R.I.P. Johnny Turbo, A.K.A. the Turbo Twins

This story was originally published on September 16, 2005.

Three Happenin Guys were once almost personally responsible for the death of another person. We almost killed a guy. It wasn’t the kind of thing where we hit a hobo with our tour bus, or a fan was crushed underneath a thousand other overzealous fans at a sold out show. This was a perfectly calculated ingenious murder plot, and it happened completely by accident. There are two ways for you to read this entry. If you are well balanced and mentally sound then please enjoy this entertaining story. But if you are an angry psycho then read this for what it really is: a blueprint for the perfect murder. Go ahead and pick a side. Got it? Now picture yourself in Lambert Fun Zone with a dumb, sweaty, chubby, blond-headed, crunk-toothed, goofy faced, home-schooled oaf in front of you. His employee name tag says Chris.

Chris Oats loved Fun Zone the way an illegal Mexican loves America. He was the only white kid in the category of Fun Zone employees that spent every waking hour at Fun Zone- the kids who ate three square meals a day in the snack bar. He’d show up at the butt crack of dawn and wait for the managers to unlock the building and let him in. He would request Gotta Girl by TCP every hour like clockwork, then skate in a blaze of glory whilst doing the Bankhead Bounce and various other ghetto moves as if he were in a one man episode of Soul Train. After a long day of skating to crunk ace skate music we would have to force him out of the building, then he’d get in his car and blast crunk ace skate music all the way home. Fun Zone was the only place he wanted to be.

He was a dirty ace pedophile. Chris Oats was sixteen when he was fired from Fun Zone for asking a twelve year old girl for her phone number, but if that was criteria for firing then he should have been fired a hundred times over. He wasn’t the kind of pervert that creeps you out though- the ones with the dirty ace glasses, the pit-stains, and the greasy thinning hair. Chris wasn’t an evil schemer with perverse plans to violate other people. Chris was a pedophile simply because he was too dumb to know that little girls weren’t fair game. His grandma had never home-schooled him that important bit of social information. I told one of my managers one day that Chris was dragging little girls’ bodies across his face as he “helped” them descend from the rock wall. Chris didn’t even get a warning. I guess his acorn sized brain had figured out the Fun Zone secret too.

We tried to keep him in check by making fun of him, but it never seemed to click. There were countless other things to make fun of Chris about though, and he quickly became Three Happenin Guys’ favorite co-worker. He was like our lovable little brother who came out the wrong way during childbirth. He wasn’t clever enough to joke back at his detractors, so his defense mechanism was to punch people who he suspected were teasing him. Three Happenin Guys were punched constantly.

One night at work Three Happenin Guys decided to take Chris Oats for a night out on the town. We invited Chris to participate in one of our famous “crazy adventures”, and he jumped at the opportunity. Little did he know that he was falling for a trap. The plan, we told him, was to go and explore this crazy long tunnel in a random Montgomery neighborhood. The truth was that the tunnel, which we had explored before and never reached the end of, was in a neighborhood that we knew very well. Clint’s long time best friend Johnny Turbo, A.K.A. the Turbo Twins lived there. Read More »

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The Internet

As the publisher of the most popular website on the internet, I hear the following question constantly from my readers:

“Dustin, I’ve been reading your blog at www.HappeninRecords.com faithfully. So faithfully, in fact, that I have never ventured out past your URL. I don’t know what else there is out there in that vast world wide web. And to tell you the truth, Dustin, I’m scared. I’m terrified of what may be out there. Is the rest of the internet as entertaining and educational as Happenin Records, or is it the abominable wasteland of child predators and identity thieves that I imagine it to be?”

Wonder no longer! My roommate Cory and I have put together a nice video presentation of everything you need to know about the internet. In this short docudrama we explore the worlds of Facebook, Netflix, Skype and more. Come along for the ride!

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S

This story was originally published on September 15, 2005.

At Fun Zone there were certain things that you came to expect to see on a regular basis. You expected to see pissed-off parents who wanted their money back for all the broken games and rides that they paid to find covered in Out of Order signs. You expected someone to fall on the skate floor and become disabled for life about once a month. You expected to see Chris Oats pursue all the eleven and twelve-year-old girls. When Mrs. Lambert came in with her sixth or seventh new husband, and her bratty ace kids told you to give them a bunch of free toys and candy because their mommy was your boss and she said they could have whatever they wanted today, you didn’t bat an eye. It was just another day. You weren’t surprised when Animatronic Man showed up and skated like a sixty-year-old android. And when Ticket Boy won thousands of tickets at a time, and he looked around at all of Fun Zone’s inhabitants with a look of great pride- pride that he had mastered the skill of hitting the Cyclone jackpot- on his gangly toothed, mullet framed, chubby face, you thought nothing of it.

Those were things you came to expect. There was another thing you came to expect at Fun Zone, and even though you expected it, it was always a crazy surprise when it showed its ugly brown face. That thing was poop. Fun Zone was full of little kids, and poop is like a currency to them. They make the stuff like they’re afraid they’ll get behind schedule, and they don’t give a F where they are when they do make it. Poop would show up in the ball pit. There was poop in the snack bar. It would get dumped on the floor in front of skate rental where people walk barefoot to get their skates, smearing warm diarrhea between their toes. Poop once found itself streaked by roller-skate wheels across the shiny black skate floor. When a group of middle eastern women found that particular pile they exclaimed that the floor was “unclean” and fled in disbelief, but it wasn’t all that unbelievable if you worked at Fun Zone.

The tubes were just one long twisted rainbow colored toilet. Kids would piss and puke and S throughout them like they were leaving a trail of bread crumbs. One special little boy crapped his pants, got the poop all over his ace, then slid down the wavy tube slide, WEEEEEEEE!, leaving a long wavy streak of poo for all the other children to slide through. Chris and I cleaned that one up.

It was a poop zone.

In the summertime Fun Zone would get most of it’s weekday business from group field trips- YMCA’s, youth groups, vacation bible schools, retarded kid groups, and year-round schools. The year-round school groups always came from the poorest black counties in Alabama. They’d drive three or four busloads of elementary school kids miles and miles to Fun Zone to tear the place up. The kids were poor, and they were dumb as S. They smelled like S. They communicated in a crude patchwork of the words Be, That, and Is. Even their teachers couldn’t speak proper English. For every Fun Zone employee there were about a hundred of these dirty little customers. It was hell on earth.

Now if this all seems insensitive to you don’t assume that I’m completely shallow and heartless. I’m perfectly aware that these children are less fortunate than myself, and that they never had a chance to receive decent schooling. The fact that their educators weren’t even educated is testament to that. Blame the school system, blame the state, blame the taxpayers, and blame whoever else you suspect. The kids were a product of their environment. Nevertheless, when you are being manipulated by a hundred of these little jerks, having compassion for each individual one isn’t an option. So let me continue my negative description.

The kid’s were f’n thieves. They’d steal the D between your legs. They’d sneak their thieving little hands behind the prize counter and steal prizes with you looking them in the eye. If you went to fix a broken game for one kid, twenty kids would crowd around you and say that the game took their money too. Even the kid’s parents stole S, and they weren’t any more clever about it. Poor, dirty, and dumb; you get the picture.

It was very easy to despise those groups and despise the days that they visited. There was one time though that poop made the whole day worthwhile. I was working at the rock wall, hooking up the dirty little crooks to the twenty foot mountain. Clint was loading children into the virtual roller coaster. Across the building I spotted Christopher of Three Happenin Guys laughing and shaking his head behind the prize counter. He motioned for us to come over and find out what was so funny. I began walking his way but was stopped about fifteen feet short by an impenetrable force. A smell.

This was a smell that I wouldn’t wish on Hitler. It wasn’t a smell that just stunk, it made you question existence. This smell was so unimaginably awful that it made you ask how a just creator could put us in a world where such horrible smells exist. When I first tried to describe this smell to others I would make references to other things that stunk, like “It smelled like if somebody took a dump inside a month old beached whale in a steam room”, but those comparisons are irrelevant. It was nothing other than a poop smell. It was just that that simple poop smell, which is arguably the worst smell there is, was magnified at least ten times than the worst smelling dump your dad has ever taken. If you think you’ve smelled something as bad or worse than this then you’re an idiot and I hope you never talk to me again. There has never been and will never be a smell as bad as this. Ever. Enough said.

Chris was heaving with tears in his eyes as he laughed at what was in front of him. I held my breath and got close enough to see for myself the twelve year old boy with S smeared down the back of his shorts. It was a greenish brown. I was becoming dizzy so I ran to safety and watched the scene from there. The kid stood looking at the colorful prizes underneath the glass as people walked by and immediately scrunched their faces in agony. “What that smell is?” the other children would cry before running for their lives. The young man left the prize counter to tour the rest of Fun Zone so Three Happenin Guys followed and observed from a safe distance. Everywhere he went people nearly fainted, but they were so dazed by the stench that they didn’t realize who it came from. The filthy child walked up to a wrestling game where four other boys were playing.

“Nigga you be stank!” exclaimed one of the horrified boys. All four of them abandoned the game and got as far away as possible. We watched Poopy Butt walk up to play the abandoned game and noticed that he was unfazed by his classmate’s reaction. He had the expression of a man who didn’t know or care where he was. It was as if poop coated shorts were part of his every day attire. Read More »

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TokBox is Top of the Pops

Do you ever have days where you spend countless hours clicking through the vast changing landscape of new and innovative web services, applications, and add-ons? Today was one of those days for me. I probably added twenty new things to Firefox and uninstalled 18 of them immediately. My favorite new feature of Firefox is Personas, an add-on that let’s you instantly change the theme of your browser with a single click. I’m pretty sure I will design a Persona of my own soon and link to it here for anyone who wants a Dustin Timbrook themed online experience. I also plan on creating an iGoogle skin at some point, but that requires some xml knowledge that I don’t have yet.

I even tried out Second Life for the first time.

I even tried out Second Life for the first time.

Most of the new apps and services that I sign up for don’t hold up too well. Often they are based on interesting concepts, but just aren’t practical enough to put to regular use. Occasionally I find something really helpful though. I will share a few here. Read More »

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Little Spring Park, Part 3

Last night I finished the center section of my five part watercolor of Big Spring Park in Huntsville. This one took forevvvvvver, but it was worth it. The series is really starting to come together as a visually cohesive whole.

Click the image to view in more detail on Flickr. Select All Sizes to view a larger version.

Click the image to view in more detail on Flickr. Select "All Sizes" to view a larger version.

Hopefully I will finish this project this week so I can get on with my life.

Hey, guess what? I’m having a solo show in Huntsville this coming November. Do you want to receive a nice postcard invitation? Email me your home address and I will send you one when the time comes. Back to work…

dstntmbrk at gmail dot com

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The Rise and Fall of Lambert Fun Zone

This story was originally published on Wednesday, September 14, 2005.

I plan on writing a few stories in the near future that are tied to one central place. As much as I desperately want to write those stories right now, they will not be as profound if I don’t first write about Lambert Fun Zone, the place where Three Happenin Guys used to work. Lambert Fun Zone was more than a family skate rink; It was Utopia. But like all great civilizations it would eventually come toppling down. This is the tale of the rise and fall of a great empire.

Clint was the first to work there. He signed the dotted line the day that Fun Zone opened it’s doors, and his description of the place was so unbelievable that John and Chris and I had to see it for ourselves. Walking through those red double doors for the first time is probably the closest thing I can imagine to that scene where the ticket holders first enter Willy Wonka’s factory. Fun Zone was an all ages Chucky Cheese on steroids. There were bumper cars, there were arcade games everywhere you looked, there was a rock climbing wall, a virtual roller coaster, cyber pods, skate rink, snack bar, moon walk, and tubes – tubes as far as the eye could see. A manikin with a pink wig and roller blades was suspended from wires up high next to a bunch of busted drywall to look like, get this, He Had Crashed Into The Wall! The skaters, most of whom were either little kids or kids springing their first pubes, sweated to the pulsing beats of only the crunkest hits. They chanted along to classic lines like “sweat drop down my balls”, as the DJ cranked out the jams in a booth underneath a giant purple Styrofoam octopus.

In the farthest, darkest corner of the building, far from regular adult surveillance, there was a nonstop budding pubescent heavy petting makeout orgy. A congregation of sweaty thirteen year old ChismItes and white trash bumped and grinded in the shadows, interrupted only occasionally by a concerned manager. Those interventions just meant that the sexual activity would be moved to the enclosed video games and the tubes, the miles and miles of tubes. The party never stopped at Fun Zone.

The future coke whores and the young men that would eventually beat them weren’t the only ones having fun at Fun Zone though. As I found within days of being employed there, Lambert Fun Zone was the easiest job on earth with the most immediate benefits. For starters, there were chicks wall to wall. Hot chicks with huge T’s. And the managers hired them by the dozen, so Three Happenin Guys saw huge T’s everyday. In fact, Chris and I were denied employment the first time we applied because two chicks with huge T’s got the job instead.

The greatest benefit was the complete lack of employer leadership. All day long you could play video games. You could eat free pizza till it came out your ears, and free candy till you reached the ‘if I eat another piece of candy I’ll throw up’ point. Nobody gave a F. You could watch some little kid fall and scrape his knee and say “Hey little kid you need to learn how to skate cause you skate like a dumb piece of S”. You wouldn’t get in trouble. You could play some video games, eat some free cotton candy, take a free slice of pizza and throw it at some kid’s grandpa’s face, then leave work for two hours, come back to work and dump some trash in the moonwalk, then clock out. You’d get a fat check at the end of the week. It was a lawless frontier.

If you think I’m making this up then just go end your life now because I’m trying to tell you about the greatest job on earth and you refuse to believe. Now in all honesty not just anybody working at Fun Zone could pull off such poor work skills and keep their jobs in tact, but Three Happenin Guys did on a daily basis. We discovered the Fun Zone secret: Our managers didn’t want to take the time to hire our replacements. Plus, we had made such good friends with them that they didn’t care what we did, and they knew that the owners were too busy avoiding the IRS and the investors who they owed hundreds of thousands of dollars, and sleeping around and getting trashed to make sure that the place was being managed properly.

It paid minimum wage, but it was the greatest job imaginable. All day long we would talk to chicks and watch little kids crap their pants. There were other employees like Chris Oates who loved Fun Zone so much that they would never leave. These kids would clock out after their shift and keep on skating, keep on eating free candy, keep on requesting their favorite song, keep on getting crunk like it was their last chance ever to get crunk. Every single day they would do this, showing up even when they weren’t on the schedule. Fun Zone was so great that it consumed their lives. It became their home. It was a golden age.

That golden age would slowly fade over a two year period though. Management changed. There was a crackdown on pizza theft. Dirty ace crunk music was taken off the playlist. Fun Zone was now going to try to appeal to white families only. The T’s on our co-workers became smaller and smaller. When a video game broke we really had to fix it. When a kid took a S all over the floor, Three Happenin Guys actually had to clean it up.

It had become an actual job. Clint quit almost immediately. Chris and I sucked it up and continued to earn our checks. And although that golden age of Fun Zone was long gone, it had produced a handful of incredible stories, and the place continued to produce incredible stories even after its prime. These are stories that will change your life, so if you’re already satisfied with your life then read something else. Chicken Soup for the Soul or something like that. You’ve been warned.

Previously: Natural Selection

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Little Spring Park, Part 2

Good googly moogly, this project is taking a long time. This morning I completed the second section, which happens to be my favorite part of Big Spring park. It’s the shady area where all the college kids and angsty teens go to relax underneath the tree cover. Even the fish come to this section of the park to rest, and because the water is so shallow in the channel where they hover, you can study the koi in full detail.

Click the image to view in more detail on Flickr. Select All Sizes to view a larger version.

Click the image to view in more detail on Flickr. Select "All Sizes" to view a larger version.

Recognize that bike?

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Natural Selection

This story was originally published on Friday, September 23, 2005.

As you should know if you have read a newspaper in the past year, the hot topic in the world of public education nowadays is the teaching of evolution versus “intelligent design”. The whole thing seems very silly to me. I believe in God, but I don’t see how belief in a creator cancels out the simple science of natural selection. Evolution is visible on a daily basis. Your science teacher will point this out by saying something about a hummingbird’s beak being long and slender enough to enter a flower and suck out it’s sweet nectar, and how that specific shape was derived by a series of eliminations of birds with short beaks over hundreds and thousands of generations. But you don’t have to look that close to see evolution. It’s right in front of you.

When I was learning about natural selection and ancient species in junior high school – free of glued in science book disclaimers – I was able to view the real deal on a regular basis at Boy Scouts. My troop was filled with variations of the human race that would never survive in the wild. There were kids that were too fat to hike up Mount Cheaha. They’d never escape the jaws of a saber-tooth tiger. There were kids that were too dumb to pitch a tent or start a fire on their own. They’d die the first day of an ice age winter. And then there were the kids that were just so weird that they would have been killed and eaten by their own species the first time they opened their crazy-ace mouths and said that they had an imaginary alligator named Jack who tells them secrets in the bathroom. The almost normal boys of the troop were like raptors, traveling in packs and eliminating the weak with their razor sharp joke-downs. Blood was never shed, but those who weren’t fit for troop 406 soon found themselves out of troop 406, and our species evolved into a group of boys who talked a lot of S, paired with boys that could put up with a lot of S. But no single raptor can take on a T-Rex. Our fellow scout Frank had to learn that lesson the hard way.

Mike was a T-Rex. From his first days in the troop he was twice as tall as every other scout, young and old. He was a tragic display of pubescent awkwardness, as if all the development from ages eleven to eighteen were jammed into him overnight. He was greasy, he was crazy tall, and strong in random parts of his body. He had zits and curly hair dripping with sweat, and his voice sounded like someone was constantly flipping the 33”-45” switch. His limbs bent and moved in impossible directions totally at random. This made walking almost impossible for Mike. If you were in the same room as the kid he would at some point collide violently into you no matter what. When we were hiking he would veer from one side of the trail to the other because walking a straight line was a physical impossibility for his teenage body. It didn’t matter how steep the cliff or how far the drop, Mike would almost fall off of it. If there was a cast-iron bucket full of potatoes hanging from the tent ceiling, Mike would hit his head on it every time.

Mike would eat all the F’n food for your entire patrol and then brag to your emaciated face that he was a growing boy with a big appetite. Then he’d slam some little crying Cub Scout on the ground during a game of King of the Hill and stare at his own hands proclaiming, “I don’t know my own strength.” He wasn’t a jerk. He just wasn’t prepared for the responsibilities of being an overnight T-Rex, and we as a troop had to bear the consequences.

Read More »

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Little Spring Park, Part 1

The interesting thing about being self-employed is that I work much harder now than I did when I was under someone else’s direction. Whether or not there is any profit in my own direction is still up in the air. I have been selling some work though, and I think the project that I’m on now will be a hot item here in Huntsville.

I’m painting a 7 foot long panoramic watercolor of Big Spring Park, scaled down to the self-contained vignette size that I have been working with lately. The work is sectioned in five separate parts, each showing a different area of the park. It’s a somewhat overwhelming project, and all of my time and energy for the latter half of August is going into it. I probably spent 20 hours on this first section.

Click on the image to view it in more detail on Flickr.

Click on the image to view it in more detail on Flickr. Select "All Sizes" to view a larger version.

I’m definitely verging into overly-cute territory here, but how can I not when the subject matter is colorful ducks, squirrels and koi? I promise to follow up with something familiarly disturbing.

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Satisfied Customers

This post is an ongoing directory of people who have bought, traded, or been gifted my art work. If you own one of my original creations, email me a photo of you with the work. Make sure that you and the piece are both clearly visible, and let me know if I should include your name on the site or keep it private. I hope to see you all here soon!

dstntmbrk at gmail dot com

Amanda Norman celbrates her own Watermelon Day

Amanda Norman celebrates her own "Watermelon Day".

Ashley Carlton always takes her Picnic Crab watercolor to buy-one-get-one free night at Red Lobster.

Ashley Carlton always takes her "Picnic Crab" watercolor to extra butter night at Red Lobster.

Ginny Erickson is pleased with her new pet racoon.

Ginny Erickson is pleased with her new pet racoon.

Jessica was too excited about her purchase of Sunshine to keep it all in.

Jessica was too excited about her purchase of "Sunshine" to keep it all in.

Andrew Wilson is stoked about his watercolored screen print, Stubble Throat.

Andrew Wilson is stoked about his watercolored screen print, "Stubble Throat".

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Hot Dog Beach

I am really into doing these little watercolors nowadays. Tomorrow I begin a long panoramic painting of Big Spring Park for the juried Unique Views of Huntsville exhibitition. If I get in for that show I will have stuff hanging in three ongoing exhibitions here in town at the same time. I’m crossing my fingers.

Hot Dog Beach

Hot Dog Beach

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Back in Action

I missed you, Internet.

During the past few weeks I have traveled to Chicago, moved into a new place, and buried my Grandfather. All of this business has kept me offline and away from my studio, but I’m happy to be back on the job of creating once again.

I apologize to those of you who’s Stranger Mail has been held up, and assure you that it will be in the drop box tomorrow. And those of you listeners waiting for a new podcast can expect a new one this week.

One cool development that recently popped up for the site is the ability to log in and comment using your Twitter account. If you are a Twitterer, how about logging in and leaving me a nice comment about my new watercolor painting of a baby elephant eating a Push Up.

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Huntsville Gallery Tour: Free Booze, Loose Women, And All the Art You Can Eat

Tomorrow, Thursday, July the 23rd is the Huntsville Summer Gallery Tour. This is a city-wide event in which hundreds of people visit all of the art galleries in town to schmooze, consume free food and alcohol, and BUY ART.

Come see me at Lowe Mill and buy some stuff. I will be wearing a tie, ladies. Things kick off at 5 and end at 9. I will also have a few new works for your enjoyment, like this watercolor of a ginger kid and albino chimpanzee atop a pair of hungry, hungry hippos.

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Brothers

If you have been reading this blog you are already familiar with my Grampaw, my cousin Tony, and the embarrassment they regularly cause me. Unfortunately, my family problems don’t end there. I also have two brothers and a father who make my life a living hell. Just the other night I was slapped in the face for a packaging tape mishap that was TOTALLY NOT MY FAULT, and I have the evidence to prove it.

It’s not always terrible though. In fact, things are looking pretty good now that my father has revealed our incredible family secret…

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Watermelon Day

Here’s what I painted today.

Watermelon Day

Watermelon Day

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Don’t Stop till It’s Broke

This story was originally published on Wednesday, September 21, 2005.

As I write this entry it is now Fall, and Winter is not far away. It was hot as S all day today, but very soon you and I will have to bundle on layers of warm cozy clothing. When you’re wrapping up in your gay-ace scarf you’ll probably say “Ooh, it’s so cold out today. Oh my gosh I’m so cold.”, but you my friend, have never been cold. You’ll never know the cold that the poor bastards of troop 406 had to experience, and if you think otherwise then you deserve three sharp punches right in the face.

Although it was a troop of freaks, my Boy Scout troop never cut any corners when it came to roughin’ it. Troop 406 would go on a weekend camping trip once a month no matter what the weather. We’d hike through lightning storms, set up camp in hurricane winds, and freeze our nut sacks off at below-zero temperatures. We were involuntarily hardcore because the older men in the troop were hardcore. But the most hardcore part of our trips were the sleeping arrangements.

We camped in crappy, derelict army surplus tents made of green canvas and wood poles. They were already poorly designed enough to be rejected by the army, and they were riddled with holes. If it rained during the trip then you slept in a wet sleeping bag- without exception. On cold nights the freezing air would rush through the tent holes mercilessly. Your only escape was to curl into the bottom of your possibly wet sleeping bag and periodically come up to breathe the painfully cold air. It was so cold that you couldn’t cry about how cold you were because you didn’t want to ice up your face.

We were dumb ace junior high kids so there invariably were a large number of boys that didn’t pack the proper clothing for those freezing winter trips. There would always be one or two boys that only packed a t-shirt and would have to beg borrow and steal jackets from the other scouts. The cold often approached fatally hazardous levels. One scout went into hypothermia by sleeping in a frozen wet sleeping bag. Another scout, who happened to be mentally retarded, had to piss one night but was too cold to make the trip out of the tent. He decided to stay somewhat warm by sticking his D through the door slit and pissing directly out the tent, a wise move that we all pulled when necessary. At some point though he lost control of his D and he and his tent partner awoke the next day in a tent painted with frozen piss.

There was one boy in the troop who was used to being cold in the woods. His name was Frank, and he was a redneck. Frank was always doing bad stuff. Read More »

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Happy Birthday, America!

Happy day after the 4th of July, from HappeninRecords.com!

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How Come Jermaine Got Two Popsicles?

This is it people. As promised, I am giving away my most valued painting for free to the first person who can complete my list of 25 things to do.

If you want to own How Come Jermaine Got Two Popsicles?, the single greatest dinner party conversation starter in the history of the world, here is what you need to do. And no, I will no longer sell the painting. From here on out, the only way to get this painting is via the competition.

Intsructions: Read More »

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Latrine Duty

This story was originally published on Thursday, September 08, 2005.

My Boy Scout troop, Troop 406, was a dumping ground for adolescent freaks. A lot of folks are surprised to find out that I am a certified Eagle Scout, I guess because I don’t go around tying knots and building fires at random. I was one of the few proud scouts in 406 that achieved that prestigious rank because most of the other kids weren’t there by choice. You might expect that they didn’t want to be there because they thought it was lame, or gay, or for nerds. But it was the total opposite. Their parents forced them into the program because they thought it would make them normal. The boys were so abnormal that they couldn’t handle being there.

Now “freak” is not a word I use lightly. You or someone you know might see some pale chick wearing a lot of black shiny clothing and say “That chick is a freak”. Or someone watching the Jenny Jones show might see a man dressed in woman’s clothing and say “He be a freak”. Those aren’t freaks though. Those are people that fall into a fashion culture or gender identity minority. They might be very different from me and you and your mom, but they still follow the trends of a fairly large group of people with similar interests.

The boys in my Boy Scout troop were freaks the way Michael Jackson is a freak. These were kids that were one-of-a-kind weird. You can scour the earth for years but you’ll never find another person that has the same crazy-ace speech impediment as this one kid, or the gag inducing stench of this other kid, or the general creepy mentally disturbed vibe that resonated from at least half of the group. In my years there I was threatened to be killed numerous times, a kid tried to stab me and all the other kids in the troop, and I had to hear more sobbing than you would in a nursery.

It was troop of freaks.

There were maybe four boys there that were just normal kids. But they were viscous. Kids love to pick on other kids who are going to react in an erratic way, and our campouts and meetings happened to be the World’s Fair of unpredictable behavior. I was the leader of the troop so I had to keep things from getting too far out of hand. I won’t say I protected the weird kids from everyone else, because really, that was our only source of entertainment. As shameful as it sounds, it’s funny to see a thirteen year old kid cry after hearing a ridiculous ghost story. It’s funny to see some crazy kid rage out and break a bunch of stuff because you called him “Mouse” one too many times. It feels good to laugh at some kid that pisses and craps his only pair of pants for the entire weekend. When you grow up you tend to pity those people and try to help them out, but that’s not the case when you’re a teenager. I just tried not to let things go to dangerous extremes.

One of the weirdest kids in my troop was Blakely. Blakely wasn’t one of the kids that wouldn’t shower, and he never threatened to kill anyone. He was just unbelievably socially awkward. It seemed like he knew how goofy he was so he tried to play it off as his comedic shtick. He was so easily provoked to tears or temper tantrums though that it was obvious that it wasn’t an act. He was kind of a chubby kid, with glasses and a voice like some Sesame Street character reject. He would proudly joke back at the kids who picked on him, but his comebacks were terrible. I think at one time he was suspended for sexually harassing one of his teachers, and I doubt he understood the meaning of what he said or motioned to her. He was most likely parroting his peer’s behavior. Anyways, you get the point. If my description isn’t fleshed out enough then just imagine the weirdest kid you went to junior high school with, and insert him in this story.

When you are hiking through the mountains and you have to take a S, you lean back against a tree, pull your britches down, and take a S. Read More »

Posted in Journal | 2 Comments

Free Painting

I am giving away my favorite and most popular painting, How Come Jermaine Got Two Popsicles?, for free. Here is the promo:

I will be posting full details tomorrow, and the competition will officially begin on the 4th. Till then, talk trash in the comments section.

Posted in Art, Video | 1 Comment
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