a nearly linear fashion.

To kick things off, Hugo and I sat down to talk a little of what Mary Poppins likes to call “shop.” Almost immediately we came to the conclusion that women should be given the right to vote. And not just half-votes, whole votes. Equality should be granted at the polls regardless of gender. The fact that this wasn’t addressed during the last Presidential elections really blew my mind. But that’s another story for another time.

Our next move was to hit the street. Under the moonlight, whilst strolling through Edendale, I recalled a conversation I had heard overheard between a very intoxicated transient man and woman regarding the exact location of infiltration during the sexual position, which canines frequently practice.[i] The debate was over port of entry.

I was relaying this story to Mr. De Naranja when we crossed the street and practically walked into a demonstration and the very same debate, which I had overheard that afternoon. Luckily, the transients in questions were fully clothed. Unfortunately, having heard the conversation twice, I am emotionally scarred and for a brief instance, I even debated a life of celibacy.

This was as good of a start as any citizen of this nation could hope for on an eve of research. Libation after libation was consumed. Hugo enchanted the barmaid into comping his tab. I had had enough. We changed venues.

The streets of Edendale can be confusing regardless of how familiar one is with the area. Needless to say, approximately two blocks away from where I get my “shut-eye,” I was lost.

The next thing I knew I was drinking out of a mason jar in what looked to be a loft blown up to the size of a warehouse. While assessing the situation some debauched and damaged damsel tried to woo me with tequila. Despite my lack of interest in her as a person, when the tequila calleth I beckoneth.

Fast forward, three minutes and the worst swing dancing you’ve ever seen is transpiring in the middle of this wholesale mattress dealer sized loft. She wasn’t friendly. Hugo said she was an asshole. She also, for reasons unbeknownst to me, kept trying to rub her cheek against mine; I thought it would be best to leave. The damaged damsel talked and talked and I can’t recall one concrete detail of what amounted to be a soliloquy. I don’t think I missed much.

Because I was on assignment, to see what people do when they’re not on the internet, I felt we should change venues. Mason jars, swing dancing, conversations without content, weird cheek rubbing, I was pretty sure I got the gist. Hugo on the other hand thought because I was on assignment I should arm myself with contraceptives and let this girl prove that what she lacked in dancing and conversation she could make up ten-fold with handcuffs and a Rodney.[ii]

We changed venues. Hugo cooed sweet nothings to the barmaid who continued to ring up his drinks as gratis. I was starting to come to the conclusion that despite being away from computers, everyone was still very much on the internet in a cellular way. I was started to think this whole assignment was for naught. I was thinking that everyone is perpetually on the world wide web so people don’t act any differently away from it because it’s inescapable. It’s basically like the Matrix only Laurence Fishburne and Johnny Utah get to wake up in thermals with plugs in them in a submarine. We never get to do that. It was slightly devastating, like learning Santa Clause is German and probably of Aryan descent. [iii]

One door-to-door trip from a man in a yellow car with two other strangers Hugo had befriended and suddenly I’m on the back patio getting called “not American!” Call me a podiatrist! Call me a misanthrope! Call me the worst ever Russian to English translator of Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment! But do not call me “Not American”![iv]

It all started with an exchange between a girl (read 28 year old woman) with a drawl and myself. She spoke with such a Southern twang that I couldn’t help, but wonder if she was in Edendale pursuing a country-western singing career. I wasn’t really listening to the sentences, but more the words and the weird shapes and sounds that came out in her version of English. Her portly friend came along and asked whom I knew at the party. I said I came with Hugo and two anonymous gentlemen I met in a taxi. She gave me a ‘hmm.’ I returned my attention to the future country-western balladeer and waited for a word to come out.

“How old are you,” the portly friend asked in her bland and not even remotely twangy or Southern intonation.

Being a gentleman, a theorist on assignment and drunk, the only reasonable response I could think of was, “I’m not going to dignify that question with an answer.”

Age doesn’t bother me. It changes often and in most cases regularly, but she was portly and if there’s one thing I can’t stand, it’s a portly girl in Edendale.[v] A few other things were said. She didn’t like my career choice of “baggage thrower” for SouthWest Airlines.[vi] Then suddenly she cut me off mid-sentence.

“Wait. You’re not American, are you…”

It was a blood curdling statement. Speaking of blood, I thought about telling her my favorite colors were red, white and blue, but I couldn’t remember if blue was a primary color or if white was a color at all so I abandoned that approach. Instead, I said nothing. I turned around and made my exit stopping only briefly to bid adieu to Mr. De Naranja who was in the depths of some sort of philosophical conversation regarding sex and the Olympic sport of curling.

Not American! Ha! I’d like to see her try and prove that in a court of law. I was out of there and back on the sweet streets of Edendale. I thought a little bit more about divorcing the human race from the internet, but it may be too late for that.

When I saw Hugo at the car wash this morning[vii], he didn’t look like he had slept much. He mumbled something about Martin Sheen’s son before I interrupted him to ask how his night had ended. He seemed hesitant about sharing the details, but he said he was almost positive that we were in an internet free-zone at the end of the night. [viii]

This got me thinking. Does a lack of internet drive people to hysteria? Does the inability to get totally and completely www cause women to call patriots “Not American”? These are just a few of the many questions I am still pondering after a night of trying to figure out what people do when they’re not on the internet.

The Neapolitan Mastiff


[i] Doggy Style

[ii] Erection http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=rodney

[iii] Exchanging Pleasantries does not consider Santa Clause a scientific racist, but we respect the opinions of those who do.

[iv] Possible double negative. Duly noted. Passion occasionally and hierarchically surpasses grammar.

[v] The views expressed in this article do not reflect those of Exchanging Pleasantries. Exchanging Pleasantries can sympathize though not emphasize with a dislike of portly girls in Edendale.

[vi] This is a profession I often claim while in the presence of people with low intelligence. If I ever tell you I “throw bags” at the airport, it’s because I think you are stupid. Now you know.

[vii] Hugo owns a chain of coin-operated car washes. He taught me how to “jimmie” the machine so I can get free soap and water rather than paying the two dollars so now I wash my car every day of the week that has the letter “T” in it.

[viii] Some parts of Edendale have notoriously poor reception. Rumor has it that James Dean was in the middle of a phone call that fateful night he crashed into Jack Nicholson’s house and died. Supposedly he was calling Jack to open the garage door when the call got dropped and he crashed. Lindsay Lohan was the first one on the scene.

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“I’m on the train!”

I was sitting on the train, trying to decode David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest.. I had been trying to read for it entirely too long when he stepped on the train. Or rather, when he stepped on my foot.

“God damn, mother fucking! I don’t give a damn if I go to jail tonight!”

He reeked of Boonsfarm or some other cheap and fruity booze. Soon the whole train would reek of his wrath.

“And a black man in America. Martin Luther fucking King had his day. I don’t care if I go to jail, tonight!”

He started stripping down, layer after to layer. First he took off a large Pittsburgh Penguins Starter jacket, circa 1991, then a windbreaker, and then he took off a fleece. He threw article after article of clothing on the seat in front of him. He was about 5’4 and maybe 40 years old. I thought about switching seats. His scent was decidedly that of Skid Row Vet.

“Shut up! Just the fuck up! I’m on the train!” He was now down to just a tee shirt, which hung loosely on his thin frame. Piled before him was what looked to be half of the Fall Collection from the Salvation Army on Slauson Avenue.

He stood in the aisle of the train. I stared at my book and made as much progress as I had before his arrival. None.

Some people tried to read. Others just stared, waiting for him to make a move. Usually, things like this happen when I try and convince a friend from the suburbs to ride the train downtown with me. “Yeah, it’s safe,” I tell them. “It’s great and it’s just like the Tube in London. Nobody talks.” Fortunately or unfortunately, tonight I was on my own.

He frog jumped up in the air. He got pretty high in the air. Then he did it again and I jetted across the aisle and back a row. Everyone seemed to be laughing.

“Why don’t you sit down, sir,” a Teenage Girl’s voice called from the far end of the train. “You’re acting like a damn fool!”

“What!? What?” he charged her direction, but stopped and turned back. A hipster, clad in an oversized wool beanie, snug pea coat and skinny jeans stared blatantly. He stared more obviously than the rest. I figured it was because the Hipster was white and didn’t know better.

Retreating back to his seat. The 5’4 Penguins Fan curled up in a ball and started shrieking. People laughed. From the fetal position, which only a man of his stature could have fit, he yelped and sniffled loudly. After several minutes and a couple train stops he popped up, recharged.

“I am sorry,” he whined. “I’m wrong. I accept responsibility. I can’t help myself.”

The ethnically ambiguous Teenage Girl, who earlier told him to sit down, spoke up again.

“You’re going to hell.”

“What? What you say to me,” his voice creaked and carried. He was shocked.

“I said – you’re going to hell, sir.”

He flung himself out of the fetal position. “Jail! I’m not going to jail. You provoked me. You attacked me.” He lunged forward again. “I did whatever I did, but what I did, I did because of what you had prior, prrrrior, done to me.”

“I didn’t say nothing about jail,” she yelled back. “I said hell. You are going to hell.”

“Ha, ha, ha, ha,” he sounded like a freshly pressed Little Richard vinyl, dated 1952. “I am not. I’m not going to hell. You’re going to hell. Not me. I’m not going nowhere!”

Although some passengers looked scared, most stared on amused. Passengers turned off their mp3 players and listened with the their headphones in. Open paperbacks and newspapers went neglected. Even the wealthier downtown residents let their Blackberries sit dormant in pockets and purses. I was facing away from the scene, but I heard it all. The Hipster continued to stare; more so than the others.

“Stay where you are, sir.” The Teenage Girl yelled. “I’m warning you.”

“You provoked me,” he shuffled a few steps forward like a fencer on the attack. “I did nothing to you and whatever I did do, I did because of what you did to me and I had forgave you for what you had said…”

“I’m telling you stay where you are or we’re going to have problems. I’m warning you. If I have to get up; there’s going to be problems.” She couldn’t have been older than fourteen or fifteen.

He shuffled a few steps closer. He had traveled from the middle of the train all the way to the last section of seats.

“You’re the one going to hell. Ha!”

“Man, stay the fuck back.” She stood up and so did her plump Mexicana friend.

Another black man, a few years younger, stood up and walked over to the Penguins Fan.

“Hey man, why don’t you chill,” he whispered into the screaming man’s ear. “Take a seat. You don’t want any problems.”

“You take one step closer and I will beat the shit out of your drunk ass.” The Teenage Girl threatened. The Mexicana giggled. “I will kick your ass, you drunk fool!” There wasn’t an eye on the train that wasn’t glued to the scene. The Hipster was now standing, looming actually, over my seat.

“They’ll call the police and everything,” the younger black man tried to reason. “You don’t want that. You don’t want to go to jail. Just chill, chill.”

The Penguins Fan pointed at the Teenage Girl. “You provoked me!” He lunged his head forward then turned to walk back to his seat. The girls clapped loudly.

“That’s what I thought, you drunk fool. You asshole!”

He sat down with his pile of garments in front of him.

A scraggly looking black man with a beanie holding a crossword puzzle with words like “Administration” and “Progress,” tried speaking with him. “That’s right, take a seat, just take a seat. Take a seat.”

When the Penguins Fan was already seated. The scraggly man leaned over. “You’re making us look bad. Why you making us– all black folk, look bad?”

The Penguins Fan, who was making black folk look bad, started to wail and loudly cried out, “I’m sorry! I’m sorry I can’t help myself. I can’t. I can’t help myself.”

“Stop crying,” he said. “Stop acting like how everything thinks crazy niggas act. You see any white people screaming on this train? Any Chinese? La-tin-nos?” He pronounced every syllable independently of the last. The scraggly man stood over the Penguins fan until he thought he’d made his point. Then he went back to doing the crossword and shaking his head.

All was quiet for a bit. The Teenage Girl got off the train. From outside she yelled, “Asshole!” and the Mexicana giggled again.

The 10:19 p.m. train to North Hollywood zoomed on. He started wailing again. Passengers couldn’t help, but laugh. He was curled up into a little ball. With his knees to his chin, we couldn’t even see him, but we could certainly smell him. He shouted and howled, at the top of his lungs, sometimes muffled by the seat or his arm and sometimes not.

The man with the crossword puzzle got off the train at the next stop. “Damn fool,” he muttered. My stop was next. I stood up and walked to the door. I wanted to get a peek at this guy, but not bad enough to get near him. It wasn’t worth a confrontation. He cried behind his seat and I waited for a glimpse.

When the train was almost to my stop, the Hipster stood up and took a seat next to the Penguins Fan. I couldn’t understand why. Maybe he was getting off at the next stop too. Though we had passed Vermont/Beverly, Vermont/Santa Monica and Vermont/Sunset, the stops where everyone with a fixed-gear and pervasive tattoos religiously exited.

Then he looked at the Penguins Fan. The Hipster’s head dropped down by the sobs. Ten seconds passed. I wondered what was being said. Then thirty seconds and a minute. The sobs stopped. The Hipster, looked like he was talking to the man who made all black folk look bad. He looked like he was whispering something, like he was trying to comfort the man. He stayed crouched next to the man who had jumped and screamed at the top of his lungs. The man who now laid in the fetal position talking to a white kid in a wool hat and skinny jeans.

I missed my stop awhile back so I got off at the next one. I walked by the pair. They were nearly cheek-to-cheek. When I got off, I stared from the platform and the train left, headed north, with the Hipster who missed his stop and the Penguins Fan who gave all other black folk a bad name.

-The Neapolitan Mastiff

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