A Band Apart

Every Tuesday and Thursday, the Dakota State University concert band meets. Every Tuesday and Thursday Megan, Jenny Sixta, and I make the trek, usually by car, up to the Dakota Prairie Playhouse to play our clarinets. Because of our devotion and talent, we own the third clarinet section.

DSU does band differently than Milbank did band. In Milbank, at first, we would be arranged most courageous to most boy. Because of this, our first day in band, Corey Rolfes and I were last chairs. Boys in the high-register winds section always get shafted. Just because girls can sing higher doesn’t mean they can play higher. Thankfully for me, Milbank then had a sorting audition, and I got put in my rightful spot.

DSU doesn’t rank its players. This means that, once again, I am the last player in the clarinet section. This also means that the alpha females compete for the first chair position, often resulting in bloody carnage minutes before a rehearsal. “Passive-aggressive” is definitely a synonym for “alive”.

Still, I like my position. I firmly believe that every part in a piece of music is important. So, I have no qualms about playing a third part. Third parts often have challenging, musical aspects that make them just as viable as any other piece of music. Still, the clarinet is meant to go high. So, the only consolation I get in playing third is that it is typically written low and I like that sound.

It reminds me the final blast of the Titanic’s horn as it sets sail for America. Okay, maybe that’s a little over the top, but it is definitely a beautiful sound laced in tragic irony. Or something like that.

The other good thing is that, because of college band, Megan and Jenny can sit next to me. This is important because they make me play all the parts that the audience has a chance of hearing, which means most of the music. Megan, who I recruited and who then recruited Jenny, claims that she just goes along with Jenny’s insecurities and that she could actually play those parts as loud as they needed to be.

Yes, dear.

This year, though, there was an unexpected change. I began taking bassoon lessons this semester. The bassoon is a messed up instrument. It has two reeds. This means that you can make twice as many squeaks, wrong notes, and mess ups as a typical reed instrument. It goes by the moniker, The Farting Bedpost, on account of its shape and smell. Naw, just joshing!

I took on the bassoon to have something new to learn, to get some more credits, and to make my life even more busy. It turns out, however, that Mr. Hegg wants me to play this thing in the concert. And, of course, it will be a solo. Well, thank God for that. Now I have a solo to play, I have Jenny crying “traitor” and Megan putting on her brave face saying, “I’ll support you,” when she actually means, “I hate you.”

The solo isn’t going well, however. You see, they hadn’t counted on the fact that I suck at this new instrument. It sounds tons better if there is an entire band behind me, but the other day he had just me and the piccolo play our duet. I am the weakest link. Megan said later that, just for the record, she didn’t laugh until I did.

I’m scared. Will this go well? Will I mess up horribly? Make sure you attend the Spring Concert on Sunday, 5/02/04, at 4:30 p.m. to find out! It is taking place at the Dakota Prairie Playhouse in Madison, South Dakota! Same Bassoon Time! Same Bassoon Channel!
[ bassoon ]/[ i hate you ]

SPAM Explained

I normally don’t read spam emails. Unless they’re porn, I have no reason to open them. I mean… not porn. I mean… dmmt. I can usually tell that its spam just by reading the from and the subject line. Today, however, I got taken by one message (which I commend them on), and the other one was just for fun.

I was going to put up some coffee shop poetry I wrote yesterday, but I don’t want anyone to fall asleep! I know what the people really want and it’s not poetry! It’s comedy!! And so I’m going to try to write some comedy not stupid stupid poetry!!! Cuz poe tree iz da suxx0rs!!!!!

The first message I got was in my midco webmail. It had no reply name (they usually have some very upstanding, trustworthy name like Dina Wolff), but it did have an address: no-reply@paypal.com. I’ve heard of PayPal. PayPal is the only way most online comic writers can survive long enough to place their crude, 4th-wall-ignoring, rubber stamp comic characters out on the net.

I was ex-static. The subject line read: “Congratulations!”. I was so excited! I opened it up and I read this:

Your bill is attached to this mail.

What?? What bill? I didn’t buy anything with PayPal! What are they congratulating me for then? I was furious. Was someone out there pretending to be me? Worse yet, were they giving my money to worthless hacks who opened up a free account just in case their grandparents ever got the “interwebnet” finally “downlorded” onto their “seepeeyou”? Then I noticed that a zip file was attached. HuhHah! Caught! Only viruses attach zip files. The whole internet has become so scared of zip and exe files that no matter how many certifications you have as attachments, you can’t get the pope to open an emailed zip file. A quick visit to PayPal’s security site led me to believe that the truth was that I had been doped.

Then I checked my Yahoo! mail. This message was from phlip_cpp@losmunoz.com (now in my address book) and the subject line (which was very intriguing) read: Rauschpax, Want you see madness? (NPmNG). How could I not want see madness? And that cool secret code at the end? How could I pass that up? Plus, he used my real rocker name, Rauschpax. I had to open it.

I heard some people catch a helpless d0gs and other
animals, like h0rses, g0ats, sheeps and f-u-kk them. Recenlry i saw it…
They also make an extreemly s.e-ks.ual actions with an1malz!

They make an1-mals to l1ck w0man’s pooss1es and a-s.sh0les. W00men l1ke to play w1th d0g-s huuug-eee eerekted k0cks, they
mast00rbeit the1rselvez and must00rbat a d0g!!!

2 lessb1ans starv1ng for a-neem-al $eks came to stables and start to mus-tur-ba.te h0rse’z
1ncread1ably hooge and l0o0ng deek! 1t 1s reelly awe-some! They also leek hor-ze deek in cumm here

A mAn and a wu-mAn ffaa;k themselves and a dd0gy! Unusual S(E-(K(S trio!

We got TONS of piks hes and veedeos with aneemal-ffak-and-ssak-lovers!
A lot of fre_sh photoz are coming soon!

M_O_R_E…
For oonsubscript reasons write here:oonsubsribe me

zEWujjEhtijcOFi

Wow – that was madness. This email seems to be a combination of english, l337, and dutch. How do you oonsubscribe? What does it mean to leek? Why would two lesbians masturbate a male horse? The fact that the animals they catch to have their way with are helpless. Shouldn’t someone be emailing PETA about this? If I cared more, I probably would.

Some subject lines don’t even try to hide anything.

Suckled K. Voyage – Stupid Teen Swalloing Jizz

This was even condescending. Not only is this presumeably female teen swalloing jizz (whatever that is and whatever that is that she’s doing), but they have to make fun of her intelligence. That’s not necessary. Unless, maybe, her punishment for being so “stupid” is to swallo the jizz. Then maybe it’s okay.

dreammates – View photos of singles in YOUR area

As opposed to HIS area? I would have been more likely to read this email if it had said MY area. A conceited spammer is better than a fake spammer. I get this one often. I make sure to email every one, though, and tell them that I have a girlfriend and that her name is Megan and then I give them her email address.

King Stud- MEN: Make her beg for it

This one is good. I get this one alot, actually. They never tell you who she is or what to make her beg for. Maybe we’re making the stupid teen beg for a good grade, since she has to swallo jizz. Maybe.

There are the Vicodin emails.

vickie Boyes – Hydrocodone and Vicodin hospital

I get an email involving Vicodin every day. This one has a very simple inside.

Buy Meds at 80% off, $99 V1codin Special
Vic0din, Hydrocod0ne, C|al1s, V1agra, lev1tra, Lipitor,Xanax, and so much more.
V1sit Our Website
No Prior Pres.cription needed
No Appointments
No Waiting Rooms
No Embarassment
Private &Confidential
Discreet Packaging
HUGE SAVINGS

boiling ray bird cloth equal left knee fat division book answer property little development still bird before roll tall cloud move size bee humorice lip umbrella law possible and language growth bulb but language example horn for cheap burn on question old desire chance sort long prison farm picture milk leather chance roof wax wind peace fat island put fold fat any knowledge interest toe chest doubt direction sad sneeze development he grey/gray leather wave over grass paper thread will much get name quality sail military electric

Then there is the crap paragraph at the bottom. What the hell is that? Those words have nothing to do with each other! It’s so ridiculous. Maybe they made whoever wrote this swallo jizz first. Then I guess I forgive him.

But he should get his grades up soon and leave my inbox alone.

[ spam ]/[ jizz ]

Radiohead Reviews

I recently came across a new look to SomethingAwful.com. It turns out that they are parodying Pitchfork Media with their own RichDork Media. Here is what the proper site, Pitchfork Media, said about Radiohead’s Kid A album:

Radiohead – Kid A [Capitol] Rating: 10.0

I had never even seen a shooting star before. 25 years of rotations, passes through comets’ paths, and travel, and to my memory I had never witnessed burning debris scratch across the night sky. Radiohead were hunched over their instruments. Thom Yorke slowly beat on a grand piano, singing, eyes closed, into his microphone like he was trying to kiss around a big nose. Colin Greenwood tapped patiently on a double bass, waiting for his cue. White pearls of arena light swam over their faces. A lazy disco light spilled artificial constellations inside the aluminum cove of the makeshift stage. The metal skeleton of the stage ate one end of Florence’s Piazza Santa Croce, on the steps of the Santa Croce Cathedral. Michelangelo’s bones and cobblestone laid beneath. I stared entranced, soaking in Radiohead’s new material, chiseling each sound into the best functioning parts of my brain which would be the only sound system for the material for months.

The butterscotch lamps along the walls of the tight city square bled upward into the cobalt sky, which seemed as strikingly artificial and perfect as a wizard’s cap. The staccato piano chords ascended repeatedly. “Black eyed angels swam at me,” Yorke sang like his dying words. “There was nothing to fear, nothing to hide.” The trained critical part of me marked the similarity to Coltrane’s “Ole.” The human part of me wept in awe.

The Italians surrounding me held their breath in communion (save for the drunken few shouting “Criep!”). Suddenly, a rise of whistles and orgasmic cries swept unfittingly through the crowd. The song, “Egyptian Song,” was certainly momentous, but wasn’t the response more apt for, well, “Creep?” I looked up. I thought it was fireworks. A teardrop of fire shot from space and disappeared behind the church where the syrupy River Arno crawled. Radiohead had the heavens on their side.

For further testament, Chip Chanko and I both suffered auto-debilitating accidents in the same week, in different parts of the country, while blasting “Airbag” in our respective Japanese imports. For months, I feared playing the song about car crashes in my car, just as I’d feared passing 18- wheelers after nearly being crushed by one in 1990. With good reason, I suspect Radiohead to possess incomprehensible powers. The evidence is only compounded with Kid A– the rubber match in the band’s legacy– an album which completely obliterates how albums, and Radiohead themselves, will be considered.

Even the heralded OK Computer has been nudged down one spot in Valhalla. Kid A makes rock and roll childish. Considerations on its merits as “rock” (i.e. its radio fodder potential, its guitar riffs, and its hooks) are pointless. Comparing this to other albums is like comparing an aquarium to blue construction paper. And not because it’s jazz or fusion or ambient or electronic. Classifications don’t come to mind once deep inside this expansive, hypnotic world. Ransom, the philologist hero of C.S. Lewis’ Out of the Silent Planet who is kidnapped and taken to another planet, initially finds his scholarship useless in his new surroundings, and just tries to survive the beautiful new world.

This is an emotional, psychological experience. Kid A sounds like a clouded brain trying to recall an alien abduction. It’s the sound of a band, and its leader, losing faith in themselves, destroying themselves, and subsequently rebuilding a perfect entity. In other words, Radiohead hated being Radiohead, but ended up with the most ideal, natural Radiohead record yet.

[…]

The experience and emotions tied to listening to Kid A are like witnessing the stillborn birth of a child while simultaneously having the opportunity to see her play in the afterlife on Imax. It’s an album of sparking paradox. It’s cacophonous yet tranquil, experimental yet familiar, foreign yet womb-like, spacious yet visceral, textured yet vaporous, awakening yet dreamlike, infinite yet 48 minutes. It will cleanse your brain of those little crustaceans of worries and inferior albums clinging inside the fold of your gray matter. The harrowing sounds hit from unseen angles and emanate with inhuman genesis. When the headphones peel off, and it occurs that six men (Nigel Godrich included) created this, it’s clear that Radiohead must be the greatest band alive, if not the best since you know who. Breathing people made this record! And you can’t wait to dive back in and try to prove that wrong over and over.

I’ll admit, I got a laugh over it. But wait until you see what they said. You’ll have to scroll all the way down their page to find it.

Radiohead – Collectionanthropolopolisology [ EMI Toshiba; 2004] Rating: 10.0

Traveling through space at 293.37246 million billion miles per hour, traveling past star systems and glowing golden suns, comes Radiohead’s latest offering. Discovering a new Radiohead release is like staring into the eyes of Jesus Christ and feeling the eternal stream of love and awe that flows from Him. I might be so bold as to claim that Radiohead is the Jesus Christ of music; the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost combined into one small package featuring the limitless talent of Thom Yorke.

So how do I review such an inherently perfect, flawless recording? It would be unfair of me to simply state, “this CD is perfection in the literal sense of the word,” as that would not give such a masterpiece the sufficient praise it deserves. Putting this disc into your stereo and listening to it is like having the saints pee liquid gold into your ears. A beautiful, flowing, melodic wall of sound embraces you like the mother you never had because she was a filthy whore.

Track 1, “Ale A Gator,” opens up with a lush field of melodic vibraphones and marimbas trumpeting the arrival of Thom York’s genius. A glassy string section envelopes the sound field and reminds me of the time I was doing heroin in the middle of Canterbury Park. Finally Yorke’s angelic voice sweeps in, crooning the following incomprehensibly intelligent lyrics:

Ale A Gator, the world is your at your feet
With a gaping mouth and jagged teeth
Your eyes remind me of capitalism (the telephone is ringing)
And your love is love like loving eyes, I will be there for you

Ale A Gator
Ale A Gator
Dragging through your personal hell
Ale A Gator
Ale A Gator
Encrusted jewels and a kissing kill across your gentle forehead

Time for sleep
Time for sleep
Time for sleep
Time for sleep
Gentle Ale A Gator

Such raw, unrelenting beauty caressed my soul like fingertips running across my spine. The power, the genius, the immeasurable talent which escapes from this porous CD can easily overwhelm you without proper preparation. Teams of NASA scientists could spend hundreds of years attempting to discover the meaning behind Thom’s words, but nobody is intelligent enough to properly do so except Thom himself and his alter-ego, Jesus Christ. Perhaps some day they will both do a duet together and we can finally see who’s truly the Son of God.

As for tracks 2-9, I was unable to listen to them as I was so blown away by Radiohead’s sheer power that I beat my CD player into pieces with a rake so it would never be defiled by another, inferior compact disc. I shall review the rest of the album once my dad flies back from the Hamptons and buys me a new SUV to play it in.

This was too priceless to pass up. If you love a band so much that you can’t laugh at them, then you are being too serious. I love Radiohead, but (c’mon) that was priceless.

[ radiohead ]/[ parody ]

Show Me Yours ;)

I got an email the other day. It was from my cousin Jenny Brass, on my dad’s side. Jenny is a second cousin. She’s a cool gal, sometimes a little ditzy, always fun. I was surprised to get an email from her because she’s not a very email/internet in-touch kind of girl.

The email was short. It had about a paragraph in it, and it had a link. As it turns out, Jenny has gotten herself a LiveJournal. If you are not familiar with it, LiveJournal is a blog hosting website. It’s a lot like Blogger or Pitas except that the only way to join is to be invited or to buy your way in. It’s an elitist blogging site or sorts. It’s like a nightclub, where you can only get in if you know the owner or if you can afford to palm out a benjamin’.

I haven’t really had a chance to read Jenny’s blog, but it seems like all the other blogs out there. People, deep down, just want to write. They can write about anything. Here at Awayken.com, I have chosen to write, mostly, a particular kind of prose, seeking to entertain through humour. I also throw in poetry, fictional prose, and virus code… I mean wallpapers.

I was really shocked to find that Tony Rolfes has a blog. I’ve withheld the address – you can ask him for it – but I was impressed. Of course, he had to start it for a class. The assignment was to do an online journal of some sorts or have to do something else. Well, Tony took the lazy way out, but it turned out to be a positive endeavor.

He writes regularly, has a nice layout, and has found it to be a nice way to get his ideas across to the world. And here I thought Tony didn’t know how to read! With such a simple outlet, Tony has let the world know just how literate he is. Here is a sample of his genius, from April 4:

This weekend was really fun. We went to Miles play on Friday night. I can’t say it was the most enjoyable play I have ever gone to, but I can say it was the only play I’ve seen Miles in where he only had one line that was something like “Gays Rock!!!” or something like that. You understand Miles. It was a musical with singers that aren’t that good, and you didn’t have any lines. HONESTLY. I envied Jeff because he had a few before we went to the play. At least we got in for free.

After the play was really fun. We played black jack and cribbage. I can honestly say that it was one of the most fun times that I’ve had down in Madison. It was great talking to everyone late into the night. Saturday we lanned it up. I can’t say it was the best lan party I’ve been to, but it was fun non the less. That’s pretty much it for me.

I can’t wait until school is over for the year. I need money and Golf. You can’t live without money or golf. I’ll keep you all informed if any entertaining thing happens to me this week. L8rs

If that can pass as quality internet literature, anything can.

I was further shocked to discover that my girlfriend wanted to start a blog. She’s normally so shy about writing. For instance, she won’t play guitar, sing, write, read out loud, do homework, put on makeup, put on her shoes, dance to music, eat a meal, talk on the phone, or breathe in front of me for fear of doing something embarassing. In fact, I’m not even allowed to know the address to her blog. But, I hear that she writes quite frequently, and that she’s even posted a poem, which I am not allowed to read. I love that girl.

Micro$oft, realizing the value that blogs have to the world, has provided its employees with blog space. Dubbed “blogs.msdn.com“, this site has served as a way for the conglomerate to seem more “human” and “friendly” instead of “threatening” and “scary”. Does it work? It seems to be a thinly veiled way for these programmers and assorted worker bees to talk up their products and sound slightly less �ber-geeky, but some of the stuff is interesting.

So, could any more shocks come? Yes, there is one more shock. This isn’t based on who has a blog (because, c’mon, who hasn’t a blog??) but on who does not have a blog. That would be, my brother, Bryce Rausch.

Bryce’s internet presence has been menial at best. Always on the outskirts of content, some of the sites that he or he and I have authored together comprise a small and somewhat discouraging and embarassing list. It includes his site and a teaser site for The Clintrix, a Matrix parody we had planned on making something up for.

As you can see, on Bryce’s site, he relies heavily on Flaming Text. Flaming Text is a website that allows one to make custom graphics by picking background and fonts and such. It got its name because one of the options is to make text that flames. Thankfully, Bryce removed any flaming text he indeed had on his site. I think it is the cheesiest graphic effect in the world.

But just to show it off, here is Awayken.com in the cool flaming text style! To make it extra cool, I made it big, the background transparent, and my font even had flames built into it.

Maybe that is what’s holding him back. Most blogs do not have places for you to put your pictures unless you pay extra. This is called, in the industry, “webspace”. Tell you what, Bryce. If you decide to do a blog, and need a place for you graphics, I will front the webspace. Because I’m your brother. And I love you. And I’m tired of being your post bitch.

And no, you cannot have my flaming Awayken.

[ family ]/[ dirty blog on blog action ]

Guest Post (Need to Get Away for a While?)

by Bryce Rausch, my brother, who writes for the SMSU (formerly SSU) Spur.

Finals are coming up, papers you’ve successfully put off for a month have come up to bite you where you least expect it and you keep getting hit on by that annoying someone in your Intro to Tee-ball class. So what can you do to just escape those daily pressures?

For one girl from Minnesota, who will soon be a little more than grounded by her mommy and daddy, the obvious choice was to stage a kidnapping. Not just for some bloke on the street either, she kidnapped the person closest to her: herself.

Brilliant! What a flawless plan…that is if you can remember your own lie.

Wisconsin police reported a day after they found Audrey Seiler who was thirsty and cold in a marsh that her stories were inconsistent. Wisconsin: One, Seiler: Zero.

Seiler said she just wanted to be alone and I’m not so sure police will just say, “So the thousands of dollars spent trying to find you were wasted? Man, we got punk’d!”

I know what you’re saying, “Hey Bryce-dawg, I’m sick of the pressures of college, too, what can I do to be alone for a while? Do I have to kidnap myself or is it true that there are a plethora of options?”

Well, random student, that’s a great question. My advice is that you do NOT kidnap yourself. If Wisconsin is known for anything besides cheese it’s their elite police force; Minnesota is only known for Bob Dylan and having a lot of lakes. So if you stage yourself being kidnapped, you may never be found and will probably be eaten by coyotes.

My advice for you students needing to get away is to drive down to Nebraska; no one lives there so there will be plenty of alone time. If traveling is not your “cup of tea,” as they say in England, then you may just want to spend time in the library on a Friday night, where your chances of seeing anyone is about as good as Nick Nolte giving a key note speech at an AA meeting.

[ guest post ]/[ humour ]/[ bryce-dawg ]

ny eve

A little boy coloring at the kitchen table.

you wonder
how much of it was a lie
how much of it was just
a game

her game

mens hearts like strings
marionette, n*sync-style
and all without a guilty glance

you fell for it
you ate it up
and all for knots.

ny morn
ny noon
ny eve naive.until.the.eve.

starlight is far brighter than moonlight
if only because it is pure
and it is pure, like diamond dust
that only makes you
clean.

[ i ]/[ don|t ]/[ expect ]/[ understanding ]

FYI (Sex with Monkey)

You may have noticed that in the post where I discussed my birthday, Don’t Go Ape, We’re ReZoovanating, I left an email address in it. The address was tonysfreakymonkeylove@awayken.com.

I left the address because I implied certain sexual contact between one, Tony Rolfes, and one, Monkey. Now, I was joking. Tony doesn’t have a primate girlfriend. He didn’t get lucky in that monkey enclosure. It was all a joke, and the address would just send the mail to my normal awayken.com mail.

So, that email address works. Not only that, but I had one person, Missa, send an email to it. Her email, while short, warranted a response (as I don’t want to be a b*hole). So, I took to the internet.

I figured that I should just send her a link. I also figured that it should feature “monkey sex” or “sex with monkey”, but it should not be porn. So, after a google search string that looked like “sex with monkey” -porn -porno -movie -“young girl” -free, I finally happened upon one site.

The site is a blog called Iron Monkey hosted on blogspot. He has a post entitled Primate Sex where he has the following exerpt.

A small but noticeable portion of this site’s traffic comes from those searching for “monkey sex” (a phrase I tend to associate with a line from Buffy, The Vampire Slayer) or, as some searchers quaintly express it, “sex with monkey.” I assume that most of these searches must originate from serious researchers seeking to expand their knowledge of primatology. So, as a public service, I will provide some basic information and links to online resources for further study.

(blush) Call me silly, but that’s the exact way I found his site. I thought that was hilarious. So, as recompense for having such a terrible way to be discovered on the internet, I dedicate this post to him. It’s an interesting post, with good links. Check out the bonobos website.

You will be informed, surprised, and slightly aroused. At least, I was.

[ monkey sex ]/[ tony ]

Two Men

I know that this is a popular forward, but I’ve always been enchanted by the story.

Two men, both seriously ill, occupied the same hospital room. One man was allowed to sit up in his bed for an hour each afternoon to help drain the fluid from his lungs. His bed was next to the room’s only window. The other man had to spend all his time flat on his back.

The men talked for hours on end. They spoke of their wives and families, their homes, their jobs, their involvement in the military service, where they had been on vacation. And every afternoon when the man in the bed by the window could sit up, he would pass the time by describing to his roomate all the things he could see outside the window. The man in the other bed began to live for those one-hour periods where his wold would be broadened and enlivened by all the activit;y and color of the world outside.

The window overlooked a park with a lovely lake. Ducks and swans played on the water while children sailed their model boats. Young lovers walked arm in arm amidst flowers of every color of the rainbow. Grand old trees graced the landscape, and a fine wiew of the city skyline could be seen in the distance. As the man by the window described all this in exquisite detail, the man on the other side of the roomm would close his eyes and imagine the picturesque scene.

One warm afternoon the man by the window described a parade passing by. Although the other man couldn’t hear the band – he could see it in his mind’s eye as the gentleman by the window portrayed it with desriptive words. Day and weeks passed.

One morning, the day nurse arrived to bring water for their baths only to find the lifeless body of the man by the window, who had died peacefully in his sleep. She was saddened and called the hospital atnedants to take the body away.

As soon as it seemed appropriate, the other man asked if he could be moved next to the window. The nurse was happy to make the switch, and after making sure he was comfotable, she left him alon.

Slowly, painfully, he propped himself up on one elbow to take his first look at the world out side. Finally, he would have the joy of seeing it for himself. He strained to slowly turn to look out the window beside the bed. It faced a brick wall.

The man called the day nurse back to his room. “Why,” he asked, “would my roommate describe such wonderful scenes for me? Why not just tell me that all there is here is a brick wall?”

The nurse smiled. “The reason he didn’t describe the brick wall is because he couldn’t even see that. He was completely blind when they brought him in.”

[ touching ]

Don’t Go Ape, We’re ReZoovanating

I had quite the weekend. There was much on my planning plate for Saturday. I had it all laid out: Zoo, Museum, Dinner, Movie. Then my family arrived. The plan became: Zoo, Arcade at Movie Theatre, Dance Dance Revolution, Movie, Dinner. No problem; I’m a flexible guy.

It was a good day, but one thing truly stuck out in my mind. There was really only one thing that was worth writing a comedic commentary on, and that was “The Passion of the Christ”. Whoa – what a funny movie! It was like a return to slapstick Charlie Chaplin movies. It was even entirely in German and French, which is unusual.

Aside from that, though, the funniest thing was the Great Plains Zoo (GPZ), in Sioux Falls. There is nothing more trashy looking then a South Dakotan Zoo in the winter. Most people don’t think we have running water up here, let alone wild animals kept in cages. GPZ seems to help reinforce that idea by giving Zoo Walkers very little to hold up their expectations.

You start by walking through a museum. A museum is a lot like a zoo except that everything is already dead. That and you “learn” things at a museum, supposedly. I learned is that their messed-up version of pangea is way wrong and misshapen. There is no way to get that thing into one land mass. I also learned what color carpet one can expect to find in the Rocky Mountains, the Amazon Rain Forest, and the Sahara Desert.

Off to the zoo. First thing you see out the doors is the rhino. Rhinos are scary by virtue of their large size, quick temper, and poor eyesight. You know that TRex on Jurassic Park? You remember when he rams the side of the jeep as it drives away? That was modeled after rhino behavior. Yeah – TRex, boys. TRex.

The TRex, I mean rhino, was pacing back and forth. He wasn’t just walking back and forth; he was doing figure-eights. Like a bad figure skater trapped in hell, he just went around and around, panting quietly. I, noticing his ethnicity (he was African), asked him if his being African American made him feel oppressed by his white slave drivers.

In response, he slipped and, in trying to regain his balance, kicked a fine spray of dirt and feces onto my coat. I guess he can take care of himself.

The next cage featured these birds that we all mistakenly dubbed Emus, but who were really stupid whatsits from another country. Bryce began taunting one of them. Minutes later, after wrenching his shaking body from the out of their reach, we surmised that these Emu-wannabes didn’t care for taunting and name calling, as such. We decided, however, made a decision to piss off each type of animal there was at the zoo.

This promise extended into the penguin area. Penguins, you would think, would be one of the most interesting creatures to see at a zoo in the winter. They’re used to winter, you know, so they’d feel at home and relaxed. We got to the tank and realized that penguins are always uninteresting. They stood there, silent and unmoving, facing all different directions like RISK armies. They just stared off into whatever random direction they happened to have been placed. Despite the appealing pool designed for the utmost in penguin leisure, very few of the tuxedo wearing birdish creatures were enjoying a swim or a bathe. The only excitement came when one of the penguins began moving forward. We all cheered it on. Everyone, follow Billy’s lead! Then it bent over and shot some crap out of its butt.

Next were the bears. They weren’t as interesting. When I got to that pen, one of the bears was on a rock about 20 feet below us. My parents had apparently coaxed him over to talk fish prices, but, after my arrival, he declined to stay there much longer. He began a slow, boring walk back to his cave. I turn to Megan to admire the way the sunlight gently frosts its golden beams around her, and I hear a ruckus. The bears were having a fight, but, as soon as I turned their way, they stopped. The bears, sensing an inability to get along, walked to seperate corners of the pen.

A short distance from the bear pit is the tiger track. I love tigers. Tigers are nature’s Fonzi. Cool and strong and covered in fur, though. If you don’t believe me, try putting a tiger next to a jukebox. He’ll tear it to shreds if you hang meat around it – just like Fonzi used to do. No wonder Ron Howard turned to directing! The funny thing about the tiger was that he was doing figure eights, too. The not-so-funny thing about the tiger was that he was limping. :( Pobre tigres.

Then there was the falcon/eagle cage. Most of these birds had been removed due to the violent, horrible nature of a South Dakotan winter. The ones that remained stared at us with a cool demeaner. They seemed to say, we may have one side of the cage that we launch our poop through, but we can launch it at you just as easily. Seconds later, Bryce, Lindsey, and Tony found a dead squirrel which they buried next to the road.

RIP, Mr. SnappyPants, Esquire.

The highlight of the zoo, however, was definitely the monkey arena. We went inside first. Inside there was a mommy monkey and a baby monkey. The mommy just stared at us through the glass. The little one kept climbing around and playing and being happy. He’d come up to his mother and gently pull her hair a couple times, swing around some more, and then the momma would smack him, grab him, and bite him. What a sweet mother.

Then, suddenly, she began moving. She climbed the ropes and ledges and came as close as she could to the window. Hanging there on her fingers, she stared at Tony, stared at him. Maybe it was love, but what happened next, I can’t tell you here : e-mail tonysfreakymonkeylove@awayken.com.

Then we went outdoors. I was standing there, waiting for some of the other people to walk out, and I had taken time to look at a monkey. As more people filed out the doors, we all turned to look at the monkey. He had been lying on his back, slightly turned away from us. Then he stood up. Right there was the biggest, pinkest monkey boner I have ever seen. Everyone’s eyes got huge, and we tried our best to turn away. It was horrifying.

We couldn’t stay any longer. The girls were scarred. The rest were skerrd. My parents were angry, seeking legislation to calm our woes. As we stood in the parking lot, Brenna just shook, her eyes fixated on a primate penis that was no longer there. My parents went to present me with a cake, but no one was hungry. In fact, no one was anything. We just stood there – dead in our hearts – and lamented this day, the day we lost our monkey penis innocence.

[ zoo ]/[ birthday ]/[ penis ]

Guest Post (High Street)

by Bryce Rausch

Walking with Miles� guitar strumming away wearing away his cheap guitar strings hoping they wear so thin he can finally replace them with his Martin strings he plays for just us.

Walking Dan and I try to keep a tune but Dan soon gives up and pats his stomach and legs for a drum affect that will soon turn his belly and legs bright red making him stop and ending the beat in which we stepped.

Walking I sing into the night, nearly screaming concerned for the people living in the houses we walk on past in the late night but don�t care cause I�m sure I could outrun them.

Walking, Miles quits playing and with each story the words are frozen in the air as the temperature nears 40 degrees and we regret wearing our shorts, it was warm when we left.

Walking Dan starts, �I can�t even� Miles and I complete �begin to start thinking of knowing how to answer that question� and we laugh, not because of the oddness of the phrase we�ve become so fond of but because we all remembered it and recited it as if it were a prayer at church we had been saying since we were old enough to have to stay away throughout the entire mass.

Walking I start singing a familiar tune I haven�t thought of in months and Miles racks his brain trying to remember the chords as Dan finds the beat on his legs and we sing about a boy and his love for his butterfly as the moon shines on us as if it were a sun.

Walking we discuss everything we can think of for this is our chance, away from parents, away from school mates, away from girlfriends, attention is only on us without acting a certain way for anyone�s approval.

Walking we unleash the terrors trembling just under our skin that have been waiting to be set free for so long.

Walking with Dan and Miles and I, I feel like I could cry, run away, jump for joy, sleep, jump, tackle, slide, scream and any number of other emotions I could possibly be feeling because I love this moment but I know the moment is gone almost as soon as I realize it.

Walking we get to the swings which we finally rest on without realizing the swings are a symbol of so much more than we realize at that moment, swings bring up back and forth, you always start at the present and go to the past then the future, much like life, much like our conversations, we always start talking about what we�re doing now, memories of old, then where we�re going in this playground of life, and much like a swing we end the night by jumping off going forward, into the future.

We walk home.

[ poem ]/[ nostalgia ]/[ high street]

Meet Me In St. Phoey

Guess what? I’m in another play!

“Meet Me in St. Louis”

Spring Musical

Where: Dakota Prairie Playhouse
When: March 26-27and April 2-3 at 7:30 p.m. & April 4 at 2:00 p.m.

General Admission: $9
Seniors/Teens/Kids/DSU Staff: $4
DSU Students: free with ID

But, in an effort to keep some of my fans, I’m going to try to make this a post.

This musical is a riot. Here’s a basic synopsis of the plot. We meet the Smith Family. There is Mr. and Mrs., Agnes and Tootie (the token little kids), Esther, Rose, and Lon (the goody-two-shoes older children), Grandpa (whose fez fetish caused Grandma to leave him), and Katie (the irish white slave).

We watch the inane inner household of this 1904, typical upper class St. Louis suburban family for about three scenes. The girls only think about marriage. The boy only thinks about food. The dad only thinks about his bath. And the major conflict is what time supper is.

They are all a titter over the World’s Fair, coming soon to St. Louis. Who in God’s name chose St. Louis for the WORLD’S Fair? Was it that arch? Was that it? They could have held it in Washington, D.C., our nation’s capitol. They could have held it in New York, the most populous city in America. Instead, they chose to have such an outstanding fair in St. Louis, city of Nelly.

So, we watch them for a while. A LONG while. Then, randomly, a bright orange trolly with a little kid as conductor shows up on stage and all these random chorus people begin to sing “The Trolley Song”. Wait, that’s not a little kid. It’s Miles! But his outfit is a little big, so he looks 12 or 13, which is just the look he wants. Gracious.

Lon has a going away party, but he never goes away. There’s a ballroom dance, where I personally dance for just short of an hour, which also has little reason but to bore the audience and give me cramps in my calves. There is all this drama because Mr. Smith gets a job New York and they have to move, before the fair! Oh, Gosh!

In the end, Mr. Smith doesn’t have to move and nothing really happens at all in the musical. The girls get boyfriends, Lon (who goes nowhere) gets a girlfriend, Tootie and Agnes get to see lights out of doors, and Katie is free of her servitude. No, not really.

In this play, I play three characters – Lance and Sidney Purvis who are twin brothers and their uncle (the motorman), Ed Purvis. This means four costumes, two changes of which are in the same scene and minutes within each other. Lance is “normal Miles”. Sidney is “afraid of girls and bad dancer Miles”. Ed is “happy super anime fun Miles”. All-in-all, it’s a lot of sweat.

You should show up. If you’re good, I’ll let you wear my motorman hat.

Maybe.

[ musical ]/[ banjo ]/[ gracious ]

Guest Post (Grey Album)

by Bryce Rausch, my brother, who writes for the SMSU (formerly SSU) Spur.

DJ Danger Mouse, what an intimidating name, is a hip hop disc jockey who has not been paying attention to news. He took two musical Gods and mixed them together, unfortunately, he didn�t tell either of the artists. He mixed the rapper Jay-Z�s �The Black Album� and The Beatles� �The White Album.� You don�t have to be an Art major to figure out that black and white makes grey, hence the name of his little album.

He claims it was all in fun and he just wanted to give it to friends and family, �Merry Christmas �Nana�, but he also sold some copies to a record store to get his name out. After that, because of Al Gore inventing that darned internet the music got everywhere.

Guess who wasn�t pleased: Jay-Z and the Beatles. Lennon reportedly rolled over in his grave and Jay-Z was so upset he bought another gun.

Logically, if you didn�t want anymore trouble you�d apologize and get those CD�s you�ve made for �Nana and Booby and plead forgiveness, right? Wrong. Once the Grey Album his the news and EMI records, The Beatles music�s babysitter, and letters from lawyers were released DJ�s pals started up website and made Tuesday February 24 �Grey Tuesday�. There were a plethora of websites posting the album for free download, just to antagonize the RIAA and EMI.

You have to love that. There were over 150 websites posting these illegal tracks!

I am not a fan of the RIAA bullying kids on computers. They push people around, slap enormous fines on them and all in the name of the law. I may have been able to buy that poor Britney Spears and the band Metallica were starving to death for a while, but then I watched �Cribs� on MTV. Their garages are the size of our entire university and they have more vehicles then we have in our parking lot.

Though Jay-Z and EMI may not be happy about this new album, I�m sure they�ll sue until they feel better.

[ guest post ]/[ humour ]/[ ‘nana ]/[ booby ]

Butterfly

We both lie on our backs, facing the golden disc in the sky. The long, green grass is soft and cool against our warm, summer-kissed skin.

We stare up at the sky. Thousands of white, cotton-fluffed clouds skirt across a deep blue field. The shapes join and divide into a menagerie of animals, blobs, and household items.

Three butterflies play upon the delicate breath of the wind. When I squint, their colors stretch into a column that reaches above them and dives below them.

I turn my head to look at you, but all I see is your notebook. The wind blows back the cover, and I see something written in sky blue ink.

love me until the sky falls down…

I look, but you’re gone. I squint at the words in your notebook, and they stretch into columns. I pick up the notebook with your command safely nestled within its pages. I vow to keep those words for as long as I live.

I will love you until the sky falls down…

Download it at deviantART.

Butterfly

This is a wallpaper Megan made for me.

The text says, “Love me until the sky falls down…” and it has three butterflies on it.

She made this in MS Paint on my tablet.

Download it at deviantART.

A graphic with a butterfly on it and it says Megan Did This on it