Mice


This movie takes on a more somber tone in light of recent shinanigans.


There are mice living in my house.

The place is a mess, it’s got a generally fetid odor, the kitchen is a disaster, and over the course of several parties our bathroom has seen a lifetime’s worth of horrors ranging from shower peeing to sink puking to a party guest getting an impromptu blowjob.

And now, on top of that, we’ve got a fully-fledged mouse infestation. Classic.

We’ve already killed three, although when we started setting out traps we thought there was only one.

You see, my roommate Cameron saw a mouse saunter through his room and out the door a few weeks ago. He came running out of his room to tell me, and for the next 24 hours I was living in a state of fear. I tore apart cardboard boxes and taped the shreds to the bottom of my door to prevent the mouse from crawling underneath, starting obsessively researching the diseases mice can spread*, and never ventured out of my room alone for fear that the mouse might rape me.

*Fun fact: If it’s a horrific disease that you thought had been eradicated years ago, mice can and do spread it.

But then, in the morning, the mouse dove headfirst into one of our peanut butter-baited Victor mousetraps – a move that resulted in the wire snapping down across the bridge of his nose, breaking his face into two pieces, popping out an eye, and leaving a bloodstain on our carpet.

The mouse was very prolifically dead, and we all figured that the crisis was over. Admittedly, we still hadn’t found the hole in our defenses the mouse had used to get in, theoretically leaving the door open for any other mice that wanted to join the party, but our reasoning was that our profoundly gory execution of the first mouse had given us a Keyser Soze style reputation in the mouse world, and the rest would stay away out of respect and fear.

Over the course of the week, though, we found two more dead mice in traps that we’d forgotten we had set. The message was clear: The mice were out in force, and they wanted us to know that they would suicidally Zerg rush our defenses until we ran out of both peanut butter and mousetraps. They delivered their coup de grace when, two nights ago, I walked into the bathroom in the middle of the night and watched a little furball go streaking out the door a second before it closed.

I hadn’t seen any of the other three mice – they always died and were disposed of while I was in class – so this was my first encounter with our woodland invaders. And let me just say this: It’s really easy to laugh at women in cartoons who see a mouse and instantly jump on a table with their skirt hiked up. It’s like, ‘What’s wrong with you? It’s just a little mouse! And to think we let you vote!’

But when you’re half asleep in the middle of the night and you see something with mangy grey fur and a tail scamper past your foot in your own goddamn home, I challenge you to not want to jump up on a table and start screaming. That second before you remember that it’s just a little creature that is pretty much at the absolute bottom of the food chain is a straight up nightmare, because all you’re thinking is ‘OH MY GOD HOLY SHIT THERE WAS A WILD ANIMAL IN HERE OH JESUS CHRIST IT WAS GOING TO WATCH ME PEE.’

This encounter galvanized me into action, and the next day I hit Albertson’s and picked up a pack of four Tomcat brand mousetraps. This was my first mistake. Do not buy Tomcat brand mousetraps. I’ll tell you why in the paragraph after next.

I’ve never set mousetraps before, but I’ve seen enough Saturday morning cartoons to know that it’s an activity ripe for slapstick comedy and severe pain. Naturally, I was very cautious as I primed the traps and daubed small amounts of peanut butter onto the bait trays, but I managed to make it through the entire process without having one of the traps close on my thumb, causing it to become comically large and red and make my eyes shoot out of my head. I placed the traps at key, mouse friendly areas behind couches and along the baseboards and went to bed.

In the morning, I went out to check the traps, preparing myself to see a grisly scene of mouse carnage – because it’s always surprising how much damage one spring loaded wire can do. But lo and behold, all I discovered was three still-primed and set mousetraps, albeit with completely empty bait trays.

This, ladies and gentlemen, is why you shouldn’t buy Tomcat mousetraps. While they have a very cool and intimidating looking picture of a ferocious cat on them, their trigger mechanisms are so unresponsive that they serve less as traps and more as plates with which you can easily convey food to the mouse’s mouth. Unless these traps operate along the ‘turn the other cheek’ principle, I think a bunch of nefarious vegans have started swapping these duds for functioning mousetraps in an effort to safeguard the livelihoods of these freeloading, disease spreading rodents.

So that mouse is out there in my house, belly full of peanut butter that I essentially gave him, gnawing on our wires and playing host to God knows how many fleas. All I’m saying is, I’d better kill his ass before he meets some nice girl mouse and I come back from Christmas break to find everything in my house buried under a fine layer of mouse droppings.

Truman Capps has also considered leaving a toy motorcycle out for the mice to ride in an attempt to make friends.

Quick Thanksgiving


...I have to eat it all in 30 minutes and then drive to Eugene. This... Is Man vs Food!


What’s the last thing anybody wants to do after their Thanksgiving dinner? Yes, that’s right - move. That’s the real paradox of Thanksgiving – it’s a brief holiday that causes an immense traffic snarl-up across the country, all so millions of people can rush home, overindulge more than usual, and then turn right around and rush back wherever they’d come from, in spite of the fact that their digestive systems want them to spend the intervening weeks before Christmas sleeping.

My Thanksgiving this year is even more abrupt than the average Thanksgiving, because the University of Oregon has helpfully scheduled a football game for Friday, November 26th. Thanksgiving and football are both completely awesome, uniquely American traditions, but I’m not looking forward to being physically present at both of them in the space of 24 hours.

The new University of Oregon athletic director, Rob Mullens, received some criticism from fans for making gameday the day after Thanksgiving. His response was, “You can have the game be whenever you want, if you give us $600,000,” referring to whatever broadcast contract they’d worked out with ESPN.

And to that I say, fuck you, Rob Mullens! You have plenty of call to get snippy with people at other times of the year, but when you’ve scheduled a major event that requires thousands of athletic employees, security guards, janitors, cooks, policemen, and band members to cut their holiday short, some greater degree of apology is in order, whether you actually mean it or not.

Don’t get me wrong – I love Duck football. I love it just slightly less than I love Christina Hendricks, mostly in that I don’t want to see Duck football naked.*

*Yes, I am well aware that the Duck football experience includes the Oregon cheerleaders, who I would like to see naked, but if my seeing them naked required me to see everyone else involved in the Duck football experience naked (LaMichael James, Chip Kelly, toothless Crowd Management Services people from Springfield, the rest of the trumpet section), I would probably opt not to. I’m sure the Oregon cheerleaders would look spectacular naked, but if I had to also look at an entire stadium full of naked people in order to see them naked, it would ruin nudity for me altogether.**

**Incidentally, if any of the Oregon cheerleaders are reading this and are interested in working out some sort of more favorable nudity arrangement, don’t hesitate. Male cheerleaders need not apply.

Anyway.

I’m leaving home tomorrow, shortly after dinner, so that I can ride back down to Eugene with other band friends and get a good night’s sleep before the game, which, in true late November fashion, will be colder than Hoth, only with no warm Tauntauns to crawl inside.

I’ve been telling everyone who will listen that I’m praying for a freak blizzard/ice storm/zombie apocalypse to strike Oregon on Thanksgiving, anything to close down I-5 and give me a legitimate reason to throw up my hands, shrug, and say, “Oh well – guess I can’t make it to that there football game!” Some of my friends who are seniors have shaken their heads, saying, “No way, man; that’s our last home game. No way I’d miss that.”

And it occurred to me that, yes, this is going to be my last game playing with the Oregon Marching Band in Autzen Stadium. The Civil War this year is at Reser “Stadium” in Corvallis, and after that our next performance will be somewhere in the Sun Belt, preferably not in a location that ends with –adena.

But for whatever reason, I don’t feel myself experiencing an overwhelming rush of nostalgia. Not yet, anyway.

Autzen Stadium is the greatest stadium in the history of stadiums. It’s obnoxious and loud, like Gilbert Gottfried full of angry drunk people. It’s technologically advanced and powerful, like The Six Million Dollar Man full of drunk people. It’s classy and aesthetically pleasing but also won’t take your shit, like a young Edward James Olmos… Full of drunk people.

The Rose Bowl felt small and Husky Stadium felt like a clammy handshake from a boring kid who nobody likes and is consistently terrible at football. The Horseshoe isn’t bowl-y enough and The Big House looks like the Wolverines are compensating for something.

So understand this – I love Autzen and I love the Ducks. But after four years of attending every home game, I know the pattern each game takes. I know the ups and downs of the game itself, the smell of $9 kettle corn, the balls out rush of students running to get their seats, the solemn trooping of the team from the Casanova Center to the field, the look of shame on the face of the fan being ejected by the cops, the hint of weed in the air, and stadium announcer Don Essig’s creative pronunciation of virtually every word in the English language.

I enjoy all of those things – they’re the reasons I continue to put up with the ongoing weatherbeaten shitshow that is the Oregon Marching Band year after year. But my last one isn’t going to be all that different than the others, and it’s not an experience I’d be too sore about missing. The game looks just as good on TV.

Thanksgiving with my family, on the other hand, is something I want to have every second of. My Mom is a fucking amazing cook, in addition to being hilarious after more than two glasses of red wine, I’ve grown to miss my Dad’s unending onslaught of lame puns and dirty jokes, my cousin Gene is spending the holiday with us for the first time ever, the house is spotless and, unlike my place in Eugene, it doesn’t smell of beefy man BO and mouse droppings.

I love my Ducks, but I love my family more. So fuck you, Rob Mullens, and you, ESPN. I can’t help but notice that we didn’t have anything to do the weekend before this game – that would’ve been a great time for my final Autzen experience.

As it is, my final Autzen experience will coincide with the experience of running onto the field for pregame while still digesting the previous night’s turkey and mashed potatoes. And that will be a unique experience all its own.

Truman Capps loves his family, but does not want to see them naked.

Truman Analyzes Rap Music


Oh, hi there Greatest Image on the Internet. Can I make you into a poster?


I’m a white guy who grew up in a Mormon-heavy part of Oregon, and have a solid history of attending schools with roughly the same level of racial diversity as a KKK meeting.


I have also never been a huge fan of rap music – which is not to impugn its legitimacy as a form of self-expression – and the bulk of my experience with it comes from what I’ve heard at college parties or on my friends’ car radios.

After four years, these are my impressions.

(No information included herein is intended to be offensive to the artists, fans, or Black People™. Also, I have a very broad definition of what ‘rap music’ is, so don’t take issue if my selections are actually hip hop or something, Jack Brazil.)

Replay – Iyaz

Shawty’s like a melody in my head
That I can’t keep out
Got me singing like
Na na na na every day
Like my iPod’s stuck on replay.


My iPod has had plenty of problems, but getting stuck on replay isn’t one of them. Usually, when my iPod gets stuck, it freezes while cycling between songs and refuses to turn on or off – on my drive to California over the summer it locked up outside Sacramento, forcing me to listen to the only available radio station in Yolo County, which consisted entirely of mariachi bands.

Of course, ‘Shawty forces me to listen to a music genre that I’m not crazy about’ doesn’t have quite the same message. I’m just saying, I don’t know how Steve Jobs feels about a song highlighting a potential hardware malfunction in one of his main cash cows.

I guess Apple is doing pretty well right now, and the publicity probably can’t hurt them. Thank God Sean Kingston didn’t target the auto industry:

Got me singing like
Na na na na every day
Like my 1977 Ford Pinto got rear ended and exploded, killing me.


99 Problems – Jay-Z

If you’re having girl problems I feel bad for you, son
I got 99 problems, but a bitch ain’t one!


Up until now, I had heard this lyric as ‘I got 99 problems, but the bitch ain’t one.’ Use of the definite article ‘the’ suggested that while Jay-Z had a bitch, their love for one another was so strong that in spite of all the various other problems in his life, he knew that at the end of the day he could come home to his bitch to relax and enjoy her company.

As I saw it, the only thing Jay-Z could count on was his bitch, and this song was about how lucky he was to have such a bitch in his life, whereas everyone else had to deal with girl problems because their bitches weren’t of the same caliber as his bitch. It was sweet. I hoped to one day meet a bitch who made me feel the same way that Jay-Z’s did.

You know what I mean? The sort of bitch you can take home to meet Mom and Dad. The sort of bitch you could see yourself spending the rest of your life with.

So imagine my surprise when I see that it’s a bitch – indefinite article – that isn’t one of his problems. The implication now is that bitches, were they to play a bigger role in Jay-Z’s life, would be just as big of a problem as racist cops and a fundamentally broken criminal justice system, which isn’t nearly as endearing a message.

I’m like, fuck critics, you can kiss my whole asshole
If you don’t like my lyrics you can press fast forward!


…well, if you want to make me cry, Jay-Z, then mission accomplished. Dick.

Can’t Tell Me Nothing – Kanye West

The drama
People suing me
I’m on TV talking like it’s just you and me.


With all due respect, Kanye, I’ve seen you on TV before, and the way you talk isn’t how you’d be talking if it were just you and me. If you were, in fact, talking on TV like it was just you and me, there would probably be lots of awkward pauses, and you’d spend most of your time trying to steer the conversation away from Battlestar Galactica. That said, it would still be one of your least embarrassing TV appearances.

Let up the suicide doors
This is my life homie, you decide yours
I know that Jesus died for us
But I couldn’t tell you who decide wars
So I parallel double parked that motherfucker sideways
Old folks talkin’ about back in my day?
Class started two hours ago, oh am I late?
You know I already graduated
And you can live through anything if magic made it.


Wait, what?

So you start out talking about suicide doors, an outmoded feature on old cars, then move into self-determination before talking about Jesus and then something about deciding wars. Then it’s another automotive reference with the line about parking, something about old people, a Saved By The Bell gag, and then perhaps one of the most perplexing lines in music history, ‘You can live through anything if magic made it.’

You know what magic made, Kanye? The One Ring. And let me tell you, one hell of a lot of people didn’t live through that fiasco. Just ask Boromir.

Miracles – Insane Clown Posse

Water, fire, air and dirt
Fucking magnets, how do they work?


Look, I was going to do this thing where I posted the Wikipedia definition of how a magnet works, but to be honest, I’ve been skimming the article on magnets for a minute or so now and I haven’t found a concrete explanation.

So I guess what I’m saying is, good question, Insane Clown Posse. Let me know if you find out!

Truman Capps awaits the inevitable accusations of racism.

Studio Production (Or, Buttons: A Love Story)


Has there ever been anything more enticing?


Lighting and editing aside, you know what’s actually fun? Studio production. Why? So many buttons.

My Intro to Electronic Media class is a comprehensive course, designed to give us a knowledge base in just about every subject necessary for the creation of electronic media. The most recent skill they’ve been teaching us is studio production: The art of a bunch of people sitting in front of a bunch of different, outdated machines and pushing buttons and saying things in the right order, a process which, if done correctly, will make a live television broadcast happen. If done incorrectly, everyone gets angry and yells at each other. The evening news, I have learned, is a delicate and precarious thing.

It takes a lot of people to run a live TV broadcast – you need somebody to work the teleprompter, somebody to manage audio levels, a guy in the master control room to see that everything is being broadcast properly, somebody to design the little titles that pop up under the anchors, a person to operate the switcher, which determines which video feed from which camera gets broadcast, and a director to tell all of them what they should be doing at any given time.

What all of this amounts to is buttons: Thousands and thousands of buttons. The mock TV studio in the basement of the journalism school is basically one big orgiastic tribute to the button, and, more importantly, the pushing thereof. That’s actually all that electronic media is, now that I think about it – pushing buttons. Sure, there’s some menus and dials along the way, and at least one prominently placed lever, but by and large if you meet somebody with an electronic media degree, you can bet that their fingers are calloused from spending long days bent over large, expensive consoles, endlessly pushing buttons.

When I was a child, I made frequent trips with my parents and various school groups to OMSI, the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, a large and endlessly wonderful children’s museum full of interactive, rotating exhibits about space travel, dinosaurs, earthquakes, and anything else likely to hold a five year old’s attention for a few minutes.

Space travel and dinosaurs were all fine by me, but what I liked most about OMSI was the fact that most of the interactive exhibits had buttons you could push.

I think buttons and the pushing thereof holds a revered status among children because we grew up surrounded by buttons we saw adults pushing that we were always expressly forbidden to push ourselves – usually because most household buttons set things on fire or activate spinning blades underneath the kitchen sink. At OMSI, we were surrounded by child friendly buttons that had no function – well, okay, maybe they would make a recording of a scientist explain about erosion or some shit like that, but anyone who actually waited around long enough to see what pushing the button had accomplished was seriously limiting his ability to seek out and push other buttons. The point is, we could pretend to be button-pressing adults all we wanted.

In a TV studio, there are just as many if not more buttons.

The teleprompter operator sets the speed at which the script moves with a big silver dial which doubles as a button which, when pressed, starts the teleprompter. The audio operator has both buttons and sliders which turn mics on and off and adjust their levels. The technical director is in charge of a series of highly advanced buttons with built in LCD readouts which explain what that button has been assigned to do (activities are assigned to buttons by pushing other buttons), and below these buttons are more buttons which light up when pressed and serve only to show that the buttons above are ready to be pressed.

These buttons, unlike the ones at OMSI, affect very specific things when pressed, and seeing as about half of the buttons in the control room are tied to equipment on-camera personnel are using live in the studio, careless pressing of the buttons can result in making someone look like a dick on live TV. Boom goes the dynamite? Somebody was probably messing with the teleprompter speed control. If you hate somebody on television, by all means, go into the control room and start pushing buttons.

As a child I would’ve rejoiced at the opportunity to push all these buttons, but now that I’ve reached something that could be considered adulthood I have to recognize the terrible power all these buttons hold. Pushing buttons – a fun and carefree activity in my childhood – is now sort of nerve wracking, because one errant push can bring down the entire delicately constructed broadcast and get everybody in the studio to yell at you over their headset radios.*

*Oh, yeah, did I mention we get headset radios? Buttons and headset radios. Suck it, public relations majors.

When the stars align, though, and the studio production goes off without a hitch – everyone focused, talking on their headset radios, and pushing the right buttons at the right times – I get this overwhelming sense that now, more than ever, I’ve grown up. I’m in a position to push buttons that have actual power, buttons that, if a small child were nearby, he would be forbidden to push.

Only eight weeks into the term and already electronic media has given me a sense of accomplishment. If only the accomplishment was something more dignified than, “Is old enough to be unsupervised around complex technological equipment.”

Truman Capps promises an end to electronic media-oriented updates for the time being.

Editing


This icon is synonymous with spending four hours squinting at a computer monitor.


Oh man, you know what’s almost as bad as lighting? Editing.

Editing is terrible because doing it reminds you that the film industry is maybe 30% glamorous movie stars acting out tightly written scripts on lavish, professionally built sets and 70% fat sweaty nerds sitting in dark rooms full of computers, eating Cheetos and stitching the whole thing together with cross dissolves and color filters.*

*In the case of movies like Sky Captain And The World Of Tomorrow or Avatar it’s more like anywhere between 90 and 110 percent sweaty nerds in dark rooms with Cheetos.

While shooting the 60-second project for my Intro to Electronic Media class was a daunting task because it required me to manage actors, put together equipment, and light the damn scene, it was the editing room that really frightened me. Because once you’re editing, the cameras are put away and the actors have gone home. What you’ve shot is basically all you’ve got to work with, and no amount of George Lucas wipes and audio effects can help if you’ve made something terrible.

That was my main concern – finding out once I’d reviewed all my footage that I’d screwed up in the filming process. Because there’s a lot of stuff you need to remember when you’re shooting – you’ve got to focus basically every time you move the camera, and white balance so that the camera knows what color everything should be, and make sure all the legs of your tripod are the same length so you don’t wind up shooting everything at some weird angle. This is a lot to ask of somebody like me, who frequently forgets biological necessities like eating breakfast.

Fortunately, I’d shot everything correctly, but the potential pitfalls didn’t stop there. Between the camera and the computer there are all kinds of disasters waiting to befall your hard-recorded footage.

Dropped frames are one. A relic of the days when film was physically cut with an actual razor on a reel to reel machine, a dropped frame would occur when one of the necessary frames would get inadvertently cut and then dropped onto the floor, where it would presumably get lost among all the other unwanted materials. In the era of digital recording, it happens when a piece of sophisticated and expensive equipment decides to stop doing its job for a fraction of a second and not record, which creates timecode kerfuffles galore in the editing room later.

Also, the tapes we use don’t necessarily do us any favors. Back during the Writers days, Mike and I had one of our tapes actually split into two pieces, forcing us to, in a moment of desperation and supreme desire to not spend any more time on Writers than necessary, (Scotch) tape our (MiniDV) tape back together so that we could stick it into the tape deck to upload the footage to the computer. As it turns out, tape decks only want one kind of tape in them at a time and tend to break if you don’t respect their wishes, a discovery which very nearly cost us a few hundred dollars.

It was experiences like these that worried me as I sat down in the editing bay earlier in the week to put together my 60-second piece. In my previous experiences with Final Cut, I had always had someone better qualified right there with me to make sure I didn’t screw anything up. But now, flying solo, who would guide me through the sea of options and menus that is Final Cut Pro?

That’s just it – I’m not a pro, and I didn’t feel qualified to use a professional program such as that. After all, everybody says that Final Cut is an incredibly powerful program that can do just about anything; what if I accidentally clicked the ‘Blow Up Journalism School’ button, or checked the box next to ‘Go Back In Time And Help Nazis Win World War 2’? Somehow setting fire (digital fire) to my footage was the least of my concerns.

Fortunately, most of the rest of my Intro to Electronic Media class was in the editing lab at one time or another, and together we formed a shaky support network for one another. It takes a village to raise a child, and it also takes a village to edit 60 seconds of video footage. Ideally, though, people raising a child aren’t looking for tips on how to cut him into pieces and rearrange them in a more dramatic or aesthetically pleasing way.

Once I got going, though, I was surprised by how quickly I was able to put everything together, and how little help I needed throughout the process. Final Cut was always my go-to excuse for not doing more multimedia stuff – “Oh, man, I totally would, but I don’t know how to use Final Cut!” Now the curtains have been pulled back, and I realize that it’s actually a pretty simple program when you get right down to it.

I’m going to need to find a new excuse not to go out and start making movies.

Truman Capps wishes he didn’t have to edit in a room full of people, because it makes it far harder to yell profanity at the computer when it moves too slowly.

Lighting


This little bastard will stop at nothing to make you miserable.


In every book on filmmaking or electronic media I’ve ever read, at some point the author attempts to dispel the rumor that all media creation is simply ‘Lights, Camera, Action!’, and that it is, in fact, quite difficult. There are so many other steps – scripting, storyboarding, funding, editing, catering – that make the process so much more difficult, thereby explaining why there is so little worthwhile content on the Internet.

But lights, man. They’ll get you every time. Fucking lights.

In spite of how far we’ve come as a civilization in terms of camera technology, the amount of light put out by the lamps and overhead fixtures in your house is still not enough to properly light a scene for multimedia production. Video cameras are, apparently, cooler than everyone else, because they are perpetually wearing sunglasses, which means that if you want a scene you’re shooting to look normal, you have to give all your actors long term eye damage with a variety of different heavy duty stage lights, working in tandem, set up in the correct order.

Today I shot a project for my Intro to Electronic Media class in my living room. The leadup to the project was not especially daunting for me – I knew my way around a camera, thanks to Writers, and I had a good plan for what I was going to do and how I was going to do it.

But lights, man. Fucking lights.

On one of the first days of my Intro to Electronic Media class, our professor pulled out one of our battered, aging light units and explained its inherent difficulties and dangers.

The stands are flimsy and prone to collapse. (You can damage journalism school equipment and incur serious fines without even trying.)

The lights reach temperatures of a billion degrees within fifteen seconds of being turned on, so don’t touch them or keep them near curtains or other flammable materials. (The lights will not hesitate to kill you and then destroy the evidence by burning the house down.)

Don’t touch the lightbulbs – if too many people do it, the accumulated grease from fingerprints will boil and make the lightbulb explode. (Using one of the 20-year-old lights from the journalism school is essentially playing Russian Roulette with everyone who has used that light since Desert Storm.)

They’re the most dangerous, finicky, and unpredictable part of your shoot. Fucking lights.

Lighting is about two things: The proper illumination of the subject, and the complete genocide of shadows. Ideally, you will have three lights (a spot, a fill, and a backlight) set up in a specific triangular pattern that, somehow, will make stars align and completely eliminate all traces of shadows (because shadows don’t happen in the movies, just like people going to the bathroom or minorities living through an entire horror movie).

This is all fine and dandy if you know the order in which to set up your lights. If you’re me, who can’t find his textbook or his notes on how to create this shadow destroying power-stance, the best you can do is flip on all your lights and play musical chairs until the shadows are as small as possible, at which point you turn on the camera and hope for the best.

Fucking lights..

Shadows are resilient. Today we had shadows so strong and beefy that even when we shined other lights directly on them they refused to go away. It was a lot like Independence Day - our adversaries were powerful and seemingly invincible and we had no idea how to kill them. Only in Independence Day Jeff Goldblum and Steve Jobs save the day, whereas I just said, “Fuck it. It’s my first video project – she’s bound to grade us easily,” and went with it.

For something that I consider to be a chore at best and an incentive to give up on film at worst, lighting has a surprisingly strong cadre of devotees. I’ve met plenty of amateur filmmakers who are obsessed with lighting, people who treat sets full of craggy, shadow-prone objects the same way my parents treat crossword puzzles – fun problems waiting to be solved. Up until 2005 there even existed a magazine, Lighting Dimensions for people with a severe hard on for lighting.

Thismakes me wonder if they have a magazine for people who make those toothpick and paper umbrellas that they stick in tropical drinks, because I find them and lighting to be about equally interesting. Unfortunately, you need to light your scene properly if you’re going to make a good film, whereas a Pina Colada is simply strongly encouraged.

Fucking lights.

I spent the better part of our shoot today fretting about the state of our lights, which has now made it impossible for me to enjoy scripted television anymore. Every time Don Draper stands against a wall and tries to explain why cigarettes aren’t bad for you, all I can think about is how difficult that scene must have been to illuminate, given the fact that there’s no room for a backlight or a fill.

Lighting has ruined television for me.

Thank God you’re not a journalism major.

Truman Capps would like to welcome his J472 class to his blog – why don’t you take a picture? It’ll last longer!

Man vs Food


This burrito is bigger than my roommate's girlfriend. By the transitive property, Adam Richman is a cannibal.


We’ve all met plenty of snobs who turn up their noses and say, “I don’t watch reality TV – it’s so puerile.” For example, if you’ve ever met me before, you’ve met one of those snobs. I don’t like reality TV because real people are fundamentally less interesting than fake people invented by writers, and because their petty, stupid conflicts are too similar to my own; when I watch TV, I want to see people who have to deal with zombies or genocidal robots on a daily basis, if I want to see an argument about who needs to clean the kitchen, I can just leave my room.

What I’ve found with a lot of my fellow TV snobs, though, is that we’ve all got one weak point. “I don’t watch reality TV… Except for What Not To Wear, because there’s actually a lot of good fashion tips on that show.” “I don’t watch reality TV… Except Nanny 911, because it’s really inspiring what they do to turn those kids around.” “I don’t watch reality TV… Except Jersey Shore, because I’m stupid.”

In that case, I may as well tell you now: I don’t watch reality TV… Except Man vs Food, because there is no purer form of entertainment than watching a man slowly kill himself, one bite at a time.

For those of you unfortunate enough to not be familiar with Man vs Food, the premise is simple: Host Adam Richman travels around the country, doing every restaurant food challenge he can find. You know that steakhouse by the Interstate where if you can eat a 72-ounce steak in half an hour you don’t have to pay for it and you get a free hat? That’s Adam Richman’s career.

What I love about this show is the fact that Adam is living my dream. I love food – moreover, I love food that is prepared in such a way that its deliciousness is only matched in how many years it will shave off your life, hence my deep-fried safari to Scotland earlier in the year. However, I’m also trying to live healthier, a lifestyle choice that makes it hard for me to eat anything involving red meat without imagining my innards crying and dreaming of a day when I consume nothing but Edamame beans and tepid water.

Fortunately, I have Adam Richman to show me what life is like for people who have absolutely no common sense when it comes to eating – or, rather, what happens when The Travel Channel pays a person to tie up his common sense, throw it in the trunk of a car, and have Robert Di Nero shoot it like in Goodfellas.

For example, in the most recent episode, Adam goes to a restaurant in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and orders a five pound nacho platter with three different kinds of meat, horrifying amounts of refried beans, and a lava flow of melted cheese, all of which he finished in slightly less than 45 minutes, earning him a free T-shirt.

There is something so quintessentially American about this – one man eating enough junk food to feed an entire village in Mexico, all in the pursuit of a cheap polyester T-shirt, most likely manufactured by starving peasants in the same village in Mexico.

My biggest problem with the show is Adam Richman himself. The only reason I watch the show is because I like food; I feel like that’s the reason why most people watch most food shows. Yet food shows have a solid history of obnoxious hosts – Guy Fieri and Anthony Bourdain are the archetypes, and Adam Richman is well on his way to overtaking them.

Whenever he isn’t stuffing his face with something that looks almost criminally delicious, he’s mugging for the camera, telling jokes or, more often, mimicking fear and anguish as he watches the chef prepare his gargantuan eating challenge. That always sort of pisses me off – insurance risk managers don’t act all scared when they have to determine the liability of a second rate theme park, my Mom doesn’t roll her eyes and gnash her teeth when she’s assigned to a particularly nasty malpractice case, and I usually didn’t quiver in fear whenever I had to assistant edit a three hour long ghost hunt over the summer. I know you’re just trying to be endearing, Adam, but there’s nothing endearing about a guy acting stressed out about the job in which he gets paid ludicrous amounts to travel the country and eat.

Man vs Food has been criticized for being ‘food porn’* - a shameless display of overindulgence and excess. But I say, what’s wrong with a little porn every now and then?

*Mainly by newspapers in England, where excessive eating is looked down upon. Excessive drinking, on the other hand, is widely celebrated there. So you tell me, England – where’s Man vs Alcohol?

My roommates and I watch Man vs Food pretty much whenever we’re in front of the television – between On Demand and the fact that Man vs Food is a big moneymaker for The Travel Channel, it’s basically always on. And while the show is undoubtedly a celebration of excess, to me it’s also sort of a champion of moderation.

Before the challenge, Adam narrates as the camera lovingly pans over the preparation of this unmanageably large feast – a six-pound burrito, or a four pound grilled cheese sandwich, or three pounds of cracked crab – and all of us on the coach collectively moan and talk about how much we wish we had his job.

And then the clock starts and Adam starts eating, shoving this simply gorgeous looking food into his mouth as fast as he can in pursuit of that T-shirt or bumper sticker, a crowd behind him chanting his name. He’s putting away this food so fast he can probably barely even taste it.

As the challenge goes on, Adam inevitably begins to slow down, sweating bullets and clearly fighting off the urge to vomit. And there comes a point, near the end of each challenge, where he looks like hell and he’s still got half a plate of delicious barbecue ribs left, and his entire career is entirely dependent on him eating the rest of them in under ten minutes, and you can see this defeated look in his eyes where he wishes that he had just become a CPA before he dives back in and finishes.

Then, greasy, sweating, bloated, and miserable, he manages a weary smile and mugs for the camera one last time before retreating to his trailer for Man vs Colon, an event which is not televised but must be equally exciting, at least for him.

If anything, this show is anti-gluttony; Fundamentalist Christians may well be behind this whole song and dance, trying to beat the American obesity epidemic by showing us this one man being made to hate his very existence because of too much food.

He’s a regular martyr, that Adam Richman – sacrificing himself on camera every week so that we may one day realize that there is such a thing as too many nachos.

Truman Capps wants Adam Richman to come to Taylor’s Bar and Grill in Eugene to do the ’25 Tacos in 30 Minutes’ challenge, mainly just to see him finish the tacos in 3 minutes and make all the people who’ve lost look stupid.

Previously, on Battledip Galactica...


The ping-pong ball is not a secret ingredient, just the luckiest (or unluckiest) beer pong shot of all time.


My mother had, from an early age, taught me that artificial cheese is a bad thing. In her eyes, it was perfectly acceptable to buy a package of Kraft Singles or a gallon jar of Rico’s nacho cheese at Walmart, but only if you were going to smoke three cigarettes on the ride back from the store in your rusted out 1973 Dodge Dart before returning to your obese wife and 5 kids living in a double wide trailer which doubles as a meth lab. Otherwise, any cheese that didn’t come in a $7 brick with the word ‘TILLAMOOK’ emblazoned across the front was only to be used as a punchline.

So imagine my quandary last year, on The International Day of the Nacho, when my then-roommate and current-Boris Johnson lookalike Jack Brazil came home from the store with a brown bag full of discount nacho ingredients, among them two squat glass jars of Tostitos Fiesta Cheese.

Jack uncorked the two jars and poured their contents into a big glass bowl. The cheese rolled into the bowl like viscous, yellow sludge; pooling on top of itself in folds and layers as it settled. This, I had been taught, was the wrong consistency for cheese to be. If you wanted your cheese in liquid form, you had to buy it solid and melt it yourself – to buy it pre-melted like this left a lot of unanswered questions about how the cheese had originated and who had done the melting.

“Why, uh,” I muttered, watching these seemingly small jars disgorge a veritable Crater Lake of cheese into the bowl. “Why are we putting it in a bowl?”

Jack, no doubt a veteran of many jars of artificial pre-melted cheese, looked at me like I was stupid. “So we can warm it up in the microwave! Duh..”

This cheese was nauseating enough at room temperature; the thought of it slightly warm like a lover’s embrace was not doing it or me any favors. It was so thick that it took ten minutes to microwave it to an acceptable temperature.

And then there we were – me, Jack, and a big, bubbling bowl of what I had been brought up to view as concentrated synthetic evil. I resolved not to have any of it, but somehow Jack changed my mind (to this day I can’t remember how – I imagine he probably called me a fag somewhere in the process) and I dipped a chip into the substance and then deposited the chip in my mouth.

The cheese slithered across my tongue, bland and overly salty, before sliding down my throat like mucus. I pushed the bowl back towards Jack, who was gleefully drizzling the cheese onto his plate of nachos.

“Pfft.” Jack grinned, watching me force back the urge to vomit. “More for me, I guess. Pussy.

While Jack is accomplished at many things, he is far better knowing every obscure fact about every band in existence than he is at eating two jars of Fiesta Cheese in one sitting, and so once we were finished with dinner we had one and a half jars of Fiesta Cheese in a glass bowl sitting in our refrigerator.

Two days later it was the night before a weekend band trip to Seattle to watch the Ducks crush the Fuskies, and Jack and I were staring at that big bowl of cheese, the last thing left in our refrigerator.

“We should probably throw it out,” he said. “Y’know, in case it goes bad while we’re gone.”*

*In retrospect, the cheese probably had so many preservatives in it that it would outlast me, Jack, any children we might have, and potentially all life on Earth. Eons from now, alien survey parties would land on Earth and the only evidence they’d find of human civilization would be that bowl of Fiesta Cheese. Tasting it, they would no doubt write off our entire race as producers and consumers of sub-par dairy products and go on their merry way.

“No,” I said, my long held aversion to wasting food welling up within me. “Let’s use this cheese. Let’s make it better. Let’s cook with it.”

“What can we make? It’s just a bowl of cheap cheese!”

“We’ll make dip,” I said, turning to the spice cabinet and flinging the doors wide open. “We’ll make the best fucking dip in the history of the world.”

Jack and I proceeded to do just that, employing probably about 60% of the nonalcoholic foodstuffs in the house. Cayenne pepper, chili powder, taco seasoning, red pepper flakes, black pepper, Chipotle Tabasco, Tapatio, and half an onion combined to make what had once been a bland bowl of dairy sludge into a robust and delicious dip.

Jack and I heated the substance up and sat downstairs, playing Halo 2 and scooping as much of this stuff as we could into our mouths on chips.

“What are we going to call this?” Jack asked, gasping for air between mouthfuls.

“Easy,” I said. “Battledip Galactica.”

Like Battlestar Galactica, my dip is intense, smart, powerful, well-written, and a fitting allegory for the global War on Terrorism. Also, none of my other favorite TV shows had applicable names for a dip - Mad Dip? Dippy Howser M.D.? No thank you.*

*In the process of writing this blog, I realized that Arrested Dipvelopment was almost a better choice than the name I went with, but I have no regrets.

I’ve never thought of myself as an especially gifted cook, so it’s been ingratiating for me to see the warm reception Battledip Galactica receives at every band party where I’ve served it. When the trumpet section went to the beach a few weeks ago, I pulled the Battledip out of the microwave just as half a dozen stoners came back inside after herbing up on the back porch. The entire bowl was gone in under 15 minutes.

People have begun to demand Battledip even when I don’t have the ingredients; on Halloween, two people left the party while drunk just to go to the store to buy an onion and some Fiesta Cheese so I could make the dip. When I was done, it was gone in about 20 minutes.

I feel pretty good about Battledip’s popularity, given that it’s got four figure calories and reportedly has given more than one person a horrifying case of Battleshits Galactica the following day.

People keep asking me for my recipe, and I’ll tell you here on the Internet in front of everyone: All you do is pour two jars of artificial cheese into a bowl, and then start experimenting with all your other applicable spices and vegetables. Everything is variable, except the artificial cheese.

Sorry, Mom.

Truman Capps wants to have a Battledip Galactica sampling party where all the guests bring their own versions, but the windows would have to stay open at all times, if you catch my drift.

Festival of Bands


Above: A festival WITH bands. Very different.


In the course of a season for the Oregon Marching Band, there is one event, usually somewhere in October, which is by far the most stressful performance of the year, even though it involves absolutely zero football and about 57,000 fewer fans. It’s called Festival of Bands, and from the first day of band camp until the end of the performance all it does is make our lives miserable.

There isn’t an awful lot of scrutiny placed on college marching bands because they have the unique distinction, much like wedding bands and The Grateful Dead, of playing to inebriated audiences who as a result aren’t all that critical. I can’t even count how many times the Oregon Marching Band has sweated all week to get a halftime show practiced and ready, only to start performing at halftime and have the students promptly turn around and start booing when they see the police ejecting a drunk fan. At that point, we could all take a collective dump in the center O on the field and nobody would notice.

To some degree this is sad, but it also takes a lot of the pressure off. Even a sober Oregon football fan (if such a thing exists) is unlikely to notice that somebody is in the wrong place on the field or missing his or her stepoffs, and even if said fan did notice, it’s not like he can send a text to the athletic department and get a chance to throw a water balloon at us or something. As such, we tend to not sweat the small stuff, preferring instead to make sure everyone is playing the same song at the same time while wearing their uniform properly, which is a bigger challenge than you’d think.

But then there’s Festival of Bands, the annual high school marching band competition that the University of Oregon hosts. We provide judges and a venue, OMB members work in tickets, concessions, and security, the bands compete, and then afterwards we march in exhibition in hopes of enticing the various nerds in the audience to come join us once they graduate. It’s a pretty effective recruiter – four years of seeing the Oregon Marching Band blow all the high schools out of the water at Festival of Bands was why I came to UO (Lord knows the Journalism School wasn’t that enticing).

The problem with this is that an audience of hopeless band geeks know exactly what we should look like and will be scrutinizing our every form and note for the slightest hint of an error – it’s like if your Beatles cover band is playing for the actual Beatles. Maybe the guys down at the bar didn’t notice when you sang the wrong lyrics for ‘Hey Jude,’ but they will. And then John, Paul, George, and Ringo will be so put off by your lackluster performance that they go join the marching band at Oregon State instead. Game over. That means we have to bust our asses to make sure everything looks and sounds perfect, and who wants to do that?

Of course, if we perform well, it’s the best thing in the world – these kids from tiny, poorly funded marching programs think we’re gods thanks to our high proportion of music majors, six figure budget, and 200+ people on the field. Sure, maybe it’s silly to seek approval from people several years younger than you, some of whom wear fake animal tails and makeup just for the hell of it, but we’re a marching band, for God’s sake. We take appreciation where we can get it.

Yesterday was my last Festival of Bands, ever – between the time I spent attending the competition (and losing, every year) with my high school’s band and the time helping run the competition with the Oregon Marching Band, I’ve been involved with Festival of Bands for eight years. Eight years is a long ass time, basically a decade if you’re fuzzy on the details and bad at math, and when I look back at my life I can’t find an awful lot of things that I’ve spent that much time doing. To be honest, most of my current circle of close friends I’ve only known for roughly half that long.

It’s sad when one of the major elements in your life is built around trying to impress a stadium full of socially awkward high schoolers in the rain. Yet, after eight years, it’s become something as friendly and familiar as going home.

Working in the ticket booth yesterday, for example, was a very fitting way to end my experience with Festival of Bands and marching band competitions in general, because it allowed to me to see pretty much every marching band competition spectator archetype who I’ve come to know over the years.

We were yelled at by band assistants who couldn’t fathom why we wouldn’t give them sets of on-field passes at the price they wanted to pay, chatted to by band moms wearing big buttons with pictures of their children in their band uniforms pinned to their sweaters,* harassed by hyperactive competitors who were no doubt jazzed on PixyStix and Mountain Dew (the crystal meth of the band world), and questioned by unaffiliated passers-by, no doubt confused by the conflagration of school buses and semi trucks, parking lots filled with girls twirling flags, and ATVs pulling xylophones, all set to the beat of a dozen or so drumlines early on a Saturday morning.

*By the way, thanks, Mom, for never doing that.

Looking at the high schoolers running around now, so obsessed with something so pointless as their score in a high school marching band competition, I find it hard to believe that only four years ago that was me, completely committed to trying to win at Festival of Bands, which is arguably the only competition you can win that will actively cockblock you if you mention it to a girl in a bar.*

*Okay, that’s not true. I’m sure winning the Northwest Chloroforming Unsuspecting Women Championship probably isn’t a big turn on either. Nor is getting the blue ribbon for ‘Best Basement Dungeon.’

I guess I’m just surprised about how much has changed in the past four years – it makes me wonder where I’ll be four marching band-free years from now, and whether I’m going to want to untag the 300-odd Facebook pictures of me in my green and yellow OMB tracksuit.

Truman Capps imagines it would’ve been a good idea to make his Halloween update today, which is actually Halloween, as opposed to last week, but he can’t help when inspiration strikes.

CMT


See how the letters look all worn out? That's because they're hardworking, honest letters.


Out of all genres, why is country music the only one that gets a basic cable channel? Maybe it’s because it’s a genre of music so heavily tied to a particular lifestyle – after all, the entire discography of all country music ever is basically one big theme song for driving a truck around and steadfastly refusing to move to the city, so why not maximize that audience by creating a TV channel to air ads for newer trucks and albums about not moving to the city?

For years, Country Music Television has been about the same as BET – a channel in my basic cable package that caters to a lifestyle wholly irrelevant to my own. Of course, while BET is produced by and targeted at black people (I know three), Country Music Television is almost exclusively white and I still don’t get most of the stuff I see them do.

I’ve been watching far more CMT than I had ever thought I would in the past few days, due mainly to the fact that I only turn the TV on when I’m exhausted and unwilling to apply any more effort or cognitive ability to anything in my life short of pushing a button. By the time the TV warms up and I realize I’m watching CMT, I’m already sitting down and knee deep in a bowl of white rice, wholly uninterested in picking up the remote again and try to figure out if Man Vs. Food is on (even though it usually is).

The reason that the TV is so often left on CMT is because of the show Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, a reality program about the rigorous selection and training process for the feminine sideline eye-candy who try to make a game built around men grabbing and rubbing against one another a little bit less gay.

My roommates have been following the show religiously because Katelynn Johnson, a former Oregon cheerleader who is mind numbingly gorgeous even by Oregon cheerleading standards, is a contestant. Even though she’s not being actively profiled by the show or anything, they still make a habit of pointing at the screen and shouting “THAT’S KJ! THERE SHE IS!” every time she’s in the background of a shot.*

*As much as I’d like to make fun of them for this, I usually find myself joining them to play the ‘Find KJ’ game. The beauty of the game is that even if you can’t find KJ, you’re still looking at a room full of beautiful, scantly clad dancing women, which, as far as losing games goes, isn’t all that bad.

To be honest, I’m not sure why Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders is on CMT – the girls don’t dance to country music, the show takes place in one of the largest metropolitan centers in the United States, and I’m not sure how short skirts and tube tops fit in with the family friendly nature of country music.

Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders has opened the door to various other elements of CMT programming which we wind up watching once the show is over and we’re too tired from playing ‘Find KJ’ to change the channel. World’s Strictest Parents is probably our second most watched CMT product.

World’s Strictest Parents is a reality show wherein petulant spoiled brats from the big city are sent to live with a set of ‘strict’ parents for a week, who, without fail, permanently change a lifetime of disobedience and bad parenting within 22 minutes, usually by way of two big scoldings before the first commercial break and a poignant, tearful revelation before the second.

I find myself enjoying this show a lot because in spite of the fact that it’s lowbrow reality TV on a station named after one of my least favorite genres of music, it’s really fun to sit down at the end of a hard day and watch some pouty, whiny skateboarder get yelled at by a Southern Baptist pig farmer.

And I think that’s why the show is on CMT, too – the spoiled city slicker kids are out of control, swearing at their parents, getting bad grades, and smoking (always smoking), and the only thing that can save them is a trip to a rural locale somewhere in the Deep South where country folk have their way with them. It’s really a lot like Deliverance, when you think about it, only instead of getting raped the city people are transformed into upstanding members of society while a Taylor Swift song plays.

The other show I’ve seen a fair amount of on CMT is The Dukes Of Hazzard, a show which is so aggressively Southern that I feel as though CMT was only created so that they’d have a place to show reruns of it at all hours of the day. Hell, I feel like modern day country music is basically just Dukes Of Hazzard fan fiction set to a twangy beat.

It’s a show about back country farm boys tearassing around county roads in a muscle car named after a Confederate general with a Confederate flag painted on it, constantly outwitting corrupt, bumbling county officials. On some level the show could be seen as a very sophisticated treatise on fundamental conservative philosophies about individual liberties and the wasteful, corrupt nature of government, but on most levels it’s cool to watch sports cars jump over creeks and police cruisers.

So that’s what CMT has to offer me – mindless entertainment involving either women, hillbillies yelling at rich kids, or a 30 year old show about car chases. Basically all of this beats Two and a Half Men.

Truman Capps feels bad making any sort of joke about Taylor Swift after everything she went through at the hands of Kanye West, but he doesn’t know any other country singers.

Halloween


I looked up 'best Halloween costume' on Google Image Search, and I saw a lot of half naked fatties. Please enjoy this image of a pumpkin.


In my experience, holidays take on new meanings as the years go by. Christmas used to be all about the presents, but as I got older and moved out, it’s become less about shameless materialism and more about seeing my family, something I never would have guessed in spite of the fact that that’s the moral of virtually every story ever written about Christmas.

My appreciation of Thanksgiving has increased exponentially with my newfound appreciation of turkey and stuffing over the past five years or so, and my birthday, which had gone through sort of a lull after I turned 18 and could finally buy porn and lottery tickets, was especially enjoyable when I turned 21 last year. But it’s Halloween, more than any other holiday, that I’ve discovered a newfound appreciation for.

I was never totally nuts about candy as a child, so when I did go trick-or-treating it was more out of a sense of social obligation than interest in sweets – if people had been handing out garlic bread or meatloaf on their doorsteps it would’ve been a different story. But still I pressed on, every year struggling to think up a new costume and then trudging from one house to the next, accumulating more candy than I could hope to eat, miserably sleepwalking through a major childhood social function like some pint sized, overweight Jay Gatsby.

I quit Halloween altogether in fourth grade, which at the time was a lot like trying to tell your Southern Baptist friends that you’re gay. “No, guys, I don’t want to run around the neighborhood dressed as Power Rangers, demanding free sweets from adults. I’d rather sit at home and watch Seinfeld.”

I’d turned my back on the holiday pretty much entirely until I got to college, where the band’s annual Halloween costume contest pulled me back into the raucous, child-oriented activity in the way that only the Oregon Marching Band can.

Prizes in the costume contest are awarded for the best single costume and the best section-wide coordinated costume, and traditionally these prizes are awarded based entirely on favoritism, making the promise of an award less a tangible goal and more a good excuse to convince all your friends to dress up like characters from Super Smash Brothers.


The fact that they’re in a marching band is the least nerdy thing about this picture.

After abstaining from the festivities my freshman year, I got my feet wet sophomore year by showing up to the costume contest dressed normally while wearing a novelty arrow through the head.*

*After practice, I wound up leaving the arrow in my then-girlfriend’s dorm room. When we broke up a few weeks later there was a somewhat bittersweet moment when I had to stop by to pick up my stuff from her place and she met me at the door with a Kurt Vonnegut book, my DVD of Dawn of the Dead, and a slapstick comedy prop.

Last year, I cobbled together a suitable Team Zissou uniform as a tribute to The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, which I was very proud of in spite of the fact that absolutely nobody understood it.


From left to right: Long story, Santa, Iron Man, Balloon Boy, Team Zissou.

This year, for the first time in perhaps ever, I’m considering doing multiple costumes, which I think is impressive considering the fact that when I was the intended age for this holiday I found it too stressful to come up with so much as one. Right now I’ve got at least three Halloween parties on tap, which means that I can pull out both David Caruso on CSI Miami as well as Doogie Howser in pretty much the same weekend, plus Kenneth the Page if I can find an NBC tie.

I can’t figure out why I’ve only started embracing the spirit of the holiday now, when I’m well beyond the culturally accepted age for such shenanigans. Maybe it’s because Halloween as my friends and I celebrate it now doesn’t involve trick or treating for candy, but instead trying to one up your friends’ creativity for attention, which is essentially the greatest candy money can buy. Unless we’re counting alcohol as candy.

Incidentally, I would gladly go back to trick or treating if you knocked on doors and people gave you little one shot bottles of Absolut, or just baggies filled with scotch or whatever they happened to have in the liquor cabinet at the time. Admittedly, one night of strangers giving each other free alcohol would probably bring about the downfall of Western society, but I feel like it would be worth it to drink Jack Daniels out of a water balloon.

Truman Capps has really given up on trying to hide his love of booze on his blog – if any potential Hollywood employers reading this have a problem with mind altering substances, judge not lest ye be judged.

Gatorade


Delicious, delicious science.


Have you seen that Gatorade commercial, the one that’s the history of Gatorade? Where they have the two old University of Florida scientists talking about how they invented this revolutionary nutrient-replacing athlete drink, and then one of them drawls, “Naturally we called it Gatoraaaade.” I don’t know if it’s that effective of a sales pitch, because all it makes me do is think of what would have happened if another major university had invented the drink.

Wolverineade – Big seller to X-Men and Red Dawn fans.

Fighting Irishade – They already have it, and it’s called beer.

Spartanade – “I THINK THEY’RE THIRSTY, LADS!”

Trojanade - ”Is It In You?

Having been less than athletic in my childhood, my first real encounter with Gatorade came last year at the Rose Bowl. On the night before the six mile Rose Parade and subsequent football game, the band director issued two bottles of Gatorade to everyone in the band and ordered us to drink them before bed.

“You’ll be working a lot tomorrow,” he shouted to us as the colorful drinks were distributed. “Sweating. This will keep you going, I promise. It’s science.

This endorsement was coming from a doctor, so I took it pretty seriously. A doctor of music, granted, but a doctor nonetheless – while I wouldn’t consult him for a prostate exam, I’m willing to believe that he did his homework on Gatorade before spending four figures to buy enough of it 200 people two times over.

It was tasty, and as I drank it I couldn’t help but imagine it getting into my bloodstream and making it somehow better. Sure enough, the following day I made it through the whole parade and game with no problem – that might be due to the fact that walking six miles and then standing for a few hours isn’t an especially taxing activity, but I choose to credit Gatorade with my success.

Since quitting soft drinks six months ago, I’ve sticking mainly to water as a beverage because I’m more willing to deprive myself of high fructose corn syrup than I am to buy a pair of gym shorts. For most of that time, my go-to logic was that if a drink had flavor, it was probably there thanks to roughly the same number of chemicals as there are in the stuff I spray on ant infestations around the house.

During the more sweltering part of the late summer, though, Gatorade and I bumped into each other again when my friends picked a bunch up to stay hydrated through a 90 degree band practice. It dawned on me that Gatorade was refreshing, flavorful, and basically clinically proven to keep you from dying* - being as I’m a huge fan of refreshment, flavor, and life, I picked up several bottles as well and began my flirtation with becoming a regular Gatorade drinker.

*As opposed to soft drinks, most of which, I hear, are clinically proven to make you die.

It’s a stupid thing, drinking Gatorade casually as a beverage, rather than for its nutritional value – this is probably why you don’t see it served in a lot of restaurants. It’s not something you get at a coffee shop. Gatorade is a specialized tool for athletes – I’ve always seen drinking Gatorade just for the taste as akin to wearing a cup all the time because you like what it does to your inseam.

So in order to keep from being what I’d always relentlessly mocked, I found myself starting to create a false need for Gatorade in my life.

“Oh, man, Truman, you were sweating a little bit on the bike ride home today. You should probably hit up 7-11 and get some Gatorade. No, water won’t cut it. Dehydration is serious business.”

“Damn, man, you walked up three flights of stairs! Better go grab a Gatorade – electrolytes don’t just grow on trees, you know.”

“Wow, looks like it’s going to get up to 70 degrees next week. I’d better crack open a preemptive Gatorade. Better safe than sorry.”

My cousin, who is nine years clean and sober, once told me that people don’t really kick addictions so much as they just find new ones. Gatorade, I knew deep inside my very well hydrated conscious, was just my way of finding excuses to drink something sweet on a regular basis again.

What shocked me back to reality was when I was at 7-11 stocking up and spotted Gatorade G2, the low calorie calorie replacement drink. Apparently I wasn’t the only person drinking Gatorade recreationally, and the fine folks in charge of the company had seen fit to respond to complaints from fat Gatorade fans, concerned about how many calories the drink was replenishing, by releasing a new version with diminished nutritional value for sedentary people who just want to drink expensive fruit punch. At that point they may as well just call it ‘Brokenade.’

I’m off Gatorade now and looking to find some new addiction to fill the gap soft drinks left in my life. I’ve been trying real hard to make it something constructive, like getting better at cooking or seeing how many fresh vegetables I can eat in one sitting, but one of my friends just loaned me Halo: Reach and I feel like that’s going to be it for the time being.

Truman Capps didn’t write about a scenario where Oregon State University scientists invented Gatorade, because that would be a far too easy joke to make.

On Video


Happiness. Musty, unrewound, slightly sticky happiness.


As much as I love my new neighborhood, the one place where it does suffer is in its lack of a good video store. Or any video store, for that matter. There used to be a Hollywood Video, wedged in between LIQUOR and the nail salon outside the Market of Choice, but it recently closed, and is now just an empty storefront, haunted by the ghosts of a thousand 12-year-olds trying to discreetly rent Showgirls.*

*I watched some of Showgirls on Pay-Per-View in the hotel room in Spokane, and maybe it was the absinthe I’d just drank, but it was sort of amazing. A guy bones a chick in a swimming pool, and he makes it look both feasible and enjoyable. If I owned a company that installed pools, that would be our commercial – just the pool sex scene and then our phone number.

Chances are you know exactly what I’m talking about, because Hollywood Video is closing up shop all over the place. The Internet’s relentless march of destruction has already singlehandedly destroyed print journalism and the professional pornography business, and now video stores are next to be thrown into the dustbin of history.

I mean, it makes sense. Video stores are just buildings full of things to look at while you sit on your ass doing nothing for two hours – the only problem was that you had to get off your ass to go to the video store in the first place, and now Netflix has eliminated that step. If necessity is the mother of invention, laziness is totally the father (and I assume, given his slothful nature, that he’s behind on his child support payments).

I’m particularly fond of Netflix Live Streaming at the moment because they haven’t gone through all the legal hurdles to get exclusively good, famous movies on there, so there’s still an awful lot of obscure arthouse stuff and mindless trash being made widely available to bored people with too much time on their hands. Protip: Stay away from Antichrist unless you want to see Willem Dafoe ejaculate blood.

But for all its convenience, Netflix will never be able to recreate for me the very experience of going to a video store. There’s a sort of excitement about it, being able to see all the titles around you, being able to meander through the store if you don’t know what you want to watch or hurrying to grab a new release before they run out of copies.

When I was 9, I went down to American Family Video and grabbed the last copy of Beetle Adventure Racing for the Nintendo 64 a split second before some other kid. He pouted as I strutted up to the counter to pay, vindicated, having won a race before even plugging the game in. That’s the sort of thing Netflix can’t give you – scarcity, competition, making children cry…

Incidentally, kid, if you’re out there, Beetle Adventure Racing sucked, so… You’re welcome, I guess.

Come to think of it, I’ve got all kinds of fond memories of American Family Video. I was a fat kid, and the half-mile walk to that video store was about the only exercise I ever willingly attempted.

Alexander and I had probably spent a combined total of well over a day just wandering up and down the aisles, arguing about what French kung-fu movie we were going to get or daring one another to rent Legends of the Kama Sutra. The staff never seemed to care – even then there was so little business that they didn’t mind the two seemingly homosexual 12-year-olds running around quoting The Fifth Element.

I remember the clunky old plastic VHS cases – blue for new releases, vomit orange for older titles. When DVDs first arrived on the scene, American Family set aside one shelf for them – the DVD section, comedies, dramas, and horror movies all mixing together. Over the years, the DVD section grew like a cancer throughout the entire store and then killed it shortly before I went to college.

When the store closed, they had a huge sale to get rid of their stock – I picked up Punch Drunk Love and Road to Perdition for something like $6 total. They were even selling the shelves for $20; clearly the owners were still sort of bitter about the whole venture and wanted to get rid of anything that would remind them of the fact that they’d spent the last 25 odd years running a video store.

Now the same thing has happened with Hollywood Video, which will leave Blockbuster as the last man standing until the rental industry finally goes completely under. It’s like the Titanic – the band kept on playing right until the end, and I’m sure if anybody wanted to rent a DVD of Hitch to watch on the long wait in the lifeboat there would be a guy in a blue shirt and khakis waiting to give him a copy.

It was one of the great disappointments of my life that I never worked at American Family Video – or any video store, for that matter. I’d always assumed that I’d wind up working there, based on my love of movies and the fact that I pretty much grew up in that place.

American Family Video was the childhood sweetheart who I intended to marry but never did, and then when I come back to town years later and try to look her up, it turns out she’s dead.

Man, that sounds kind of like a country song.

…Yeah, I’m going to open up GarageBand. Something’s happening here.

Truman Capps thinks ‘Piano Man’ would’ve worked equally well if it were written about a video store.

That Guy

This guy is That Guy.


There comes a time in every man’s life when he has to either go big or go home. And most of the time, I prefer to go home – while home may have a bit of an ant problem, it’s still a comfortable place with a big TV and cabinets well stocked with liquor and Pop Tarts. If going big can’t provide those same amenities, it really doesn’t offer that much to me in the first place.

The reason I even bring this up is because the month long XBox Live subscription that had been gifted to me after my return from Hollywood recently ran out, and my life is such a low stakes game that the choice between paying money to get murdered by racist Southern 13 year olds online or not constitutes a ‘go big or go home’ moment.

Going big, in this case, would be to bite the bullet and drop $50 on a year’s worth of XBox Live. Going home would be to return to my old habit of sitting around investing 75-odd hours into Fallout 3, which is slightly more depressing than doing the same in Modern Warfare 2 because at least when you pour your life into an online game you’re squandering your best years with other people.

I was reluctant to go big because I truly hate spending money, in spite of how often I do it. When I spend money, I like it to go towards something tangible – a Philly Cheesesteak I can eat, a Mrs. Beer I can drink, an escort service with some sort of AAA certification. Buying XBox Live is like paying for the Internet, which is A) Intangible and 2) Something I already pay for.

Also, I’ve always been reluctant to subscribe to XBox Live because you’re paying for a big block of time, instead of per use. I was in no hurry to spend a bunch of money on something and then potentially not get my money’s worth if I’m not actively using it. I’m big on getting my money’s worth – this is why, when I go to Red Robin, I make a point of eating every last scrap of that $12 hamburger,* because by God, I paid for it.

*Coincidentally, this practice usually leads me to use their bathrooms, which, as they’re reserved for paying customers only, is yet another thing I feel my $12 entitles me to do.

Every minute I’m not on XBox Live, I can hear my $50 investment dribbling away, 13 cents every day getting funneled into Bill Gates’ pocket, him cackling as I pay for services he hasn’t rendered. When you buy a gym membership, the thought of the money you don’t want to waste will ideally inspire you to go work out. With XBox Live, the thought of the money you don’t want to waste inspires you to sit on your ass and play more video games. So really, nobody wins except Microsoft and the cholesterol building a pillow fort in your arteries.

That’s really what XBox Live is – it’s a gym membership for inactive people. You don’t work your muscles; you work your Kill/Death ratio. Instead of building up your own personal appearance, you build up your online avatar’s appearance, earning new military rankings and logos for people to look at after you kill them. All the time you invest in a game like Modern Warfare 2 goes toward impressing people online but doesn’t do much for you in real life, likewise, being strong in real life doesn’t carry a lot of weight on XBox Live (I can’t tell you how many falsetto-voiced opponents have told me they’re black belts and threatened to beat me up).

As much as I never wanted to be That Guy at the gym with his oddly tight shorts or his special protein bars that for some reason don’t involve bacon, I also never wanted to be That Guy with the Live subscription and the party chat headset, deeming weapons ‘noob cannons’ depending on how recently I’ve been killed by one. There’s nothing wrong with being That Guy – lord knows a lot of my friends are – but it’s just not the guy that I thought I was.

In spite of all these reasons that I didn’t want to go big, I did – I went big in a big way. I picked up a used copy of Modern Warfare 2 and bought a Live subscription on the same day – that’s nearly $100 I’ve invested in a game that will be obsolete when the new installment comes out next month.

I bought a Live subscription because I’m addicted. XBox Live is like crack. Playing XBox Live with my three roommates, our clan doing battle with the prepubescent foul mouthed homophobes of the Internet, is, if possible, better than crack. It’s like a crack flavored Hostess Fruit Pie. As much as I wanted to pretend to be above all of this, I’m not. Were it not for the fact that I had to write this blog and then do a week’s worth of homework for one of my classes in 24 hours, I’d be playing right now.

Hopefully one day I’ll get addicted to a healthy pastime, like swimming or fresh vegetable eating contests. Until then, my GamerTag is ThriftyHair Guy – feel free to be impressed by how cool my online avatar guy looks.

Truman Capps encourages the Boise State and Washington State fans who hate him so much to seek him out on Live and settle this like men – immature, bitchy men.

Damn You, Cougars, And The Horse You Rode In On!


If you squint, unfocus your eyes, and get drunk, this symbol might begin to resemble the letters W, S, and U.


So I just got back from Pullman, and let’s be honest – it wasn’t the Worst Trip Ever. I didn’t go into it expecting it to be anything great; I’ve been to Pullman before so I knew what to expect. There’s a nine hour bus ride through the blasted, post apocalyptic landscape known as ‘Eastern Washington,’ a boring football game very close to the border with Idaho, everybody spends what little per diem they receive and we all go home confident that we’ve wasted a weekend.

That was what I was expecting, and somehow I’m still disappointed.

Fuck you, Pullman. And more importantly, fuck you, Washington State University.

Compliment sandwich:

Spokane, where we stayed, is a beautiful city in spite of its unfortunate location in the state of Washington, and I would love to go there sometime again in the future.

Our hotel was kind of a disaster.

The nachos in the hotel bar weren’t necessarily great, but at least they gave you a whole lot of nachos for your $7 investment.

I once read that the human gastrointestinal tract, if it were stretched out to its full length instead of coiled up like it is, would stretch for two miles. Our hotel was the same way – it had the same capacity as an ordinary 7-story hotel, yet it was only two stories and stretched endlessly through suburban Spokane like a long, uncoiled intestine. Also like an uncoiled intestine, it was full of shit.

After picking up our keys in the lobby, we quite honestly had to walk through about a quarter mile’s worth of identical, twisting, turning hallways to get to our room, rather than just use an elevator or jaunt up a flight of stairs. As a result, walking from our room to the dining room became an honest to goodness commute, the sort of thing where you have to pee ahead of time because you’re going to be on the road for so long.

But then we went to the game, and here’s the thing I don’t get:

We’ve had fans treat us like shit a lot. Oregon State’s fans threw paint on us at the Civil War two years ago. Ohio State frat boys jeered us as we left the stadium after the Rose Bowl. Husky fans asked us, “Why do you have zeros on your uniforms?”*

*The correct response is, “Hey, why do you have zeros on your scoreboard?”

And I understood all that, because the Beavers and the Buckeyes are good teams, the teams with solid winning records about which one can feel comfortable talking some smack, and Washington fans are stupid because they go to the University of Washington.

But we got some of the worst treatment from the Washington State fans at this game – and if anything, one would hope that a school that’s been dead last in the Pac-10 for the past decade or so would know a little bit of humility. I mean, people who live in glass houses have every right to live there if they just want to have an excuse to get drunk on a Saturday afternoon, but as soon as they start throwing stones they just become tools.

One thing that we have trouble with at away games is spectators trying to cut through the band’s section of the stands, rather than going up an aisle and down around the other side. We can’t have complete strangers walking through our ranks because we’ve got all kinds of expensive, stealable material lying around, so whenever it happens we ask them to turn around and go back out.

At the Washington State game, one drunk Cougar started sidling through the band until a beefier trumpet player stepped in front of him and told him he’d have to turn around. The fan’s response was to start screaming in his face about what a fucking travesty his having to turn and walk the other direction was before stomping off. Not long after, another drunk fan started pushing and shoving clarinet players aside as he barreled through our section. One of our staff members, who happened to have her infant child in her arms, was in his path, and he shoved this woman, who might I remind you was plainly carrying a fucking human baby, out of the way, flipped us all off, and departed.

I don’t get why Cougars were so eager to cut through the band in the first place. I mean, it’s a tiny little high school stadium anyway, so going around the band isn’t a major detour, and what was their rush? If they were trying to get back to their seats it wasn’t like they were missing any spectacular football, and if they were trying to leave I guarantee you there wasn’t anything exciting happening in Pullman without them.

After the game, a drunk fan jumped onto one of our motor coaches and demanded that we drive him home. When we explained that, no, chauffeuring douchebags around was not part of the Oregon Marching Band’s mission statement, he stormed off the bus and punched out the rear view mirror of one of our equipment trucks, shattering it and leaving a trail of blood as he ran off, police in pursuit.

But by far the worst show of Cougar spirit came during the game, when Oregon tailback Kenjon Barner got more or less knocked out by a Washington State safety who was leading with his helmet. For the ten minutes that Barner was lying on the field, surrounded by medical staff and family members, about half the people in Washington State’s ‘stadium’ refused to sit down, and then began chanting “GO COUGS!” as they loaded him into the horse drawn ambulance to be taken to Pullman’s only hospital so that they could rub Bibles on him until he got better.

That’s not okay, Cougar fans. I’m honestly sort of having trouble making a joke out of how not okay that is – because I’ve never seen Oregon fans, even at their most crass, disrespect a seriously injured player like that. Let’s just say it made me feel really good to watch us spend the rest of the game raping your two-bit backwoods safety school up and down the gridiron as payback.

Now hear this: Boise State, you’re off the shit list in favor of the Cougars, who are just barely tailing the Huskies. Here’s hoping this year’s Apple Cup is a scoreless tie with a lot of career-ending injuries.

Truman Capps promises he’ll stop writing about college football rivalries soon.

Helmets


Another totally awesome helmet.


Living two miles away from campus, I wind up riding my bike to class just about every day. This is a great thing and I’m really happy to be doing it – it gives me a chance to get more use out of my awesome bike, the commute is incredibly cyclist friendly what with this being Eugene, and the fact that I manage to get a four mile bike ride most days helps me to justify my eating habits, which, while healthier than some, go to shit as soon as there’s a good deal on tacos or I become aware of a Philly Cheesesteak available somewhere in my general vicinity.

Only in Denmark have I seen people as enthusiastic about the bike commute as at the University of Oregon. The bike lanes, while never quite congested, are always well trafficked by legions of professors on tricked out mountain bikes, students on hand-me-down beaters, douchebags on fixed gears, and talkative, insufferable engineers on recumbent bikes.*

*One of the biggest fuckwits I knew in high school, and arguably one of the biggest of all time, rode a recumbent bike for a while. So adamant was he about the superiority of its design that he refused to refer to it as a ‘bike’ but a ‘recumbent’, and instead of saying ‘I biked over there’ would say ‘I recumbed over there,’ a sentence which has no business being spoken outside of a porno shoot.

Riding a bike in Eugene feels right and natural, like eating something deep fried on a stick at a state fair. However, in typical Truman Capps fashion, I still manage to stand out from the crowd in a way that makes me look like a dork: I wear a helmet.

Helmets aren’t cool, because they are one of the few fashion accessories to say, “I have so little confidence in my ability to ride this thing that I’m willing to wear this ugly hat on the off chance that I fuck up.”

Essentially none of the other student bicyclists on campus wear helmets – professors, on the other hand, go full bore, wearing helmets with built in rear view mirrors and taillights, along with a reflective jacket and presumably a bulletproof vest on the off chance they ride through a bad neighborhood.

In an attempt to try and make my safety-motivated decision look cooler, I try to refer to my helmet as a ‘crash helmet’ in conversation whenever possible – because the only time helmets are cool is when you couple them with a slick adjective or noun to create terms like ‘football helmet’ or ‘Army helmet’. Other good words to add to ‘helmet’: “Viking,” “Skydiving,” “Sex.”

As much as I want to cast throw caution to the wind and join the other students in their easygoing, helmet free commute, I pretty much can’t, recognizing full well that this fashion choice means I probably won’t be in the market for a sex helmet anytime soon.

You see, as I’ve mentioned before, I come from an insurance family. Some families all wind up being cops or firemen drug dealers, but not mine – we’re insurance people. My father has worked in insurance for well over 20 years, my mother for 10, along with most of their friends. Throughout my childhood, virtually every adult I spent any amount of time with was more than capable of identifying every potential disaster within a 10 mile radius.

And so they passed the power to say, “Oh, that’s going to end badly,” on to me, which I do, whether I want to or not, at pretty much all times. And let me tell you, riding a bike – even in Eugene – is one big catastrophe waiting to happen.

Eugene’s streets are in terrible condition, so bad that drivers actively complain about them, and they’re not the ones whose balls are smacking against a hard leather seat every time they go over a pothole, nor are they in quite the same precarious balance situation.

Add onto that the fact that it rains a lot here, making these already treacherous streets slick.

Add onto that the fact that the University and its surrounding neighborhoods are populated by an uncommonly high number of young people from California, who while in cars have no regard for human life or traffic laws and while out of their cars see nothing wrong with blindly stepping off a curb into a bike lane and assuming that the laws of physics will work in their favor.

To me, these aren’t chances – these are facts of life. Were I to venture out on my bike without my helmet and have an unwanted encounter with pavement, a car, or a texting blonde anorexic with zero spatial awareness, I know that there would be sympathy for me at home, but underneath it there would be an undercurrent of, “Told you so!” from my family and all of their friends.

I imagine it’s the same response I would get if I’d tried to climb Mt. Everest wearing only my underwear. If there’s one thing my parents have beaten into me, it’s that you’ve got to take the proper precautions, no matter how quickly it shunts you into the friend zone with every woman who sees you.

But let’s not focus on how stupid I look wearing a helmet – let’s focus on how great it is that I’m willing to contend with all these factors while wearing only a helmet and not the Iron Man suit.

Truman Capps would totally just use the Iron Man suit to fly to class.

Jersey Shore


This is the only image I could find for 'Jersey Shore' that had nothing to do with 'Jersey Shore.' You're welcome.


Up until now I had prided myself on not having watched an episode of the show Jersey Shore, a piece of reality programming so mainstream and white trash that I feel it barely deserves the italicized HTML coding I just gave it. As of this writing, my bio on Facebook simply consists of, ‘No, I don’t watch Jersey Shore.”

It may seem like a stupid thing to list as your Facebook bio, but I think that says a lot about a person – to declare that you don’t watch Jersey Shore means that you are more or less purposefully excluding yourself from a major part of American college culture. You’re abstaining from following the exploits of a group of 20something spraytanned blowjobs and their exploits in a world where MTV pays their rent and the cover charges for the various clubs they go to and start fights at.

Without having seen the show, my impression of Jersey Shore was the same as my impression of any other given reality show – MTV puts a bunch of attention whores into an enclosed space with nothing to do except drink and waits for the inevitable hormonal explosion, which they then videotape and throw on national television in between commercials and the occasional music video.

And I consider that to be cheap. It’s almost like cheating, to be honest, because everybody who has ever lived with anybody else knows that there’s going to be at least one filmable moment when somebody eats the other person’s Oreos for the umpteenth time. If nothing else, Jersey Shore is the epitome of Jean-Paule Sarte’s quote ‘Hell is other people’ from his play No Exit, and because this sentence reeks of egocentric English major bullshit, I’ll also go on record as saying that the 2008 Jason Statham film Death Race was seriously underrated.

So that’s why I was diligently avoiding Jersey Shore in the same way that I avoid Survivor, Big Brother, and C-SPAN – it’s a bunch of people I don’t particularly like running around and talking shit behind one another’s backs while being followed by a camera crew. Only for whatever reason, everybody I know can’t stop talking about Jersey Shore, as though the fact that the performers were tanner and more ethnic somehow made the show better.

Imagine my disdain when I came out of my room this morning in the early afternoon, still worn out after spending 17 hours in Autzen Stadium yesterday, to find my roommates watching Jersey Shore reruns. I was essentially trapped – I had already left my room, and due to a combination of physical exhaustion, muscle ache, and residual swamp ass from the day before I was unwilling to turn around and walk back when there was a perfectly inviting seat on the couch in front of our 62 inch TV waiting for me.

So I sat and watched Jersey Shore. I’m not proud of it, but I did it.

And let me tell you, folks, it was stressful as hell. The whole show is based on ugly, oversexed attention whores fucking and yelling at each other. It’s a show built around drama.*

*Drama is a word derived from the Greek word drao, or ‘to do’, and is a genre based on interpersonal conflict that has permeated human entertainment from Oedipus to Hamlet. Now, the word is most commonly used to describe screechy feuds between immature girls over who freakdanced on whose boyfriend at prom. Way to totally shit on linguistic, theatrical, and literary history, America.

I was surprised to see that in spite of the title Jersey Shore, the show appeared to be set in Miami, which, to my knowledge, is in the state of Florida. Maybe this was an artistic choice – after all, Chinatown mostly took place outside of Chinatown. Maybe the real Jersey Shore is less a location and more a state of mind. Or maybe the producers wanted to brand the show as different without altering anything about the tried and tested formula. Either or.

As I saw it, the show consisted of the interactions between groups of people wearing a few million dead lab rats’ worth of cosmetics – these interactions were limited to screaming, punching, or a bizarre sort of dancing that incorporates both fake screaming and fake punching.

On the episode I saw, two girls got into a fight in the kitchen, spilling food everywhere (no doubt attracting so many ants) before wandering off to their respective bedrooms to bitch to the camera crew about one another. Not long after, everybody went out to a nightclub and got drunk.

The reason I can’t find a show about a close knit group of alcoholics constantly fucking and fighting is because that’s my life already. I don’t know if I’ve mentioned this at all on this blog, but I’m in the fucking Oregon Marching Band. That’s all we do. I can’t kick back and enjoy a bunch of stupid people yelling at one another for trivial reasons, because I already deal with that on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 3:20 until 6:00, and also on select Saturdays throughout the fall.

I can’t watch Jersey Shore for the same reason ice road truckers probably can’t watch Ice Road Truckers - when I get home, I don’t want to relive the same stupid bullshit I deal with on a daily basis. If I’m going to watch a group of people backstabbing each other and passing around sexual partners, it had better either be in space or the early 1960s. Anything else is too close to home.

Truman Capps thinks a reality show about the Oregon Marching Band would be awesome – something he’s only saying because he wants MTV to foot the bill on Taco Tuesday.

A Walk Around My Neighborhood


Depressed yet?


I’ve spent the past three years living either on campus or so close to campus that I could hear the endless squealing and clapping of sorority girls every year during rush.* Even though my addresses changed from one year to the next, they were all within about a mile of one another. My neighborhood was Campus – real estate prices were low, but public urination rates were concerning, to say the least.

*Which I’m sure is a glorious and time honored tradition, and my ignorance of it is in no way intended to belittle or diminish it. (Thanks again for being on Writers, Molly.)

This year, I’m living in a house nearly two miles away from campus, in a room that, as I’ve already mentioned, is so small that it actually makes me look fatter when I’m in it due to a trick of perspective. This area is so distant from campus that it has the distinction of being home to some actual, real people – as in, non students. People who just live in Eugene for the hell of it. I believe the term they used in the 1970s was ‘Townies’, which is proof that college students have a solid history of being elitist douchetrucks.

After first moving in, I was a little bummed out when I realized that in addition to my daily commute to campus for school, I was also going to have to ride my bike out there every time I needed to get groceries or rent a movie or grab an emergency Hostess Fruit Pie from 7-11.*

*I’m pretty sure a lemon flavored Hostess Fruit Pie can cure cancer. Of course, it’ll also give you Type 2 Diabetes, so…

But then, I made a shocking discovery - there’s a whole freaking town around the University of Oregon. Get this: It’s where all the Townies live! And as it turns out, the Townies have their own supermarkets and video stores and 7-11, and at my place right now, I’m actually closer to most of those establishments than I was when I lived near campus!

I’m still trying to adjust to my new surroundings, though.

7-11

This one’s closer to my place than the campus location was to any of my previous dwellings. Also, they sell movies at this one – there’s a little rack by the door full of DVDs. One that jumped out and caught my eye was There Will Be Blood.

A sticker on the case alerted passers-by that this was an EMPTY DISPLAY COPY – SEE CASHIER FOR DVD, which came as a surprise to me, as I hadn’t pegged Paul Thomas Anderson’s oil-boom epic about obsession, religion, and greed to be a real hot item for the sort of delinquent who would shoplift from a 7-11.

Also, I’m pretty sure the cashier was on crack, because he was having this conversation (or monologue) with another customer, who was trying desperately to leave:

“YeahmanIreallylikebluegrassIusedtoplaywiththisonebluegrassbandinCottageGrovewewereprettytightbutthenwesortofhadafallingoutohmanthere’sthisreallygreatbluegrassbandupinPortlandyouhavetohear…”

McDonald’s and Wendy’s

Great! If I ever want a sub-par burger that probably has somebody’s pubic hair on it, I’m in like flint.

Mulligan’s Irish Pub

I was not aware that there were themed pubs in Eugene. The only two themes I knew of were Student Bar, where the walls are covered in autographed jerseys and you have to shout to be heard over Kayne West, and Trucker Bar, where the clientele glare at and/or murder any students who wander in.

But there’s Mulligan’s – a squat, dark green cinderblock building with no windows to speak of. I think I might become a regular, because on the off chance that there’s a nuclear attack while I’m inside I’ll be so well protected I won’t even know it happened.

Long’s Meat Market

I was not aware that there was still room in the economy for markets specializing in such a specific food item – particularly in Eugene, which has an entrenched and suitably unbearable vegan asshole contingent.

I feel like I want to patronize the crap out of this store, because I’m the sort of guy who would not only attempt but also benefit from an afternoon sampling the finest organic artesian bacons from around the world. However, I’m also the guy who goes to the supermarket and turns up his nose when some flashy all natural company tries to charge more than $4 for a jar of pasta sauce, so I don’t think I’d be willing to spend a lot of money on highfalootin’ meat when I could go to Safeway instead and then use the savings on liquor. Speaking of…

LIQUOR

WOOHOO!

The liquor store ever so close to my house doesn’t appear to have a name, other than LIQUOR, posted in red neon above the door. Floor to ceiling glass windows showcase the goods, as if to say, “Hey. Drink this.”

I haven’t been able to bring myself to go in just yet – not just to this store, but to any liquor store in Oregon. So much of the fun of living in California all summer wasn’t just seeing bottles of hooch lined up next to the Lay’s, but the excitement of examining the price tags and being shocked at how cheap everything was due to the lack of any discernable state taxation.

When I finally do go to LIQUOR (and believe you me, that day will come – probably soon) I’m going to have to take some Kleenex and cue up ‘Always Something There To Remind Me’ on my iPod as I survey the damage that those malevolent fuckshits at the Oregon Liquor Control Commission continue to rain down upon my checking account.

Truman Capps hopes that the anonymous enraged Boise State fans from the weekend’s update don’t use these locations to stake out the neighborhood and kill him.

Why I Hate Boise State - A Treatise


"THE GOGGLES! THEY DO NOTHING!"


No, before you ask, this isn’t one of my rare sports oriented blogs. Yes, some of the subject matter involves sports, and sports, namely football, ignited and continually stoke the fires of my rage, but to say that me explaining why Boise State sucks is a sports centric update is the epitome of not seeing the forest for the trees.

Hating Boise State isn’t about sports, it’s about common goddamn decency. It’s about not hoisting mediocrity up as excellence. It’s about knowing what fucking color certain things should be, and fighting to preserve those standards.

Here’s what I’m saying: Boise State, you’re damn lucky there’s a fourth Indiana Jones movie and the University of Washington in the world, because if not, you would top out my list of most hated things. But keep up this behavior and hey, who knows? Maybe you’ll climb the ladder a bit.

Item 1: Your Field Is A Catastrophe Wrapped In An Abortion

Look, I don’t have any problem with the color blue, in and of itself. It’s a friendly looking color. Water is blue, and anything that keeps me from dying of dehydration is A-OK in my book (except orange Gatorade, which I could do without).

But you see, football fields are green.

Football fields have an illustrious history of being green – back in the pre-AstroTurf days, football was played on grass, which tends to be greenish in color. Then, when artificial turf fields were invented, they made them in various shades of green, so that when people watched a football game it looked like they were watching a game being played on grass.

I suppose this all seems a bit obvious and on the nose, but I feel like it’s something I need to explain slowly since clearly some people don’t understand, as Boise State plays all their football games on a field that looks like a fucking swimming pool with yardlines on it surrounded by a red clay track, just like the one that surrounded the (green) football field at my high school.

Just because the NCAA doesn’t prevent you from doing something doesn’t necessarily mean that you should do it. The only reason this travesty exists is because in the mid 1980s Boise State’s athletic director replaced the green turf with blue in an attempt to, and this is a direct quote, “give the school some notoriety.”

When I was in kindergarten, there was a kid who sat next to me who once wet his pants in a desperate cry for attention. The only difference I see between that kid and Boise State is that Kirk Herbstreit didn’t claim his piss-stained jeans were a BCS contender.

Item 2: Big Fish, Small Pond Full Of Small Fish Who Can’t Play Football

Here’s Boise State’s football schedule for last year’s season, when they went undefeated:

Oregon - 19-8 W
Miami (Ohio) - 48-0 W
Fresno State – 51-34 W
Bowling Green – 49-14 W
UC Davis – 34-16 W
Tulsa – 28-21 W
Hawaii – 54-9 W
San Jose State – 45-7 W
Louisiana Tech 45-35 W
Idaho – 63-25 W
Utah State – 52-21 W
Nevada – 44-33 W
New Mexico State – 42-7 W

Look, to be honest, I didn’t even know some of these schools existed until I looked at this schedule, which, after game one, looks like a list of ‘Potential Safety Schools’ posted in a guidance counselor’s office. I mean, what the hell, people – Bowling Green? That sounds more like a lesbian alternative rock duo than a school, and from a look at the scores for some of these games it seems like two lesbians with acoustic guitars would mount a far more robust offense than some of these schools’ football programs.

You know, I wish my life was more like Boise State’s football schedule: I wish I only had to do one difficult thing every year, and then could just spend the rest of my time eating nachos and masturbating. I mean, yeah, I’d have to apply myself briefly for as long as it took to restore that 18th century armoire or whatever, but then I’d be done, nachos all heating up in the oven, Spice Channel membership all paid up and ready to go.

The thing is, if that was my life, I wouldn’t demand recognition and respect for my ability to restore armoires.* I wouldn’t claim that I had been passed over for praise and awards because of some sort of bias. I’d recognize that if I wanted recognition as a world class armoire restorer, I’d need to start restoring more than one armoire every year.

*I would, however, demand respect for my nacho cooking and masturbational abilities, both of which I imagine would be top notch after all that practice.

The same goes for football. Yes, Boise State manages to beat their one real opponent every year, but that’s all they ever have to prepare for, isn’t it? Football is about quantity, not quality – and yet for some reason, there’s this entrenched, stupid minority which believes that Boise State’s ability to play a real football team once per season entitles them to go to the BCS Championship.

Item 3: Cowboy Up!

So after Boise State had heard my argument about the weakness of their conference enough, they grumbled a bunch and announced that they were looking to change conferences.

Great! We all thought. Boise State will come on over to the Pac-10 and play some real teams on a regular basis and promptly be exposed for the slightly above average team that they are.

And then it was announced – Boise State will be moving from the WAC to the Mountain West. And my reaction was, “What, there’s another shitty conference on the West Coast?”

As it turns out, the Mountain West is generally considered a stronger conference than the WAC due to the presence of stronger football programs like Utah and Colorado. Of course, as of next year, Utah and Colorado will be joining the Pac-10 to create the Pac-12, leaving the Mountain West with powerhouses like UNLV (5-7 in 2009) and University of New Mexico, which has such a strong defense that they only allowed a 72 point shutout in their season opener against Oregon.

The only school even remotely worth it’s salt in the Mountain West is Brigham Young, thanks to a squad of larger-than-average football players who delayed college by a couple of years for their mission trips and a coaching staff that probably doesn’t have to spend a lot of time trying to keep their players away from bars, drugs, and loose, chokeable women.

So after all this noise, Boise State changes conferences, and effective next year they’ll start playing two good teams every year instead of just one.

Maybe in 100 years or so they’ll have eased themselves, good opponent by good opponent, into a legitimate football schedule. And when that day comes, if they’re able to contend with the sort of weekly play that basically every other school has since Earnest T. Football invented the sport back in 768 AD, they just might get bumped off my shit list.

But only if they change that fucking turf.

Truman Capps made it through this whole update without saying anything derisive about Idaho. Perhaps he’s losing his touch.

Infestation


If the explosions were made of sugar, this would be totally accurate.


Yeah, I’ll admit it – I’m scared of spiders. And fuck you for thinking that it isn’t very masculine to be scared of something tiny. Chlamydia is way smaller than spiders, but you’re scared of that, aren’t you? At least spiders have fangs and the ability to bite, not to mention the fact that they show up regardless of whether you’ve been having unprotected sex.

The number of bugs in a given living space is my number one concern before moving in. I’m not necessarily a tidy person, but I’ve got a major carrot up my ass about keeping my surroundings clean, and a place so dirty that it can sustain a minor civilization of insects doesn’t fit my definition of clean. Call me selfish, but as a general rule I prefer to share my living space only with people who can pay rent.

To be honest, though, even if a spider had the financial means and cognitive understanding of capitalism to pay me rent, I probably still wouldn’t want to room with it – and if that makes me a racist, so be it. Fuck all spiders, everywhere. They’re terrible drivers and I don’t want them going anywhere near Ground Zero.

I’ve been pretty lucky to have lived in some pretty bug free student housing over the past few years, but my current house out near Amazon Park in Eugene is older and a touch more rural, which increases the chances of insect infestation considerably.

It also doesn’t help that my Roommates are slobs. And hey, nobody’s perfect – we’ve all got our faults. For example, my fault is that I’m really terrible at parallel parking. My Roommates’ fault is that they’re physically incapable of taking a dirty dish and placing it in the dishwasher instead of leaving it in the sink long enough for the A-1 sauce to harden into a paste resilient enough to build a battlestar out of.*

*Due diligence; it’s band camp, so we’re all busy, and two thirds of them have pitched in on cleaning a couple of times. But I wanted to make pasta tonight and the sink was too full to strain it, so I’m calling them out on the Internet. I had to settle for peanut butter for dinner. Again. I mean, it was still delicious, but it’s the principle of the thing.

This behavior, coupled with their tendency to take crumbly, sugary snack foods to their rooms while drunk and then lose them in dark corners, brought about a considerable ant infestation in short time, which is pretty much the sum of all fears for me. All you had to do was look at the hardwood floors in our living room and you’d see dozens of the little scavengers parading this way and that. The baseboards in our hallway were a veritable ant 405, a thick trail of them marching off to snack on what The Roommates had been too drunk to finish.

The problem intensified after a recent party, where every female in attendance managed to spill at least half of her sugar-rich Mike’s Hard Lemonade onto the floor, and one of my friends’ wife somehow left an entire kebab behind our motherfucking television.*

*Don’t ask how she did this. I think the better question is why. Because this sort of thing doesn’t happen by accident. You have to want to put a perfectly good piece of food – on a paper plate, mind you – in the dark recesses behind a 62 inch TV.

It was like a horror movie in the morning. Everything you looked at crawled. Opening the pantry for a snack, I saw a line of ants running down the back wall, going in and out of poorly sealed boxes of my Roommates’ cereal and cookies.

Even though my room had been spared the infestation, every time my foot itched or I saw a shadow move on the wall I freaked out, assuming that the bastards had now invaded my one refuge, the place where I sleep.

Enough was enough. I had had it with these motherfucking snakes on this motherfucking plane, if you catch my drift.

We went to the store and I dropped $20 on some of the best chemical warfare money could buy. We already had a tub of indoor-safe insect repellant, which I sprayed around every baseboard in the house in hopes of cutting off the escape routes.

I had The Roommates pull all their food out of the pantry, examine it for signs of infestation, and throw the clean food into a big plastic bag, the contaminated in the garbage (which we promptly emptied into the container outside the house). When we were done, all that remained in the pantry was canned food, which I sprayed down with an (all natural) insect killer to destroy the stragglers before deploying a Berro ant trap to catch anybody who came back looking for seconds.

My Roommates set more traps in their rooms, we Swiffered the floor, wiped down the countertops and beer pong table with vinegar (to throw off the ants’ scent – it’s science), and essentially nuked the Zerg hive swarming the kebab behind our TV with the all natural insect killer. By the end, The Roommates were calling me General MacArthur, although I prefer to be referred to as Sergeant Zim, the ultimate bug killer of all time.


It’s not a Hair Guy update if there isn’t at least one Starship Troopers reference.

Winning was easy – ants have numbers, but they have yet to figure out that the oh-so-delicious smelling food in those traps is actually poison that they’re taking back to the hive. The problem is maintaining control in the postwar period – washing the dishes every night and wiping down countertops, jobs that are not necessarily as glorious as ant battle but every bit as important.

Regardless, I believe this ant insurgency is in its last throes.


Truman Capps doesn’t want to think about how many dead ants are in the walls of our house right now.