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  • LET’S PARTY LIKE THERE’S NO TOMORROW!


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    At 10:23 this morning in Bar Alcázar, all heads turned when a strange man reading a local newspaper suddenly gasped.

    That strange man was me. The newspaper was the March 11, 2005 edition of Henares al Día. And the reason I was gasping? See the advertisement in the lower portion of the above photo.

    Translated into English, the ad reads as follows:

    The Nuclear Power Plant of Trillo.
    Promoting the culture, the festivals and the traditions of its surrounding communities.

    In other words, this ad—complete with its photo of two steaming, nuclear cooling towers at the far right—is saying, “You’ll die a horrible death if our plant suffers a meltdown, but in the meantime…LET’S PARTY!!! We’ll even buy the drinks!”

    I look forward to attending Trillo’s annual festival this summer. I understand that the highlights will be an asbestos-filled balloon toss, followed by a demolition derby comprised solely of Ford Pintos®.

  • I HAD A DREAM.


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    An uninspired blogger is a dangerous beast. There’s no telling what nonsense he’ll publish—out of sheer desperation—when his well of creativity has temporarily run dry. Just think back to November 2004. I published a damn post about my left foot!

    Well…it seems that November 2005 has come early. After a low-key weekend in the plains of Castilla-LaMancha, I remain uninspired—and hence, dangerous. So dangerous, in fact, that I’ve been sniffing around my computer’s archives for ideas. And what did I find? My “I Had a Dream” file.

    I had forgotten about this file. For a short period in 2001, I would fire-up my computer immediately upon waking each morning and document—in excruciating detail—the dreams that I had the night before.

    It was an interesting experiment. Dreams seem to reside in one’s short-term memory banks. If you don’t exercise those memories shortly after waking, they’ll disappear forever. If, on the other hand, you make the effort to remember them, you’ll often be rewarded with a tale of amusing—or disturbing, depending on your point of view—surreality.

    Which brings me to today’s post. I have—for lack of any better ideas—randomly chosen one of those dreams and reprinted it below. As you read it, please keep one important fact in mind: It’s not me…it’s my subconscious! Really, it is! Really!!!

    DREAM OF MARCH 10, 2001

    I am standing on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean in North Carolina looking at a large, light-colored, wooden house on stilts. I walk through the front door and enter a large room whose walls are covered in Scandinavian-style, light teak wood. To the left is a wooden staircase leading to the second floor. To the right is an ice rink.

    There is a hockey game in progress. The team is called the “North Carolina Jets.” They wear black uniforms with red letters. The game is almost over. The Jets are losing. A spectator comments that, “The Jets have the worst record in hockey; which is a shame since they were a good team before moving from Winnipeg.”

    One of the Jets’ players suddenly scores a goal seconds before the closing buzzer. He is middle aged and playing without a helmet. The spectator comments that, “That player is one of the legends of the game.” He says, “I am happy that he scored, because this is his last game before he retires.”

    At the right-hand corner of the rink is a concession stand. The man working behind the stand picks up the hockey puck. It is broken into two horizontal pieces. The concession man comments that he has invented a substance that would have protected the puck. He pulls out a sheet of one-inch thick black rubber. It has the color and texture of a car tire’s tread.

    He cuts off a strip with scissors and wraps it around a new puck. He puts the puck into a machine, which fires the puck at 40 miles per hour against a brick wall. The puck is unscathed.

    The man says that this substance will also protect humans, and that he needs to do one more experiment before marketing it. He asks if I would participate in the experiment. I agree.

    I put on a crash helmet and walk to the center of the ice rink. There is a car seat, dashboard and windshield in the center of the ice. In front of (and facing) the seat/dashboard/windshield is a large green hydraulic machine with the front-end of a green 1970’s-era car mounted onto it. I sit in the car seat and fasten my seatbelt. The man cuts off a one inch wide strip of the black rubber substance and wraps it around my shoulders. He steps away, and pushes a button on the hydraulic machine.

    The machine crashes the green car front-end into me at 40 miles per hour. I crash into the windshield and fall onto the ice on my right side. I feel no pain and am completely uninjured. We all laugh. Everybody is happy that the experiment has been successful.

    I remove the crash helmet and walk up the stairs on the left. I enter a bedroom, also done in teak. I hear noises in the walk-in closet. I open the door and look in. A tall, thin, young Asian woman with long hair is wearing black leather shoes with stiletto high heels. She is marching in place; alternately lifting one foot, driving the stiletto heel into a hole in the floor and then doing the same with the other foot. She continues methodically driving each heel into the hole….right, left, right, left, right…

    I ask what she is doing. She says that there is a man under the floor and that she is driving her heels into his head to, “Teach him some respect.”

    She stops and exits the closet. I accompany her to a dresser. She opens the drawer and pulls out a pair of white leather shoes with silver studs. These shoes have longer, thinner stiletto heels that are tipped with steel and sharpened to a point. She says, “I am really going to teach him a lesson with these.”

    We walk back into the closet and stop in our tracks. The man who was trapped under the floor has escaped. He is standing in the closet, his head is bleeding and he is holding a shoe with stiletto heels. He is looking very angry. The Asian woman gasps.

    At this point, I woke up—and probably, for the better.

    So…what does all this mean?

    Well…for one, it means that I’ll never be able to run for public office now that I’ve foolishly published these details on the Internet.

    It also means that my in-laws are—as we speak—likely removing all of the steak knives from their kitchen and hiding them in a shoe box in their front hallway closet.

    Closet? I wonder if there’s a hole in the floor of that closet?

  • ODE TO A SICK SPECTACLE.

    We’ve had a “busy news week” here on planet earth. A huge bomb exploded in Iraq. Lebanon is in the midst of a (hopefully) velvet revolution. The US Supreme Court has banned executions for crimes committed by non-adults.

    But does anybody care?

    Not really.

    Why?

    Because a certain, much-anticipated celebrity trial started two days ago, and much of the world—Spain included—is enthralled.

    The trial is expected to last six months; which means that we’ll all grow tired of it soon enough. At this early stage, however, it’s still a novelty. So let me seize this fleeting opportunity, and offer a Virtual Tapas Bar editorial in the form of…a limerick.

    There once was a man from Neverland.
    With sequined glove on his left hand.
    Though he’ll risk a deflowering.
    Whilst the inmates are showering.
    One good turn, does another demand.

    Sorry. That was a bit childish. Such juvenile indulgences should be forgiven.

    Indulgence in juveniles, however, should not.

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  • AND THE WINNER IS…

    The 475th annual Academy Awards—that globally-televised extravaganza in which an incestuous group of overpaid egomaniacs gather to heap further praise upon themselves—takes place tonight in Hollywood, California. But the ceremony poses a logistical problem for Spaniards, as it starts at 2am Central European Time.

    I therefore decided to create a parallel cinematic lovefest that citizens of Spain could enjoy prior to—rather than three hours after—their normal bedtimes: The 1st annual Virtual Tapas Bar Movie Awards!

    Unfortunately, the VTB Awards cannot choose its winners from the same pool of nominees as the Oscars, because I only saw three movies during 2004. But we won’t let that triviality stand in the way of our fun.

    So without further ado (whatever the hell “ado” means), the winners of the 2004 Virtual Tapas Bar Movie Awards are:

    BEST MOVIE: The Incredibles.

    BEST ACTOR:
    Hellboy.

    BEST ACTRESS:
    That nutty Korean chick from Sideways.

    BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM:
    (Three-way tie!) The Incredibles, Hellboy and Sideways.

    What? You say that neither The Incredibles, Hellboy nor Sideways qualify as a foreign language film? That’s odd. When I saw these films at the Guadalajara Cineplex Odeon, all of the dialogue was in Spanish.

    Posted by Hello

  • THE SNOWMAN OF LaMANCHA.

    Living in Spain’s central plains has made me a more generous person. And there’s nothing I love sharing more than our weather.

    Quite often during the dead of winter, I’ll open my window and marvel at the blue skies, sparkling sun and balmy temperatures. Then, I start making phone calls.

    “Hi Anders! What?! There’s a meter and a half of snow in Copenhagen?! Jeez! I’d need to hop on an airplane and fly two hours in order to see THAT much snow.”

    “Hi Hanna! What?! It’s already dark in Helsinki…at 3pm?! Jeez! It won’t get dark here for another four hours. Good thing, too…because I’m about to go for a bike ride.”

    “Hi Victor! What?! It’s -20ºC in Moscow?! Jeez! If it were that cold here, I’d be wearing my Mad Bomber Hat. But I don’t need it today, because it’s +20ºC.”

    Well…the tables turned yesterday, when the Madrid-area suffered—or enjoyed, depending on one’s perspective—its heaviest snowfall in twenty-one years. A whopping two inches of snow blanketed the ground. TWO INCHES! Downtown traffic screeched to a halt, and Madrid’s Barajas Airport cancelled ninety flights.

    Surely, the thought of two inches of snow grounding ninety flights—as well as that of my gloveless hand using a VISA® debit card to scrape ice from my car’s windshield—gave my Nordic friends an evil-yet-satisfying chuckle.

    Which leads me to the inescapable conclusion that—insofar as generosity is concerned—it truly IS better to give, than to receive.

    Posted by Hello

  • WHAT A PIECE OF…ART!

    Regular readers of this blog know that my hometown—Cabanillas del Campo—is a treasure trove of surreal humor.

    From its 80 proof breakfast buffets…to its speckled streets…to its annual Butt Kebab Festival—rarely a day passes that I don’t scratch my head in amused disbelief.

    Today was no exception. And I scratched mightily upon noticing this sculpture (pictured above) near my two-year-old daughter’s daycare facility.

    Now, the City Hall may argue that this sculpture promotes reading as an enjoyable and educational activity for all townsfolk—but I don’t buy it! Given its conspicuous form and location, I’d argue that it—more likely—promotes potty training as an enjoyable and educational activity for my daughter and her classmates.

    Just for laughs, I may place a roll of toilet paper next to his foot tomorrow morning.
    Posted by Hello

  • ROOSTERS IN THE MIST.

    I reported last month that my next door neighbor acquired a handsome new rooster named “Bush.” I’ve since been surprised at the level of interest that Bush has generated.

    Friends and family ask about his well-being. One gent from California even reproduced Bush’s photo on his own blog.

    Given Bush’s popularity (and, more importantly, my lack of anything interesting to say this week), it seemed fitting that I should provide an update on my feathered friend.

    I am therefore pleased to report that Bush continues to thrive. He is eating well, gets plenty of exercise and shows no signs of suffering from constipation.

    I know this because—much like the great Diane Fossey—I have spent countless hours observing the daily rituals of this noble beast. And while my recent studies have debunked many myths about roosters, none is more important than the following:

    MYTH: Roosters start each day by crowing when the sun rises.

    FACT: Roosters start each day by crowing TWO HOURS before the sun rises.

    Coming soon…a recipe for Coq au Vin.
    Posted by Hello

  • BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL.

    The Spanish province of Guadalajara—just east of Madrid—has an enclave that’s famous for its arquitectura negra (i.e., “black architecture”).

    The exteriors of homes, churches and municipal buildings in this area are covered with layer-upon-layer of flat, thin, black sheets of slate. Slate, of course, is the material from which chalkboards were made in the good ol’ days.

    Chalkboards, of course, are the things upon which presentations were made in the good ol’ days…before the invention of PowerPoint®.

    My family and I were in the town of Campillo de Ranas earlier today, and snapped the above photo of Casa Rural El Abejaruco—a bed and breakfast that is a classic example of arquitectura negra (and, coincidentally, happens to be owned by friends of ours).

    But sightseeing aside, our visit to the region raised some probing anthropological questions. For example:

    * If a local child misbehaves during dinner, will his parents hand him a piece of chalk and order him to write “I WILL EAT ALL OF MY VEGETABLES” one hundred times on the front of their house?

    * Why was there no monument to Fred Flintstone’s boss in the town square?

    * Does the entire town get goose-bumps whenever someone scratches his fingernails across the City Hall’s facade?

    I said *probing* anthropological questions. Not intelligent ones.

    Posted by Hello

  • RIGHT-LEANING MARKETING PRACTICES.



    My hometown, Cabanillas del Campo, is in the midst of constructing a spacious, new City Hall building. I walked past the construction site this morning, and did a double-take.

    It wasn’t the site itself that grabbed my attention, but rather the sign that Sitol, S.L. (i.e., the building’s cement-work contractor) posted on the security fence. You’ll note from the photo above that Sitol’s sign features a graphic of the Leaning Tower of Pisa.

    Perhaps I’m being overly sarcastic, but it seems odd that the contractor responsible for pouring the City Hall’s foundation should choose, as its logo, history’s most famous example of negligent building construction.

    Or maybe I’m being short-sighted. After all, just think of the revenues that will be generated when busloads of foreign tourists arrive to photograph the “Leaning City Hall of Cabanillas.”

    Posted by Hello

  • DULLARDS WITHOUT BORDERS.



    I thought I could escape Bryan Adams by moving to Spain. I was wrong.

    It’s nothing personal against the man. I’m sure he’s a swell guy who treats his mother like a queen and makes generous donations to his local animal shelter.

    But his music! Let’s just say that I haven’t found his songs to be inspiring…or timeless…or—to be brutally honest—well-written. Let me give an example to clarify this point. This isn’t a specific Bryan Adams song; but rather, an amalgamation of all Bryan Adams songs:

    Yeah.

    Look into my eyes.

    You’re the only girl for me.

    You’re all I’ll ever need.

    Yeah.

    I really love you.

    I really, really love you.

    I really, really, really, really, really, really love you.

    Yeah.

    I’d die for you.

    I’d really, really, really, really, really, really die for you.

    Do you see what I mean? Not quite in the same league as Lennon’s and McCartney’s All You Need Is Love. To be honest, I’m not even sure it’s in the same league as that Gary Glitter song that’s played during basketball game intermissions.

    Yet even in Spain, Bryan Adams’s music won’t go away. There is a nation-wide radio franchise called KISS-FM. Its music format is a relentless gush of saccharine-sweet ‘80’s pop—punctuated with a large dollop of Bryan Adams every fifteen to twenty minutes. Honestly!

    KISS-FM is extremely popular in Spain. But worse yet, it’s extremely popular with all the wrong people—such as Mrs. Virtual Tapas Bar, my neighbor Jesús (who, lamentably, has wired his back patio with outdoor loud speakers) and every taxi driver with whom I’ve ridden since 1999.

    Despite KISS-FM’s troubling ubiquity, I’d remained hopeful. I kept reminding myself of one important fact—Bryan Adam had not released an album since 1999. Could it be that he had retired from the limelight? Would he soon join the likes of Boy George and Ginger Spice on the scrap-pile of music has-beens?

    Apparently not.

    My hopes were dashed last week, when I learned that Bryan Adams had just released a new album. Its first single—creatively entitled, Flying—is already receiving airplay on KISS-FM. I heard it yesterday for the first time. And what did I think?

    Well…I can honestly say that Mr. Adams has grown as a song-writer. He no longer relies on clichéd stanzas from high school-era, puppy-love notes as the sole content of his lyrics. To the contrary, he now infuses his lyrics with metaphorical imagery. Here is a verse from Flying:

    Feels like we’re flyyyyyyyyin’.

    Yeah.

    Look into my eyes.

    You’re the only girl for me.

    You’re all I’ll ever need.

    Feels like we’re flyyyyyyyyin’.

    Yeah.

    I really love you.

    I really, really love you.

    I really, really, really, really, really, really love you.

    Feels like we’re flyyyyyyyyin’.

    Yeah.

    I’d die for you.

    I’d really, really, really, really, really, really die for you.

    How ironic life can be. I once believed that Canada’s cheesiest musical export was Gordon Lightfoot. Now I miss him. I really, really, really, really, really, really miss him.

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