Sunday 27 April 2008

Call 1-800-GULLIBLE.

I was watching one of those mad evangelical Christian TV channels the other day, the sort where a perma-tanned, middle aged American gentlemen tries to convince you that the best way to do God's Will is to give over your credit card details as soon as possible. It was strangely fascinating, in a faintly disturbing way. The main thrust of the Evangelist's point seemed to run thusly: the first 10% of a person's income belongs to God. If you're fool enough to keep God's cut of your paycheck (here I'm imagining God as loan shark in a 70's blaxploitation movie, complete with the universe's funkiest pimp hat) then he'll curse the rest of your money and you'll generally have a shitty time of it. Therefore, you should get the tainted tithe out of your account as soon as possible, ideally by giving it to Mr Perma-tan.

Which is a really cock-eyed way of justifying a pretty sensible proposal. The world probably would be a better place if we all gave a bit of cash to someone who needed it more. Society would be fairer, people would be kinder. Birds would sing, Christmases would be snowy, Deadwood would never have got cancelled. But can't people reach that conclusion themselves, through thought and reason and the application of morality? Surely we should have got past the stage where we need to believe in God and curses in order to do the right thing? I can't get me head round it.

My hour of Televangelism did throw up one funny moment. Mr Perma-tan, with his pointy white collar and spray-on hair, was beseeching his viewers to pick up the phone and donate, to feel the hand of God moving in them, guiding them, ridding them of the curse that has held them back all these years (that'll be that pesky 10%. And did you know they take all major credit cards?). And he said 'Please, if you get an engaged tone, be sure to dial again.' Because that'd be right pisser, wouldn't it? If it actually happened and the Big Man filled you with his spirit, the full on religious awakening, and you picked up the phone for your conversation with the Almighty, only to discover that the cunt was dealing with someone else? It'd be head in the oven time and no mistake. Or you might decide to put all of your faith, belief and money somewhere else. I hear Oprah is very popular.

My Current YouTube Favourites.

First, thrill to the inventive choreography of 'OK Go, on treadmills':



Then piss your pants laughing at the Japanese madness on display in 'massage chair prank':



And don't stand up immediately after you've sat through 'Inoue Waka boob jiggle massage':



That is all. Interested parties (I'm looking at you, Glyn, Anthony) should try searching under 'Inoue Waka' where they will discover enough mental wanking ammunition to last them well into middle age.

Monday 21 April 2008

A Girl Called Bob.

Some food for thought for my gentlemen readers: next time you're working your charming sex magic on some lucky lady in a club or at a party or maybe even a funeral, remember this - you're not just pulling her, you're pulling her friends as well. I had this the other night when I met a girl who goes by the slightly unusual name of Bob. I didn't find out about this until much later but Bob and her mates held an impromptu council of war, where I was vetted and my suitability assessed. Luckily for me, I was given the nod - I've got good teeth, apparently - but it could easily have gone the other way, and then where would I have been? If they've decided that you're no good then all the clever puns about biscuits (my one and only pulling tactic. I'd like to say it never fails but it does, often) in the world aren't going to save you. It ain't. Fuckin'. Happening.

So think on, lads. You may believe that you're making progress with that hot chick you've had your eye on but if you've wronged, neglected or in any way offended her mates then you're fucked. Or rather, you're not.

Bob's just a nickname, by the way. Still, it could make my next call to the parental homestead a tricky sell, as in:

Me: Ma, I've met a girl.
Ma: That's great news, Pete. What's her name?
Me: Bob.
(pause)
Ma: (slightly weepy) Is there anything you want to tell us, son? Because you know we'll always love you no matter what you do.

I don't need that kind of drama.

Sunday 13 April 2008

Stuff What I Seen.

Spotted while driving out to the supermarket: a crowd of people standing on the beach, staring at something out in the bay. Pointing, taking photographs. We pulled over for a nosy and there they were, about 300 metres out into the water - dolphins, probably ten or fifteen of them, accompanied by a small escort of dinghies and sail boats; tourists out for that perfect photo opportunity. Birds flocked and squawked overhead and dived for the fish that had drawn the dolphins into the bay, while above us a prop-powered Cessna sputtered and wobbled for a landing at Wellington airport. For half an hour or so all attention, human and animal, was concentrated on one small area, a square of hot light and cold blue water. For that little block of time everything seemed, for once, right with the world.

Sunday, 13th April. About four in the afternoon. Sort of makes me wonder what I'm going to come across next.

Thursday 10 April 2008

Pete's NewsPoke.

This is an artist's impression of the proposed Universitas Leadership Sanctuary, to be possibly built out in Nevada. It's supposed to be a sort of super exclusive hotel for world leaders, free from the stresses and strains of their lordly duties. A place where a tired El Presidente can relax, play Nintendo Wii in his pants and presumably enage in many many sessions of the Biscuit Game with the other presidents and prime ministers.

Firstly, I'm not sure I like the idea of the Prime Minister buggering off to Nevada to play table tennis with the President of Benin when he should be at home taking care of business. Secondly, and more pertinently, it seems like the worst kind of folly to put the most powerful men on the planet in a building like that. They already have the ability to wipe out humankind many times over - put them all together in something that looks like a cross between the Death Star and Superman's Fortress of Solitude and there'll be no telling what kind of crazed power-trips they'll embark on. Have another look at the picture. Now imagine it choked with corpses, with dead Mexicans impaled on the spikes and the mountains ablaze in the background. Screams fill the air. Roving deathsquads rove their roving way about. There are lasers. People shitting themselves. It's nightmarish. And, if you look very carefully at the central ball structure, you'll see Gordon Brown playing underpants Wii tennis with John McCain, while Nicholas Sarkozy gags on the biscuit.

That'll be the scene ten years after this thing gets built. We'd basically be installing them as supervillain dictators. We might as well issue them all Doctor Doom costumes and have done with it. The Universitas Leadership Sanctuary: it's a shit idea and no good will come of it.

Stuff What I Seen.

On the bus, cruising along Willis Street and into town, we passed a church. Most Kiwi buildings are timber and the churches are no exception. They look like regular English churches with spires and naves and all that but they're made of wood, in green or blue or yellow, and when the sun catches them they look stunning. Best of all, the church we passed had a little car park with garage, on the door of which was written:

XI: Thou Shalt Not Park.

I just love that.

Wednesday 9 April 2008

Brand Awareness.

I had no difficulty buying a mobile phone. I had no difficulty opening a bank account. Catching the bus was easy, as was obtaining fish n' chips. Ditto chinese curry, and beer. Life in New Zealand is passing smoothly and without undue fuss.

But I do have trouble buying a loaf of bread. In England if I want bread I'll breeze into a shop and pick some up in under a minute. I can see some Hovis, for example, and know exactly what buying a loaf of hovis entails - how expensive it is or isn't, what it tastes like, whether it's brown or white, whether it has those annoying lumpy bits, whether it's suitable for my purposes, how it compares to the other available types of bread, everything - from only the briefest of glances at the packaging. And it all happens automatically, without any conscious effort on my part, not only with bread but with all groceries and general household stuff.

Here, there's none of that. I'm adrift. I have no brand awareness. It's all unfamiliar. Everything needs to be examined in careful detail, lest I drop a bollock and come home with drain cleaner when I was sent out to buy jam. In my head I'm converting from dollars to pound sterling, weighing my options, and then the old Asian bloke manning the counter (who fears and despises me) starts questioning me and I panic and leave without half of what I came in for. Creature of the 21st century that I am, without recognisable brand names I am lost. God knows how long I'll last after the apocalypse; hopefully I'll get taken out in one of the opening nuclear exchanges. Fingers crossed!

Good Morning Sunshine

I'm not the cat you saw yesterday
at least by tomorrow Iwon't be any way.
Whole new ball game, brand new day.

Quasimoto, 'Good Morning Sunshine'.