Categories
UPSETTING DAY

Upsetting Day: Urge 🌭

Urge is a 2016 movie starring Pierce Brosnan. Urge is also the most secret, hidden Pierce Brosnan movie ever made, for one cursed reason and a lot of fun reasons. Here’s the trailer. Here’s one of its many frames that drew me in:

Brosnan? Vaping? In cocaine clothes? Count me, and only me, in. Despite my repeated and correct proselytizing, society has not yet adopted Pierce Brosnan as its central cultural figure. You would think ā€œhe played James Bond when Alex Schmidt was a childā€ would win folks over. What a convincing argument for making Pierce Brosnan the star of every movie ever. But no! Pierce has to settle for whichever roles he can get. For instance, he settled for third billing in the elaborate psychological experiment Black Adam. Don’t get me wrong: Black Adam was important. Black Adam won the Nobel Prize In Superhero Genre Entropy Confirmation. That’s an important scientific finding and it makes Pierce Brosnan the Irish Einstein. But as an actor, in this century, Pierce doesn’t get picked to be a movie’s top star. Urge is a rare exception to that. Here’s why no one’s aware of that:

What a progression. Sure, Pierce Brosnan is the beloved Dad-God to us all. But Justin Chatwin is not a name you know or face you recognize. I watched Justin Chatwin be the main character of this whole movie, and I’m still half-convinced I generated Justin Chatwin, by asking an A.I. art program for ā€œa spare Justin Bartha.ā€

That’s not the big problem. Star #3 on that list is why this movie got buried. Davey Masterston, this movie’s co-co-lead, is a monster. The only people who want to see A Danny Masterson Vehicle are cops double checking a car’s fingerprints. Urge hit theater(s?) in June 2016. Less than one year later, three women jointly filed sexual assault claims against Danny Masterson. Last year a judge sentenced him to 30 years to life, in jail. It’s grim. It’s bad! And it’s a slam dunk reason for the whole world to vanish this movie. People can barely watch the best work of Woody Allen or Kevin Spacey. This movie’s criminal is an actor I called “Davey Masterston” without you noticing. A much less famous guy, doing a passable portrayal of ā€œboring selfish guy.ā€ Nobody NEEDS that. We can lose that morsel of acting. And this situation is a rare case of entertainment algorithms being a good thing. One line of code evaporated this movie from streaming services. Evaporated it, like a gross puddle, in a way that is a bummer for no one but Pierce Brosnan. Pierce has performed 101 Hollywood roles and counting. Due to Pierce’s co-star’s crimes, this role is his absolute least discoverable.

What movie are we missing out on by ā€œcancellingā€ Urge? A bad movie. A movie with less Pierce Brosnan in it than we want.

Pierce Brosnan has three scenes in this movie, and he exits two of the scenes by vanishing. I’m only pretty sure it’s on purpose, and they didn’t run out of their limited Brosnan Minutes. This role is the briefest role I’ve ever seen be most of a movie’s poster. Pierce barely swings through here. If Pierce Brosnan is the lead of this movie, I’m the lead of my nearest gas station’s security footage.

Here is the gist of the movie: seven bad, boring twentysomethings go to an island and then to a nightclub and then take a magical party drug called Urge. Later, the most obvious twist in the world happens. Nothing before or after that twist is engaging or comprehensible. There’s also a bulbous hell-clown who does some dance moves.

I’m boiling this down. But not way down. Urge has a runtime of 82 minutes, then credits. Then there’s one post-credits scene, which is 100% a scene from a zombie movie.

Thanks, IMDb. Let me expand on that. The after-credits scene is in a dim deserted grocery store. A child discovers an aisle of frenzied bloody moaning people. It’s not really relevant to Urge. None of Urge’s cast are in it. Here’s why I think this scene exists. I think the producers embezzled their own budget, shot a proof of concept for a next movie, couldn’t sell that next movie, and did their fallback plan of gluing their demo onto the end of this movie.

The beginning of the movie is also plausibly part of something else. The opening titles are a montage of sex-writhing bodies in matching red unitards.

Is this a powerful metaphor for the dangers of hedonism? Or is this the Hollywood equivalent of hopping over a residential fence to slip a business card and resume through the front door mailslot of whoever makes American Horror Story? Perhaps the answer is ā€œall of the above.ā€ That’s not a good answer, but it is dumb and vague. Dumb and vague are what Urge is all about.

The movie begins with our main character, Danny Masterson, gathering bland twenty-nine year olds on a New York City roof. They gather on this windy rooftop so the producers don’t have to pay for a background.

Hell yeah: a free Chrysler Building. They can’t make you pay for that location if you’re at Peeping Tom distance. Meanwhile, indoors, we meet one of the ladies from Twilight. Her first scene establishes she’s the sexually exploited corporate employee of Danny Masterson, because why not dramatize what LAPD’s sniffing out IRL.

Everyone gets in two different helicopters and flies to Manhattan-Adjacent Party Island. Upon arrival, Danny Masterson and friends find their other friend (played by Justin ChatGPT) having shameless, mostly-clothed sex in a glass room. His partner is a woman who vanishes from the film immediately after coitus.

This is one of one million interactions, between all the non-Brosnan characters, where they all disregard and disgust each other. Somehow seven old friends can’t stand any member of a large group of themselves. They just glare at each other and make cutting remarks, on their vacation. Why? This movie is HARDCORE. This movie is here to get real about the depraved evil lurking in the hearts of men. The filmmakers know humans are so evil, they cannot form one relationship anyone would ever have with any other human. Because people are frauds, you see. This movie is here to prove people are frauds, by revealing the hidden evil lurking under the surface of our… obvious upfront evil. Wow: a powerful insight. Humans present themselves as jerks, while privately being jerks, because deep down we’re jerks. And if we have no positive qualities, that raises a very smart question. Perhaps humans are not as civilized as we pretend to be? Perhaps we’re just a big ol’ ball of…urges. Isn’t that right, one of this film’s producers?

Later – MUCH later – we meet Pierce Brosnan. He is in a lair, in a nightclub. The characters get into this nightclub by lining up outside, offering the bouncer money, learning no amount of money can get them in, then going straight through the velvet rope after a big exterior wall projection of eyes looks down at them.

Our wealthy Manhattanite characters descend into a club. The club blows their minds more than any place they’ve ever been in their entire lives. The club looks almost as good as an average Gossip Girl prom.

Remember: this club refused their money. Then this club offers them an astounding party drug, for no money, with just one rule (don’t take it a second time). Hmm. What manner of club is this? It’s as if this club is…a test? A test of the characters’…urges? Perhaps Pierce Brosnan can explain. In his first scene, Pierce says a bunch of mysterious stuff with Biblical connotations in a room full of Biblical art and tentacle projections.

Before you lambast me in the comments, let me take one step back. The fanatical Urge fans know I’ve mis-described Pierce’s character. His character is not named ā€œPierceā€. His character is called ā€œThe Man.ā€

ā€œThe Manā€! What new cinematic concept is this?! Truly nothing more deft than putting one nameless character in a movie. Probably no twist or shock coming! Also, scratch that. The movie doesn’t have the courage to actually make Pierce nameless. His character gets called ā€œThe Manā€, out loud, more than a few times. He’s named a lot. People say ā€œThe Manā€ so often, there’s one part where it’s medium-confusing who or what is being discussed, like this is an Abbott And Costello And James Bond routine. Why don’t the filmmakers go all the nameless way? I have the urge (lol) to theorize why. These filmmakers hamfist this because the filmmakers are smart, according to them. This movie is loaded with Smart Person Blather, despite all its non-Pierce characters being callow jackals. Characters presented as hellraising cokeheads, with no interests beyond nonstop party times, also paint modern art and quote philosophers. Don’t get me wrong: this is not Quentin Tarantino’s fault. But much like how everybody decided Quentin Tarantino is smart because he gives smart dialogue to burger-filled hitmen, the guys behind Urge want their window sex man to tell you he’s read a book, because the filmmakers sure have googled one.

Here’s the entire rest of the movie: the characters accept Pierce Brosnan’s totally normal and not suspicious offer. They take one dose of the Urge party drug, and have the best night of their entire lives. You can tell it’s the best night of their entire lives because they stand at a bar and tell each other they are having the best night of their entire lives.

Yes, my Dear Hotdogger: some of the characters kiss. On the lips! And also dance on each other somewhat. That is the power of Urge. If you take Urge, like the characters in the movie Urge do, you too might achieve the dizzying heights of the coolest 60% of Winter Formal attendees.

I don’t know how they kept making the movie after shooting those scenes. The whole movie depends on those scenes. This drug is supposed to be more seductive and powerful than every real drug. The rest of this movie is the characters deciding to break the one rule and take the drug a second time. They decide they simply must do this drug again during their sober next morning, set in a kitchen nicer than the club.

The characters insist they must take Urge a second time, despite the ominous warning, because they had a spectacular fantasy-fulfilling orgy of pleasures [citation needed] last night. They also insist on retaking Urge despite Danny Masterson offering them an amazing day of spa treatments, meals, relaxation, and a private tennis lesson with Pete Sampras. I am not throwing in a gag. When Danny Masterson describes his planned itinerary, he brings up tennis lessons with Pete Sampras as if they’re as big of a deal as dinner. Pete Sampras is a world-famous tennis player, with independent wealth, married to the lady who played Veronica Vaughn in Billy Madison. He is harder to get a hold of than, say, a table at a steakhouse. I don’t think Jeff Bezos can book tennis lessons with Pete Sampras, and Jeff Bezos can kidnap every one of us. No one told the actors this Tennis Fact, and they don’t react to this suggestion at all. They reject Danny Masterson’s itinerary of four equally ordinary things, and make a plan to do more Urge. To do more Urge, they return to the club. They discuss this club passionately, and call it by its name for the rest of the movie. The club is called ā€œVolcanoā€.

I need more people to have seen Urge so we can quote ā€œWhat do you think I do here at Volcano?ā€ to each other. It could’ve been the new ā€œmy wiiiiife!ā€ The name is supposed to be ominous and it comes off as heartwarming. ā€œVolcanoā€ is what America’s restaurateurs could’ve named Rainforest CafĆ©, with no modifications. But in this movie, Volcano is home to the most incredible drug in the world. A drug that turns obvious jerks into differently obvious jerks. That’s what we do here at Volcano!

The rest of the movie is not worth recounting blow by blow. Jacked up on Urge, the characters do random acts of The Purge until we run out of characters. One of them starts a vague Fight Club. Another eats parts of a cake with her hands, and later describes this as ā€œfuckingā€ a cake, because this movie won’t put dirty stuff in its dirty scenes. Urge-fueled Danny Masterson says mean things to the gal from Twilight. That’s messed up. That’s less messed up than the sexual exploitation he put her through before he took Urge. Then the gal from Twilight gets revenge on Danny Masterson, by tying him up for sex reasons, but then not doing sex, then inflicting burns on his chest with the ferocious heat of one table lamp’s one lightbulb.

The island descends into chaos. Only Justin Chatbot is unaffected. He is immune to Urge, it turns out. The characters say this might be because he’s already so uninhibited [citation: one window sex]. This is supposed to be ironic about morality. The one voice of reason and sanity on this Bronx-adjacent island is Justin Chatwindows97? Irony! Smart! Makes you think! Justin Clubpenguin wanders the island as civilization erodes. He seeks sustenance in a diner, where Pierce Brosnan apparates into a booth for his second scene.

Hmm. ā€œThe Good Bookā€? Why would this regular club owner bring up the Bible, in his very first words of an interaction? This brings us to the movie’s second greatest crime. Crime #1: false adver-brosnan. He’s almost not in this. But crime #2: The entire movie is one big obvious twist (morality test), but the twist gets exaggerated into a much bigger and dumber thing there wasn’t any setup for. Here’s where it goes: Pierce Brosnan is not merely testing the morality of this friend group. As he explains in his third and final scene, Pierce Brosnan is God. Specifically, he’s the version of God from the Old Testament, as understood by a guy who’s not religious, and doesn’t respect religion, and did go to USC for Camera School. Pierce Brosnan’s nameless mystery character… [waggling eyebrows at you from behind the most Los Angeles eyeglasses ever not filled with a prescription] …IS MORE THAN HE SEEMS. After an entire hour of all of us knowing the basics of that, the film says Pierce Brosnan is a vengeful God doing a Biblical Flood. While ā€œHeā€ was morality-testing seven ding-dongs, Mean God implemented global distribution of his club drug that makes you feral.

This scene happens on a ferry boat. Pierce Brosnan tells Justin Barthish that by taking this ferry ride in the New York City area, Justin Barthish has ended humanity. How? Because something something something Urge spreads worldwide now. For failed morality test reasons. Or not? It’s about that clear. Then the camera shows us the name of the ferry boat. The ferry boat is called ā€œMegiddoā€.

Did you know Megiddo is the name of an ancient Mesopotamian city? Whose Greek name has something to do with Armageddon? I did not know that until I skimmed its Wikipedia entry, in disgust, after that shot of a ferry’s duct-taped prop name sign was the central image of the ā€œwe give upā€ final shot of the movie.

I’m furious about this role for Pierce Brosnan. I’m not just furious because a sex criminal plunged the footage into Hollywood’s Phantom Zone. Pierce Brosnan should have the time of his life for the rest of his career. Once you’ve been James Bond, you’re a permanent star with unimpeachable credibility as a cool handsome guy. That’s a magic power. If you walk into the middle of Hollywood Boulevard and say ā€œI would like a next paycheck playing a silver foxā€, a camera crew leaps out of a manhole to film you. It’s unique stardom security. This gives you a free pass to do fun weird stuff forever. Timothy Dalton is leering creeps now. Daniel Craig is wackadoodle Southerners now. Sean Connery was Spanish, twice. I want that same freedom for my man Pierce. He should be out here sinking his teeth into every bizarre character he pleases, with the same verve he gave one line in Taffin. It’s obvious that’s why he took this almost-a-role. Pierce signed on for Urge with the clear goal of a Timothy Daltonian Rumspringa. Why not get weird? He can always fall back on playing a zaddy the next time his mortgage is due. But it wasn’t the 31st yet, so he did this movie. Pierce plays a character in a pale suit, swilling red wine, offering a demonic bargain. Brosnan delivers it with the wild vibe of a louche, vaping Agent Smith. He toggles between a snarl showcasing his bottom teeth, and a liquid shimmy while cooing the words ā€œeasy breezyā€.

This brings us to my biggest joy, and my favorite problem with this movie. The problem: Pierce Brosnan is too clearly a nice guy. This extraordinarily flawed movie needs Pierce Brosnan to come off as more evil than every other character. They stack the deck against him. Every twentysomething main character is an unlikable rich dingus, on the verge of their deserved comeuppance, while one-seventh of them are Danny Masterson. Meanwhile, Pierce Brosnan says a bunch of lines about humanity being a sickness that must be eradicated, with the vibe of a guy who made the craft services lady’s day two seconds ago. Don’t get me wrong: he delivers these lines as loudly as he can. He’s showing up. But my man Pierce is not my favorite actor for acting reasons. Kind of the opposite. He never quite lets go of the sweet guy I know so well. The guy from Pierce Brosnan’s Instagram account.

Pierce Brosnan has a mere 2.1 million followers, because some of you are not living your best life. His account consists of three post types: Pierce Brosnan’s paintings, Pierce Brosnan complimenting people, and boomer photo collages of how much he loves his wife and sons.

This movie’s filmmakers want us to be terrified of Pierce Brosnan. Pierce Brosnan wants us to be terrified of Pierce Brosnan. Instead, a zaddy teddy bear inflicts righteous vengeance on that criminal from That 70s Show. You could try to miscast 100 movies and never chuck your dart this far from the board. It’s an exquisite miss. I’ll never watch it again. And it brought me less than a fraction of the joy of my Instagram feed. When he’s in the role of himself, Pierce Brosnan is not spooky or demonic or an offensive caricature of God. He’s posting this:

That’s right: earnest, blurry cell phone pics of dinner with Greg Kinnear and three other guys and one business card I briefly worried was the zoomable front of somebody’s debit card. It’s nice. It’s pleasant. And it turns out you don’t need Urge when you’re high on my man Pierce’s life.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Kyle Campbell, who is revealed in the big twist to be the actual Old Testament Tod. Not a typo.

Categories
LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: Zazzle’s William Henry Harrison Gifts 🌭

This is the Zazzle.com store page for President William Henry Harrison Gifts. That exists! Give the gift of William Henry Harrison, today, with Zazzle.

Unlike the image resolution of the products I’m about to show you, let’s be clear. I want to make clear I am not hoodwinking Zazzle Dot Com into looking sillier than it is. I’m not pumping a wacky search term sequence into the Zazzle website. That page is an on-purpose, specific, unique URL for President William Henry Harrison Gifts. Google brought me there. But when you arrive at this alienating store, they gaslight you. They place the words ā€œpresident william henry harrison giftsā€ in the search bar. As if to say this is not a store at all. As if this page is the grim progeny of you being weird. But no: Zazzle did this. Zazzle Dot Com delineated a permanent depot for William Henry Harrison-ania. The results are vile by 2020s commerce standards, 1800s moral standards, and any decade’s definition of sane shopping.

Do you know who William Henry Harrison is? Whatever you said, good answer. You either said ā€œno who’s thatā€, or said ā€œis that the President who died fast?ā€ William Henry Harrison became President in 1841, and served 31 days in office, before dying. He’s American history’s number one Dead White Man, in the sense he’s iconically the ā€œDeadā€ part. His brief term’s briefness is all anyone knows about him. Also, he’s lucky that’s all anyone knows about him. All other facts about William Henry Harrison are nightmares. He spent his brief life murdering Native people and maintaining slavery and being born rich thanks to slavery. He’s a leading, towering figure of every American history horror…but he’s Mr. Bean’d his way into the simpler/wackier legacy of ā€œhe died lol.ā€ So for most people, William Henry Harrison is a howling void, as a topic. He’s the dullest trivia tidbit. He’s a factoid for middle schoolers to bandy about, in between hormones and discharges. No one has interest in this man. So tell me, Zazzle Dot Com, how/why/whatfor do you sell ā€œwhat would william henry harrison do poker chipsā€?

My dear Hotdogger: you are right. These are random. William Henry Harrison’s life had no poker component. He was not some sort of Vegas President. He never bluffed it all on the turn card at the Tropicana. I associate poker players with big indoor sunglasses. William Henry Harrison lacked eyewear in general, let alone the signature specs of a Greg ā€œFossilmanā€ Raymer.

I’m aghast at these poker chips. Every element baffles. For example: they’re sold in boxes of one color. Think that through. No one in the history of poker has used poker chips in just one color. That forces you to bet ā€œone moneyā€ per chip. You regress to a toddler’s understanding of currency. You’re better off just using money from your wallet. Money has denominations. Zazzle Harrison Chips are useless unless you buy in color-diversified bulk. You need so many of these. Also, the text alignment of that hanging ā€œdo?ā€ makes my eyes feel like they jumped off a cliff. Also, there’s a discount if you use checkout code ā€œ2024ZMOMENTSā€. I’m repulsed by the implied concept of ā€œcelebrating a ZMOMENTā€. That sounds like a Terminator proffering a children’s birthday party hat with its non-gun hand. These chips are so hideous, I’m just now getting around to complaining about its use of the phrase ā€œwhat would [Person] do?ā€ That phrase belongs to Jesus. Everyone knows Jesus coined that, or something. That belongs to Him. Only Zazzle is deranged enough to sell William Henry Harrison poker chips that jack The Risen Christ’s steez.

Why are we here, looking at these products? Why, besides capitalism? Curiosity got the better of me. I wanted to know more about the ha-ha wacky President who died fast. I googled William Henry Harrison, looking for books and scholarship about William Henry Harrison. However, when you google anything, you often get served SHOPPING ADS at the top of the page. So when I googled a genocide enthusiast, I found an interesting book about him…but not before scrolling past a row of products like this.

That first shop listing led me to a smorgasbuhwhatnow of thirty-eight William Henry Harrison Zazzle Dot Com ZMOMENTS. 38 different z’mentoes, presented as gifts. Gifts for that special someone you wish to confuse and concern. Or perhaps implicate in wasteful tree murder.

You’re fine! Your monitor or phone is fine, and not glitching. That blurred visage is Zazzle’s fault. That’s the product image for William Henry Harrison Portrait Wood Wall Art. Finally, a portrait of ā€œ9th USA Presidentā€ with only three-ish warped horrors in the image transfer. At last, the name ā€œWilliam Henry Harrisonā€ as it was meant to be seen, in Almost The Nazi Font. With this portrait you’ll enjoy Willie Hanky Harry year-round! Gaze at his trademark ā€œAbyss Orbā€ Necktie! If that’s what that is! What is on his neck! Oh well! Don’t forget to use code ā€œMATRIXROBOTKISSESYOUā€ for 15% off this eight inch by eight inch wooden slab.

Have I described Zazzle.com yet? Zazzle is a marketplace website for anything anyone thinks of. They’ll print anything, on demand, on anything. You (yes, you) can submit up to 100,000 product ideas before Zazzle Dot Staff rolls out of bed and considers doin’ a li’l quality control. Until then, upload away. Upload for profit. For you! According to “SideHusl Dot Com”, ginning up a Zazzle store is a fantastic side husl. Your idea, printed on anything! Even if they’ll never sell that idea in a bajillion years! They don’t care and they’re not checking and that’s how William Henry Harrison likes it. If William Henry Harrison were alive today, he’d only have one objection to this store: the shirt models’ ethnicities.

That’s a t-shirt celebrating ā€œTippecanoe And Tyler Tooā€, the presidential campaign slogan of William Henry Harrison and his running mate John Tyler and their eventual one question on the A.P. U.S. History test. Why was ā€œTippecanoeā€ a lot of the slogan? ā€œTippecanoeā€ was William Henry Harrison’s nickname. He won that moniker by winning The Battle Of Tippecanoe. He ā€œwon the battleā€ in the sense that he attacked a small group of Native people with his larger army, did not run that attack very effectively, and had his troops desecrate Native graves after the Native folks retreated. Celebrate that event I just described with a painting of the event, printed on a Zazzle t-shirt.

As you can see, the shirt celebrates the battle between Zazzle’s garment printer and any average-shaped man’s pectorals. Your chest meat will Salvador Dali this massacre. Back to the slogan: Harrison ran for President on a slogan referencing these actions, because the white men of 1840 were rapacious land-grabbing maniacs. They liked that about him. They also liked the lack of other William Henry Harrison information. People in 1840 barely knew more about William Henry Harrison than you do. He ran one of the first American campaigns built on distractions, stunts, and vibes. Harrison ran on such a bogus non-platform of non-ideas, I found a scholarly write-up of it invoking the word “bogus”. His campaign makes scholars sound like Bill and Ted.

Harrison’s team even faked Harrison’s backstory. They claimed Harrison lived in a log cabin. Real Harrison came from a Virginia slaveowner aristocrat family. Harrison’s father was full-ass The Governor Of Virginia. And then Harrison’s chosen running mate, John ā€œTylerā€ Tyler, was another born-rich Virginia slaver. So ā€œTippecanoe And Tyler Tooā€ describes a two-layer nesting doll of the same bastard. It’s like if a young Robert E. Lee ran for President, with Robert F. Lee as his running mate and Roberts G. And H. Lee as their Mafia-style underbosses while Robert Y. Lee brings them cocktails and Robert Z. Lee is on his knees being their couch. ā€œTippecanoe And Tyler Tooā€ was a whimsical pitch for a crimes against humanity-doin’ duo. Zazzle offers a t-shirt celebrating that, modeled by an unsuspecting Black woman.

These models took a couple pictures in blank t-shirts one time. She has no idea what Zazzle would auto-photoshop in later! Do we…tell her? Maybe she can learn this, fight back, bring Zazzle down in a cyberpunk heroine type way? Shimmy into a data center and unplug servers? Because they also did this to her:

Let’s get a better look at the shirt and also show you the product description. Computer, enhance.

This is such a mousetrap for nerds. A pedant honeypot. Also, it might be inaccurate? I searched online resources a lot. None of them say this. I have no idea where ThenWearOnZazzlePro got this. Please share if you’ve got any sources. This seller sure doesn’t! If this is a joke: No, it’s not. If this is a fact, it’s the worst fact you could put on your body. If you wear this, you’re dressing in an arcane sub-fact, about a boring Prime Fact, concerning two monstrous slaverymen. Only one kind of person wants this. It’s for someone traipsing around town, chest first, quivering with anticipation of a fellow nerd asking why ā€œTippecanoe and Tyler Tooā€ is misprinted. That’s the one use case of this t-shirt: to inflict annoyance (and maybe misinformation!) on the rare other human being who’s even a little bit like you. Buying this shirt is like taking a correspondence course in Loneliness But Profounder. The only good thing about this shirt is you can wear it under a different, less infuriating shirt. Every shirt is an undershirt if you rank it low enough. Also, you mostly don’t have to look at your own shirt. It won’t look back at you. What will look at you? This kitchen magnet bearing a William Henry Harrison portrait so pallid and smeary, it makes me feel like he died in an asylum fire.

Moving on to cleaner, fresher art, Zazzle offers this bumper sticker, at a price point that suggests it’ll flop off in your next light rainfall.

No one wants this. Not just because it’s a bad product. Absolutely everyone disagrees with this. You see, we’ve had at least several U.S. Presidents. One (Lincoln) was good. The others (Roosevelt, Obama, I want to say ā€œJohnsmanā€?) had funny mustaches or cool dogs. So if you think the objectively worse one, who died right away, is the best one, you are…a Presidential assassin? And/or anarchist? ā€œThe only good President is a dead Presidentā€ is maybe too punk of an attitude. And you celebrate that punk-or-assassin attitude by celebrating no Presidents. A 31 day administration is 31 too many, if you’re the murderer I described.

This postcard is eerie as hell. It looks ordinary, but it’s a picture of William Henry Harrison’s tomb. Zazzle suggests you buy a postcard from that location, without visiting that location. William Henry Harrison rots in North Bend, Ohio, which is also the birthplace of President Benjamin Harrison. Benjamin Harrison was William Henry Harrison’s grandson. They’re the only Presidential grandfather/grandson duo. So, uh, you could write that on the back of the card? That’s all you can do with [checks Zazzle] Zazzle’s second-worst William Henry Harrison postcard.

This gift is the worst one, ish. It’s called William Henry Harrison Baseball Card. But it is objectively a postcard:

That’s a lazy stock image. But by Zazzle Dot Com standards, it achieves the tremendous success of not slapping Harrison’s image on an unsuspecting descendant of a Harrison victim. They didn’t photoshop it onto Tecumseh’s grandkid or whoever. So, mini-win. Oh no. Zazzle probably calls a mini-win a ZINIWIN or some garbage. Anyway: whoever made this doesn’t seem to have made other cards of the other Presidents. They made just one Presidential ā€œbaseball cardā€, for William Henry Harrison. And they’re even lazier about copying sports tropes. Look at the few letters on this card:

Why is there a random ā€œWā€ in there? Is it a tribute to George W. Bush, and his 96 consecutive Harrison Terms (1 month) in office? Nope. It’s a ā€œWā€ for the Whig Party. But it’s done in a faulty fashion. Baseball cards often feature a small initialism, representing the player’s position. ā€œPā€ for pitcher, ā€œCā€ for catcher, ā€œ1Bā€ for the slow meathead. This card makes a vague gesture at that, but it does that letter for the political party. Not the position (President). The party, aka his team. ā€œWhigsā€ should be written in a fun team logo, not a stamped positional afterthought. They also skip the good part of a baseball card, which is the back of the baseball card. Baseball card backs are pretty much the origin of sports statistics. William Henry Harrison is lucky this one doesn’t total his enslavements and murders. He’s lucky about that in general. He’s legitimately lucky he died. His all-time record for death immediacy is all anybody knows about him. It’s the root of the one William Henry Harrison joke online, which one Zazzle product manages to not garble:

Hardy-har-har-he-died-fast. He also deserved to die fast and everyone who bought this has no idea. Don’t buy these gifts for anyone. Remember to be better, and do better. Like an inspirational figure would do. ā€œWhat would an inspirational figure do?ā€ And to remind yourself of that timeless message…take it away, Poxco!

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Gellaho. When times get difficult, remember: WWGD (Whoa, Wicked Gellaho Dunk!).

Categories
LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: Interviews with the Crystal Skull 🌭

Greetings, Hotdogger. It’s time you met the chattiest crystal skulls in all South Florida.

That’s right: I read Interviews with the Crystal Skulls: Ancient Secrets of the Multiverse, Unlocking the Healing Codes Within Us and the Hierarchy of Heaven. Yes, the title has a period on the end. No, I don’t think it needed a longer title than the first clause. Nobody sees a book promising Crystal Skull Stuff and wonders if we’ll get weird. You don’t ask a crystal skull how to scrub tile grout or make better salads. You ask a crystal skull about your wackiest whim, and they throw wackier wacky back at you.

This book crushingly, thrillingly disappointed me. I read this in hopes of a specific style of fun. Half of Amazon Dot Com is peddling crystal skull stuff. Only this ebook is peddling crystal skull interviews. This book is, theoretically, a talk show. I know it’s a pretend talk show. But it’s a pretend talk show where the guests are crystal skulls and the hosts are the loopiest Floridians with access to Starbucks WiFi. That should be a blast. Here is a brief hint of why it underdelivers:

This book interviews a set of progressively more powerful crystal skulls about secrets of the universe. Unfortunately, these skulls are same-y to talk to. They are same-y to talk to because the book’s authors are talking to themselves. It turns out a conversation between a tedious person, and themself, is tedious squared. They also fail to offer anything new to the bullshit community. The authors mash together mystical stuff from three continents they consider mysterious: Atlantis, Lemuria, and Asia. They also work in a lot of Christian lore, plus Christian-ish filler about light and energy and whatnot. They write all this in a personal fantasy tone, depicting skulls that are super impressed with the authors’ knowledge of the authors’ own canon.

Question: what ties together a Catholic saint, a South Asian cosmology concept, plus reincarnation? Answer: stop badgering the authors for answers.

Yeah! Can’t you see these authors are busy? Busy de-funning the premise of ā€œask crystal skulls questionsā€? This is one of the most pedantic, wearying books I’ve ever read. Me saying that should blow your mind. I read multiple books about seemingly boring topics, every week, for a living. This one crystal skulls book wore me out more than three entire books about baking soda. It’s a grind. Somehow these authors come off as selfish jerks about how much they know about crystal skulls blessing the world with healing revelations. They even slam-dunk their bonafides with a ā€œBibliographyā€ section. This book has dozens of footnotes. They might’ve been my favorite part. These authors make claims about fluorite crystals altering the dharma of the Abrahamic cryptid-angel Metatron, and tag that claim with a footnote. It’s phenomenal. Every time I saw one of those tiny numbers, it felt like approaching a new door on an advent calendar. I knew I could click for a little treat, in the form of a funny URL. Unfortunately, this gunked my Internet history. Now my browser thinks I want to visit ā€œenergymuse.comā€, or revisit a HuffPost article about the fourth Indiana Jones movie. Yes, the fourth Indiana Jones movie. The crystal skulls one. This book footnotes one write-up of that movie, a couple times. Also, do not bring up Indiana Jones 4 around these crystal skull chatters. They think that movie is normie popcorn-y misinformation, about crystal skulls.

After pooping all over that movie, they cite the blog about it, to prove one of their Floridian skulls is 36,000 years old. Sloppy? Yes. More interesting than everything else in this book? Yes. The authors write both sides of their chats, with crystal skulls, as if it’s the minutes of a county board meeting. It could be so wild! This is a book revealing all world pyramids interconnect through a subterranean light grid of energies. This is a book claiming Buddha is also Mohammed, and is friends with a crystal skull named Moe. Those wild swings should be fun. Instead, we get a blow by blow of this feeling like a laggy Microsoft Teams check-in.

The authors are two Fort Lauderdale residents who are possibly hooking up. One author is Ordained Interfaith Minister Reverend Marguerite Pizzati. Her credentials include a friend giving her a bunch of crystal skulls in 2015, and her parents almost naming her ā€œMargherita Pizzaā€. The other author is A.J. Ferrara, whose bio is an extensive list of film production companies he presidents, and film scripts he penned that are in active pre-pre-pre-production with companies he presidents. Marguerite and A.J. spent a lot of time together, with crystal skulls. Their authorial collaboration is seamless, in the sense that it’s never clear who is speaking or typing. The only distinction is that Marguerite gets described as the ā€œguardianā€ of the skulls. A.J. gets described as visiting them a lot. The skulls get described as the motivating force for Marguerite writing anything at all.

What I wouldn’t give to know the details of these authors’ business relationship and [eyebrows waggling] personal relationship. Because sure, this crystal skull book could’ve been a pretext for them gathering. Gathering, to boink. But I sure hope it’s more, or different, because there might be a much weirder power dynamic here. It seems like A.J. does the writing, and Marguerite does the crystal skull possessing. Does that mean A.J. did all the labor of writing the entire book, in exchange for Marguerite providing access to crystal skulls? Is A.J. paying his dues? Is he working overtime for an entry-level foot-in-the-door role in the crystal skull industry? Is he working in the crystal skulls’ crystal mailroom? I hear that’s how Hollywood works. ā€œHollywoodā€ is also a town in Florida. No joke: Marguerite’s bio says she spent more than a decade running Hollywood Florida’s ā€œThe Center for Human Development Spiritual Healing Center & Meditation Schoolā€. Is this relationship the Florida swampcoast version of a mogul and assistant? Is A.J. brownnosing bigwigs, in a scenario where the ā€œbigwigsā€ are hairless skull-rocks? I think it is. I think I read a book about a dozen eternally-communing crystal skulls, and found out its weirdest relationship is between the two middle-aged Treasure Coasters banging this out.

Speaking of Hollywood, I’m forced to question A.J.’s bonafides as a filmmaker. Why? This book has pictures. Phone pictures. They’re almost good enough for the crystal skulls’ use as passport photos:

There’s also a couple of skulls group photos:

Oh, and there’s one photo set documenting an angelic visitation. It comes out of nowhere. ā€œBy the way, we took pictures of angelsā€ is one notecard on the wall-pinned outline of this book, if that outline’s existence weren’t as fictional as every concept in it.

These angel pics are the best example of another authorial failing. Margie and A-Jod invoke all sorts of Christian angels and saints. Shortly after I said ā€œJesus Mary and Josephā€ out loud in frustration with this book, the book invoked Jesus, then Mary, then a crystal skull spirit who once incarnated as Joseph. For the second time in a row, I’ve read a book by American cultists, promising NEW REVELATIONS that NOBODY ELSE IS TALKING ABOUT…only to find out the cultists are more Christian than our general population.

Despite that Bible element, the book pulls quite an un-Christian move. This book condescends to the reader. Here’s how it feels: do you remember the long-ago teevee sex comedy Game Of Thrones? That show did a running gag where a hot barbarian told Jon Snow ā€œyou know nothing, Jon Snow.ā€ This book is like that, toward you, every time the authors ask the skulls something about a far less interesting fantasy world.

ā€œWow: this idiot barely even knows five star systems we emanated from.ā€

ā€œIt’s like you’ve barely even identified one flying object.ā€ This entire rug of skulls is judging you:

As much as these negging skulls wasted my time, I’m grateful to them for delivering one fantastic punchline. They close big. Here is the joke math: the book promises an escalating journey through more and more powerful skulls. In practice this is a pyramid scheme, because every skull tells you there is so much more to be revealed, and we can’t get to it now, just wait for the next skull to really blow your mind. Then there’s further chapters of circling back to previous skulls, because anticipation is the main component of edging. It’s a big waste of time. A waste of time, with one recurring theme. Every chapter promises a final boss skull called Max. Max has the full revelations you seek. Max is why we are all here. Hilariously, Max does not belong to this book’s authors and is on loan from another gal.

Whoops! Also, thank you? Very honest of the authors to admit they’re not the mightiest figures in Crystal Skull Schlock. I sincerely think they might’ve turned honest here because the spark went out of their hookups. With no sequel coming, might as well wrap it up with another gal’s super-skull and chase new love in Saint Pete (the Florida city, not a Christian saint summoned via skull voodoo).

Max is the endgame of this whole book. We’ve met a progression of skulls, all promising Max knows the true secrets of this universe. We listened to skulls describe an imminent alien invasion of Earth, and a 3000-year king of Atlantis who is also the Egyptian god Thoth, and all sorts of other wildness… always capped off with ā€œand if you think that’s amazing, wait till we get to Max’s revelations.ā€ Then, Max talks to us, in the book’s shortest chapter. He tells us the astonishing truth that we need to be nice people and keep a positive attitude. Then, somebody knocks on the door of the room. Upon hearing a knock, Max’s spirit bails. We don’t get him back. The central promise of this entire tedious book resolves with the universe’s most powerful crystal skull spirit getting spooked by one door knock. The story gets terminated by what’s probably a FedEx delivery.

This might strike you as shabby, random world-building. Especially because the authors’ skull connections have a less than impressive origin story.

Then the book ends with the shallowest science-y narrative exclamation point I’ve ever read.

A lot to unpack here. ā€œCoast to Coast AMā€ is nonsense. Its best feature is having the good sense to broadcast its woo-woo at The Kooking Hour. String theory is real physics stuff that’s complicated, but easy to riff on if you’re already in Crystal Skull Mode. Why does any of this come up? The unclear author of this epilogue says an out-of-context radio interview, heard at bleary dawn, indicated the Large Hadron Collider hasn’t discovered a ā€œgod particleā€ – and therefore, Max is a good book ending.

That’s how this book ends! The mysterious unison voice of two Floridian Boomers tells us they did a D+ job of listening to A.M. radio, and thanks to its mention of particle physics, a crystal skull named Max showed us how to save the universe. Don’t get me wrong: ā€œa weird nut ruminating about weird lightā€ can be a fantastic book ending. It’s just not quite the crystal skull revelations I was promised. Is that a letdown? Perhaps. But when it comes to chasing the secrets of the universe, it’s important that we have no fear. I heard that idea from somebody recently. I forget who. Possibly a 36,000 year old crystal skull. Oh no. Oh well. Merry Skullsmas to us all.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Ted H, whose body is also part crystal. Guess which part. Guess with your hands.

Categories
LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: A-Rod’s Gum Disease Campaign 🌭

The other day, I became less aware of gum disease. How? I listened to Alex Rodriguez.

Gah! Him again. Many American sports fans react that way when Alex Rodriguez crosses their screen. ā€œA-Rodā€ (his words not mine) is a retired athlete, a grindset hokum peddler, and a relentless font of uncanny. Somehow he is always weird. Somehow he turns the coolest things on Earth into icky headaches. For example, he’s one of the greatest baseball players ever…to ruin that with steroid stuff, twice over, plus give testimony against other guys. He achieved his dream of winning the heart of megastar Jennifer Lopez… also no he did not, commence tragic rebound. He made the near-impossible leap from sports player to sports owner, by purchasing… the worst pro basketball team, mathematically. He’s also written a children’s book that fractured my sanity, and began writing an adult’s book in the weirdest way postable:

What a cool post on Alex Rodriguez’s Instagram story! It’s great to see my least favorite ballplayer write nothing, on corny letterhead, in a framing that achieves ā€œoptical illusion of pantslessness.ā€

What is my fellow Alex up to now? Besides simulating flashing his own house? He’s leading a disease awareness campaign. Dot dot dot. Dot dot dot. In the most Alex Rodriguez way possible. You see, Alex Rodriguez is now an advocate for gum disease awareness. How does that work in practice? Alex Rodriguez tells people he has early-stage gum disease. He does that on TV:

And in magazines:

And in…paid advertising for a pharmaceutical company??

Alex Rodriguez began telling people about his gum disease when he started receiving money to be a spokesman for gum disease medication. Which is…fine, ish. Athletes sponsor all kinds of stuff. However, big problem: most sports fans assume ā€œfamous athlete is sickā€ means ā€œfamous athlete is sharing about that sickness as an act of charity.ā€ Not to link-spam you, but there’s a robust tradition of American athletes choosing to become symbols of fighting a disease: Lou Gehrig, Walter Payton, “Truth Era” Lance Armstrong. Alex Rodriguez never quite claims to be part of this tradition. He does not steal that valor…in a technical legal sense. Instead, he tells the truth about having gum disease, while maintaining varying levels of clarity about this being part of an advertisement. It’s less charity, more charitish.

Good news: though that basic situation is a bummer, I’ve filled this column with its endless silver linings. Funny silver linings! Also: this creepy ad campaign is still a net good, because gum disease is for real, and most people don’t know that, and I didn’t know that till I read that link. So thank you, real medical stuff I googled. No thank you, Alex Rodriguez. A-Rod is so bad at explaining gum disease, he decreases a viewer’s understanding of it. It’s like a sketch comedy premise of ā€œUnaware Awareness Guy.ā€ Check out A-Rod’s attempt to answer one question about what gum disease is, in a national television spot dedicated to that:

Good news: I don’t think A-Rod is trying to exploit anything or anybody in those statements. He references the black and brown community because that is a true fact. Also because he is brown. And he invokes Tony Gwynn because they were friends. But also, my dude, I can read the screen. You are on television to increase gum disease awareness. Say facts about gum disease. Instead, we get borderline misinformed. By distrusting this segment, and googling, I’ve learned Tony Gwynn died of salivary gland cancer, a sickness that experts and Gwynn himself attributed to Not Gum Disease. He is not the topic here. We’re off the rails, disease awareness-wise. Next silver lining: so much else went off the rails. This interview goes Metaphorical Train Disaster in a whole ‘nother direction, and it does that before they can even wrap up the Gwynn stuff:

Ho ho ho! Alex might not have prepared any scientific information, but he sure prepped some pleasant jollity! You know my guy’s packin’ a Boy Scout one-liner. ā€œPackin’ A Boy Scout One-Linerā€ is also a plausible erection nickname for A-Rod. Especially given that ā€œA-Rodā€ is taken. Anyway: do you remember one hundred hyperlinks ago, when I linked about A-Rod getting caught using steroids, twice? America’s gotten over that somewhat, as a baseball thing. But this man is such a space alien, he thinks he can sling twee li’l japes about having overly perfect health beliefs, when he is fully the all-time record holder for steroid suspension length. The TV journalists hearing this bravely push back, in the sense that they pivot to asking A-Rod what he thinks of recent baseball games’ quality. Spoiler: he thinks they are good. Extra spoiler: most of the rest of the segment doesn’t touch on gums, unless you count the grinning.

Two more silver linings await you. The next one is a print interview. In the print interview, Alex Rodriguez tries to say the exact TV interview stuff you just heard, but say it again, into a People Magazine tape recorder. Should that go smoothly? Sure. Does that go smoothly? Well it starts kind of like the TV interview, with Rodriguez affirming he did not use tobacco. He also throws in a little more detail on why he did not use it.

Great! Thanks Alex. That normal story wraps up this intervi–

Um…sure, thanks Alex. Great talking to–

Again, the stated goal here is disease awareness. Also, the secondary moral goal and primary financial goal is medication sales. But the moment your brain tries to latch onto any of that, Alex Rodriguez unspools an out-of-nowhere yarn about 25 epic years of arcane gum numerology. Questions abound. How did he find the time to eat and chew all that? How did he find the mouth space? Should I google the answer to the math problem ā€œ25 years times 162 games times 36 sticks of Fruit Stripeā€? What does a relentless mix of pink rubber and sunflower seeds taste like? Was A-Rod exploring whether it’s possible to contract gum disease simply by chewing way way too often? Was he coining a new and psychiatric definition for the words ā€œGum Diseaseā€?

Our final, vastest silver lining is A-Rod’s three and a half minute medication commercial. This ad is his clearest spokes-for-pay gig. It’s pretty clear he’s getting money. So I respect that. It also continues the trend of A-Rod openly barely understanding this disease.

Cool! That’s honest. He let his dentist lead the learning process. A dentist should lead that. However: I counted. Within 55 seconds, A-Rod racks up three more ā€œmy dentist told meā€s:

That repetition turns funny. You start wanting to just hear from the dentist. Why is this ad a game of literal Telephone? I keep thinking Alex’s dentist will walk in, turn him 90 degrees, and tap him forward like a windup toy, so that an expert can talk to the camera while Alex Rodriguez bonks into a wall.

The rest of the ad turns weirder. If there’s one thing American medication commercials do, it’s show the ill person having tons of friends. That’s always what’s shown during the tiny legal text and the voiceover about side effects. This commercial missed that memo. Other than that one shot of Alex Rodriguez with a dentist, he spends this ad alone. Totally alone, in a huge glassy house. Everything from his tragic diagnosis…

…to the entire rest of his life…

…is the opposite of every other medication commercial. Total isolation. Gum disease quarantine. It’s so backward, it feels like how a space alien would write a medication commercial, in a good way. No distracting communal joy. Just pure uncut Guy Grappling With Illness. It even ends on more than a minute of warning voiceover. Which is too much. That’s longer than most entire commercials. This commercial spends 70 seconds unspooling a harrowing list of potential side effects. It includes a request that you, the patient, help them document new side effects, because that’s how new this drug is (!). That dire warning plays over one unbroken stalker shot of Alex Rodriguez brushing.

This 3.5 minute ad deserves a full episode of a bad movie podcast. It’s profoundly antithetical to selling its own product. And our fella Alex Rodriguez is this art film’s MVP (ā€œMost Very-Freaky Personā€). I never thought I’d write a column about him again. Perhaps this is the last one. But I see how he could recur yet again. This website is named 1900HOTDOG. And someday, when I seek another literal hot dog premise, I’ll remember no athlete’s ever simulated more dangled wiener.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Alpha Scientist Javo, who one time wrote Article.

Categories
LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: 9 Cats, 9 Lives 🌭

I’m furious at this book, because its cover is its first and last mention of cats.

It should discuss cats! Look at the title! The title is 9 Cats 9 Lives: Influential People & Their Past Lives: Karma, Reincarnation & You. Wow. A lot going on there. That word salad has some zesty dressing. But it is a lie. I want cat stuff. I love my cats! And I thought this book would be about cat reincarnation. Nope: this book is a human reincarnation book, dominated by boilerplate Wikipedia history, and ghost-co-written by a dead cult leader’s acolytes. All of that frustrates me on its own. Yet across 200+ pages, I got most angry about the total lack of cats. Cats brought me here. Cats purr beside me as I type this. But author Elizabeth Clare Prophet is such a megalomaniac, she forgot cats are a more interesting topic than herself.

I discovered this book while pursuing a noble goal (cat toys) on a horrible website (Amazon dot com). The listing did not meet my wonderful beautiful pets’ needs. But it proceeded to hook me with its immediate powerful question:

That non-haiku is a better title than the book title. And great news: they follow through on that question. It turned out this book lacks cat stuff because it is chock full of Atlantis stuff. You might’ve noticed the cover features famous dead 1900s Americans and Britons:

According to the book, most pictures of Anglo-Americans are pictures of Atlanteans.

I quoted that passage to a friend the other day. I laughed about it. They showed concern. They suggested that by reading this book, I’ve accidentally and hotdoggily versed myself in the entire belief system of a cult. Turns out they’re right. Whoops! I should’ve searched Amazon for something better-phrased than ā€œcat toys for my darling angels who I worship with a fervence bordering on cultish cult Atlantis Reincarnation henryfordā€. Anyway, don’t worry. I entered and exited this book a-ok. I am not joining its ā€œSummit Lighthouseā€ cult. Partly because both the leaders are dead. Two out of two dead leaders makes me feel like the party’s over. If I’m culting up, I want to touch the O.G. manipulator’s garment hem. I can’t fanboy an urn.

This book’s credited author is Elizabeth Clare Prophet. She gained that try-hard last name when she and cult leader Mark L. Prophet left their spouses to marry each other. A few years later, Mark died. Then she died. Then ā€œThe Summit Lighthouse, Inc.ā€ published this book. The legal, official copyright page lists Elizabeth as the author of this book, published in 2021, even though she died in 2009. Huh? What? Don’t worry: a note at the very end clarifies this miracle.

Stunningly, that is not the only Good Research Practice carried out by this cult’s runnin’-on-fumes membership. The Summit Lighthouse Inc. peppers the book with a handy footnote every time its reincarnation claim is ā€œas of 1992.ā€

Those footnotes thrilled me. They achieved total fidelity to the truth, in a situation where ā€œThe Truthā€ is a cult leader’s second wife spouting Atlantis Stuff during a Chicago Bulls three-peat. That devotion to Doing The Work brings the whole book together. Also, this is a book in desperate need of bringing together. It is all over the map. Maybe its wacky smorgasbord of beliefs is less surprising if you’re already in the cult? I hadn’t heard of ā€œThe Summit Lighthouseā€, possibly because its name sounds more like a seafood joint in Colorado. Now that I’m versed in its [AS OF 1992] cosmology, I can tell you they practice at least six belief systems. The book dabbles in all of the following:

1. Reincarnation stuff

2. Karmic balance stuff

3. A loosey-goosey version of Christianity centered on ā€œThe Universal Christā€

4. Theosophy, via an alleged guru called Morya

5. ā€œbecause Atlantisā€ stuff

6. The regional myth that ā€œcats have nine livesā€

6a. An implied corollary to that mythical belief, which is that many famous Americans of the early 1900s happened to be living their ninth life specifically. No reason is given why their ninth life happened to sync with ā€œThe American Centuryā€.

6b. A variation on the ā€œnine livesā€ myth, where some famous Americans proceeded to live a tenth life. In one chapter, an American lived fourteen significant lives and countless other minor ones. Nobody addresses whether these tenth-plus lives debunk the ā€œnine livesā€ belief about cats.

I don’t know about you, but that list makes my head swim. Total swimmy-headedness, as if I ate a discount thin-air shrimp platter. It’s D-minus cult lore at best. I don’t know how The Prophets attracted a following of each other, much less a loyal cadre of Prophetettes. They’ve flooded Amazon with Elizabeth Clare Prophet’s speeches-turned-into-books. In this speech, Mrs. Prophet goes all in on the number nine. She attempts to document nine incredible lives, and their nine-plus reincarnations across the centuries. Basically all of the lives start in Atlantis. Did you know: Atlantis is a concept from history! Or at least from historical people! The book documents these roots in wordy non-detail. We receive insights like ā€œMuch of the speculation about Atlantis comes from Plato.ā€ By cult standards, this is somebody trying hard. By reading standards, this is a photocopy of a photocopy of Wikipedia. It’s a snooze from jump. Then, Mrs. Prophet puts Henry Ford on blast for being an ancient mean guy and a modern moron.

The thrills build from there. Also, the humongous boredom. Every time a real person crops up in this book, the Prophetettes pad it out with page after page of accurate facts about their American life. Meanwhile, the non-American lives come in short bursts of vague fables. Mrs. Prophet uses these hastily-scribbled extra lives to build a throughline for each soul, where their mistakes thirty thousand years ago on Atlantis cause them to feel karmic pain. This karmic pain makes them sad, during the Jazz Age or whatever. You get it. It’s what you think. Everything is Atlantis, every American is Atlantis-driven, and there you have it. It’s Mrs. Prophet’s only idea. It’s even the context for a few filler photos. A few Americans who don’t get their own chapter get namechecked as important muckety-mucks of the Continent Lost In Seafloor Muck.

Each of the nine souls featured here gets its own chapter. Mrs. Prophet formats a few of them as Mystery Chapters, where we read along in suspense, wondering which Important American’s soul slummed it as a Greek Sailor or Russian Peasant before they got reborn and drank Coca-Cola. She does this ā€œMystery!!!ā€ gambit as soon as the second chapter, because you want to make your audience solve riddles before they have enough familiarity with your whole deal. In Chapter Two, we read about a soul with anger management issues, who made several stops in Atlantis before becoming a Sicilian monk and a French merchant. Did you already solve the riddle yet???

Huge red flag there. Clear racism signal. Anybody using the full given name ā€œAlphonseā€ is about to Um Actually you, about the underrated cultural significance of Cristoforo Columbus Day. On its own, ā€œAlphonseā€ was fine. But the book reveals some curious blind spots when it comes to Mrs. Prophet’s abilities. For some past lives, she fills entire pages with that soul’s exact locations, organizations, loved ones, experiences, and Euro-American adventures. Yet in other past lives, her powers grow…Cliffs Notes-y, let’s say.

Oh shoot: I forgot to list ā€œyada yada-ing non-white countriesā€ in the Summit Lighthouse Trove O’ Theology. Whoops! I hope I don’t get a karmic payback for that in my next life, when I’m reincarnated as either a white American or an NPC. This book is so white, there’s a whole chapter about the astonishing reveal that Winston Churchill’s soul was previously the 1st Duke of Marlborough. That duke’s name was John Churchill. Winston and John were real-life relatives. The whole chapter is almost Ancestry dot com. Yet Mrs. Prophet knows more about this factoid than she knows about the entire life this soul lived between its Churchillizations. In between glorying in the minutiae of Winston Churchill’s nonfiction publishing career, she handwaves his soul’s eighth life as ā€œunnamed Asian king.ā€

On the plus side, this book gets around to wild claims about souls achieving multi-fame. This is the author’s basic professional duty as a peddler of reincarnation hokum, and Mrs. Prophet sort of comes through. She says writer AnaĆÆs Nin was artist Marie Bashkirtseff in a past life. She says Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s first life was on Atlantis, as the son of Joseph Stalin’s first life. She also says FDR spent a life as an Egyptian slave under the whips of both Stalin’s soul and Khrushchev’s soul. Awkward! And great! The book needed more of this. Elizabeth’s one job is to string dead celebri-figures together in pleasing patterns, like a Sid Meier version of an Oscars Night ā€œIn Memoriamā€. It’s what we’re all here for! Other than cats! Again, I’m mad she lied about the cats. And Mrs. Prophet dishonors the famous cat-life myth by handing a lot of these folks a tenth life. The first bonus life goes to Al Capone, and her approach to it almost made me applaud.

BREAKING NEWS: Alphonse Capone is a poor child in Bangladesh City. SUBHEADLINE: that fact demonstrates the grace and mercy of the one true Christian God. NEXT CHAPTER: AnaĆÆs Nin is in Astral Jail for Sexy Selfishness Crimes.

As the book goes on, Mrs. Prophet throws more and more surprises at us, with that exact lack of warning. One minute you’re learning Winston Churchill reincarnated in the early 1990s. The next minute, you’re learning Margaret Thatcher’s soul originated on Knock-Off Pacific Atlantis.

Yeah! She throws in a whole ā€˜nother Lost Continent like it’s a ding dang ā€œa wild [Pokemon] appears!ā€ Terrific stuff. Life is short and I want its nonsense hot and fast. Speaking of which, this book’s best reveals come on Lives #7-#9. After six tall tales about Prime Ministers being from Lemur Land or wherever, Mrs. Prophet’s secret ghostwriter tackles the soul of Charles Lindbergh. It turns out Charles Lindbergh was also Abraham Lincoln, and also the Egyptian pharaoh Merneptah. However, our ghostwriter has tragic news about this life:

That’s amazing. That’s amazing! I thought this book was a lazy copy/paste/pad-out of a dead cult leader’s lecture. It’s more! It’s a document of somebody telling a full-on cult leader to cut their sermon short, and telling them that so persuasively, the cult leader complied. Somebody in that 1992 hotel conference room told this cult leader to [gesturing from the back] WRAP IT UP PLEASE… and that worked! How did that work? Elizabeth Clare Prophet is a cult leader. As I understand it, cult leaders do not comply with anything short of a federal raid. Who is this event space’s magic employee? How did they silvertongue Mrs. Prophet into skipping the announcement that Charles Lindbergh is Abraham Lincoln is The Pharaoh?

This situation causes thrilling ripples throughout the rest of the book. In stand-up comedy parlance, Mrs. Prophet tried and failed to run the light. She’d planned nine lives, but she had to cut two of them for time. Then she told somebody Charles Lindbergh and Babe Ruth were next on her list. But she did not tell the Prophetettes any further information about their souls. That forced her modern adherents to finish this book by indexing her other past mentions of Lindbergh and Ruth. Luckily for Lindy, she’d freestyled a couple other lives for him in her other jam sessions. Luckily for us, Mr. and Mrs. Prophet never mentioned Babe Ruth in any other situation. If she prepped anything about him, it’s gone. Can you guess how this book’s authors handled that gap? Do they step up and invent some Babe Ruth stuff themselves? Do they simply not include Babe Ruth in the book? Or do they do the third and by far funniest option?

That’s right: they wrote a middle school ā€œlearn to read!ā€ book of basic facts about a dead baseball player. Just when I thought I was done covering baseball’s alienating inhuman madness, I bonked into a dozen pages of snorifying real facts – and somehow no sex facts – compiled by an anonymous flunky in a declining cult. My dear Hotdogger, this chapter was worse than boring. It was a dark night for my soul. I wondered if the book would ever get interesting again. I wondered if the ninth and final chapter could redeem this reading experience. When she skipped Lindbergh/Lincoln/Pharaoh and Babe Ruth, whose life did Elizabeth Clare Prophet make time to cover in full? What final astounding American did Elizabeth Clare Prophet deem to be her perfect lecture closer? I wonder who, to Elizabeth Clare Prophet, was the most important soul to Elizabeth Clare Prophet? Not to be an Elizabeth Clare Prophet spinning out mysteries here, but can you guess where this is going?

Heck yes. There is nothing more CULT LEADER than giving a lecture, learning you are running short on time, and skipping the topics of several world-famous humans so you can talk more about yourself. Er, talk more about yourselves. Elizabeth Clare Prophet has so much Elizabeth Clare Prophet material, she trims her auto-mega-biography down to her fourteen *most significant* lives.

This chapter honestly increases my level of belief in Atlantis. Why? No ordinary continent could support the weight of this gal’s ego. The closest she comes to humility is her account of Life #13, where she admits she merely might have been Marie Antoinette or King Louis XVI.

After that, she declares herself the greatest queen in the history of Atlantis. Then she deftly pre-debates anyone who’d raise the mildest possible criticism of her life story.

So there you have it: Abraham Lincoln was a pharaoh and an aviator and ultimately kind of bleh. He’s nothing compared to the most self-centered cult leader ever to over-stay a conference center room rental. It fills me with awe. It fills me with astonishment. In a twisted way, it’s the sort of transcendent experience a lot of folks seek from faiths. So great job, Elizabeth Clare Prophet. You astounded me even more than I thought an Internet publishing nut could. You’re also allowing me to say ā€œI’m glad you’re deadā€ without that being a mean thing to say, technically, because you claim death is a brief pause before you start life number one billion. And when you return for your next life as Queen Of The Galaxy, I encourage you to look into your heart, think about what’s important, and focus on spreading The Good News about cats for a change.


This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Chance McDermott, the reincarnation of Bernard Slopely, mid-level draftsman for train bathrooms. Not all reincarnation is sexy.

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LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: The 2023 NHL Draft Lottery 🌭

The 2023 NHL Draft Lottery is an accursed video. You’d think it would be normal. Nope! It’s like if a boring regional business made a hostage video. It’s like if Dunder Mifflin kidnapped a hockey executive, and sent Scranton P.D. a threatening tape, but forgot to clear out the chintzy ball machine from Cringe Bingo Night. I can’t believe the NHL uploaded it at all. They uploaded it to their main YouTube channel. Me and more than 100,000 other sickos watched this.

What did we watch? A harried-yet-snorifying sports commissioner, describing ping pong pull logistics, whilst fidgeting between three ferns.

(Sean, please add the appropriate Gary Bettman showmanship to the attached screenshots.)

Okay maybe two ferns and a fig tree. I’m not a botanist. I am a person with a passing knowledge of sports. So I know the NHL is the world’s most prominent hockey league. A huge entertainment organization, with millions of fans…and apparently an allergy to entertaining. This huge NHL event is a snooze. A snooze! Even though hockey is – not to get too technical – a sport. Hockey is a sport. Sports are fun. You don’t have to agree with that claim, or feel that fun in your heart. I’m saying sports are by definition ā€œfun.ā€ They are a member of the ā€œfunā€ category. Like circuses, and pony rides, and the Ginuwine song ā€œPonyā€ inappropriately played to children at a circus. It’s like how an oil painting of a bowl of fruit is art. Whether you want that on your wall or not, you would define it as ā€œart.ā€ Hockey has that intrinsic ā€œfun.ā€ But somebody (everybody?) involved with the world’s top hockey league lost track of that here. For comparison, here’s the look and feel of the U.S.’s pro basketball league’s draft lottery:

That’s a show. With an audience. Because this is fun! Those teams are playing a lottery, i.e. gambling, i.e. fun. Then after the lottery, all the teams’ fans get an awesome new young guy to root for. It’s a joyous occasion. So the NBA’s draft lottery is a glitzy party. The sports drafts that follow are even bigger parties. The U.S.’s top football league held their draft in a giant public space this year, on a stage bigger than a football field, and more than 100,000 people tried to attend in person. They took over Kansas City to accommodate tens of thousands of draft goers, and they still had to turn people away at the gate. Because it’s fun! I don’t watch football anymore and this still looks fun to me:

That’s great. That’s like if the Bellagio was a city’s main square, in a good way. Meanwhile, in hockey land:

That experience is most of this video. For sixteen-plus minutes, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman gives a medium-effort explanation of arcane draft lottery rules. The camera framing gives equal emphasis to the National Hockey League’s next draft and the location of this conference room’s fire extinguisher. That’s the format for staring at Gary Bettman – a hockey commissioner so despised, he gets booed when he attends hockey games. The NHL serves up that guy, with no pizzazz or co-host, droning about policy changes from a recent NHL board of commissioners meeting. It reminded me of that time Jason Pargin revealed the low-key kink communities of YouTube. I wondered if this video’s other viewers have some kind of bureaucracy/minutiae hard-on. I turn my love of details and facts into something constructive, thank you very much. I don’t funnel it into a YouTube video of a hockey team called ā€œThe Anaheim Ducksā€ losing at Joyless Powerball.

A fun sports video should not make me wonder just how perverse the Internet can be. Especially not a hockey-related video. Hockey is more than classifiable as fun. Hockey is legit fun. Hockey is a series of supermen moving at terrifying speed, mounted on foot-swords, whilst always on the verge of (legally!) punching each other into unconsciousness. Hockey is so thrilling, they have to play most of the games in Canada, just to water down the excitement. Hockey is so cool, it made something interesting and organic happen in Ottawa. Yet when it comes time to see this video’s event, and discover the future of hockey, we get a video where almost all of the runtime could’ve been posted in a webpage’s fine print footer. An elderly man in an office building in Secaucus, New Jersey walks you through the potential results of drawing two sets of lottery balls. And he kicks it off with a bang:

Reminder: we are not watching this video live. It’s a recording they uploaded later. The NHL posted this with an untouched ā€œuncle misunderstanding camcorderā€ at the beginning.

Imagine making this video. I can! I’ve filmed Internet videos in office spaces at a budget of zero dollars. In that circumstance, everything around you is a tool. I can relate to grabbing all the plants in the nearby conference rooms, and distributing them spread-out-ish-ly for decor. That’s free. That fits your budget. You know what else is free? A little verve. A bit of showmanship. A pre-taping rehearsal of the physical act of holding up today’s newspaper.

In this video, Gary Bettman holds up today’s newspaper to prove it is today. You know: like in a hostage video. That guy is essentially the CEO of hockey. That’s a cool job. Why are we watching him do proof-of-life drudgery? It feels like he got kidnapped by the league office’s nighttime janitor.

Good news: this guy (NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman) is not the only member of our cast of characters. Our ensĆ©mble includes such thrilling stars as Scott Clark Of Accounting Firm Ernst And Young. You know: Scott Clark! Of Accounting Firm Ernst And Young! And I’m sure you started a-hootin’ and a-hollerin’ as soon as the camera panned to him, in the very first camera movement of the entire video, more than four minutes in.

The next reveal is even better. This draft lottery was attended by two representatives of NHL teams! Which is weird. Normally, in entertaining leagues, every team sends somebody to the lottery. Then those guys have some kind of active role: opening an envelope, reading their team’s name, wearing fashions the rest of us find humorous. That’s standard draft lottery entertainment stuff. It’s what these basketball guys are doing:

Does the NHL set up less than a hundred bucks worth of logo podiums for their teams? They do not. In the NHL, they only convince two teams, out of sixteen teams, to send a guy to this event. The two guys who turned up have nothing to do. And the staging of their reveal is ā€œnow please wave at the camera from a plastic folding table you did not think we’d film.ā€

The commissioner then gives that ā€œ[not actually your uncle but we call him that] bugging youā€ treatment to three reporters…

…before directing the camera back onto himself. Then, he asks if anyone has any questions. Seriously: he does a classroom teacher style ā€œare there any questions?ā€, at the NHL Draft Lottery. He even asks for questions with that Inexperienced Teacher vibe, where he’s outwardly disappointed in the group when nobody pipes up.

ā€œAre there any questionsā€ is a bonkers agenda item here. Why bother? How would that impact anything? Also, all the people in this room are either league officials or reporters. If they ask a question, they are presenting themselves as incompetent at their job. All the less-than-a-dozen guys in this stale room are paid salaries and health insurance to know this event’s ā€œinside puckballā€ details. Don’t bother stopping to ask for questions, Gary. That’s like if a Taylor Swift show ground to a halt to make sure everybody knows the name of the sparkly lady.

After that beat of ā€œis the class even paying attention?ā€, we get a thrilling twist. We meet our story’s handsome young lothario. I say ā€œlotharioā€ because I assume that word is a contraction of ā€œlottery technician.ā€ Gary brings in lottery technician ā€œMartin Gorba[muffled].ā€ Martin enters the frame, to operate the ping pong ball device. This entrance is when the league’s flair for showmanship sparkles:

Oh heck yeah! Let’s let ā€˜er rip!!! I’m on the edge of my seat for the [reading that video screen as it is staged] 202023 DRDRRAFT LOTTETERY. I gotta say, bit of a wonky text alignment with the machine there. But hey, who could’ve predicted a glass cylinder would bend that image? No time to resolve that! The NHL’s burliest setup interns aren’t on hand. They’re several floors away, scavenging a fourth decor ficus.

I do want to celebrate Martin. He’s wearing black on black on black on black, in a way that visually highlights his industrial lotto machine speed-changer. Or maybe they asked him to dress like a hockey puck? Either way, he’s both manning the machine and navigating the erotic charge between himself and Gary. Sparks fly as Gary and Martin enjoy enough physical space for them to walk around each other, but only sort of enough physical space.

Martin is the third person in this video with a job to do. The second was Accountant Scott Clark Of Accounting Firm Ernst And Young. And after Gary and Martin select a few balls, we find out who gets the first pick in the draft…right? That would be what any viewer wants. But nope, not right, not yet. You see, the balls are not the teams. The balls are confusingly linked to a coded numbered system, in a way that ties the statistical odds of a lottery win to the inverse points standings of the previous hockey season’s [you skip ahead seventeen paragraphs in this article] and finally, read to Accountant Scott Clark. Scott Clark hears these numbers, then quietly looks at a stapled packet of paper. Then Scott whispers a city name to the commissioner. The commissioner then blurts that city, louder, to us, while mid-pivot. That is the dramatic reveal of which hockey team won the draft lottery. This lottery is legitimately a big deal! But it’s got all the thrill of your boss remembering to tell you there’s a package in the mailroom.

Bonus points to Martin for punching up this moment, by doing slick mob stuff with his jacket and hands. ā€œYouse pickin’ foist Chick-agh-goh. Youse pickin’ foist.ā€

Let me pause the column for the non-sportsheads among you. The above screenshot is an earth-shaking moment in hockey history. It is the moment when Chicago’s hockey team got the first pick in the annual draft. That is a big deal. It’s an especially big deal this year. This year, scouts say the likely top pick is the best player of his generation. So everyone knew this draft lottery had Actual Lottery For Hundreds Of Millions Of Dollars stakes. It’s major news which multi-million human fanbase gets to root for that super-talented guy, and which other multi-million humans will settle for a different consolation Canadian. Yet for some reason, the NHL chose to under-undersell this event. Again, I’ve made videos with zero dollar budgets in office buildings. I’m both upset and thrilled that I could’ve done this better. Heck, it’s even easier to shoot than the basketball version. It’s hard to keep a whole basketball player in the frame. Look at the most recent basketball draft. The spooky pallid ā€œshortā€ man in this photo stands six foot three.

Also, that is a nice photo. Basketball’s whole operation tends to be well-presented. They celebrate their new class of talent with a well-lit parade of beauteous slendermen. Hockey celebrates their version with a hostage video. The room is so beige, and the camera is so inert, it approaches the vibe of sad pornography. It also super, super doesn’t feel like pornography (Martin’s too angelic). But the action on camera feels obligatory for all involved. And at the end, it achieves full Hostage Mode:

That’s right: the NHL bothered to post and share this piece of mandatory legal evidence. The actual announcement happened on U.S. and Canadian sports channels. I’m guessing they let the sports show anchors make it funner. Maybe they light a fireworks array that spells ā€œChicagoā€, or pull the news out of a hot dog with too many vegetables on it. You know: showmanship! This entire video is not that. They taped this to prove their draft lottery happened in a not-rigged way. It is a grim exercise in airtight legal surety. And it does make sense that the National Hockey League taped that. There’s a history of other leagues, such as the Slenderman Association, allegedly rigging these lotteries. The theory is that they rig things so the cool and big teams get the cool and literally big players, because it’s more lucrative for New York and Chicago to beat Podunksville and East Podunksville. That suspicion clouds all sports draft lotteries. The NHL wanted to avoid that. So they posted this, and achieved that purpose. We’re all sure this NHL draft lottery was not rigged. Right? Right. Right! That must be the end of the column. I do see more words below this, but surely that’s the end of MY DEAR HOTDOGGER: I am thrilled to report the NHL’s video made me more suspicious of their draft lottery, not less. There is a yawning, gaping hole in their proof of above-board drafting. Because this video puts every element of the draft lottery process on screen…until the exact moment when they are pulling the balls.

Shocking twist: a fourth guy has a job here! A person we never see gets told to turn around and not look, and then call out the timing of lottery ball selections. We do not see him turn around. We just trust that he did that. Also the NHL wants us to believe my beautiful giant son Martin couldn’t get a ball machine with a gizmo that picks the balls for you. Those exist! But instead, they used a mysterious off-screen ball-caller. And then this draft lottery hands a generational hockey player to the huge-market hockey team in Chicago. Fun fact: Chicago won this lottery at an all-time low point in the team’s public image and reputation. Not to mention, a time of looming Chicago Hockey Team name change pressure. They haven’t even begun to address those problems. Chicago really, really needs a piece of good news to cushion the pain of all that. And oh, wow, they happened to leapfrog two worse teams to get that good news. It’s fishy. It’s fishier than the gross mollusk-based ā€œhat trickā€ tradition in Detroit. And more than a hundred thousand of us saw the evidence. So there’s our accursed element, folks. This video isn’t just the dopiest anti-entertainment I’ve ever seen. It’s also the source of a grim, plausible NHL conspiracy theory. We thought we’d only consider this footage for a day. Instead, we’ll wonder if that guy turned around and looked away from the ball machine for a lifetime.


This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Brianne Whitney, the Martin Gorba[muffled] of the San Quentin M[muffled]m Secu[muffled] Pris[muffled] intermediary co-ed [muffled]ball team from 19[muffled] to presen[muffled].