Friday links! Cunning of the octopus edition

An octopus wearing a top hat, which turns out to be a surprisingly popular image

An octopus wearing a top hat, which turns out to be a surprisingly popular image

The octopus is the smartest animal. In terms of cunning, it goes octopus, weasel, crow, political consultant, fungus. Did you know that an octopus can fit through any hole larger than its eye? Did you know that it becomes much funnier if you refer to it as an “ockapus,” or if it wears a monocle? The octopus is more than just a wonder of nature, though. It is also a symbol for strange conspiracies, for the silent drifting of the alien and invisible just beneath us or, if we are unlucky, in our grills. Multifarious and mute, the octopus is mystery itself, disparate tentacles connecting at a consciousness we cannot hope to understand. In conclusion, the octopus is a land of contrast. Also, I am sick.

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And now for something we can all agree on

Judge G. Todd Baugh of Billings is unaware that western shirts make you look older than your chronological age.

Judge G. Todd Baugh is unaware that western shirts make you look older than your chronological age.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned from covering the westside/Union Gospel Mission debacle, it’s that you should never write about a local controversy. All my friends Facebook friends think I’m a jerk now, and what do we have if not the esteem of our peers’ peers? That’s why my most recent column in the Missoula Independent is about Montana District Court judge G. Todd Baugh, whom we can all agree on. He is a schmuck. In August, he sentenced a 54 year-old Billings high school teacher to 30 days in prison for the statutory rape of 14 year-old student Cherice Moralez, remarking from the bench that she was “older than her chronological age.” Moralez killed herself in 2010. You can read about the black comedy of errors that followed Baugh’s pronouncement while I do a bunch of boring stuff around my exciting new house, and then we’ll both meet back here for Friday links. Deal? Deal.

 

On the tea box copy problem

TAZ-20065-2

Editor’s note: The internet still doesn’t work. I am posting this from the coffee shop.

“Through the screened front door,” says my box of Tazo Zen Green Tea, “zingy lemongrass and spritely spearmint coax contemplative pan-fired green teas to come play. Calmly, lemon verbena opens the door and invites them all to a cup of tea.” Hungover, I fly into a rage and invite the tea box to have sex with itself. It does not respond.

I woke with a compromised limbic system, because Titus Andronicus played the Missoula VFW last night. I though they were more popular than that—at least Palace-level popular, if not Wilma. But they played the bingo room at the VFW on their relatively new stage, where they were graciously enthusiastic. “I think we’re about ready to get started,” Patrick Stickles said after sound check. “Or maybe I have to poop.”

We all have to poop now. I am on the comfy chair in my new house, watching the internet man frown at his internet box. Ideally, my Tazo Zen Green Tea would ground me, or possibly center me, in my sunny and briefly analog living room, but I cannot stop reading the box.

What aspect of the experience of being pan-fired would make green teas contemplative? Lemongrass and spearmint invite them to come play through the oddly particular screened front door, but they are not allowed. Wouldn’t it be more fun to drink tea inside? Lemon verbena suggests it calmly, as if she had learned to master her emotions long ago. This is life now, since the pan fire.

Presumably, Tazo chose this vignette carefully. Probably, the thing they agreed to print on all their tea boxes is not a first draft. The germ of this story about tea ingredients coming over to play and drinking tea instead was once written on a whiteboard somewhere, and it grew from their according to professional teasellers’ understanding of the marketplace. This story sells tea.

Why, then, does it throw me into a rage? Again, it’s because I poisoned myself with alcohol. But also maybe there is something different about me, whereby a haiku about anthropomorphized tea ingredients that makes other people feel pleasant and safe makes me feel snarky and alienated.

Or maybe everyone feels like that. Maybe the box copy guys at Tazo thought lemongrass and spearmint coming over to play was somnolent bullshit too, but no one said it because that’s how these things are done. They go home and listen to loud music about how everything is fake. Perhaps the yoga moms feel a pang of cynical resentment when they read about lemon verbena in the tea aisle. Maybe we are all displeased with our own society, and we want only to come together and admit it.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qim8DYhosUw

In which I am a dick via satire

The now-empty Sweetheart Bakery, disputed site of a future soup kitchen

The now-empty Sweetheart Bakery, disputed site of a future soup kitchen

We’re just ten days away from the public hearing on Missoula’s emergency ordinance banning new soup kitchens and homeless shelters, and I personally cannot wait. City council has proposed a retroactive “urgency measure” designed to prevent Union Gospel Mission from moving to the former Sweetheart Bakery, pictured above, after nearby residents complain. A week from Monday, we get to hear homeowners explain why Missoula urgently needs to prevent charities from feeding the poor. In the meantime, you can read my snarky column on the subject at the Missoula Independent. It is biased and poorly thought-out, in that it assumes a law against helping the homeless is kind of absurd. We’ll be back tomorrow with Friday links.

Friday links! Modern times edition

Early 20th-century heterosexual Charles Chaplin

Early 20th-century heterosexual Charles Chaplin

When does modernity begin? Is it with the emergence of nation-states in Europe, as my high school social studies teacher insisted? Perhaps modernity arrived with the industrial revolution, when broad changes in the nature of work altered the day-to-day texture of millions of lives. Or maybe modernity started with the internet and the retrospective knowledge that to give everyone a global voice means dramatically reducing, in your perception at least, the importance of your own. Personally, I think modernity started when a law firm realized it could make more money suing people who downloaded free pornography it uploaded to the internet than by making actual pornography. Today is Friday, and modernity begins when society concludes that its work is done. Won’t you knock off early with me?

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