January 28, 2005

When IQ and Temperature Are Inverted

I've had fun telling Loner and the kids how the entire city of Atlanta (all 20 some-odd counties) goes freakynuttybatshit not at the bad winter weather, but at the very idea that someone has the notion that there's a 30% chance that there might be an increased possibility of some winter weather. Fulton PD's Detective Steve Rose has apparently given some thought to the subject, and has summed up the experience as succinctly as I think is humanly possible. Read on. . . .

1.27.05
Face it: We're a little winter weather-challenged

So they're predicting some winter weather for our fair area this weekend. If you aren't from Atlanta let me tell you that we are a very winter-dysfunctional people.

I'm not proud of us in the winter. The anticipation of snow is overwhelming. We really rarely actually get snow but we look forward to the possibility of a chance of snow every year. We have no release for our overwhelming need and want to have snow so that even when we get a small flurry, we go absolutely nutzo.

Once a winter storm begins in Central Asia, Atlanta meteorologists begin tracking it in the anticipation that it will hold its strength and deliver snow to Atlanta, which is some 60 million miles away.

We know the anticipated possibility of a chance of a possible opportunity for a snow event is not critical until that night when the meteorologist gets on camera with his sleeves rolled up.

This is a non-verbal signal to the people of Atlanta that the anticipated snow 'event' is now close, say only 30 million miles away. Conversation at dinner stops, work stops, and the city is silent for seven minutes while the weatherman, his sleeves rolled up, begins to point to things on the map.

Interpreting the Three Maps

There are three maps the meteorologist will point to. The first is the giant satellite photo of the galaxy. He points to the small white speck in the far corner. That represents the storm, now over northern Canada. That's a teaser. It doesn't mean anything. This is time you need to take to go to the bathroom and do whatever because you still have two maps left.

The second map is the computer map they can digitally flatten out and move around so it looks like you're flying over it. It shows the outline of the states. You can see the clouds, the mountains, and Rock City. The map moves in a northerly direction, 15 million miles or so to Canada where the storm is dumping tons of snow on the Canadians who wish they were at least as far south as Atlanta right now.

Between the second and third map, the meteorologist undergoes a transformation from impeccable TV guy with perfect TV hair to impeccable TV guy with his sleeves rolled up and now, for the first time, perspiration on his brow. (I think the makeup guy dabs it with a paper towel but I have not been able to confirm it.)

At the TV station they have rooms named for bad weather. This is where they go to report from when the weather gets really bad. For instance, the Severe Weather Center is where they go when they reach a critical point. I think its underground, some 1,000 feet below the Big Chicken in Marietta.

It's odd that they only have bad-weather centers. I've never heard of them reporting to us from the Nice Day Center.

The Third and Final Map: When the weather program returns from commercial break, the meteorologist is staring right into the camera at us. He says "Here we go." He's sweating profusely.

He takes us to the third map, which oddly enough is the most low-tech of the three.

This map is a large green map of North America but, unlike the other maps, it has the red and blue string of flags. You've seen them. They look like the grand opening flags at a new car dealer, strung from the streetlights to the ground.

The string of red flags represents the hot weather moving southeast. Don't worry about that one. The blue one is what we want to see. It comes right behind the red one and this is the point where you have to find out where you are in relation to the blue string of flags.

The map of Georgia highlights the individual counties so you can see where you stand in relation to the blue grand opening flag.

The Snow Event

The day of the event is a great media day. It begins with the early, early news, airing about 15 minutes after the late-night news. Protocol dictates that the early, early, news should start with interviews with D.O.T. workers.

The D.O.T. workers come in and move the sand around their parking lot a couple of times with the bulldozers so the reporters can film it as they tell us, who are asleep, of the preparation plan.

Next, the D.O.T. spokesperson reads from the prepared statement telling us, while we're still asleep, that they are prepared. During this time thousands of news crews across the state begin to travel north to find a snow flake. They will compete to file the first story from their embedded positions in Pickens County.

By 5 a.m. reporters are running around alongside a road somewhere north of Atlanta yelling into their microphones describing to us how it feels to be out there where the snow may soon fall.

The first video of someone hitting a light pole at 12 miles per hour on a sheet of ice is soon aired.

The meteorologist returns to the screen and, in plain English, says to us several times, "Please don't drive in this weather unless you absolutely have to." We interpret this as: "Please get in your car and go to the grocery store and buy all the bread and milk you can!"

Cars now begin to fill the ice-covered streets driving first forwards, then backwards, then sideways. Cars slide down hills into other cars. Cars merging onto I-85 south from Ga. 400 hit an ice patch and continue across the lanes and into the wall.

The ditches are soon filled with cars and the tow trucks have a field day.

Two days later it's 65 degrees again and the bars are full of insurance adjusters swapping horror stories of dents and smashed fenders.

I'm sitting at home yelling at the kids because they aren't drinking enough milk.



January 20, 2005

If You Thought YOU Had It Rough. . . .

Woman Gives Birth to Giant Baby


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Jan 20, 7:57 AM (ET)

(AP) Ademilton, a 16.7 pound (7.57 kilogram) baby boy is seen at the Albert Sabin Maternity Hospital in...
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SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) - A woman in northeastern Brazil has given birth to what one doctor called a "giant baby," a boy weighing 16.7 pounds.

Francisca Ramos dos Santos, 38, gave birth to the healthy boy named Ademilton on Tuesday at a hospital in Salvador, 900 miles northeast of Sao Paulo. He was the largest baby born at the Albert Sabin Maternity Hospital in its 12-year history, the hospital said.

"Obviously the baby was born by Caesarean section," hospital director Rita Leal said. "Both mother and baby are doing just fine."

Ademilton "could truly be considered a giant baby, for he was born weighing what a six-month-old-baby normally weighs," pediatrician Luiz Sena Azul told the Correio da Bahia newspaper.

Santos has four other children - ages 9, 12, 14, and 15 - who were born weighing between 7.7 pounds and 11 pounds.

"She knew Ademilton would be a big baby, but not this big" Leal said. "She, her husband and the hospital staff were caught by surprise."

The average weight for newborns in Brazil is 7.7 pounds for boys and 6.6 pounds for girls.

January 19, 2005

BaBW, Eat My Verbiage!

An Excerpt from James Lileks' "Open Letter to Bath and Body Works":

For a year I have enjoyed your “Aromatherapy” line of soaps and shampoos. It has nothing to do with the purported therapeutic benefits of the various scents, and we both know that there is no empirical evidence to suggest that slathering myself with these emollients will alter my emotional state in any way. If I find myself tense, coating myself in a thick paste of Orange Ginger moisturizer has no noticeable effect on my life, other than to make me feel unduly damp, and emit squishing sounds when I sit. But the aromas are nonetheless pleasing. If you have set foot in your stores recently, you will notice the accentuated preponderance of floral and spicy scents, as though someone had swabbed the walls with an expensive prostitute.

(Read the Rest)

January 17, 2005

"Punisher" Game Reminds Us What REAL Totrure Is

Thankfully based more on the Comic than the 2004 movie, this forthcoming game allows you to, ahem... "creatively interrogate" thugs. How about Lifting them with a crane by their arms, strapping them into an electric chair, holding their head over a tank of pirahnas? Once you get your information, it's up to you whether you finish the job. I think the developers know which one most of us will pick.

LINK

January 14, 2005

Titus

For anyone wanting to get me an early birthday present: Christopher Titus is coming to The Funny Farm in Alpharetta (inside the oh-so-classy StarTime complex) Feb. 17-19 with his "Norman Rockwell Is Bleeding" show, which was the basis for one of my favorite short-run sitcoms, "Titus."

That is all, please return to your normal lives.

January 06, 2005

Read my Screenplay...

Just a quick plug for a blog that just got added to my daily reading list: Queryletters.blogspot.com. A collection of honest-to-God actual screenplays that come across this guy's desk. As bad as some movies are, imagine how bad movies that DON'T get made are! Here's a sample:

"Two die-hard 'Big Trouble in Little China' fans are on a quest to recover Kurt Russell's tank top after being outbid at an online auction."

January 05, 2005

"Don't let the Snipers hit you on the way out..."

JONESBORO, Georgia (AP) -- On his first day on the job, the new sheriff called 27 employees into his office, stripped them of their badges, fired them, and had rooftop snipers stand guard as they were escorted out the door.

The move Monday by Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill provoked an angry reaction and prompted a judge to order him to rehire the employees.Hill, 39, defended the firings and said the new sheriff has the right to shake up the department in whatever way he feels necessary. He told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he fired the employees to "maintain the integrity of the department."

"A lot of people are under the impression that the sheriff's office is under civil service laws," he said. "But my research shows the employees work at the pleasure of the sheriff."

The firings had a racial overtone. Hill was among a spate of black candidates elected last year in the county once dominated by rural whites. The fired employees included four of the highest-ranking officers, all of them white. Hill told the newspaper their replacements would be black.

Hill said the manner in which he fired the workers was necessary, citing the assassination of Sheriff Derwin Brown in neighboring DeKalb County in 2000. "Derwin Brown sent out letters to 25 to 30 people letting them know they would not be reappointed when he took office," Hill said. Brown was gunned down in the driveway of his home three days before he was to be sworn in. Former sheriff Sidney Dorsey was found guilty of plotting to kill him and sentenced to life in prison.
LINK (CNN)

Yes, we've learned lessons from the assasination of Derwin Brown... when you do have mass layoffs along racial lines, protect yourself with state-funded snipers!