Friday, December 25, 2009

Rifles & Reindeer

When it comes to mall Santas, I tend to overlook the individuals under the red suits and see only the Christmas figurehead, that boisterous, jolly reminder of the fact that, soon, I’ll be unwrapping the presents that I’ve dictated people buy me. I suppose my underlying notion is that the individuals spending their free days or nights dressed up like an overweight gift-bearer are looking for spare cash or ways to knock off a few hours of a community service sentencing. The idea that some people do it for other reasons — personal enjoyment, for instance — is lost on me.



That being said, it’s one thing to go in and simply dress up as what might as well be a large painted bullseye for remarking teenagers or shopping-weary parents; it’s another thing entirely when the man stepping into the shiny black boots and tomato-colored pants dedicates himself to the role.



The other day I was reading on the CNN website a profile of something called The Fraternal Order of Real Bearded Santas. The group, more than 300 strong, consists of men who believe in growing genuine Santa beards rather than rely on the elastic-banded, coarse kind so often pulled down by children. The men consist mostly of retirees, people having put in their time at normal jobs that conjure up images of the American heartland — a grocery store worker, say, or a train conductor. For only twenty-five dollars a year, all a person had to do was grow a beard and he was in.



In addition to the group as a whole, the article profiled three FORBS members who had had interesting experiences in the course of their years spent lying to children each December.



Of the three profiles, the first one I read really wasn’t all that impressive. The man had been a FORBS Santa for seven years straight, and while he actually did make little wooden toys for children, it felt cutesy and pedestrian. Anyone could do that, I thought. He sort of made up for it when his “wacky Santa memory” turned out to be him waking from a nap during a slow day at the mall to a parent telling her child that, no, Santa was not dead. But still.



The next two offered more promise.



One Santa, at sixty-two years old, was a retired LA County deputy sheriff, a fact which, by itself, filled me with ideas, but when I read that his interesting fact labeled him an expert witness in dog and cockfighting cases, it made me envision him as the protagonist in a poorly-written primetime TV show. The episode playing in my head had him receiving an emergency call in the middle of little Sally’s request for Butterscotch the Electronic Pony and having to rush off to give his expert testimony while still dressed in his jingling red jacket. “Kringle,” the show might be called or “Law and Order: Santa Victim Unit.”



The third profile was of a man in his mid-fifties, a former utility company lineman who told about the time a child asked him in the same sitting for both a BB gun as well as a chainsaw. In his pockets he carries coins that have sides reading “naughty” and “nice,” a detail, odd at best, made all the more uncomfortable by my lingering question of whether or not he carries them around all year long. Referring to someone as naughty in the period from the day after Thanksgiving to Christmas morning is spirited and festive; any other time of the year, it’s just creepy and tends to brand a person something of a pervert.



What disturbed me most was the last fact my eyes happened to catch. A self-described gun hobbyist, the man admitted to working on what the article referred to as a “candy-cane rifle.” I wouldn’t exactly call myself an expert on the particulars of Santa Claus, but I’ve never picked up on his need for weaponry. Not once have I read about Santa’s hunting habits, plugging walruses from the warmth of his North Pole cottage. I haven’t gleaned from Christmas cards or carols his bundling up with Sprinkles the Elf to track and bring down a reindeer, dragging it back to the workshops so that Mrs. Claus can help dress and store the meat, maybe to feed the army of elves once toy production gets into full swing.



It was disturbing to think of Santa as a cold-blooded killer. But what if this man, this impostor with nothing to his credibility but a genuine beard and a twenty-five dollar online certification, had more sinister plans? I combed the article for something like a name or a location, but there was nothing about any of the unnamed men operating in what could have been any mall in the United States. It might not have been as frightening had the man just been into guns; guns are distinctive and stand out against a crowd of children and white snow. But a candy-cane? There wouldn’t be any warning, and I go to malls.



As I sit here, this Christmas season is coming to a close, and while my shopping is done for now, there’s always next year. I suppose I’ll have to start paying more attention to the men on whose laps the local children sit and make their Christmas wishes. Not only will I be looking for a Santa’s surprised face as a child tugs on what will turn out to be his genuine beard, but also for the shiny glint of a naughty coin, followed by the rise of a Santa as he grasps in his hands a four-foot candy-cane and stares down the stem as if taking aim. And while people around me think merrily of decking the halls, I’ll be planning, worried and at the ready, to hit the deck.

[Satan Snow Cone]

SATAN SNOW CONE...WITH HYDRAS!

"HA! HA! HA! YOU'RE FUCKING DEAD!!!"


Friday, December 18, 2009

Making Plans on a Thursday Evening

We were sitting there, and I was thinking about the time I was asked to buy condoms at the local Target store, when the waitress came by to take our order. I was sitting across from my friends Kate and Alex, who had recently become married and were talking about fond wedding memories, and so I found myself considering the menu and drifting off.



“What can I get for you guys?” the waitress asked, and as if she’d just whispered her question or asked it in sign language, neither Kate nor Alex noticed her.



The girl was maybe twenty-two, perky in a fashion that seemed demanded of her in that particular chain restaurant way. Her ponytail was still bouncing when I looked up and asked if we could have a minute or (judging from the way Kate and Alex were talking) twenty.



Our evening had started about an hour before, when Kate called and inquired about my plans for the evening. Being something of a recluse, my social calendar was wide open, and so, feeling more than a little lonely, I told her that I was free. Originally, I was under the impression that it would be just the two of us, and when I learned that her legally-declared better half would be coming along, I knew with a sinking feeling that the night was a goner.



It is a rare occasion, finding a couple with whom I can spend time and not feel like a human-sized equivalent of an appendix. My friends Jason and Leah, for example, have never made me feel like a tag-along. Most couples, especially new ones, seem unable to keep themselves from cuddling and loving on one another, even in public, and, being stricken with some disease that renders me perpetually single, I’m always left wondering why I’m being punished just because they’re sleeping with each other.



For the most part, Kate and Alex’s conversation was fairly exclusive, but every so often Kate would turn to me and clarify some details so that I wouldn’t be entirely out of the loop. Although, I usually enjoyed their company, tonight they were the main attraction, and I felt like an audience member contemplating if I knew enough about Japanese ritual suicide to do it right with nothing but a butter knife. So, I studied the entrees until I found something that sounded good, and when I got tired of holding up the menu and pretending to listen to which songs were played and who danced with whom, I started thinking about random things of my own.



Our table was next to a window, and the Thursday night was quickly growing dark. Across the highway outside was a Target store, and for some reason I recalled the time my friend Amy and I were there shopping. We were killing time one evening, and after walking around looking at CDs and clothes, Amy remembered that she needed to pick up some things for her mother.



We made our way around the store a couple times, and after we’d collected everything in a little red basket, Amy said that she needed to grab something for herself as well. Walking towards the back of the store, I tried guessing what she might be looking for. At first I thought shampoo or conditioner, but we passed those, and before I could try toothpaste we were beyond that as well.



“What are you getting?” I asked, glancing back at the soap that was steadily growing more and more distant.



“Condoms,” she said. “I just ran out.”



At first I thought I’d somehow misheard her, but by then we were stepping into a veritable no-man’s land that flanked me on both sides with tampons and little padded underwear liners.



“And you need these tonight?” I asked.



“Oh,” she said, sensing my discomfort, “it’ll just take a second.”



We moved further down what had to be the longest aisle in the entire store, and I found myself wondering why there had to be so many different kinds of what seemed to me like the exact same product.



Ordinarily, I would’ve prided myself on a sturdy ability to stomach things that make other people uncomfortable. Like, for example, my sophomore year of high school, when my human biology class took a trip to a medical school for a few hours to study cadavers. While several of my classmates had to excuse themselves from the room, I walked around scrutinizing each dissected body with a striking dispassion that I imagined would make me either an outstanding doctor or serial killer.



This, however, was decidedly more disconcerting.



When we made it to the end of the aisle, we stopped. In the last couple sections were the contraceptives, and while Amy searched through her many options, I looked around the corners, hoping that no one would see me. It was one thing, I thought, to go through the women’s clothes helping a friend look for an outfit; it was something else entirely to be where I was currently standing.



Each aisle was marked with a little green sign at each end that gave both a numerical designation as well as a few brief keywords or phrases about what to find inside. Ours was marked G5, and beneath that were listed the phrases “Feminine Hygiene” and, more interestingly, “Family Planning.”



The phrase struck me in a way that lightened the whole idea. It made me imagine a bright, sunny couple marching into a well-lit office building. The man and woman, dressed respectively in a gray suit and a red-and-white checkered dress, would smile and sit before a polished mahogany desk, where a tanned woman with curled hair would greet them and, as if readying herself to prepare a tax return, announce, “So. Let’s plan a family!”



In actuality, the situation wasn’t quite as decorous.



“Do I want Ultra-Ribbed or Smooth Sensations?” Amy said out loud.



I wasn’t going to answer, but then I realized she was actually asking for my opinion.



“Um … what were my options again?”



“I just don’t know which one will be better.” She paused a second, and as I was searching for a response, she reached forward to grab another box.



The spring-loaded pusher behind the box snapped forward after she pulled the black and pink box out, and I cringed as it made a sharp smacking noise against the end of its plastic track. I looked around, thinking that surely somebody — maybe, say, someone from security — would come to check up on us. Lurking near the contraceptives, we were two eighteen-year-olds, one of whom was grabbing box after box with her friend standing behind her, shifting from foot to foot and starting, now, to sweat.



“Now, this one’s a multi-pack,” Amy announced to me, considering it. I watched in horror as she turned it over in her hands and started to read the descriptions posted on the back.



“Are you almost finished?”



Much to my relief, she settled on this one, and after she put the rest of the condoms back in their slots, we made our way back down the aisle.



I looked again at the extensive selection of products related to that specific region of the female anatomy, and as we passed by packages boasting both “Unscented” and “Gentle Glide,” I couldn’t help but thank God I’d never had a girlfriend to ask me to run to the store and pick up something from this section of a store.



As the checkouts came closer, I thought I was in the clear, but then suddenly Amy stopped. Turning to me, she looked me in the eyes, a pleading look, both pitiful and utterly despondent.



“What’s wrong?” I asked.



“There’s a problem.”



“Don’t tell me you got the wrong size or something.” I looked down at the condoms riding at the top of her red basket.



“No, no. My mom gave me her debit card to get these things. I can’t put those on there or she’ll see them on the receipt.”



“Can’t you just pay for them separately? Or just don’t give her the receipt; tell her you lost it or something.”



“I can’t. Would you pay for them for me? Please? I’ve give you the money when we get back to my house.”



We stood there, me looking into her pleading eyes, for what felt like an hour. My own sense of mortification rose like a tidal wave, but finally I gave in.



“All right,” I said.



Our cashier was kind enough to pretend my purchase was nothing more exciting than a box of matches or disposable plastic forks, but still I felt embarrassed. Never had I imagined I would have to buy condoms in public, much less in the company of one of my friends.



Back in the restaurant, Kate and Alex were still talking, and although I’d caught words here and there throughout, they had moved on to some other subject. I listened, trying to figure out what they were talking about, and I glanced again out the window, to the highway and beyond.



“And now we’ll just have to start making plans for a baby!” Kate joked. “I want a family so bad.” But before she could go into any detail, imaginary or not, I turned away from the red glow of the Target bullseye and cut her off. The waitress hadn’t come back for our orders yet, and there was time to fill with anything but the talk of babies, of getting pregnant, of any kind of family planning. “I’m sorry, but tell me everything about the wedding again,” I said, grinning. “And don’t leave anything out.”

Dear Amusingly Foreign Phisher

Dear Amusingly Foreign Phisher,

Okay. How do I put this? I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings…but your attempts to steal my credit card information are laughable. I’m going to use small words from here on out because I know you probably don’t normally read or write English (and I want you to understand).

Didn’t think I could tell, huh?

Well don’t feel too bad, I mean you DID say you were from the Kingdom of Gavanna in your email. But here, in the United States, we don’t start anything resembling a conversation or letter by saying “excuse me pardons.” I would try something like “Hello, I’d like some of your money” or “Jack-off, just give me your bank account number” (because I know you probably already have my Social Security number, since THAT’S plastered all over town on job applications…most of which just end up in the trash).

Another thing that might help you ensnare gullible people: use a few capital letters. I mean, would it kill ya? Just extend your pinkie finger (or other slimy appendage) and press firmly down on the “shift” key…then type a letter. See! See what just happened there? You made that “a” an “A.”

Neat, huh?

Compare these two things: “king of gavanna” and “King of Gavanna.”

Know which one I’m giving my banking information to? That’s right the King of Gvanna (the one with the caps! It looks more official ‘n stuff!). You’d be amazed at how a little thing like that will help you scam people.


Sincerely,

Your Phish-ee


"Special Shout-out" to the idiot that sent me this text message (hey idiot, Visa doesn't send text messages...but if they did, they'd use CAPS!!!):

"In Soviet Russia, text-message sends you!"

Friday, December 11, 2009

The Greatest Gifts of All

I’ve always enjoyed the process of buying gifts. Whether it’s for a birthday, holiday, or upcoming prison release, one of the most appealing ways to spend a day off work is picking up the perfect present. It’s not just the idea of stepping out of the house that gets me going, it’s the thrill of the hunt; it’s a primal feeling, almost instinctual, and something that I imagine even certain types of cavemen felt when approaching, say, their friends Grog and Urga’s third wedding anniversary. Nothing beats the feeling I get when I stumble upon that great find in some hole-in-the-wall craft shop or bookstore. As much as I enjoy receiving gifts, I enjoy the act of giving that much more.



That said, when it comes to presents, the best ones to buy are the ones that wander off the beaten path. Sure, shopping for Stephen King’s latest bestseller or a new blockbuster DVD release is fine, but it’s kind of like shooting fish in a barrel. Anyone can pick up these types of items. How hard is it to stop at just about any local megastore or go to an online retailer? The answer is: not hard enough. There’s no fun in it. Instead, if someone tells me they want something like that, I’ll start searching for a special edition or a limited release. If it’s a book, maybe there’s a copy that’s been signed by the author or an expert forger. For DVDs, why get it in the regular plastic case if there’s a version that comes in a collectible tin or a replica of a famous television spaceship? These little touches help differentiate my gift from just any gift and only sweeten the discovery.



For me, if a springtime birthday party is a joy to buy presents for, then the period of time from Black Friday to New Year’s Eve is the nirvana where my gift-giving glee is in full force. Last September, I received a phone call from my grandmother asking me for a few ideas for possible Christmas presents. The day she called was an unseasonably warm one, and I thought it strange that I should be sitting in front of a fan, sweating like a fugitive, and thinking about a wintry holiday almost three months away. Struggling for breath under the blanket of heat, I told her I’d think about it, though after passing out I forgot all about putting together a list for her. Later that week, I was walking around a department store when I noticed that the Halloween decorations they’d put up just weeks before were now quickly being downsized to a couple aisles and replaced with warm red and cool silver decorations. The temperature had leveled out by then, and it felt right — or, at least, better suited — for the approach of Christmas. The excitement I felt was encompassing, and by the time I stepped away from the rows of ornaments and dead-eyed animatronic reindeer I was already thinking about gifts I might pick up.



In my experience, I’ve found it easier to shop for friends than relatives. I don’t know if it’s because my immediate family and I rarely hold a conversation much beyond “Hi” or “I’ll see you later,” but my friends are always the easier group to shop for when I go hunting for gifts.



This is where the joy of perusing smaller stores and shops comes into play. What could be more relaxing than, on a beautiful day, taking a stroll along your local promenade or shopping district and seeking out stores that may or may not be open in a month’s time? When I was growing up near Alton, Illinois, opening a store specializing in overpriced, poor-quality artwork or ceramic figurines was an act of gumption to say the least. To this day I still enjoy checking out the wares of shops like these not only to see if, somehow, I can find a framed picture or small statue suitable for gifting, but also because, in rougher financial areas, I like guessing how long it will be until these stores go out of business. If you’re shopping with a friend, make a game out of it. Loser buys lunch!



When I’m browsing, I’ll always try to imagine the look on a friend’s face upon opening a certain present. Will it elicit a certain amount of enthusiasm? If I think so, I’ll jot it down on a piece of paper or make a note on my phone. If I’m unsure of my friend’s reaction but it’s something I would like to have, I’ll ask myself, how can I convince them to give it back to me? And if the gift wouldn’t interest either of us, I move on.



Whereas shopping for my friends can be a breeze sometimes, presents for my family can be problematic at best. It’s hard trying to scrounge up meaningful gifts for people who, sometimes, might as well be strangers, and it’s so disheartening to have to fall back on gift certificates to places like Home Depot or a certain megastore owned by a family of Bible-thumping nutjobs. Who enjoys something like that? I guess a place like Home Depot I can see — a carpenter, a handyman, someone who enjoys taking on the little around-the-house projects that require such festive utilities as a socket wrench or a rubber mallet. But a gift card to someplace like Costco makes me imagine somebody traipsing around a cold, expansive warehouse store, a smile stretched across his face, tossing into a squeaky-wheeled cart things like shampoo and motor oil, maybe thumbtacks or a plastic paper towel holder.



That just seems so sad.



At a Christmas party at my aunt’s house one year, I received a little decorated envelope as my gift from her. I could tell it was going to be either a gift card or a small folded-up piece of money, and so I opened it, expecting to be able to go get a novel from a bookstore or maybe a new shirt. Instead, much to my disappointment, the gift card was for Casey’s, a local gas station chain. I didn’t want to seem ungrateful, but I wasn’t sure how exactly my aunt had imagined my reaction to something like that. In a couple weeks I would turn twenty, and so I’d already learned the joys of having to fill a gas tank, but still. Who wants to get gasoline as a gift? My brother, just fifteen years old, got the same gift, and so, after giving our aunt our most sincere-sounding thanks, we made plans to sell our gift cards to our grandmother.



That’s why, in my opinion, lists are a lifesaver. I have friends who think that resorting to a Christmas or birthday list is the ultimate form of gifting failure. My friend Jessica, for example, would almost never use a list, for others or herself, reasoning that if she knows someone and someone knows her, figuring out what to get for each other without being told shouldn’t be that difficult a task. As for me, a list has a certainty, a reassurance of perfection. Not that I don’t enjoy a little spontaneity in presents — I’ll pick up little knick-knacks or trinkets like a lighthouse figurine for my great-grandmother or a comfortable throw for a friend’s mother — but for the big gifts, I want something that won’t fail. There’s nothing worse than the naked look of disappointment that comes, if only momentarily, before being replaced by an exaggerated projection of joy.



Once I have my gifts purchased and at hand, the next step for me is finding the best way to present them. To some, the options for wrapping, bagging, and boxing might be overwhelming, but I enjoy the seemingly limitless possibilities that are available. In my humble opinion, getting the right wrapping paper or gift bag is almost equally important to the present itself. A gift’s wrapping can make or break the occasion.



I’ll stand sometimes in the stationery department of my local retailer, looking at all my options, weighing one hunter green bow against another one, slightly lighter, with a tag that reads “seafoam”. I can spend hours there imagining the opening of a particular gift and the recipient’s stare as they look upon my present, transfixed. As with a pet or a prostitute, the bag and paper must suit the recipient’s personality. You wouldn’t want a rambunctious puppy jumping up on your seventy-six-year-old Aunt Ida any more than you’d want your fifteen year old son’s first time with a woman to be spoiled by the fact that she has a penis because you didn’t do your homework.



So put a little thought into it. Dark hues on simpler patters, I’ve found, are good for manic depressives, as they’re often surprised that anyone’s bothered to remember their birthday or Christmas at all, so it’s best not to overwhelm them with ornate designs or bold colors. For circuit boys the opposite is true; one can’t go wrong with loud-colored gift bags and lots of tissue paper, especially if the recipient is still high on ecstasy. The bright colors will be mesmerizing and the sound and feel of the tissue paper as they rifle through it should make for lots of fun sensory moments.



I understand that when the gift is opened, the paper is going to be nothing but a shredded afterthought on the table and the decorative tissue a crumpled plaything for a house cat or unsupervised infant, but none of that matters to me. What’s more important is the aesthetic quality and the sense of anticipation a well-decorated gift inspires in the person for whom it is intended. That’s what makes it all worth it. In the end, for me anyway, gift-giving is an artform, no different than painting or nude interpretive dance. No matter how long or hard I have to search, no matter how hard a gift is to wrap, bag, or box, I enjoy knowing that I can make a person feel valued and cared about and that he or she will come, almost certainly, to regard mine as the greatest gifts of all.

A Good, Old-Fashioned, Jewish Christmas

FULL DISCLOSURE: AS I WROTE THIS, I WAS LISTENING TO BOB DYLAN SING “HAVE YOURSELF A MERRY LITTLE CHRISTMAS” OFF HIS NEW CHRISTMAS ALBUM: CHRISTMAS IN THE HEART (WHICH I ASSURE YOU IS A REAL THING).


As you can probably tell, this is going to be different. For starters, I feel as though I must preface this post by saying that I’m not a religious person—and it’s my parents fault. I never went to church, both my Mom and my Dad found “Church” to be creepy and hypocritical. They were right, and I don’t blame them for keeping both myself and my sister away from Organized Religion.

Both my parents believe in the basic tenant of “God will be cool as long as you live a good life.” Christians will say (and have told me when I’ve repeated this) that unfortunately that isn’t good enough. In fact, I had one spit-frothing-Christian once shout at me that “your good works are dirt in the eyes of the Lord.”

Well shit. Here I was NOT killing this spit-frothing-asshole because I didn’t want to piss-off God…and he was telling me that it didn’t matter. Jesus said “I am the way” to which I reply “That’s your opinion.” I wasn’t raised with that as a core belief, and many people I know who WERE turned out to be assholes (some of them spit-frothing). Ever the antagonist, I feel that if that really is how God is, I want no part of Him.

But I think that’s a lot of bullshit. After all, if you’re not raised with religion…God hates you? You go straight to Hell if you’re born in China (where Christianity is a no-no)? That’s a billion people going to Hell because of Geography? I think not.

And like I said, if God really would damn say, the Indians of pre-Columbus America to fiery damnation simply because they were born in an era where GOOD CHRISTIANS were unable to reach them...well then I don’t want to hang with God.

So growing up my life was pretty religion-free, but my Dad works for Hallmark so we were VERY big on holidays. Holidays are good. They bring people together, they stimulate the economy. They…uh…give us time off from work and/or school?

Christmas was one of those holidays where I was excited about the PRESENTS but leery of the “trappings” of Christmas (the “reason for the season” if you will). I don’t need to tell you that every TRUE Christian knows that Christmas is a holiday co-opted from the Pagans. And that Jesus was NOT born on the 25th of December. Basically, Christmas is just an excuse for a party. Now, I’m always cool with parties….except when they depress the hell out of me.

And that’s what Christmas has degenerated into. To be brief: Christmas depresses me because I don’t have enough money to buy the people I love the things I feel they deserve. It depresses me because I always spend too much money. It depresses me because the gifts I get are crappy, thus making me feel ungrateful. It depresses me because it makes me yearn for childhood, when Christmas was wonderful and magical.

When it was ALCOHOL-free Egg Nogg and fuzzy slipper. Back when Santa was real, and I didn’t have to think about SATAN (and how 90% of this country thinks I’m going to hell because of a parenting choice).

So this year I’m “Skipping Christmas” (to reference a bad John Grisham novel, oh wait—they’re all bad…never mind).


I’m going to have a GOOD, OLD-FASHIONED Jewish Christmas. Now, before I tell you what that is and what that means (it’s fucking wonderful kids) I feel that I need to address my parents:

“Mom, Dad. I love you both and I know you’re disappointed that I’m not coming home this year. I’m sure a part of you (just a part, a small part because you’re both really cool) thinks that this has something to do with me marrying a Jewish girl. And you’re right; it DOES have something to do with it. But you see, just because you’re BORN into one thing doesn’t mean that you weren’t really MEANT for something else. I love you, and I’m coming home for Cousin Jimmy’s (I’m sorry “James”) holiday party this weekend…but I’m not coming home for Christmas. I’m having a GOOD, OLD-FASHIONED Jewish Christmas here in St. Louis.”

Okay. I feel like they might still blame my wife on some level, but there’s nothing I can do about that. When I say a “Jewish Christmas” I bet a lot of you are thinking “Ebenezer Scrooge.” Well nothing could be further from the truth! You see, much like me, the Jews of the World don’t really dig on Christmas either. And on this day, 90% of the US “disappears” into lame family parties and long, snore-ous sermons/services.

The heavens part, and so do the crowds!

“But Jason,” I hear you say, “nothing is open on Christmas Day!”

Ah, there you are incorrect my friend. There are two things that are open SPECIFICALLY for Jewish Christmas: the movies and Chinese restaurants. Apparently, as my wife has explained to me, Jews get up early…go to the movies (more than one show! *squeal*) then gorge themselves on crab-rangoon.

Sign me the fuck-up. Sorry Jesus, but you lost me at “movies” and “crab-rangoon.” So that’s what I’m doing. I’m going OUT on CHRISTMAS with my wife to see a crap load of movies and eat chow mein.

“Joy to the World.”