Saturday, February 2, 2008
Retail Drone 3 or The Joy of Gullible Colleagues
This is opposed to working with stupid people which is no fun at all. Stupid people are too dumb to be gullible. They just accept any bovine excrement you care to pour past their trusting, imbecile eyes and down their gaping maws. There's no challenge. For true gullibility goodness, the target must be smart, or at least have some sense of credulity. Anything else is cheating.
I've had some fun at my new job. Several of the staff are young, which is a good start. Two didn't know who Chuck Norris was. I mean, come on! Chuck Norris!
My linux-loving colleague Karl is possibly the best target. This is because he knows about four things in life:
Linux
High-definition TVs
Computers
Computers that run Linux. (In HD.)
Most of the other basic elements of human interaction entirely escape him. Like happened today.
Some kid was fiddling with one of the computers we sell. Karl was drifting around not doing much, so I said:
"Hey, Karl. Is it bad if that kid is, um, editing the registry?"
Karl went completely white.
"Yes, it is bad! Stop him!" he screamed, much too loud.
The kid, who was playing Peggle, bolted. The rest of us had a good laugh, except Karl, who didn't quite get it and kept trying to explain that editing the registry was a Bad Thing.
There's plenty more of this kind of thing, but I'm tired from a long Sunday at work and can't remember any. I guess I'll start keeping a bit of a list and blog 'em as they happen.
Other things that come to mind:
More Hillbillies: We had some real class acts come in today. Two guys and a girl. One bloke had the best (worst?) sideburns I'd ever seen and a tattoo of his name on his neck. His neck! The other sported a gut that could only be the product of a diet of beer, chips, lard, and tapeworms. Neither wore shirts. The girl was special. She looked like she'd fallen pregnant at 12, aborted, and consoled herself by eating solidly for the next six years. None of the staff went anywhere near them. White trash tend not to buy things anyway, unless they've sold a real good haul of weed or the caravan's burned down and they're pulling an insurance scam.
The Assistant Manager quit: Sad, because he was a good bloke. Happy, because this gives Karl the chance to fulfill his life's dream and rise to Assistant Manager.
Rap Sucks: We recently got the TVs fixed and now they're tuned to C4 all the time. Apparently C4 could change its name to The Rap And RnB Channel and no-one would notice. It's all they show. Which raises some questions:
Why do rappers all include the phrase "in da club" in all their songs? Is it a pre-requisite of some kind?
Why are all rap girlfriends (bitches?) called "shorty?" Is it a dwarf fetish thing?
Why is the median strip on a busy motorway the perfect place to sing a heartfelt ballad to your beloved?
Why is it surprising that police would try and catch a man "rolling with the gangsters," riding dirty? Isn't that what gangsters do, generally?
WHY, IN THE NAME OF GOD, DOES ANYONE LISTEN TO THIS HORRIBLE, GENERIC, USELESS, SOUL-CRUSHING MUSIC!?!?!
Look what they made me do. All caps and four exclamation marks. The world is screwed. Seriously.
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Retail Drone, Part 2
I’ll make a list of the idiots who came in today, for my own satisfaction.
Moans For Kicks Man:
This guy was what Gollum would look like if you stretched him out to six feet tall and took away the nice bits, and gave him cancer of the personality. He came in for no other reason but to moan that we’d caused him trouble trying to get in a microwave he was happy with. The story was he’d bought a microwave. He brought it back to the store because it was fogging up when he cooked stuff in it. Microwaves do this. He obviously didn’t know, and wouldn’t accept any of the staff’s explanations (I wasn’t there at the time) that it was perfectly normal. So one of the staff – Cute Girl I think – rang the manufacturer and got some retard who didn’t know that microwaves fog up sometimes. So we got him a new microwave. Which he decided was not big enough. “Product knowledge,” he said, wagging his finger under his tumour of a nose. “Product knowledge would have saved me all this hassle.” I was a spectator for most of the time while he berated the girls, who are just out of school and in their first full time jobs. When he started getting heated I butted in, asking what the trouble was. He told me, in great detail. I tried to explain that the girls could hardly be expected to magically know everything about all the products in their first two weeks on the job. He didn’t care. He just wanted to bitch and feel a little power in his impotent veins. I said (politely as hell, of course): “So you just came in to tell us how unhappy you are?”
Him (entirely missing the sarcasm) “Yes. I am very unhappy”
Me: “There’s nothing else we can help you with?”
Him “No.”
Me: “Well, go shove your face in a blender and do the world a favour, you stupid, imbecilic, narcissistic fucking excuse for a human being.”
I didn’t say that, but I bloody well should have.
Waste All My Fucking Time Woman:
This bitch came in asking about a laptop, as her last one had died. Lots of questions, which I answered. Then moaning about the price. I figured it was going downhill fast, but I said I’d see what we could do with the price anyway. Now, the computer was already discounted right down, almost to cost. I took 50 bucks off and explained. Was she happy? No. So I saw the manager and asked if we could take any more. I got another fifty off. I should explain about discounts and how we calculate them. Discounts eat into the shop profit. The more we discount the less the shop makes. Company policy is we can only discount down to a certain margin (it’s not supposed to be lower than 15 per cent) otherwise the company isn’t even clearing staff wages. The way I’d sussed this laptop, it was barely scraping the 10 per cent margin. It was, without a doubt, the cheapest retail laptop in the country. We were literally paying her to take it away. What did she do?
“Oh, for god’s sake. I’m not paying that much for a computer. I’m going to go next door (there’s another electronics shop next door. God knows what they were thinking) and get one there.”
She’s welcome to it, not that a cheaper one exists in New Zealand. I hope it explodes. Her last one probably committed suicide.
The Person Who Made Me So Angry I Can’t Remember Anything About Them:
I don’t know who this person was, what they wanted, or what they said to piss me off. All I know is that I swore and ground my teeth and fumed for about ten minutes after they’d left, enough to start worrying my co-workers. They understood, though. Everyone agreed that it was the worst day for customers we’d seen in ages.
The funny thing was, we made quite a lot of money for the day. We should have Satan’s minions in more often. They’re pricks, but they’re big spenders.
Friday, January 18, 2008
Life as a Retail Drone, Part One
Work can be fun. Nothing interesting happened today, but there’s been some interesting stuff. I work with a pretty good crew. They’re all relatively non-stupid. One girl is really cute, which is a bonus. We were working with a gay guy called Raoul who I didn’t mind (despite his being a little bitch) but he opted to shoot through on Monday on account of breaking up with his shit-sack of a boyfriend. I’d met the guy when he came into the shop on occasion. Total fuckwad, gives gay guys a bad name. I’d advised Raoul to break up with the him, and he did. And shot through to Auckland, leaving the shop in the lurch. The interesting thing is the tills hadn’t been balancing for some reason and no-one could figure out why. Well, I guessed someone had busy fingers. Now Raoul’s shot the tills have balanced perfectly every day. Hmmm.
I’ll remember Raoul for one thing, apart from the bitching and backstabbing and reluctance to work. It was probably the only time we’ll ever agree on an assessment of a woman’s attractiveness. Picture this. I’m standing by the counter about four feet from the automatic door. This dude slopes in. He’s blond and shabby looking – one of the hillbilly types we get in fairly often. His smell followed him in about a second later. Then came his wife (sister? Both?) who was the fattest partial solar eclipse of a woman I’ve ever laid eyes on. Many obese women look a bit like the spinnakers on racing yachts but this one shamed even them. She blotted out the sun. Small objects orbited her. Parents screamed and clutched their kids close. She was almost perfectly spherical on account of her tits sagging around where her belly button would normally be. Rolls of fat escaped her already plus-size clothing. She was, of course, wearing the ubiquitous uniform of the hideously obese – trakkie daks and t-shirt. She heaved and snorted with each wobbling step. Her smell outdid even her husband’s impressive effort. Other customers swiftly began to leave. The entire staff of the shop managed to avoid getting near or making eye contact with the couple, in a lovely example of ignoring the glaringly obvious. The couple began to roam the now-empty store. I hid behind the counter.
Raoul, of course, needed to say a few words. The poor guy was almost dry-retching at this woman’s undeniable awfulness, and I was about as sick as he was. “God!” he said, sweating. “How could she wear that? How could she be like that? It’s so disgusting!”
Meanwhile, Partial Solar Eclipse woman and her hillbilly satellite were ambling over to where another colleague, Karl, was fiddling with the computers. Karl is a tech guru – he uses Linux, which should tell you all you need to know about him – and, while he remains a genuinely decent guy, he is not brilliant with people at the best of times. I watched, deadly interested, to see how this exchange would turn out.
Karl looked up and went white. Perhaps it was the woman’s gravitational field getting hold of his blood. Or it could have been the smell. Ever smelled rancid grease? Well, add a dash of Cabbage Juice, the stuff you get at the bottom of fridges, and a healthy smattering of Eau De Two-Week-Old-Dead-Possum, mix and marinade for an hour, and you’ve got it. Anyhoo, the freaks come up and ask him if we’ve got Microsoft Office (which is prominently displayed on shelves they walked past at least twice.) He answered in the affirmative and got the hell out of there. Then, thank the gods, they left.
Karl came up to me and Raoul afterward and told us that when the hillbilly dude talked to him, you could see fat lice crawling around in his sparse blond hair.
RIP, Raoul. You’re in a better place now, I hope.
Names have been changed because it’s cool to say “names have been changed.” Also, I’m not keen on losing my job.
Monday, December 3, 2007
Behind the Grassy Knoll
Paedophiles, namely.
I said it was a terrible joke. It is. It gets worse.
Picture this: I'm on holiday in Australia and Movember is about to finish. So far, boring. But stay with me. My mate and I are comparing pictures of our horrible facial hair via the majick of the interwebs. He has a sparse Tex-mex porno mo. I have a mo-goatee combo that looks like I've glued pubic hair to my face, while suffering from acute Parkinsons.
I tell him he looks like a rapist.
He tells me: "You know you have to get a photo taken outside of a primary school before the month is over."
I'm a sucker for taking people up on stupid dares. Luckily there is a primary school just down the road from where I'm staying. It finished a month ago. I figure, cool, I'll nip down there with a trucker cap and sunnies and snap a pic, all without getting arrested or within miles of any actual kid.
I didn't, though, because I found something even dodgier.
On Saturday I went into Brisbane for a concert. I was a few hours early so I went to Southbank to kill time. I figured I'd have a swim while I was there - Southbank's got this big fake lagoon thing, and it was piping hot.
I get there and the lagoon's shut for repairs. The only area open is the kiddy pool, and it's crowded with around 400 kids. I thought: photo op. There's no way my mate will be able to top this for sheer dodgyness.
I was, excellently, wearing sunglasses and my awful facial hair.
I snapped a picture of myself with my best smirk. Parents moved their children away from me. I don't blame them. Then I moved away, feeling pretty gross.
But it was hot. I think the day topped out at around 32 degrees.I fancied I was getting heatstroke. I wandered around in an agony of indecision for about twenty minutes. Then I said to the lifeguard "Can you take my bag for thirty seconds?" and went for a swim.
Well, not a swim. The pool was about a meter deep, so all I could do was lie down, like a big bath. Within seconds, I'd cleared an area of a good thirty metres square, with parents sensibly dispatching their kids to the far regions of the lagoon. I got out pretty smartly, took my stuff back from the bemused lifeguard, and nipped off to get dry. Did I mention I didn't have a towel? I didn't have a towel. There was a little grassy knoll about twenty metres off to the right, so I went there to dry off and inadvertently discovered Kiddy Fiddler Country.
On the grassy knoll were at least five adult men. Genuinely sinister looking blokes. The one nearest me looked like Ernest Hemingway shortly before his suicide, if Ernest had ever kicked back in black Speedos and litres of fake tan. He was "reading," within eyeshot of the entire kid's lagoon. I would put money on the book being upside down or something. My skin actually crawled. I used my t-shirt to dry off and got the hell out of there.
I sincerely hope the cops have that area well staked out. Happily, I've now shaved, and look part-way respectable. But I have an unbeatable photo to remember Movember by.
Saturday, November 17, 2007
By The Rivers Of Babble-On
So, two things. The grammar Nazi in me wants to point out that they're not metaphors - they're all similes, dumbshits. Also, they're not stupid. They're brilliant. It takes real imagination to come up with stuff like this. I wish more people wrote like it. Except the one with the bowling balls - that's a Douglas Adams rip-off.
Enjoy.
The following metaphors were found in New South Wales Year 12 English essays in 2003.
* Her face was a perfect oval, like a circle that had its two sides gently compressed by a Thigh Master.
* She grew on him like she was a colony of E. coli and he was room-temperature prime English beef.
* She had a deep, throaty, genuine laugh, like that sound a dog makes just before it throws up.
* Her vocabulary was as bad as, like, whatever.
* He was as tall as a six-foot-three-inch tree.
* The revelation that his marriage of 30 years had disintegrated because of his wife's infidelity came as a rude shock, like a surcharge at a formerly surcharge-free ATM.
* The little boat gently drifted across the pond - exactly the way a bowling ball wouldn't.
* He spoke with the wisdom that can only come from experience, like a guy who went blind because he looked at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it and now goes around the country speaking at high schools about the dangers of looking at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it.
* McBride fell 12 stories, hitting the pavement like a Hefty bag filled with vegetable soup.
* From the attic came an unearthly howl. The whole scene had an eerie, surreal quality, like when you're on vacation in another city and "Sex in the City" comes on at 7:00 p.m. instead of 7:30.
* Her hair glistened in the rain like a nose hair after a sneeze.
* The hailstones leaped from the pavement, just like maggots when you fry them in hot oil.
* John and Mary had never met. They were like two hummingbirds who had also never met.
* He was deeply in love. When she spoke, he thought he heard bells, as if she were a garbage truck backing up.
* She was as easy as the TV Guide crossword.
* She walked into my office like a centipede with 98 missing legs.
* It hurt the way your tongue hurts after you accidentally staple it to the wall.
* Even in his last years, Granddad had a mind like a steel trap, only one that had been left out so long, it had rusted shut.
* The plan was simple, like my brother-in-law Phil. But unlike Phil, this plan just might work.
* The young fighter had a hungry look, the kind you get from not eating for a while.
* "Oh, Jason, take me!" she panted; her breasts heaving like a university student on $1-a-beer night.
* He was as lame as a duck. Not the metaphorical lame duck, either, but a real duck that was actually lame. Maybe from stepping on a land mine or something.
* The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant.
Sunday, November 4, 2007
Things Are New
Now, I have a MySpace, a Bebo, a Facebook, a Livejournal (I don't use it, I couldn't be bothered learning the system or whatever) a thing called a Ning, and this. My friend also suggested getting a Deviant Art for my art-related stuff.
That's too many internet-based social-networking time-eaters.
The only thing I use them all for is not keeping in touch with friends. I mean, it's kind of cool to see your old friends from school or whatever (and in many cases it's far from cool, because you hated them) but I think it's got to the stage where it's just not worth the time having all these things takes up.
Why can't people all just use the same one? Or, preferably, none at all? I swear, life was way simpler before all this shit came out.
Then, if it wasn't for social networking, you would probably not have the profusion of happily disinformed (new word, I just made it up) rants about Some Guy's average life. Like this one.
Why am I doing this? Well, my journalism tutor suggested it was a good thing to have a blog that prospective employers can check out. Apparently it's the done thing to Google someone if you're thinking of giving them a job.
So it's like a CV, except one that includes all the minutiae of everyday life. Like interesting coincidences, the fact I don't like beekeeping, or my old car (RIP, baby) or wearing tight pants.
I swear, if anyone hires me off the strength of a blog, I'm going to seriously reconsider the job I'm applying for.
Stuff and Yossarian
There is a lot of stuff that isn't great. I have a long list. Here are a few things I particularly feel like bitching about.
Selling Your Awesome Old Beat Up Car:
I had a car. It was a white, 1986 Toyota Corona station wagon and it was the best car in the world. Sure, it was kind of crappy. If by "kind of" you mean "extremely," but it was mine and I'd put literally hundreds of hours into it keeping it alive and warranted. I tentatively called it Yossarian, after the character in Catch-22 who objects to being killed. It was my beach car. We did countless runs to awesome Northland beaches down incredibly shitty roads in it, stuff that you wouldn't expect of a four-wheel-drive. I had dozens of near-misses and two accidents, one my fault, the other not. People had spewed in it. It was full of sand and fossilised garbage. There was a slightly tangy smell about it I suspect came of too many fishing trips and missing bait. It was rusty, and obnoxiously noisy, because the previous owner had seen fit to equip it with a loudening exhaust. I had racked up thousands of dollars in fines in that car, much more than it was worth. I had even made out with girls in it. I made a hood ornament for it with a Dragonball Z figurine – Goku – which I super-glued to the front bumper. It was the greatest.
Then it opted to start overheating every time I turned it on. The last time I drove it (unregistered, unwarranted) was when I moved house. I had an actual tonne (or more) of stuff in the back and a double bed on the roof. It was overheating like mad and so I drove fast (more air keeps the engine cool, better than idling) and took a lot of back streets and ran a red light or so. Despite everything, it got me moved. I think I may have patted the dashboard and said "thanks." After that, it sat in my backyard for a couple of months until I decided it was time to flick it. It had gotten to the stage where getting any amount of money for it was a better deal than me spending money to fix it. So I sold it for $150 and boy was I cut up. I'd had it for nearly five years. Luckily, it was bought by the next-door neighbour and so I get to see it every day when I cycle past. It's up on blocks – the neighbour was quick to scavenge my crappy mag wheels – and I think his plan is to fix it and give it to his mum. I hope so. I'd rather someone was driving it than it getting turned into scrap straight away.