Squid taco

I spent a significant fraction of my lunch break, thanks to a conversation with a friend earlier, trying to convince the girls at Taco del Mar to make me a calamari taco.

Me: “How about I run across the street to Greek Cusina, get some calamari, and bring it over?”

TDM Girl 1: “I don’t think so…”

TDM Girl 2: “What is calamari, anyway? I don’t think I’ve ever had it.”

Me: “It’s delicious squid.”

TDM Girl 1: “Oh.” Thinks about it. “I don’t think so.”

Me: “You don’t think you’ll make me a calamari taco? Or you don’t think that calamari is delicious?”

TDM Girl 2: [with a ‘whatever’ attitude] “It’s just OK.”

TDM Girl 1: “I’ve never had squid. I’m not a big fan of sea food. I’ve never even had one of our fish tacos.”

Me: “Oh, no, you’re wrong. It’s good. Calamari is good. Delicious.”

TDM Girl 2: “You’ve never had a fish taco? It’s like our specialty! That’s like working at Starbucks but not liking coffee!”

Customer 1: “I can totally see not liking coffee if you work at Starbucks.”

TDM Girl 1: “See?”

…at this point, I just cut my losses and ordered a fish taco and a pork burrito.

But wouldn’t a calamari taco be delicious?

Reverend Horton Heat, Roseland, 2004 July 15

Actually, I was probably consciously avoiding running yesterday, due to a) the lack of sleep the previous night and b) I was going to see Reverend Horton Heat at the Roseland Theater. Since I knew I was going to be up late again Thursday night, I went home and took a disco nap before heading back downtown and meeting my friends.

There were two opening bands but I missed the first one. Second act was the Detroit Cobras. Noone in my group knew if, in fact, they were from Detroit, although Anna opined that they didn’t look Detroit enough. I was pretty sure they weren’t actually cobras, however. They didn’t even do any cobra-like moves, although the bass player from Rev. Horton Heat, Jimbo, did do a cobra arm movement later on. The Detroit Cobras had some decent songs but the lead singer spent a lot of the show griping, at one point sarcastically commenting that “we might as well be at a house party”, and later, when the band paused between songs she threw a diva hissy fit and demanded several times they start the next song.

Luckily the main act was far more polished and professional. There was some ass, and the band kicked it. Names may or may not have been taken in the ensuing party. The Reverend’s crowd rap about crowd rap (monologues between songs from a band) was amusing and ended with the crowd telling the band to fuck off, much to the Reverend’s delight (and due to his skillful orchestration of the audience), and Jimbo’s diatribe about his carnal desire for Martha Stewart on the eve of her sentencing left a lasting impression.

The noise level from what is only a three-piece band was incredible, and the crowd was eating it up. Many pompadours attended the show, and a large wild-haired blond gentleman spun through the mosh pit, head down, very much as though the Grateful Dead were playing.

The only downbeat note was at the end of the encore set, when a kid made it up on to the stage. A roadie ran up and pushed the kid off the stage into the crowd, and the Reverend berated him, calling him a “pussy” and mocking him for picking up his cell phone — “Call your mommy!” he shouted at the kid. But it was an entertaining downbeat note, all the same.

New iPods?

Rumor has it that Apple is going to annouce the next version of the iPod in August, which means that I will likely be trading in my third-gen 40 GB for whatever the top end of the new ones are…

Only major concern is the report that they’re going to be in colors. I hope they offer a black, white, grey or silver model…

Ooooh… black. That would be wicked cool

Locked out

Argh. If I believed in a supernatural force that doled out justice in the universe I’d say that said force was attempting to communicate with me.

Went to a friend’s house for a BBQ last night, and on my way home realized that I had left my keys on my coffee table in the living room. Yes, it’s true, the mental image that came to me once I discovered that the keys were not in their accustomed place in my right front pocket was undeniably clear. I could see them sitting there amidst all the unsorted junk mail, and sure enough, hours and hours later when I finally broke into my own apartment, there they sat just as I had envisioned them.

Yes, I had to break into my own apartment. But that was the option of last resort. First I called my landlord, but his wife refused to wake him up for such a trivial reason, since it was nine-freakin’-thirty in the evening, far too late for such shenanigans. Mrs. Landlord told me that if I called tomorrow he could come over and help, “and he gets up real early.” Considering I had to be at work at 7 AM, just how early would Mr. Landlord be up? “Oh, no, not that early,” she said. OK, on to Plan B.

Second I called my sister, because I remember giving her a spare key to my apartment. Unfortunately, my sister reminded me that I have moved in the last couple of months, and hadn’t updated the key. “You could get into your old apartment,” she laughed and said. I don’t think the current resident of said apartment would appreciate that, though.

Third, I went to my office downtown, and looked on my desk. Maybe, I thought, I had somehow left the key there… no. So I pulled out the Yellow Pages and looked up a couple of locksmiths. First number I called I reached a woman with an accent strongly reminiscent of the Far East, who shrilly advised me that “he forgot to forward phone. Here his cell phone.” But the number she gave me was another lady who advised me that there were no locksmiths, ever, at that number.

The second number I called was a young-ish sounding man who, when I first asked him if he could get me back into my apartment, asked if I had called my landlord. After I explained that my landlord apparently needed his beauty sleep, the man shrewdly advised me that getting back into my own apartment “…is gonna cost you a hundred-dollar bill.” Thanks but no thanks, pal. I hung up on him. I’d sleep in my office overnight before paying that much just because a) I made a stupid mistake and b) my landlord is a lazy bastard.

So, I headed home. Once I got there, I tried that old trick of trying to jimmy the door with a credit card (I used my Portland Art Museum admission card, figuring it was the most disposable card I had). Turns out that trick doesn’t work. At least I couldn’t make it work.

I was both upset and pleased, however, at how easily I was finally able to break into my apartment. I’ll have to do something about that.

And, as I said above, sitting there on my coffee table, in my living room, nestled among the unsorted junk mail of several weeks, were my house keys. Joy.

Attention: new curse phrase

I just overheard my co-worker say something that I’m going to use as my new favorite curse-phrase:

“Holy friggin’ list of Kens!”

This will occupy the spot that “Sweet cracker sandwich!” occupied.

Like never

I was riding up the elevator in my office today, and another fellow elevator-rider started humming, then made a joke about there being no “elevator music” in the elevator.

Which got me to thinking: when was the last time anyone actually heard “elevator music” in the elevator?

Beach weekend recap

Back from the beach.

As I first rolled into town I stopped at the Safeway in Lincoln City to pick up some supplies… and managed to lock myself out of my car. I was using a FlexCar, since I don’t own my own car, and this particular one needed a keycard to open the doors; the ignition key only starts the car, it doesn’t open the doors. As a FlexCar member, I have a keycard, and I keep it in my wallet. As a male who is concerned about my butt becoming numb on long drives, I take my wallet out of my back pocket when driving. Combine those facts with my 4 mile run that morning before leaving for the beach, and a lack of a solid breakfast, and general crankiness from taking the wrong way to Lincoln City (I drove out the Sunset Highway, then turned off onto Highway 6, which adds about 25 miles to the trip as measured by Mapquest), and you have a very upset Brian. Luckily I had my cell phone with me and I had service. I called the 24-hour Emergency number for FlexCar, and found that, although it was technically possible to have them remotely unlock the car (yay!), the technology to do this was dependent on cell phone reception and whatever service they used was not the same as the service I used, so they had to call a local locksmith to open the car (boo!). That cost me about 2 hours. Luckily the locksmith they called had no problem getting me into the car. I won’t make that mistake (knowingly, at any rate) again.

Had the traditional first-night-dinner-at-Mo’s-Chowder-House on Saturday. Saw a very out-of-place large Goth girl there. C’mon, it’s a small coastal tourist town, and this girl comes in, dressed all in black satin, bat-wing clips holding up her dyed-black hair, all pale-faced with her spider-web stickers at the corners of her eyes, wearing tall black vinyl boots… to say she stood out like a sore thumb is to underestimate how much a sore thumb can stick out.

I also ran on the beach, my longest ever run: 5.5 miles. It felt good, even though I had to run into a headwind for the first half (I ran 2.75 miles north, then turned around and came back). I had sea salt on the left side of my face when I got back to the beach house! I should have taken a picture, dammit. But it felt good to have completed that distance.

I also read two books. I finished “Children of God” by Mary Doria Russell, a book loaned to me by a friend (hi, Anna!), and I completed “Slack Jaw” by Jim Knipfel. If I think of it I’ll post reviews later this week.

I had a good time, a relaxing time. Tried to watch for the Green Flash twice, and missed it twice. Oh, well, someday.

Beach weekend

I’m going to the beach this weekend, and won’t be back until late Monday. I probably won’t have InterWeb access so I won’t be posting ’til Tuesday (remember them?).

So I’m going to post next week’s running schedule now, but I’m going to change the date so it stays on the main page all next week. So nobody get confused.

Dark night of the soul

Dark night of the soul.

The realization that there is no one on this planet who listens, and understands, and likely never will be.

Ah, me. Of the kinds of loneliness, this is the worst.

Burton’s Willy

Pardon me while I interrupt this blog with important news.

Can you imagine Tim Burton’s version of “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”?

Well, soon, you won’t have to

And, as a bonus, you won’t have to imagine Johnny Depp as Willy Wonka, either. Pshaw… like Burton would choose anybody else in the role…