I hate shopping for big-ticket items. I research until I'm blue in the face, often taking months to reach a decision. Those who have been reading me for some time may remember it took me three months to buy a laptop.
My wife feels we need a new car. While both cars run, they are both getting up there in mileage. Her vehicle, the one we'd be getting rid of, currently has 167,000 miles and an air conditioner that doesn't work anymore (and for those of you who don't know, it gets damn hot here). My car has about 145,000 miles, but its our family vehicle, so even though it's a newer model than her vehicle, it's quickly catching up in the mileage department.
When we went to the beach, we had to cram so much stuff into the trunk of the family vehicle that it wouldn't shut properly (and yet there were still items stored at her feet and at the kids' feet). She now wants a small SUV. I'm a little bit nervous about buying a car given the economy and the possibility that Obama might make us all turn in our cars tomorrow and purchase ones that run on rose petals and maple syrup.
We're leaning toward the Equinox and Vue (these are largely incentive-based decisions). We're also looking at the CR-V, the RAV-4, and the Forrester. If you own any of these cars (or any other small SUVs), feel free to share any information in the comments (pros/cons, etc.). And if you know anyone who blew up in one of those cars, that information would be extremely helpful.
Thanks!
Shopping
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 28, 2009 at 11:56 PM
Colorful Songs
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 27, 2009 at 12:01 AM
On Wednesday night, I did another one of my Nameless Twitter Radio Shows. This week's theme was songs with colors in the title. Here's the playlist:
- Violet by Hole (me)
- Pink Triangle by Weezer (me)
- White Wedding by Billy Idol (Father Muskrat)
- Blue Monday by New Order (Mr. Big Dubya)
- Behind Blue Eyes by The Who (Cats... Books... Life Is Good)
- Stay Gold by Stevie Wonder (Charming & Delightful)
- Pretty In Pink by The Psychedelic Furs (Sashalyn)
- Paint It Black by The Rolling Stones (Cool Zebras)
- Black Hole Sun by Soundgarden (Hope4Peyton)
- Pink Houses by John Cougar Mellencamp (FlipFlopsChels)
- Orange Crush by R.E.M. (The Blog At 16th And Q)
- Red Letter Year by Ani DiFranco (Down-To-Earth Mama)
- Black by Pearl Jam (Red Pen Mama)
- 99 Red Balloons by Nena (Mom-101)
- Blue Bayou by Roy Orbison (me)
- Welcome To The Black Parade by My Chemical Romance (me)
- Scarlet Begonias by Sublime (Ramblings Of A Tired Mama)
- Back In Black by AC/DC (Diary Of An Unlikely Housewife)
- Brown Eyed Girl by Van Morrison (Connecticut Mom)
- (The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes by Elvis Costello (Chicky Chicky Baby)
- Goodbye Yellow Brick Road by Elton John (Notes From The Sleep Deprived)
- Yellow Submarine by The Beatles (Harmzie's Way)
- Black Water by The Doobie Brothers (Kimblahg)
- Red House by Jimi Hendrix (The Weirdgirl)
- Bright As Yellow by The Innocence Mission (Too Much About Paul)
- Tangled Up in Blue by Bob Dylan (Cheeky's Hideaway)
- Brown Skin Lady by Black Star (Raging Dad)
- The Blues Are Still Blue by Belle And Sebastian (Honea Express)
- Purple Rain by Prince (me)
How My Mind Works
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 24, 2009 at 12:29 AM
On my post about The Myrtle Beach Sea Monster, SeattleDad left the following comment: "And don't be surprised when the knock comes on your door and 'they' haul you away, shut down this site, and threaten those of us who have commented."
But as I passed a DOT sign (the kind that normally only speaks to Steve Martin) on the highway today and noticed it read "Military Exercise 1 Mile Ahead," I immediately thought the same thing. I realized that the government had found out about my post and had set up this whole "Military Exercise" as a way to kill me. It would be reported that I was "accidentally" killed by "errant gunfire" during the "Military Exercise."
So what did I do? I turned the car around.
If you give me advance warning, I'm going to take it. I may be crazy, but I'm not a fool.
Better luck tomorrow, bitches!
The Myrtle Beach Sea Monster
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 23, 2009 at 12:13 AM
If you are with the press and would like to conduct an interview with me or request high-resolution copies of the images below along with sixteen unpublished ones, please email me at cynicaldad@gmail.com.
I have always believed that encounters with UFOs, Bigfoot, Chupacabras, sea monsters, and other unexplained phenomena happened to people who lived out in the sticks that had just stumbled upon them, usually after drinking. Most scientists, researchers, and people with an interest in said phenomena never seem to find themselves face-to-face with the unexplained.
Until now.
On the morning of June 19, 2009, I had just put on my swimming trunks, grabbed my camera, and was riding the elevator to meet my wife, kids, and in-laws for a morning swim. As the elevator to the pool opened, I saw my wife standing there.
"Good! You have your camera!" she yelled. "Come quick! Something washed ashore!"
We hurried through the pool area and onto the beach. I saw a pickup truck parked about three hundred feet away on the beach. A small crowd had gathered in front of the truck. "What is it?" I asked my wife as we neared the crowd. "A turtle," she replied.
When we reached the beast, I could plainly see it was no turtle. I had no idea what it was, but I knew it wasn't a turtle. But a Top Secret Federal Agent an Animal Control Officer was telling anyone and everyone who would listen that given its size, she estimated we were looking at the remains of a fifty-year-old sea turtle. I estimated that she was full of shit.
Why?
Several reasons:
- It had an extremely long neck. I've seen turtles; their heads barely poke out from beneath their shells. Unless this was some sort of rare Giraffe Turtle or something, it was no turtle.
- The
Top Secret Federal AgentAnimal Control Officer spray painted a giant X across the beast's back. She claimed in case the tide took the animal back into the ocean before they were able to remove it, they would know that this was the same turtle should it wash ashore again. I have no idea what would cause her to spray paint (or even if it was paint in the can) an X across the sea creature's back, but her reasoning didn't make sense to me. - Within moments of calling it in to headquarters, a backhoe appeared and scooped up the sea creature. How long does it take to have a dead animal removed from the side of the road? Days? Weeks? Definitely not minutes.
- Someone asked the
Top Secret Federal AgentAnimal Control Officer if they were going to test the animal. She told us all that they would send it to the City Incinerator. Really? A fifty-year-old sea turtle washes ashore and you don't want to try to figure out how and why it died? This was obviously a lie so that we wouldn't ask any further questions and wouldn't try to follow up with the city days later to see what they discovered. - And finally, what the hell was Animal Control doing there? The creature was dead, why did it need to be controlled? I have a theory: the government felt this was a baby sea monster and was afraid its mother would soon come ashore, wreaking havoc as it searched for its baby.
And I have the photos to prove it!
Warning: The following images are graphic in nature. Please stop reading if you suffer from heart trouble, high blood pressure, back or neck injuries, or if you are or think you may be pregnant. Thank you.
This was the first photo I took of the beast:

Sorry I couldn't get closer to the creature. I wanted to get down on my belly, right up in its grill, and snap away. But I was afraid the

Here is a photo taken after the

It was at this point that I realized I had nothing in my photos that would show how big the sea monster was. So while the

Here's a photo of the backhoe preparing to scoop up the sea monster so it could begin its journey to the "City Incinerator:"

I have a friend who works in Forensics at the LA Police Department. They have this software that allows you to scan in photos of skulls and bones and it will fill in the image with skin, hair, etc., to give the police an idea of what the deceased might have looked like. As a huge favor, he ran a few of my photos through the program and was able to come up with a composite sketch.
Ladies and gentlemen, behold The Myrtle Beach Sea Monster!
Five Things
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 22, 2009 at 12:31 AM
Hey, guys! We're back from the beach in one piece. Sorry I don't have a proper post for you guys. That'll come tomorrow. Meanwhile…
Ridemakerz Giveaway
I'm giving away a $75 gift code to RIDEMAKERZ, an online store where you can create your own radio-controlled vehicle (think Build-A-Bear for cars). Click here for details.Imperfect Parent
My latest While Mom's @ Work article went online while I was at the beach. It's about the worst part of any vacation: the trip there. Check it out and let me know what you think.Wish You Were Me?
I'm going to a David Sedaris book signing on Tuesday night. YES!Chag's Nameless Twitter Radio Show
As a result of the book signing, this week's Nameless Twitter Radio Show will be on Wednesday at 10 PM ET. Sorry for any inconvenience this may cause.And Finally…
I really wanted to keep the lid on this until I had the post written.But I can't. THE NEWS IS JUST TOO BIG!
A sea monster washed ashore at Myrtle Beach on Friday. I saw it with my own two eyes.
And I have photographic evidence.
And I'll show and tell you all about it tomorrow.
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Graduation Songs
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 21, 2009 at 10:31 PM
On Monday night, I did another one of my Nameless Twitter Radio Shows. This week's theme was songs from the year you graduated high school. Here is the playlist:
- Cartoon by Soul Asylum (me)
- Children's Story by Slick Rick (me)
- Smells Like Teen Spirit by Nirvana (Life Of 'Pie)
- Read My Mind by The Killers (FlipFlopsChels)
- Humpty Dance by Digital Underground (Charming & Delightful)
- Alive And Kicking by Simple Minds (For A Different Kind Of Girl)
- Wildest Dreams by Asia (Connecticut Mom)
- The Whole Of The Moon by The Waterboys (Mr. Big Dubya)
- Simply Irresistible by Robert Palmer (Smart Ass Newfie)
- Save A Prayer by Duran Duran (Major Bedhead)
- Sowing The Seeds Of Love by Tears For Fears (No Artificial Scents Please)
- Cruel Summer by Bananarama (ClumberKim)
- Eye Of Fatima, Pt. 1 by Camper Van Beethoven (me)
- Beats To The Rhyme by Run-D.M.C. (me)
- Lump by The Presidents Of The United States Of America (Backpacking Dad)
- West End Girls by Pet Shop Boys (Coffeequeen)
- Mayonaise by Smashing Pumpkins (Sashalyn)
- If I Could Talk I'd Tell You by The Lemonheads (Where There's A Willer)
- Dead Man's Party by Oingo Boingo (Chunkybumble)
- Like A Prayer by Madonna (Kate B. McKinney)
- Hook by Blues Traveler (Ramblings Of A Tired Mama)
- Baby Got Back by Sir Mix A Lot (Attack Of The Redneck Mommy)
- Somebody's Watching Me by Rockwell (Cats… Books… Life Is Good)
- So What'cha Want by Beastie Boys (Kimblahg)
- I'll Make Love To You by Boyz II Men (Musings)
- Fantastic Voyage by Coolio (Gaming With Baby)
- One Night In Bangkok by Murray Head (Parentopia)
- Everybody Knows by Concrete Blonde (Chicky Chicky Baby)
Summer Reruns: The Best Of The Rest (Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day)
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 18, 2009 at 11:15 PM
Hope you guys enjoyed the look back at my series on cheap summertime fun with the kids. Hopefully, you found something worth exploring this summer.
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Here's the final installment of Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day. For those of you who are new around here, it's my little experiment where I try to find fun and cheap things for my daughter and I to do this summer.
Lesson Five: The Best Of The Rest
I figured I needed to wrap this crap up before summer actually ends (posting a Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation article in September would be really lame). So here is the final batch of cheap things you can do with your kids this summer:- Summer movie programs
We're lucky enough to have two theaters in our area that show children's movies on certain days of the week at a heavily discounted price. One of the theaters charges $3 (but you also get a small Coke & a small popcorn) and the other one charges $1 (sneak in your own treats!). While there's a good chance you may already own the featured movie on DVD, it gets you out of the house for a few hours and there's no substitute for the moviegoing experience. - Summer memberships
Some museums, zoos, children's centers, and aquariums offer summer-only memberships. Once school kicks back in, you don't have any time to visit these places anymore, so why pay the extra money? - Bookstores
Many bookstores have special story times during the week. We hit one that has a story, milk and cookies, a game, a freebie, and an art project. It lasts about ninety minutes and is totally worth the price of admission (FREE!). And once you're done, you can browse the shelves for interesting books to check out at the library at a later date. - Parks
I load my daughter's bicycle in the trunk of the car and we hit the nearby park while Zed is in school. She plays on the playground for awhile and then hits the trails with her bike. And hell, I even manage to get some exercise walking beside her. - Vacation Bible School
Not my cup of tea, but I figured this might interest some of you.
Did I miss anything? If you have any ideas I'm not aware of, please let me know in the comments.
Summer Reruns: Hit The Books (Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day)
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 17, 2009 at 11:15 PM
Here's another post in my series on cheap summertime family fun. Enjoy!
* * * * * * * * * *
Here's another installment of Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day. For those of you who are new around here, it's my little experiment where I try to find fun and cheap things for my daughter and I to do this summer.
Lesson Four: Hit The Books
No one visits the library anymore now that you have the world inside your computer. But there is so much you and your child can enjoy at the library:- Story times: Let someone else read to your kid for a change!
- Movies: They show kids' movies at our local library and even supply the popcorn.
- Music: Every once in awhile a musician or two will be on hand to play songs for the kids. Hey, it beats them hanging around outside and guilting you into putting a dollar in their guitar cases.
- Computer classes: Let your kid take a QuickBooks class. Someone in your house should be able to balance the checkbook.
- Internet: You should be able to get several hours of free Internet usage. Let your kid play around on Nick Jr. while you
surf for pornmess around with your Facebook page. - And of course, there are plenty of books, videos, and CDs for you and your children to take home with you.
Or is that just me?
Warning: If you're thinking about going to the library, get there ten minutes after it opens. If you arrive too early, you'll witness people bum rushing the door to secure an open computer. It's like the Filene's Basement wedding gown sale. You could lose a limb if you're not careful.
Summer Reruns: Try It Before You Don't Buy It (Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day)
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 16, 2009 at 11:15 PM
Like yesterday's post, this one caused some grief from some readers when originally posted. But if you can explain what's going on to your child beforehand, you should have no problem reaping the benefits of the following idea.
* * * * * * * * * *
Here's another installment of Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day. It's my little experiment where I try to find fun and cheap things for my daughter and I to do this summer.
Since some of you thought I was stealing from Chuck E. Cheese's in my last post, I'm sure you'll find this one equally unethical. Get over yourself.
Lesson Three: Try It Before You Don't Buy It
Every children's gym class, art class, karate class, taekwondo class, music class, dance class, and everyothertypeofclass offers a free trial class. It doesn't matter if you have no intention of enrolling your child in the class. They don't know that. Take them up on their offer! You're either a fool or someone that doesn't believe in coupons if you don't make this system work for you.Seriously, if you live in a medium-sized city, you can burn through two weeks by visiting a different trial class every day.
Summer Reruns: The Taming Of The Shrew (Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day)
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 15, 2009 at 11:15 PM
This is my favorite post in my series of cheap summertime fun for the kids, even though some people told me I was stealing when I initially published it. I tested it about a month ago when my daughter was home on a Teacher's Workday, so I know it still works.
* * * * * * * * * *
Here's another installment of Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day (Should that have been …Vacation On Pennies A Day? Oh well, too late now.). It's my little experiment where I try to find fun and cheap things for my daughter and I to do this summer.
After reading this tip, you will probably wander around dumbstruck for a few moments. After you gain your senses, there's a good chance you will say, "Chag, you're a genius." It's okay. You guys should probably be uttering that phrase more often anyway.
Lesson Two: Take Your Kids To Chuck E. Cheese's
Wait! Don't leave yet!Look, I know every parent hates Chuck E. Cheese's. The noise! The expensive pizza! The bratty kids! In fact, every parent blogger must have at least one post in his or her archives that bashes Chuck E. Cheese's. It's like an Internet Law or something.
But what if I said you could have a good time at Chuck E. Cheese's and it wouldn't cost you much money? Think I'm crazy? Read on.
There are two caveats, however:
- You cannot eat at Chuck E. Cheese's. It will totally break your budget. Pack a lunch to eat it at the mall instead.
- You must arrive at Chuck E. Cheese's when it opens. I'm not talking sixty or even thirty minutes after they open. When they unlock the doors, you're greeting them with a smile on your face. Got it?
Free Credits
When the employees turn on the machines in the morning, some of the machines have credits in them. Credits = free games! On our last visit, we found three video games that were already credited with tokens.
Free Tokens
Look around and you'll find tokens lying on the ground. On our last visit, we found two tokens. But to really take advantage of this, find out which days the employees open the video games to remove and count the tokens. I do not know how often they perform this ritual at Chuck E. Cheese's; I've only seen it once. But on that day, we snagged eight tokens!
Free Tickets
When the employees turn on the machines in the morning, they also make sure the ticket feeders on all the games are operational. If you're the first one there, you'll find that all of the games have tickets sticking out of them: some have only one but some have many more. Once we're inside Chuck E. Cheese's, I tell my daughter, "Go get the tickets!" She bounces back and forth between the machines, yelling "I found one!" or "This one has A LOT of tickets!" It's like The World's Loneliest Easter Egg Hunt.
On our last trip, she found 259 tickets.
Two hundred and fifty-nine tickets.
Do you know how much plastic crap you can get for 259 tickets? A lot.
Plus, you can have your child count the tickets and calculate how many she'll have left when she selects the trinket of her choice. It's an educational outing, too!
On our last trip to Chuck E. Cheese's, we lasted forty-five minutes, only spent a buck, and had a great time. When was the last time you said that about a trip to Chuck E. Cheese's?
Summer Reruns: Brown Bag It (Surviving Your Child's Summer Vacation For Pennies A Day)
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 14, 2009 at 11:16 PM
I'm at Myrtle Beach this week. Well, technically we don't leave until Tuesday morning, but I figured since summer vacation has started for most everyone's kids (except for those poor bastards that go year-round), now would be a good time to repost my series on cheap summertime fun with the kids. Enjoy!
* * * * * * * * * *
Here's the deal: my son will be attending camp at his preschool this summer, six hours a day for two months. Because gas prices are so damn high, my daughter and I will not be able to drive back to our house and will be stuck in another town for six hours every day. It was either drive back and forth twice each day or pay the mortgage, but I like my house. I'm silly like that.
My goal this summer is to line up cheap activities for the two of us. I thought I'd chronicle my findings to let you guys know how to have thrifty fun this summer. Most of the things I tell you will be common sense crap (like the one below), but I believe I have one or two lessons that might be new to you.
Lesson One: Brown Bag It
The easiest way to go broke is to eat out. Even if you hit the fast food joints, a combo for yourself and a happy meal for the kid will set you back ten bucks.You can pack a delicious and nutritious lunch for the two of you for less than the cost of a happy meal. But where the hell do you go to eat your lunch?
Sure, you can go to a nice park and have an idyllic picnic lunch but there are several problems with that scenario:
- It's like 100,000 degrees out there.
- BUGS!
- The restroom facilities usually leave something to be desired.
- Did I mention it's hotter than the sun? And the BUGS!
Yeah, you'll get some funny looks from the rent-a-cops and the custodian dude who has to clean the trays, but there's nothing they can do to you. As long as you're not brandishing a weapon, cigarette, pet, or a skateboard, you're in the clear. Pick a table and enjoy your lunch! Just ignore the packs of teenagers that have nothing better to do on a summer day than to sneer at you. They're just a big mess of studded belts and acne, so screw 'em.
I know what you're thinking: you can eat at the food court for free. While I agree that a lap around the food court sample stations followed by a drink at the water fountain will result in a full tummy, I don't believe your child's pediatrician would endorse a Bourbon chicken and Cinnabon diet.
Say it loud! I'm cheap and I'm proud!
Desert Island Songs
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 13, 2009 at 11:03 PM
On Tuesday night, I did another one of Nameless Twitter Radio Shows. This week's theme was the one song you'd want if you found yourself on a deserted island. Here's the playlist:
- Rocket Queen by Guns N' Roses (me)
- Wrong by Depeche Mode (For A Different Kind Of Girl)
- How Soon Is Now? by The Smiths (Mr. Big Dubya)
- Temptation by New Order (Coffeequeen)
- Thunder Road by Bruce Springsteen (Major Bedhead)
- Ants Marching by Dave Matthews Band (FlipFlopsChels)
- Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen (Smart Ass Newfie)
- Man Out Of Time by Elvis Costello (ClumberKim)
- Rearviewmirror by Pearl Jam (My A Cup Runneth Over)
- Youngstown by Bruce Springsteen (Cats... Books... Life Is Good)
- Little Wonders by Rob Thomas (Cool Zebras)
- Superstition by Stevie Wonder (Citizen Of The Month)
- Against The Wind by Bob Seger (Junk Food 4 The Soul)
- Glory Box by Portishead (Halushki)
- Nocturne Op.9 No.2 by Frédéric Chopin (Mommymae)
- Mass Murder by AFI (Left Coast Mama)
- Fields Of Gold by Sting (Katekross)
- And She Was by Talking Heads (Parentopia)
- Waiting For My Real Life To Begin by Colin Hay (Charming & Delightful)
- Son Of A Son Of A Sailor by Jimmy Buffet (The Daily Wit)
- Layla by Derek & The Dominos (Spellweavers)
- 100 Years by Five For Fighting (Mommy Confessions)
- Paranoid Android by Radiohead (Innerwizdom)
- Flagpole Sitta by Harvey Danger (MFA_Mama)
This week's theme will be songs from the year you graduated high school. Please Note: this week's show will be on Monday night (we're headed to the beach). Hope to see you there (for the show, not at the beach)!
Self-Medicating
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 12, 2009 at 1:44 AM
Do you know what this contraption is?
It's a device that lets you kick your own ass.
You turn the thing on the left:
And four steel-toed boots kick you in the ass:
Just make sure you pay attention to Rule #4 or it is no longer an ass-kicking machine:
So… who would you like to put in this apparatus?
Please don't nominate me.
Creature From The Church Pond
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 09, 2009 at 9:40 PM
"OH GOD! DID YOU SEE THAT?" Ella screamed in a volume normally reserved for orgasms or when one spots a Chupacabra or Bigfoot.
"See what?" I asked.
"THAT CREATURE NEAR THE POND!"
Creature? She definitely had my attention. "What did It look like?"
"I don't know. I just saw It out of the corner of my eye. It was down by the pond, drinking water."
I asked my daughter and son if they saw It, but they were no help. So I turned the car back around, hoping I could catch a glimpse of the Creature.
"THERE! LOOK! THERE IT IS! DOWN BY THE WATER!"
I saw It standing at the edge of the retaining pond in front of the church. It was a grey Beast, as big as a medium-sized dog. As we got closer to the Creature, I noticed something. "Honey, that thing's not moving."
"That's because it's drinking water!"
"No. I think it's because it's a statue."
As we pulled up next to the pond, we discovered that I was right: it was just a statue that looked like it was drinking from the pond. But we still couldn't figure out what it was supposed to be. It was grey and had an arched back, like a cat ready to strike. "What the hell is that thing?" she asked.
"I don't know. A Chupacabra?"
"You wish, Monster Boy. I think it's a wolf or something."
"Yeah, it looks kind of like a small wolf. But what the hell is it doing down here?"
"No idea."
This was not an isolated incident. We have noticed several of these statues at different retaining ponds around our town, usually at churches. While I initially wrote it off as cult activity, a little Googling showed that the statues are coyotes.
What is the purpose of these coyote statues? To drive away geese.
But there's one little problem: the geese are just as afraid of the coyotes as they are of me. Every time we see one of these statues, there are always at least two geese nearby. Hell, even the teeniest goslings aren't afraid of the stupid coyote statues.
But the coyotes do serve a purpose. Every time we drive by one of the statues, my daughter will yell from the backseat, "Mommy! I see a Creature!" I laugh. Ella glares. It never gets old.
The family that rags each other, stays together.
Shangri-La
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 08, 2009 at 12:23 AM
This post is about a small place in Prospect Hill, North Carolina known as
What is Shangri-La? Allow its deceased creator, Henry L. Warren, to tell you:
Shangri-La is a small town that Henry L. Warren built in his front yard for the enjoyment of others. Here's a picture of Shangri-La:
Here's another:
Like any town, Shangri-La has a church:
Shangri-La also has a watermill:
Shangri-La also has lots of other buildings. Like this one:
And this one:
And this one:
And these:
And if you get hungry, there are plenty of rocks and straw for you to eat while at Shangri-La:
One of my favorite parts of Shangri-La are the shrine-like displays:
This was my second trip to Shangri-La and I'm sure I'll go back. Even though nothing new has been or will be added to it, I noticed things on this past trip I didn't see the first time out. And I'm sure the same thing will happen on future visits.
Songs About A Girl
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 07, 2009 at 9:50 AM
On Tuesday night, I did another one of my Nameless Twitter Radio Shows. This week's theme was songs with girls' names in the titles. Here's the playlist:
- My Michelle by Guns N' Roses (me)
- Darling Nikki by Prince (me)
- Jenny Was A Friend Of Mine by The Killers (For A Different Kind Of Girl)
- Proud Mary by Creedence Clearwater Revival (FlipFlopsChels)
- Josie by Steely Dan (Mayberry Mom)
- Sweet Caroline by Neil Diamond (Chicky Chicky Baby)
- Barbara Ann by The Beach Boys (Kimblahg)
- My Sharona by The Knack (Habanerogal)
- Annie Get Your Gun by Squeeze (Mr. Big Dubya)
- Roxanne by The Police (ClumberKim)
- Come On Eileen by Dexy's Midnight Runners (Notes From The Bunker)
- Sweet Jane by Velvet Underground (Nicholebernier)
- Michelle by The Beatles (Mommy Confessions)
- Delia's Gone by Johnny Cash (Attack Of The Redneck Mommy)
- Layla by Eric Clapton (Connecticut Mom)
- Ruby Soho by Rancid (me)
- Viva La Gloria by Green Day (me)
- Beth by Kiss (Left Coast Floyds)
- Julianne by Ben Folds Five (Down With Pants!)
- Veronica by Elvis Costello (Motherbumper)
- Molly's Chambers by Kings Of Leon (Mommymae)
- 867-5309 / Jenny by Tommy Tutone (The Stiletto Mom)
- Carolyn's Fingers by Cocteau Twins (Coffeequeen)
- Brandy (You're A Fine Girl) by Looking Glass (Ramblings Of A Tired Mama)
- Valerie Loves Me by Material Issue (Cheeky's Hideaway)
- Show Me Mary by Catherine Wheel (TwoBusy)
- Meet Virginia by Train (The Weirdgirl)
- Caroline by Concrete Blonde (Chunkybumble)
- Christine by Siouxsie & The Banshees (Mommy Is Moody)
- Rhiannon by Fleetwood Mac (Charming & Delightful)
- Victoria by The Fall (me)
I Got What You Need: Fixing Biz Markie
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 04, 2009 at 9:44 PM
If you're like me, you've seen the Heineken commercial featuring Biz Markie's Just A Friend roughly 417 times in the past month. It's an effective anti-drunk-driving campaign, showing four inebriated late-night clubgoers sharing a cab and singing along to Just A Friend. It also makes great use of the song, as it is a perfect sing-song number, especially when you get to the chorus.
While I love the song, I've always had some major problems with it.
It's got some wiki-wiki-wiki-weak-assed rhymes.
Case in point:
Let me tell ya a story of my situation
I was talkin' to this girl from the U.S. nation
Every time I hear "U.S. nation," I cringe, I gag, and my ears start bleeding. U.S. nation? Who the hell talks like this besides Balki and Borat? There are plenty of other words that rhyme with the -ation in situation. He could've gone in any number of directions to make this a better song.
I was talkin' to this girl who was down with Creation
He could've weighed in on evolution vs. creationism.
I was talkin' to this girl from my mom's generation
The Biz could've invented the terms MILF or cougar if he had been clever enough.
I was talkin' to this girl who wanted equal taxation
Steve Forbes and Neal Boortz would've loved this.
I was talkin' to this girl writin' me a citation
He could've had his own Fuck Tha Police.
I was talkin' to this girl undergoin' mutation
Hipsters love their zombies.
I was talkin' to this girl sufferin' from starvation
He could've rapped about supermodels.
I was talkin' to this girl givin' dictation
Yeah, it doesn't make sense. But anytime you can use a word that mentions dick, do it. Plus, giving dictation sounds kind of dirty.
See how easy this is? If you're reading this, Mr. Markie, and decide to cut Just A Friend '09, there are a ton of other words you can use that would sound better than U.S. nation: flirtation, temptation, vibration, sensation, damnation, gyration, etc.
Just stay away from cremation and castration.
And for the love of God, do not mention lactation unless you want to experience the wrath of a thousand irate mommybloggers.
My New Quirk
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 02, 2009 at 4:11 PM
Over the weekend, I discovered I have a new problem. On Saturday, I started itching. Not just in one spot, but all over my body. This lasted for about thirty minutes. It was a fun way to pass the time.
On Monday night, I started itching again. I was talking to someone I had just met, someone with a good deal of respect in the community, and I was nervous. It was then that I put two and two together. I was also nervous about something on Saturday when I started itching.
Now when I meet new people, in addition to looking at the ground, stuttering, and sweating, I'll be itching up a storm as well. Nice.
And people wonder why I'm not going to BlogHer. I'd need a U-Haul just to pack all my neuroses and insecurities.
Blocking Out The Scenery, Breaking My Mind
Permalink | Posted by Chag on June 01, 2009 at 12:05 AM
"So what do you do for a living?"
"I'm a sign."
"A sign? Like an omen or something?"
"Actually, I'm more of a signpost. I hold up a sign all day long, advertising for a company that's going out of business."
I've always wondered what a person with this occupation listed as his job title. Mobile marketer?
On Saturday, I became a signpost. I went to help my mother out with her yard sale and found that she had put two small yellow signs at the end of her driveway as the sole means of advertising the event. Since she lives on a busy highway (which is not the ideal place to have a yard sale in the first place), has a very steep driveway (another minus), and has lots of trees that obscure most of her driveway (strike three!), I realized those two puny signs weren't going to do much good. So I decided to help her out a bit.
I made a large sign that read "YARD SALE." I also made a bigger sign that listed some of the things we were selling. But this was not enough for me.
Like those poor bastards who have to dress up like the Statue of Liberty or a slice of pizza, I decided I needed a gimmick. Unfortunately, my mother's garage was short on gimmicks. In the end, I opted for a witch's hat.
So I donned the witch's hat, tied the list sign around my neck, held the YARD SALE sign in my hand, and stood by the side of the road. I figured I would use my other hand to wave at passersby and to flip off anyone who made fun of me.
Because anytime you create a plan of action, always have a method in place to deal with your detractors.
But I didn't really have many critics. There were a few who laughed or yelled things at me, but most people smiled and returned my wave. I even had a passing eighteen-wheeler blow its horn at me (and don't think my inner eight-year old didn't love that!).
I like to believe that I was responsible for a good portion of my mother's yard sale success ("Hey, Leigh-Anne. Look at that freak! I bet they got some good shit up there in that yard sale!"). But I won't lie to you: I'm sure if I were some hot little twenty-one-year-old hardbody in a skimpy bikini, I would've gotten much more traffic. And more honks, too.
Mental note: next time, ditch the witch's hat in favor of a bikini.

Hello. My name is Chag Holland. I am a major pop culture junkie and music lover. I like to photograph weird things. I am a conspiracy theorist and an amateur cryptozoologist. I am an avid sports fan and follow the Yankees, Panthers, and Tar Heels. I am a stay-at-home dad and have two wonderful children and one beautiful wife. I write about all this stuff.




