Created in Darkness by Troubled Americans

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Created in Darkness by Troubled Americans Page 16

by Dave Eggers

In the future, I want to be ... a father because ... I am a boy.

  In the future, I want to be ... bogs because ... bogs is interesting and very furry.

  In the future, I want to be ... a public servant because ... looks interesting.

  In the future, I want to be ... a candy store because ... I like cake.

  In the future, I want to be ... child welfare because ... I like childs.

  In the future, I want to be ... a nurse because ... help for men.

  In the future, I want to be ... hairdresser because ... it’s cool.

  In the future, I want to be ... a dog because ... it’s interesting.

  In the future, I want to be ... a clerk because ... I think it fits me.

  In the future, I want to be ... a postmanbecause ... I can send dreams.

  A LIST OF HIT TRACKS BY MY ELEVEN-YEAR-OLD SISTER, RUTH, WHOSE KNOWLEDGE OF METAL AND GLAM ROCK STEMS ENTIRELY FROM THE COVER OF A “NELSON AND NELSON SMOKIN’ GUITAR LICKS” VIDEO WE SAW AT THE MUSIC STORE, BUT WHO, NEVERTHELESS, CALLING HERSELF “THE BLAST OFF!,” DECIDED TO FORM HER OWN ENSEMBLE, “LUMPEE & MEEN,” WHICH SHE WAS KIND ENOUGH TO LET ME JOIN

  Leif and Ruth Larsen

  “AAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH, Great!!!”

  “I’m Going to Antler You!!!”

  “I’m Going to Antler You! (acoustic love-ballad remix)”

  “I Should Have Washed My Hands....”

  *props to our mom

  “The ‘Teaparty of Darkness Which Is in My Head’ Song”

  “Mumsy!”

  “Broken $237.99 Guitar!!!”

  “Ruth, Wipe Your Chin, You’re Dripping—You Look Like a Person Who’s Not, You Know, Mentally Stable ...!!!!”*

  TERRIBLE NAMES FOR HAIR SALONS

  John Moe

  Shear Hostility

  Mane-lining Hair-oin

  I Will Cut Your Head

  Gut the Hell Out of Hair

  The Razor’s Edge Starring Bill Murray

  The Mane Reason My Parole Was Revoked

  Nervous McStabby’s Hair Care Place

  Reason Has Been E-Clips-ed by Rage

  Running with Scissors

  Armon Gilliam’s House of Style

  In No Conditioner to Drive

  Clipping Penalty

  Dexa-Trims

  Hari Commandant

  Cuts & Bruises

  Dude, I’m So Buzzed

  The Viet-Mane War Memorial

  Get the Hell Out of Hair, Kevin

  I Hate My Mother

  George Hair-ison’s Solo Career

  Why Won’t You Dye?

  Los Angeles Clippers

  Mein Coif

  GOOD NAMES FOR HAMSTERS

  Diana Fischer

  Mrs. Leonard Pannaggio

  Hammy

  Chief

  Mario

  Drew Bledsoe

  Toes

  BAD NAMES FOR HAMSTERS

  Diana Fischer

  Seth

  Gary

  Judy

  Joyce

  Janice

  Sandy Jacobson

  The Dude

  BABY NAMES FOR AN EXPECTED SISTER SUGGESTED BY NATHANIEL WATSON, AGE SIX

  Sarah Brown

  Pancake*

  Hambone*

  Skeleton*

  Toto

  *Name also suggested earlier for Watson’s brother Jimmy, twenty-one-months old

  Jimmy II

  Anna

  Hanna

  Total Annihilation

  BAD NAMES FOR PROFESSIONAL WRESTLERS—THE NEXT GENERATION

  Jeff Johnson

  Beckett

  The Tadpole

  Roy Cohn, Jr.

  The Splendid Splinter

  Bruce the Spruce

  The Cuddler

  The Framingham Fry Cook

  Paula

  Hamilton Jordan

  Tarkanian

  The Sea Horse

  The Incontinent Minstrel

  The Drooling Lamb

  The Martyr

  The Peppermint Rube

  Butterscotch

  The Standoffish Person

  The Wooden Marmoset

  The Pasty Accountant

  The Tardy Worker

  Alan Dershowitz

  The Soothsayer

  Inky

  The City Manager

  The Bench Warmer

  The Plum-Eating Bastard

  The Corpse

  The Marionette

  The Gout-Stepper

  The Willamette Pimp

  MORE BAD NAMES FOR PROFESSIONAL WRESTLERS

  (added 1:34 p.m. Wednesday)

  Jeff Johnson

  The Vegan

  The Lonely Marine

  Grace Kelly

  Peter Billingsley

  Swimmer’s Itch

  The Orderly

  Smarty Pants

  Babette

  Jivamukti

  Paul McCartney

  The Shlub

  The Shrill Housewife

  The Truant Officer

  The Dartmouth Grad Student

  The Keokuk Optometrist

  The Whispering Mime

  Aaron Copland

  The Impressionist

  The Phonics Expert

  Nancy Walker

  Hospice Boy

  Noel Coward

  Frondeur

  The Demimonde

  The Victim

  The Tattletale

  Truffle

  Victor Kiam

  The Poet Laureate

  Mrs. Grundy

  Burt Hooton

  The Pawn

  The Little Ragu

  Dale

  Morrissey

  AILMENTS I WILL PROBABLY HAVE, LATER

  Steven Tomsik

  Esophageal constricticitis

  Temporal saturation of Creen’s gland

  Torso failure

  Phlandibicules, as a result of Blaser’s syndrome

  Ocular swelling and general carbuncular pupil reflex

  Degenerative anterior glandulae meialis humera, subsequent wens

  Toxic spermatoceliosis

  Goslee tooth

  Ventricular hiatus, chestaxia, epidermal foam

  Carditis in quadrant IV with nonmedianus hyphloxiatricine tark

  Cementy ear

  POSSIBLE CLOSING LINES FOR A DEFENDANT WHO HAS CHOSEN TO REPRESENT HIMSELF

  Brian Sack

  “My client professes his innocence. And when I look in the mirror and see his eyes, I just have to believe him.”

  “The facts, which I will present to you, will show that the defendant is not guilty. My client was nowhere near the scene of the crime. My client was where I was, obviously, because he is me, and I’m definitely aware of our whereabouts that night.”

  “Truth be told, no one knows what really happened that night. Except me and my client.”

  “I have been accused of a terrible crime. This frightens me both as a defendant and as a lawyer. I don’t want to go to jail, and I’d hate to lose my first case.”

  “When all is said and done, you will have to take all the evidence and go into the room back there, talk about it, and decide amongst yourselves on a verdict and whatnot. Right?”

  “I want you to take a good hard look at my client. I want you to ask yourself if he could be capable of such a heinous crime. But I don’t want you to take that long hard look just yet, because it will distract me and I’m not finished talking.”

  SEVERAL PHRASES THAT HAVE NEVER BEEN UTTERED IN HUMAN HISTORY

  Marshall Sella

  “Look out, God—behind You!”

  “Nothing’s the same since Julie started those wars.”

  “The New World has that New World smell.”

  “We, the jury, find the defendant cute as a button.”

  “Shoot him again, Mr. President. He doesn’t mind.”

  “Yummy plague!”

  “I claim this land in the name of Phyllis T. Brunell.”

&nb
sp; “Let the ant-shaving begin!”

  “No man is so tall as when he stoops to help a child kill.”

  “That was no lady, that was Iraq.”

  THINGS PEOPLE SAID TO ME WHILE I WORKED THE FRONT DESK OF AN OFFICE IN LIEU OF “WOULD YOU THROW THIS AWAY FOR ME?”

  Sarah Brown

  “I’ve got a present for you!”

  “Think fast!”

  “Here.”

  “Got a little something for you.”

  “Just because I like you so much ...”

  “Do you have trash under there?”

  “Thanks.”

  “Aw, I got this just for you, Sarah!”

  “Would you mind?”

  “Watch out, this might be sticky.”

  REJECTED ARCADE GAMES

  Jules Lipoff

  Temporarily Disabling Kombat

  Falafel Time

  Extreme Lawnmowing

  The Congressional Redistrictor

  Washing Machine 2: Another Load before Bed

  Street Panhandler Turbo

  The 401(k) Adventure

  Martha Stewart’s Weed-Out!!

  Rabbi Rendezvous: The Circumcisions

  Mule Kong, Jr.

  Cheatin’ Wife Hunter

  THREE LITTLE THINGS I REGRET HAVING SAID

  Dan Kennedy

  “How’s it doin’?”

  —To Karen McGrew at Nieblas Intermediate School, Fountain Valley, CA, 1979

  “Let’s call up it some night!”

  —To prospective employer upon discovering we shared an interest in Museum of Television and Radio screening of Superbowl commercials

  “You think that’s dick?”

  —To street vendor upon confronting him regarding a joke he made about me as I walked past

  FOUR THINGS I WOULD HAVE SAID TO SYLVIA PLATH IF I HAD BEEN HER BOYFRIEND

  Dan Kennedy

  “Does something always have to be wrong?”

  “I’m so sick of you twisting my words around.”

  “Nothing makes you happy.”

  “Maybe we should just break up then.”

  THE EMPEROR HAS NO CORTEX: 100 PERCENT TRUE QUOTES FROM MY FORMER HOLLYWOOD BOSSES

  Tom O’Connor

  “It is my theory that it’s people that make movies. They don’t make themselves.”

  “I’m not asking you to reinvent the wheel, I’m asking you to reinvent a wheel.”

  “Are you sure this is a Christmas movie, just because the story happens during Christmas?”

  “We need to create a matrix that sets up a pattern.”

  “There is something either not important or psychologically interesting about what you just said.”

  “I don’t want to understand it, I just want to know how it’s going to be done.”

  “You’re too enthusiastic and eager to please. Every time I see you smile, it ruins my whole day.”

  “We’re all familiar with the Linear Enmeshment Method of working toward production.”

  “I hear a clock ticking that I’ve never heard before ... in my head.”

  “The thing that makes this script unique is that the characters travel back in time.”

  “Dreamworks doesn’t have the imagination to talk to us.”

  “Development is not a business. Talking is not a business. Cash flow is a business.”

  “When I came in, this company was like a beheaded chicken. It was running around, had lots of energy, but no direction, no focus.”

  “He’s a new director. Yes, he is French ... but he’s not French French.”

  “Let’s make sure we’re not dancing to their bagpiper.”

  “I need an office in New York too because there is a different ambiance there. It is more direct and less bigger-than-life than L.A. More rifle, less shotgun.”

  “Is there any way we can work Meat Loaf into this movie? He really represents the true spirit of it.”

  “Small words are so important in contracts.”

  TERMS USED IN AN OFFICE-SUPPLY CATALOG TO DESCRIBE PLACEMENTS OF TABS ON MANILA FILE FOLDERS THAT COULD ALSO BE USED TO DESCRIBE POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES OR SEXUAL PREFERENCES

  Stephanie McNutt

  Straight

  1st Position

  2nd Position

  3rd Position

  Extreme Right

  Right of Center

  2/5 Straight

  ALTERNATE TITLES PROPOSED FOR THIS BOOK

  Whimsical Is the New Weightiness

  Humor Is Timeless: 1998–2003

  The French Lieutenant’s Woman

  667: The Neighbor of the Beast

  The Sound and So Forth

  We’re in the Library of Congress! We’re in the Library of Congress!

  A Child’s Garden of Funnies

  How Can It Be Irony When It Is Exactly What You Expected?

  A Child’s Garden of McSweeney’s Erotica

  The Only Book Ever Published

  Necronomicon

  Ow, Motherfucker!

  Endnotes

  To return to the corresponding text, click on the reference number or "Return to text."

  1. The principles of comedy, of delivering humor to an audience, hold that the first joke may not get a predictable response. This story’s readers are still trying to find their footing in the story, to gauge whether they can determine the author’s wavelength and follow it. The first citation of the name “Philip Glass” will undoubtedly remind some readers of the avant-garde composer who shares the character’s name; the first repetition of the name may even induce a chuckle, as the disparity between the nature of the character and the nature of the composer would seem to be tremendous indeed. But by the third citation of his name, in which the character is actually “whooping,” readers may be greatly amused by the connection of the name Philip Glass with an activity that seems out of character for the Philip Glass they know from real life. Return to text.

  2. The repetition of the name Glass is becoming apparent by now, but the name Stephen Glass may also earn laughter from any reader familiar with the career of the disgraced former journalist. Some readers may pay particular attention, envisioning some sort of poetic revenge—but again, such anticipation may be a result of projecting an expectation of the scandalized, real-life Stephen Glass onto this character who shares his name. Return to text.

  3. By the third appearance of the surname Glass, the author’s joke is fully clear to almost every reader, and an audience laughs as one. But the joke here is twofold: Not only is there humor in the unlikelihood of an expedition team comprised entirely of people named Glass, but the name Ira Glass itself would appear not to fit such a crude expletive as that to which this character is attributed. Many readers will recognize the name Ira Glass from a weekly syndicated public radio program called This American Life, and its host’s gentle, endearing, friendly voice and manner stand in stark opposition to the cruelly banal rejoinder offered here. Therefore, humor arises also from the shock of the situation, not merely from the now-predictable repetition. Return to text.

  4. By this point, the central joke of this passage—the repetition of the name Glass, and the naming of characters after well-known, unaffiliated bearers of the surname—is abundantly clear, and any laughter that appears here is a diminishing return on the author’s investment. Such laughter will be polite and subdued; the author now must heighten the tension with a surprising joke, which, paradoxically, the audience has come by now to subconsciously expect. Return to text.

  5. Here, the payoff is tremendous. George Glass is a memorable name that appeared in an episode of the TV series The Brady Bunch—an anti-intellectual response to the preceding names of an avant-garde composer, a fallen journalist, a public-radio host, and a character from fiction by J. D. Salinger. The twist in tone—from high culture to banality—is a satisfying one. It could, conceivably, serve as the passage’s last “joke.” Any other attempted jokes must be handled deftly to keep from capsizing the heightened mood of th
e audience. Return to text.

  6. A wonderful denouement. The twist in the “name game”—from Glass to, suddenly, Blass—would throw any audience member off the scent. The idea of fashion designer Bill Blass serving as a yachting expedition’s first mate is also incidentally hilarious, and the double-joke here is enormously gratifying. Return to text.

  * Real dance troupe Return to text.

  ** Cheese Return to text.

  CONTRIBUTORS

  Jeff Alexander wishes Tom Bissell luck beating that indecent-exposure rap. He lives in Bukhara.

  As a young boy, Daniel “Fosse!” Archer perfected the art of Jazz Hands. Over the years he has added the Jazz Drag, Fan Kick, and Ball Change to his repertoire. So far, no one seems impressed. He credits Debbie Allen, Lee Remick, and the 1983 blockbuster film Stayin’ Alive for helping him develop a passion for the dance.

  Stephany Aulenback lives in Nova Scotia.

  Chris Bachelder received an M.F.A. from the University of Florida and now teaches writing and literature at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. He is the author of Bear v. Shark: The Novel.

  Ross Alan Barnes attends Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois.

  Jim Behrle edits can we have our ball back? on the web and is the Events Director at WordsWorth Books in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

  Tom Bissell is the author of Chasing the Sea and lives in New York City. Since the day Mr. Alexander correctly identified Glorfindel as the elf whom Strider and the Hobbits meet on the way to Rivendell, he has deferred to his co-author on all things Tolkien.

  Michael Ian Black lives in New York City.

  Tim Blair is a columnist for The Bulletin magazine in Sydney, Australia, where he is free to roam, free of the dictates of French law, because he does live in France.

  Zev Borow writes for magazines and for television and for love.

  Arthur Bradford wrote a book called Dogwalker (Knopf, 2001) and directed a movie called How’s Your News? (HBO, 2002). He lives with his grandmother.

  Daniel A. Brennan resides in New York, where he trains Rhode Island Red bantams for competitive fighting exhibitions.

  Brodie H. Brockie is the co-creator of capnwacky.com and makes movies and sketch comedy with A Monkey & A Typewriter Productions.

  Peter Ward Brown lives in Columbus, Ohio, where he works in a gray cubicle that is almost in the corner.

  Sarah Brown is a writer from Tulsa, Oklahoma, and has the strength of a bear that has the strength of two bears. She would love to meet your brother.

 

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