A blog about movies, technology, music, my life, and of course, goth chicks.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

On Drinking



Today I stumbled upon a great website, Modern Drunkard Magazine. It is an e-zine all about drinking, and today I found a list of "The 86 Rules of Boozing." Their website isn't the easiest to navigate, so I decided to republish them here in a more eye-friendly format.

1. If you owe someone money, always pay them back in a bar. Preferably during happy hour.

2. Always toast before doing a shot.

3. Whoever buys the shot gets the first chance to offer a toast.

4. Change your toast at least once a month.

5. Buying someone a drink is five times better than a handshake.

6. Buying a strange woman a drink is still cool. Buying all her drinks is dumb.

7. Never borrow more than one cigarette from the same person in one night.

8. When the bartender is slammed, resist the powerful urge to order a slightly-dirty, very-dry, in-and-out, super-chilled half-and-half martini with a lemon twist. Limit orders to beer, straight shots and two-part cocktails.

9. Get the bartender's attention with eye contact and a smile.

10. Do not make eye contact with the bartender if you do not want a drink.

11. Unacceptable things to say after doing a shot: Great, now I'm going to get drunk. I hate shots. It’s coming back up.

12. Never, ever tell a bartender he made your drink too strong.

13. If he makes it too weak, order a double next time. He'll get the message.

14. If you offer to buy a woman a drink and she refuses, she does not like you.

15. If you offer to buy a woman a drink and she accepts, she still might not like you.

16. If she buys you a drink, she likes you.

17. If someone offers to buy you a drink, do not upgrade your liquor preference.

18. Always have a corkscrew in your house.

19. If you don't have a corkscrew, push the cork down into the bottle with a pen.

20. Drink one girly drink in public and you will forever be known as the guy who drinks girly drinks.

21. Our parents were better drinkers than we are.

22. Never talk to someone in the restroom unless you're doing the same thing;urinating, waiting in line or washing your hands.

23. Girls hang out, apply make-up, and have long talks in the bathroom. Men do not.

24. After your sixth drink, do not look at yourself in the mirror. It will shake your confidence.

25. It is only permissible to shout 'woo-hoo!' if you are doing a shot with four or more people.

26. If there is a d.j., you can request a song only once per night. If he doesn't play it within half an hour, do not approach him again. If he does play it, do not approach him again.

27. Learn how to make a rose out of a bar napkin. You'll be surprised how well it works.

28. If you can't afford to tip, you can't afford to drink in a bar. Go to the liquor store.

29. If you owe someone twenty dollars or less, you may pay them back in beer.

30. Never complain about the quality or brand of a free drink.

31. If you have been roommates with someone more than six months, you may drink all their beer, even if it's hidden, as long as you leave them one.

32. You can have a shot of their hard liquor only if the cap has been cracked and the bottle goes for less than $25.

33. The only thing that tastes better than free liquor is stolen liquor.

34. If you bring Old Milwaukee to a party, you must drink at least two cans before you start drinking the imported beer in the fridge.

35. Learn to appreciate hangovers. If it was all good times every jackass would be doing it.

36. If you ever feel depressed, get out a bartender’s guide and browse through all the drinks you've never tried.

37. Try one new drink each week.

38. If you are the bar's sole customer, you are obliged to make small talk with the bartender until he stops acknowledging you. Then you're off the hook. The same goes for him.

39. Never tip with coins that have touched you. If your change is $1.50, you can tell the barmaid to keep the change, but once she has handed it to you, you cannot give it back. To a bartender or cocktail waitress, small change has no value.

40. If you have ever told a bartender, "Hey, it all spends the same," then you are a cheap ass.

41. Anyone on stage or behind a bar is fifty percent better looking.

42. You can tell how hard a drinker someone is by how close they keep their drink to their mouth.

43. A bar is a college, not a nursery. If you spill a beer, clean it up. If you break a glass, wait for a staff member to clean it up, then blame it on someone else.

44. Being drunk is feeling sophisticated without being able to say it.

45. It's okay to drink alone.

46. After three drinks, you will forget a woman's name two seconds after she tells you. The rest of the night you will call her “baby” or “darling”.

47. Nothing screams 'nancy boy' louder than swirling an oversized brandy snifter.

48. Men don't drink from straws. Unless you're doing a Mind or Face Eraser.

49. If you do a shot, finish it. If you don't plan to finish it, don't accept it.

50. Never brood in a dance bar. Never dance in a dive bar.

51. Never play more than three songs by the same artist in a row.

52. Your songs will come on as you're leaving the bar.

53. Never yell out jukebox selections to someone you don't know.

54. Never lie in a bar. You may, however, grossly exaggerate and lean.

55. If you think you might be slurring a little, then you are slurring a lot. If you think you are slurring a lot, then you are not speaking English.

56. Screaming, “Someone buy me a drink!” has never worked.

57. For every drink, there is a five percent better chance you will get in a fight. There is also a three percent better chance you will lose the fight.

58. Fighting an extremely drunk person when you are sober is hilarious.

59. If you are broke and a friend is “sporting you”, you must laugh at all his jokes and play wingman when he makes his move.

60. If you are broke and a friend is “making sport of you”, you may steal any drink he leaves unattended.

61. Never rest your head on a table or bar top. It is the equivalent of voluntarily putting your head on a chopping block.

62. If you are trading rounds with a friend and he asks if you're ready for another, always say yes. Once you fall out of sync you will end up buying more drinks than him.

63. If you're going to hit on a member of the bar staff, make sure you tip well before and after, regardless of her response.

64. The people with the most money are rarely the best tippers.

65. Before you die, single-handedly make one decent martini.

66. Asking a bartender what beers are on tap when the handles are right in front of you is the equivalent of saying, “I'm an idiot.”

67. Never ask a bartender “what's good tonight?” They do not fly in the scotch fresh from the coast every morning.

68. If there is a line for drinks, get your goddamn drink and step the hell away from the bar.

69. If there is ever any confusion, the fuller beer is yours.

70. The patrons at your local bar are your extended family, your fathers and mothers, your brothers and sisters. Except you get to sleep with these sisters. And if you're really drunk, the mothers.

71. It's acceptable, traditional in fact, to disappear during a night of hard drinking. You will appear mysterious and your friends will understand. If they even notice.

72. Never argue your tab at the end of the night. Remember, you're hammered and they’re sober. It's akin to a precocious five-year-old arguing the super-string theory with a physicist. 99.9% of the time you're wrong and either way you're going to come off as a jackass.

73. If you bring booze to a party, you must drink it or leave it.

74. If you hesitate more than three seconds after the bartender looks at you, you do not deserve a drink.

75. Beer makes you mellow, champagne makes you silly, wine makes you dramatic, tequila makes you felonious.

76. The greatest thing a drunkard can do is buy a round of drinks for a packed bar.

77. Never preface a conversation with a bartender with “I know this is going to be a hassle, but . . .”

78. When you’re in a bar and drunk, your boss is just another guy begging for a fat lip. Unless he’s buying.

79. If you are 86’d, do not return for at least three months. To come back sooner makes it appear no other bar wants you.

80. Anyone with three or more drinks in his hands has the right of way.

81. If you’re going to drink on the job, drink vodka. It’s the no-tell liquor.

82. There’s nothing wrong with drinking before noon. Especially if you’re supposed to be at work.

83. The bar clock moves twice as fast from midnight to last call.

84. A flask engraved with a personal message is one of the best gifts you can ever give. And make sure there’s something in it.

85. On the intimacy scale, sharing a quiet drink is between a handshake and a kiss.

86. You will forget every one of these rules by your fifth drink.

--Frank Rich


These are rules to live by, as most of my readership is in college, may be new to drinking, or will be hitting the bar scene for the first time soon. Memorize these. You will be tested.

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Sunday, October 16, 2005

On The Jets Woes


Let me take this opportunity to tell let everyone know I am a Jets fan. Everything I say about them is biased, and I will always pick them to win over any team, because I am blinded by my allegiance to Gang Green. That said, they suck.

They have a 41 year old QB and BROOKS BOLLINGER is his backup! Their star QB has a torn rotator cuff for the second year in a row, and is "questionable" for a return next year. And to tell you the truth, I'm not so sure that I even want Pennington to return.

Don't get me wrong, I love Chad as much as the next guy, and I think that he had the potential to be one hell of a quarterback. But to return from 2 years of injuries and still be able throw with your original strength and accuracy is quite improbable. If he can make the comeback, more power to him. But I just don't see it happening since Pennington did not exactly have the strongest arm before he was injured. At best, he will come back and be a decent "workhorse" quarterback like Drew Bledsoe. But he will not be worth the 7-year, $67 million dollar contract the Jets signed him to at the beginning of last season.

This salary cap burden is going to cause major problems over the next few years for the Jets, even if Pennington comes back and plays well. Their offensive line needs a major overhaul, as it has provided no support for Curtis Martin this season, and gave up 16 sacks in the first 5 weeks. And speaking of Curtis Martin, he has rushed for only 285 yards so far this season, in what could be his worst season of his career. He is projected to run a career-low 985 yards, 109 yards less than his previous low in 2002. It appears last year may have been his last truly effective season, and he still has five (5!) years left on his contract. Hopefully his ineffectiveness this season is due to the lack of support from the offensive line and the pressure on him since Pennington's departure, and not because of his age. At 32, he is starting to show signs of wear, and this season may take quite a bit out of him. It appears soon that the Jets will have to make a move for a new RB, or at least a decent backup like they had in Lamont Jordan last year.

All of this spells trouble for the Jets. It appears that this season may be lost, and if things don't work out, the next few may be "rebuilding" years for the Jets as well. Yet again, the adage "Just End The Season comes to mind.

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Thursday, October 13, 2005

On The Great Dictator



The Great Dictator (1940)
, is one of Charlie Chaplin's only full-length films. In addition to acting in it, Chaplin also wrote and directed the picture. Another interesting note is that it is one of Chaplin's only "talkie" films.

Chaplin was best known for his short form silent films, where he portrayed The Tramp, a bumbling, lovable hobo who always seems to get into trouble. Before today, this was my only experience with Chaplin, albeit a very funny experience. In The Great Dictator, Chaplin takes on a decidedly tougher role. In fact, he plays TWO characters. He portrays Andenoid Hynkel, Dictator of Tomania, and a "Jewish Barber" who has amnesia and forgets much of his life.

The whole film is a play on Hitler, Germany, and his Nazis. Instead of the swastika, Hynkel wears the "double-cross," and his right-hand-man is Officer Garbitsch (pronounced Garbage). The movie is hilariously funny, as well dramatic with great social commentary.

While I thoroughly enjoyed the picture, what impressed me most was the guts that Chaplin had in making this film at this time in history. It took balls. Censorship in America was at an all time high, Europe was imploding, yet Chaplin was able to muster up the courage to take jibes at everyone involved, and offer a look at what was happening, as many heads of state and even the Pope were turning the other way.

Today, we take such instant critique for granted, but in 1940, it was nothing short of revolutionary. The Holocaust had barely even begun, and Chaplin was already recognizing what a serious defamation of human rights it was becoming. Yet this movie is often neglected in film circles because it is either not one of Chaplin's "tramp" movies, or it is devalued because it was made by a comedian. It is a shame.

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Wednesday, October 12, 2005

On The New iPod

I just wrote a whole review about the new 'Pod released today by Apple and Co. It was good. I swear. Unfortunately, I have fat-person, sausage-link fingers, which cause me to press cmd-Q instead of cmd-A to highlight and spellcheck everything I wrote. So it was quit and deleted. I grieved. I cried. But, like a phoenix rising from the ashes, this entry occurs.

The new iPod:



A roundup of what I said: Its thinner, holds more, has a bigger screen, plays video, comes in black.

I want one.

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On Hello.

This is my new blog.






This is my new girlfriend.

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