A matter of the utmost urgency

About a year ago, I posted this entry on a temporary blog for my first blogiversary contest. Since that blog is no longer online, I might as well post it here. It’s a scene called “A Matter of the Utmost Urgency”. I should warn you — it’s painfully bad.

[Exterior, space. S.S. Interesting travels at hyper speed. Intro music.]

TURK [voice over]: Captain’s log, stardate two three four five… uhhh… six. Whatever. I just make those up anyway. We’re on course to rendezvous with Starbase 69 — a personal favorite of mine for R-and-R. And maybe a little S-and-M. Yes, that old starbase is home to the best sardines-and-mayonnaise this side of Rigel Four.

Or is it Rigel Five? Why do they number those damn planets anyway? In a hundred years of colonization, couldn’t they think of a name for their planet?

Anyway, I’ve called a meeting of the bridge officers to discuss a matter of the utmost ugency.

[Interior, meeting room. SPORK, BONER, and O’HARA sit around the table in silence. TURK enters and sits.]

TURK: Gentlemen.

O’HARA: And lady.

TURK: And… lady, of course.

O’HARA: I think you’d better start the meeting now, Captain.

TURK: Of course. I called this meeting to discuss a matter of the utmost ugency.

BONER: What is it, Tim? Hostile aliens?

TURK: No, Boner, it’s—

SPORK: Has Space Command given us a dangerous mission?

TURK: Uh… no. No, it’s not that—

O’HARA: Is it a tear in the space-time continuum, leading back to a time in our past, which will inevitably invoke a quantuum paradox?

[silence]

BONER: That was last week’s episode, O’Hara.

O’HARA: Oh. I took last week off, remember?

BONER: That’s right. How was the crab nebula? Is it as good as they say?

O’HARA: Well it’s mostly imitation crab now.

BONER: That’s a shame.

O’HARA: I hear the quality hit rock-bottom when they made a deal with the Hake system. Then the market floundered.

SPORK: Would anyone like some coffee?

[General assent. SPORK pours cups of coffee all around.]

TURK: I’m afraid that we have a very serious problem on our hands. We are running out of coffee.

[a collective gasp is heard]

We really have to get that air vent fixed.

Now, I understand your feelings, and I realize that we’re still weeks away from Starbase 69. But there’s no denying it: we have only enough coffee to last five more hours. In fact, these cups may be the among the last you’ll have. We need to explore some alternatives. Suggestions?

SPORK: We could synthesize a mild stimulant by fermenting Mr Fugu’s underpants. We could survive on Fugupants-extract for several days, and go without coffee altogether.

TURK: Altogether?

ALL OFFICERS: [together] We could survive on Fugupants-extract for several

TURK: [cutting them off] Gentlemen! GENTLEMEN!

O’HARA: Ahem.

TURK: Gentle…uh…persons. Heh.

O’HARA: [under her breath] Oh, for crying out loud.

BONER: Tim, I respect Mr Spork’s expertise in this area, but… well, quite frankly, I’d rather throw myself into a pit full of bamboo spikes and Celine Dion cross-dressers than consume Mr Fugu’s underpants. Dammit, Tim, there’s got to be another way.

SPORK: Fugupants-extract is quite safe, doctor. As a matter of fact, I add some to the coffee every morning.

[everyone does a spit-take]

BONER: Damn you, you purple-blooded Uvulan bastard.

SPORK: [breaking into tears] I hate you! I hate you all!

[SPORK runs from the room, sobbing.]

TURK: Easy on the racial slurs, Boner.

BONER: Sorry.

O’HARA: I may have an alternative, sir.

TURK: That’s officer thinking, O’Hara.

O’HARA: I haven’t told you what it is yet.

TURK: Yes, O’Hara: officer thinking.

O’HARA: I recently intercepted a transmission from Fowlia, captain.

TURK: The planet of hyper-intelligent space-monkeys?

O’HARA: Penguins. Hyper-intelligent space-penguins.

TURK: Really? What happened to the monkeys?

O’HARA: There are no space-monkeys, captain. There never were.

TURK: That’s a shame. I like monkeys.

BONER: So what was in the transmission, O’Hara?

O’HARA: The space-penguins are in our sector, and on an intercept course with Starbase 69. They’re after the sardines-and-mayonnaise.

BONER: You knew they were going to attack the starbase? Why didn’t you mention this earlier?

O’HARA: I was waiting for a gap in the banter.

BONER: Fair enough.

TURK: So. The penguins are after some S-and-M. What does this have to do with our coffee shortage?

O’HARA: Um. Not a lot. I thought maybe we could intercept the space-penguin ship and—

TURK: [interrupting] And confiscate their supply of coffee! O’Hara, you’re a genius.

Gentle… officers, we’re about to take a step into the unknown. We’re about to boldly go where no m—… person… has gone before. The mission could be dangerous. We could die a horrible death. The space-penguins may blast our hull asunder like a ballpein hammer on an apple strudel. We may be exposed to the brutal vacuum of space. Our eyes may explode in their sockets. Our blood may boil away through our skin. Our skin may freeze in the icy embrace of interplanetary space. We’ll be boiling and freezing and exploding, ALL AT THE SAME TIME! But will we be afraid? Will we retreat from danger? Will we cower behind a rock like little boy when a big, scary clown is at his birthday party?

BONER: “Yes”?

TURK: No!

[presses intercom button]

Mister Fugu! Lay in an intercept course with the space-penguin craft. Ahead twisted-factor seventeen.

FUGU: [over intercom] We only go up to twisted-factor five, captain.

TURK: Well get Spotty to have a look at the engines. Oh, and Fugu… we won’t be needing your underpants anymore.

FUGU: [over intercom] Thank you captain.

[end of scene]

Lileks.com’s “Gallery of Regrettable Food”

Here’s another link brought to my attention by the talented web-surfers of BoingBoing.

At www.lileks.com, you’ll find a compilation of some of the most horrific recipies of the mid-twentieth century. The author has organized them into categories and annotated the blurry food photos with his own commentary, including this one from “Meat Meat Meat!“:

One of the more popular cuts: pressed shank braised with smoker’s phlegm. It may take a few tries to get Uncle Hank to hack up enough Lucky sauce, so be patient.

Some of these recipe photos are truly alarming. If you ever needed an argument for becoming a vegetarian, these photos should suffice.

Link: Gallery of Regrettable Food: Specialties

O Crewman Jones, we hardly knew ye

I found this entry, originally written on April 12, 2003, in my drafts folder. Apparently I either forgot about it, or felt that it was too pointless to post… which would be odd, because that doesn’t usually stop me.

O noble red shirt: Crewman Jones

You left this life the way you entered it:

Screaming your bloody head off.

On the scifi.com bulletin board, a user by the name of Guerticus Maximus provides a count of red-shirt deaths by episode:

The Apple = 4

The Changeling = 4

Obsession = 4

Mirror, Mirror = 3

And The Children Shall Lead = 2

What Are Little Girls Made Of = 2

Arena = 1

By Any Other Name = 1

The Devil In The Dark = 1

Elaan Of Troyius = 1

Friday’s Child = 1

The Omega Glory = 1

That Which Survives = 1

The Ultimate Computer = 1

Wink Of An Eye = 1

It’s the little differences

And speaking of differences between US and Canada, here’s a couple of products and/or services that just refuse to cross the border.

TiVo. TiVo is a DVR — a digital video recorder — which can record your tv shows without the hassle of programming the channel and time like a VCR. It records shows digitally onto an internal hard drive, so the recording quality is great, and it can hold (I think) around 30 hours.

For some wacky reason, TiVo isn’t available in Canada. Why not? Canada is one of the most wired countries in the world. You’d think that marketing it here would be profitable and easy. But no, when TiVo expanded, they expanded to the UK instead. Hmph.

Netflix. Netflix is an Internet company with a mail-order scheme for renting videos. Customers pay a monthly flat fee and can pick a certain number of DVDs, which are mailed to them. Customers can keep them as long as they like, then return them by mail for a different selection. This is a very cool concept… and it’s also not available in Canada.

I’m not a tv addict — I hardly watch tv shows at all these days — but these two things would be very nice to have. And that silly border thing shouldn’t keep me from enjoying them.

And if that weren’t annoying enough… as I surf the web, I’m constantly running into ads and articles about them. As if they’re taunting me. Taunting me, saying “You like these nice shiny things? Well no shiny things for you, stupid Canuck-boy! Ha! I spit on you and your country!”

Grumble grumble grumble, rhubarb rhubarb rhubarb.

Maybe I’m taking this too personally.