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November 19th, 2003 No comments

I’m not sure how many of y’all work on your own cars; I’m assuming all of the guys, at least, because if a guy can’t change his own oil, he probably drinks wine coolers and has seen Yanni in concert. Multiple times. Anyway, this column is for those of my readers who grease their own bearings, enjoy rebuilding carburetors, and know what a U-joint is. (Not that I do.)

This weekend HW and I are going on a road trip, and I was overdue for an oil change, so I went ahead and took care of it. There are many important steps to changing fluids that I have learned and developed over years of practice. Rule One is, wait until the engine has cooled significantly; I discovered this one when I was in a hurry to get the job done once and somehow splashed 190 degree dino-juice into my eye. There is a word to describe the pain I felt, and that word is “AAADKJAKAJJAKFJAKDLKFUCKDJFDALKLAJDFAKJLKJLSKJLFKAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA.”

Keeping that agonizing flashback in mind, I got home yesterday around 6:30 and immediately sat down to play a game of NCAA Football 2004 while I waited for the truck to cool. (I whooped Clemson’s ass, 28-7.) When that was done, I watched the Simpsons; then I played another game (barely beating UMD 17-14 to take the ACC championship and an invitation to the Orange Bowl).

Around 8:15, I changed clothes and made my way outside. Rule Two: make sure you have plenty of paper towels handy. This is a rule I learned when I ruined a nice pair of jeans and my wife stuffed me into the washing machine and set it to “hot wash, cold rinse, extended spin cycle.” I grabbed a big roll of towels out of the garage, along with my plastic oil pan, my socket wrench, and a 5/8″ socket (Rule 3: Make sure all your tools are handy), and slid under the truck. I undid the oil bolt and luke-warm fluid came a-streamin’ out.

Then I got up to find a new filter and properly lube it. This when when I developed Rule 4: make sure you have a replacement filter BEFORE draining all the oil from your vehicle. In conjunction with this, I quickly learned rule 4a: also make sure you have actual oil to replace that which you have removed, and 4b: if you are going to forget to do 4 and 4a, at least make sure someone is around that can drive you to Pep Boys.

While walking the half-mile to the store, I learned rule 5: standing in front of the local police station and weeping loudly will get you the attention of the constabulary, who will assume you have escaped from the rehab center next door.

Luckily, PB was still open (Rule 6: Call to make sure of that before leaving the house). I grabbed 6 quarts of oil and the proper filter and headed to the front, where I caught a glimpse of my own reflection in the front windows. With my grubby jeans, worn flannel, and stained work coat, I realized I looked rather insane. Or perhaps it was the muttering and severe facial twitch, I’m not entirely sure.

I walked back home, changed the filter and put oil back in, and went inside to enjoy a tasty beer. Then I realized I had to dispose of the old oil, so I poured it into a couple milk jugs (Rule 7: always save milk jugs to put used oil in), spilling a significant portion of it on the driveway ’cause I have the fine motor control of Formica, and went back inside.

I probably should take the used oil back to Pep Boys this week, but I have a really nice collection of it going in the garage, and I figure the next occupants of the house can find a use for it.

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November 17th, 2003 No comments

Note to all of my friends: no more scheduling of weddings during important football games.

This weekend we married off Mandy and Speech, aka Mandra and La Mouton Rouge. Unfortunately, while the ceremony was happening, UD was going through multiple overtimes of football against rival UMass. Next week, Jodi and Todd will be getting married during the UD-Villanova showdown to decide the Atlantic 10 championship. I may have a seizure during the service, something upon which the priest would most certainly frown.

Nevertheless, the wedding festivities this weekend were highly enjoyable, even though they entrusted Jared (aka Rod, aka Rance, aka Manwhore) with the rings. Jared is reasonably trustworthy, but saying that he is “often tardy” is sort of like saying that “Hitler was a poor role model.” Luckily he rode to the gig with me, so we were on time AND sexy as all hell. (Jared is one of the few people I know who may be prettier than I am; luckily, I have larger pectoral muscles, so all the ladies were up ons.)

I sang “One Hand, One Heart” at the service, which elicited some nice compliments, because I’m the shiznit. Mandy’s brothers handled the readings, and Rev. Connie Cohen gave an amusing speech on how to keep a marriage working (avoid getting caught banging hookers in Reno, let your wife handle all the money, only slap him around when he REALLY deserves it, that kind of thing), and a harpist played some nice tunes to keep us entertained. The only downside was the heat; apparently the thermostat in the place didn’t work, because once we lit all the candles and filled the room with people, it was like being stuck in an elephant’s ass in there. I’m glad the service was short, because my polyester tux was starting to melt into my shirt.

The service was held at the same place (called The Waterfall) as the reception, which simplified things nicely. (When Sarah and I were married, a number of folks trying to get to the reception nearly lost their lives because Andy Wang gave them a lift in his car. Who’d’ve thunk an Asian guy would be such a bad driver?) Several things about the reception were fun:

  • Open Bar. Most weddings have these nowadays, or at least free beer and wine, but that doesn’t detract from the fact that free gin and tonics (I drank approximately 9) taste so much better than ones for which you pay.
  • Dan Bouda’s Father. Dan was a member of the wedding party, and a highly amusing fellow to boot. He knew Speech from way-back-when up in North Jersey. Also, his father is technically insane. I don’t dance like that until at least the 7th gin-and-tonic, and Mr. Bouda was, from what I understand, stone sober. I believe he learned his moves by watching old Menudo videos.
  • Jared’s Speech. It was a little long-winded, but it definitely managed to work in the fact that Speech used to have one hell of a mullet and liked to wear tight black jeans.

Unfortunately, I couldn’t get too drunk (as is my custom), because I had to be at work by 11pm Saturday night. To work all night. And then perform a change in the morning. Luckily, they decided they didn’t really need me and sent me home at 12:30am, which worked out nicely because I managed to get 6 hours sleep before I did a four hour job in the morning.

Jodi and Todd’s wedding, on the other hand, will not be interfered with by work, so I’ll probably be able to write a nice coherent column on Sunday morning about how I lost my wallet in a craps game and had to sleep in a pig trough.

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November 13th, 2003 No comments

When I last left you, I was discussing buying a new home, and we had just had our offer accepted. You, as I recall, thought that the process was complete, and I laughed at you like a rabid hyena. The process continues! Here are the remaining steps to owning your own home:

  1. Schedule a home inspection. This is where you take a few hours out of your busy workday and tour the house with a professional home inspector, who is clearly the type of guy that knows what a “mitre joint” is and built his own refrigerator out of an old intake manifold, using his own frigid breath as the freon substitute. He will get out a large checklist of things to examine, and will reveal to you things like “Hey, the spokes on that bannister are too far apart, a kid could get his head caught in ’em,” or “You may notice that your kitchen appears to be missing a floor.”

    Luckily, the only serious issue that we found in our future home was discovered by me; when we entered the room with the furnace and water heater, I said I smelled gas. The home inspector didn’t smell it, but sure enough when he held his little detector up to the pipes by my head, it screamed like an unanesthetized appendectomy patient. Of course, by this time, I had inhaled enough natural gas that I believed I could fix the problem by coating the affected pipe joint with my own saliva, but luckily Sarah and Melissa (our realtor) got me outside before I developed any kind of cancer.

  2. Get your mortgage locked in. You may recall having gotten pre-approved for a mortgage before you began househunting. This is not the same thing. To get final approval for your mortgage, you will need to fill out approximately 3,874 pages of forms, in triplicate, and send them back to the lender. He will then send them back to you with a list of corrections that have to be made (“You forgot to initial here,” “I don’t think your truck is really worth $173,000,” “I wasn’t aware that your name was spelled with that many K’s,” etc.). Later, a woman from the mortgage company will call and request even more information to be faxed to her, and will probably question your ability to pay a $1450/month mortgage AND maintain your “toupee of the month” membership.

    In the end, you will get locked in at a rate; this rate will be higher than anybody else who has bought a home recently has paid, but you will be able to justify it when your parents mention that the rate they got on their first home in 1983 was 47.2%.

  3. Contact a lawyer. Having the lawyer serves two purposes: first, they will represent you at settlement, and will be able to tell you exactly how much money you have to pay to everyone that shows up with their hand open. Secondly, after you have to begin robbing convenience stores to pay your mortgage, they will be able to represent you at trial.
  4. Arrange for home insurance. I haven’t gotten around to this one yet, because I’m lazy, but I imagine it will involve giving someone a massive check and praying that I hit the lottery.
  5. Pack up all your stuff. Although honestly it would be simpler, and probably more cost-effective, to just throw it out and buy all new stuff, the wife is rather attached to some of the things her grandmother left her. The next easiest thing would be to hire a professional moving company to handle this, that costs money, and you’re probably broke. So just throw all your crap into boxes and hope it doesn’t break too much.
  6. Go to settlement. This is where you sit down, sign a bunch of papers, have a bunch of things explained to you that you don’t care about, hand over a lot of money, and get the keys to your new crib. This will take an hour or two, during which your thought processes will alternate from “I’m buying a new house! Wheeeee!” to “Holy crap, I’m absolutely mind-numbingly broke!” I recommend grinding up some prozac to snort every few minutes to try and keep yourself balanced.
  7. Prepare the house. This means painting, fixing any simple stuff that might need it, etc. In our case, it turns out our new place has some aluminum wiring, so I’m going to have to go through it and make sure none of the wires are loose. We also intend to paint, and build a massive wet bar in the basement.
  8. Move. This will require lots of friends, lots of pizza, and lots of beer. If you’re lucky, nothing will get broken. If you’re REALLY lucky, you’ll take the week off and move all the little stuff so that when your friends show up, all they have to do is move furniture and get drunk. Be prepared for having most of your furniture badly scraped up.
  9. Sit down with a beer and relax. You now own your own home!

You’ll want to be sure to pick up plenty of dog food. It’s all you can really afford to eat now.

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November 7th, 2003 No comments

So HW and I are buying a house, which most of you know already. (Pictures of the new place can be found here.) What you probably aren’t familiar with is the entire home buying process, so I figured I’d enlighten you as to what exactly we did to purchase our new home.

Step 1: Find a realtor. I asked my coworker, Mike, what realtor he used when he bought a house about this time last year, and he recommended Melissa. We clicked with her immediately, for three reasons:

  1. She’s extremely competent.
  2. She’s very tall.
  3. She laughs at most of my stupid jokes.

Step 2: Contact a mortgage company and get preapproved for a mortgage. Get pre-approved for a $300,000 loan. Dance with joy. Realize you can only really afford a $180,000 home. Dance with somewhat mitigated mirth.

Step 3: Establish a price limit for your new home. We went with $175,000.

Step 4: Look at some homes. Every day, Melissa would email me a list of homes, and we would go out about once a week to look at the ones that fit our requirements.

Step 5: Realize that none of the homes that fit your requirements are located in areas in which you want to live (defined in our case as “areas where we wouldn’t need to put snipers on the roof to deter serial murderers”), and bump your price limit up by 10 grand or so.

Step 6: Look at more homes.

Step 7: Increase price limit to $190,000. Become extremely concerned about your ability to buy a home outside of the ghetto.

Step 8: Look at more homes. Weep openly in your realtor’s van.

Step 9: Increase price limit to $200,000. Resolve yourself to eating nothing but cat food and ramen noodles for the next 30 years.

Step 10: Find a glorious home, and put in a bid. Find out that the seller is insane, and refuses to bargain at all on the price. (We found out later she dumped her agent, found a new one, and bumped the price up even more.)

Step 11: Look at more homes. Consider moving in with your parents and spiking their eggs with strychnine so that you can inherit.

Step 12: Find another nice home, and put in a bid. Haggle back and forth for a week. Meet your realtor at a supermarket (Zingo’s, in our case) to sign the papers.

What, you think you’re done? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Now the work just begins!

Having finally settled on a home, you have to make mortgage arrangements (you thought you did that already; you were wrong), find a lawyer, bribe civic officials, and sleep with the zoning commissioner. These, and other issues (somehow I found myself owing a favor to the Godfather) will be covered in the next column.

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November 6th, 2003 No comments

This is it! I’m finally completing the process of puberty. Or at least I’m past the midway point. I now have to shave every day.

That may not seem like an accomplishment in and of itself, but when coupled with the fact that I now have a pretty nice collection of chest hairs (even if 70% are congregated around, for some reason, my right nipple), and recently I’ve had to spend a LOT more time yanking at nosehairs during meetings, I think I’m advancing towards manhood pretty quickly now.

This is great! I’ll be able to ask out all those hot high school girls that would never come near me before I developed the ability to grow 11pm shadow. And then, after I’m convicted of statutory rape (17 year old girls don’t keep quiet about that as much as they used to), I’ll be able to grow a really cool goatee in prison to go along with the “I be chuckie’s bitch” tattoo on my cheek.

Of course, I still can’t grow a moustachio; the hair there consists mostly of fine white hairs. I think one of my aunts has more upper lip growth. And my sideburns don’t actually connect my cheek whiskers to my hairline. I imagine these things will come in due course, and I should be able to grow a nice handlebar just in time for them to fit me for a coffin.


Queries? Problems? Your brain leaking from your nose? I don’t care. Ah, just kidding. Shoot an email to spam(at)matthearn(dot)com.

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November 5th, 2003 No comments

Is it just me, or are people wearing a lot more perfume recently? Perhaps I’m just sensitive to it because I’m a singer. There’s nothing quite like taking a deep breath just as an old lady walks by wearing two gallons of Eckerd’s new scent “Intransigence”, followed by your throat snapping shut and your nose flinging itself from your face, sliding across the floor, leaving a trail of boogery slime.

I find it happens a lot at church, which of course is where I do most of my singing. The choir, luckily, has to deal with the same issues I do, so they mostly don’t wear any stinkum. Unfortunately, I usually find myself sitting within a few seats of the acolytes and communion helpers, none of whom are singers, and at least one of whom seems to have a vat of CK1 in her backyard into which she dips herself after bathing. People that don’t sing never seem to get why it’s so bad, either; if you ask them to maybe tone down the Eau de Nasal Searing, their usual response is, “I smell just fine!” I think I should be allowed to stab them.

It’s even worse when you go out to a party or a club. Apparently the best way to attract women these days is to spray Drakkar Noir onto yourself until you get a nice crusty layer of it dried onto your shirt. Around here, some folks call it a Puerto Rican Shower, which is of course highly insulting and racist, and therefore never fails to make me laugh myself hoarse.

It happens at work as well. We have a woman here who is very nice, but luckily is not someone I have to deal with very often. It’s difficult to talk to someone while holding your breath to avoid passing out. I fail to understand why you need perfume at work. The purpose of smell, last I checked, was to attract potential lovers. Not something you particularly want to do at work.

I can’t even escape it at home! I’ll be on the throne, having some nice quiet time before showering and driving to work. Suddenly Sarah bursts into the room, and fills the air with some kind of cross between daisies, honeysuckle, and wild boar sweat. She then vacates as abruptly as she arrived, leaving me with my head between my legs, trying to breathe whatever fresh air might be left in the toilet bowl beneath me.

I often get my revenge, however. I’ve developed my own scent, which I call Essence of Stench. All you need to make your own batch of it is a large vat of refried beans, and it’s guaranteed to clear the room of odorous individuals.


Queries? Problems? Your brain leaking from your nose? I don’t care. Ah, just kidding. Shoot an email to spam(at)matthearn(dot)com.

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October 28th, 2003 No comments

I am a regular American.

I have a decent job, a hot wife, no kids, a large black truck, I’m buying a house in a few months. I’m college educated, slightly smarter than the average person, and I only work as hard as I need to. But I’m unsatisfied. I’m feeling a bit of ennui. I think the reason is, I don’t have any purpose.

I’m always envious of athletes and artists who are the best at what they do because of their hard work. Sure, all of them were granted at birth some incredible raw talent: fleet feet, musical skill, enormous genitals, etc., but the very best ones take that talent and work hard to develop it. (Of course, I can really only think of one way to develop your already enormous genitals, and it hasn’t exactly propelled me to a lucrative career in cinemax soft porn.)

I can’t think of anything I enjoy doing so much that I could dedicate my life to it and do it 16 hours a day. I chose a career in computers not because I can’t imagine doing anything else, but because it’s reasonably fun and it pays very well. I like playing musical instruments, but I can’t imagine practicing 2 hours every day and working a minimum wage job while playing gigs at “Bob’s House of Pancakes, Beer, and Violent Drunks.” The only real dream I have involves hitting the lottery so I can do whatever I want (most likely playing Playstation 14 hours a day) without having to worry about earning money.

Actually, that’s not completely true. I have lots of dreams, but they tend to be inspired by whatever interesting thing I’ve watched or read about recently. After watching the World Series, I go to the batting cages. Whenever I hear a cool song, I’ll spend a few hours composing some sappy ear candy myself. During the NFL playoffs, I drive to the mall in pads and tackle high school girls for an amusing afternoon.

But like most folks, I’m just living day to day, and I’m just a bit bored with life. What am I missing? Religion? I’ve been going to church most Sundays, with a few years off after college, for 25 years. Jesus can make his life-altering appearance whenever he’s ready, but I’m not just gonna sit around watching TV until that happens. (Okay, of course I am.)

Perhaps it would be different if I didn’t enjoy so many expensive things. Some folks enjoy running, which doesn’t cost much more than a pair of shoes and a lifetime of ankle problems; others like birdwatching, so they buy a notebook and maybe a cheap pair of binoculars and go into the woods. Here’s a short list of my favorite things to do, or things I’d like to try:

  • Ride motorcycles. Thousands of dollars for the bike and gear.
  • Auto-racing. Thousands for a car, plus parts, gas, tires, safety equipment, travel to a track, etc.
  • Play golf. Coupla hundred bucks for clubs, and $40-80 per round.
  • Get drunk in front of the TV. Already own a TV, but $60 a month for cable, $35 for a bottle of Dewar’s that lasts a few weeks.

Which do you think I do more of, racing stock cars, or passing out in my kitchen while heating up a breakfast burrito?

I’m not sure which way this column was heading when I started, so it seems like a good idea to end it as soon as possible, so I’ll close with this: anybody who can help me realize my dream of being independently wealthy, just wire the money to my home. Thanks!


Queries? Problems? Your brain leaking from your nose? I don’t care. Ah, just kidding. Shoot an email to spam(at)matthearn(dot)com.

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October 22nd, 2003 No comments

Okay, here we have ’em, this week’s BCS rankings for the Thing in a Bag Fantasy Football League (TIABFFL)! Okay, nobody will care but the 12 people with teams on this list. Who am I kidding? Nobody will care but me, and perhaps Kyle. (Scroll down past the table of random-ass numbers for explanation and analysis.)

BCS Rank Team Owner Overall Points APRV Yahoo Ranking AYRV Coaches’ Poll ACPV Computer Rankings ACRV Schedule Rank Losses ALV BCS VALUE
1 Bugger Da Hearn Fitzy 761.18 0.25 1 0.5 1 0.25 2 0.5 0.84 1 0.45 2.79
2 The Burninators Hearn 716.08 0.5 3 1.5 2.5 0.625 3 0.75 0.6 3 1.35 5.325
3 Z-Man’s Ironmen Mary 668.06 1.25 2 1 2.33 0.5825 4 1 1.26 2 0.9 5.9925
4 Whistle Tips B-lo 683.3 0.75 4 2 4 1 1 0.25 1.08 3 1.35 6.43
5 2004 ACC Champs Kyle 669.2 1 5 2.5 4 1 6 1.5 0.48 3 1.35 7.83
6 Matt is Gay Milo 655.16 1.5 6 3 6 1.5 5 1.25 0.3 3 1.35 8.9
7 A-ron’s Foosballers A-ron 635 1.75 7 3.5 7 1.75 7 1.75 1.26 3 1.35 11.36
8 The Stankrockers Doug 597.46 2 8 4 6.33 1.5825 8 2 0.84 3 1.35 11.7725
9 2much4u Craig 584.18 2.25 9 4.5 8.66 2.165 10 2.5 0.12 4 1.8 13.335
10 Balls Deep in Men Kas 554.96 2.5 10 5 8.66 2.165 9 2.25 1.44 4 1.8 15.155
11 ESPN Interns Bo 520.22 2.75 12 6 10.66 2.665 11 2.75 0.3 7 3.15 17.615
12 (HundreDolla) Bills Unga 493.6 3 11 5.5 10.5 2.625 12 3 0.84 6 2.7 17.665

KEY:
APRV: Adjusted Points Ranking Value
AYRV: Adjusted Yahoo Ranking Value
ACPV: Adjusted Coaches’ Poll Value
ACRV: Adjusted Computer Rankings Value
ALV: Adjusted Losses Value

A few interesting things about this week’s rankings; Mary, despite having 5 wins, actually sits in 3rd place in the BCS rankings. This is mainly due to having a weak schedule (so far), and simply not throwing up a lot of points. She scores just enough to beat opponents, which of course is all you really need to do. Her close wins also mean she doesn’t do well in the computer rankings (which are almost the exact opposite of the real BCS computers; all my computer model takes into account is how badly you whoop your opponent’s ass).

On the other hand, the Whistle Tips score way high in the computer model because of a number of blowouts. Without the bonus he gets from the computer he’d be in a neck and neck race with Kyle, who started slowly but is gaining momentum. He’s facing a hard schedule, which hurts his overall standings but improves his BCS score.

Fitzy, of course, is cruising along nicely, getting all the first place coaches’ votes, plus tops in Yahoo ranking and number of losses. Over the next few weeks he plays nobody ranked higher than 6th, so look for him to grab at least two more wins and clinch the playoffs by week 10 at the latest, earlier than this pundit has ever seen in fantasy sports.

As for my team, I started strong with a 3 straight wins, and then got handed three straight losses. My win in week 7 will hopefully get me some momentum back, which I’ll need to get through the next few weeks: I meet Loewen in week 8 and Mary in week 10, with a nice break to demolish the ESPN Interns. The Loewen-Hearn matchup this weekend is a make-or-break game for both teams; winner goes to 5-3, with a good chance of moving past Mary in the official standings.

The Interns have a great squad, but seem to have a lot of trouble predicting which players will do well in a given week. I predict that Bo will get out of his run of bad luck and rally to win 4 or 5 of the final 7 games, just enough to miss the playoffs by a whisker, along with Craig, who just seems to be lumbering along in mediocrity for some reason. I think a few poor draft decisions have kept Craig from really shining this year.

Speaking of poor draft decisions, Kas has done well to manage his team to 10th place, considering his draft. Picking last in the first round, he had an opportunity to snag 2 top-15 players; he went with Tiki Barber and Trent Green. I have no idea what he was thinking, but his plan seems to have backfired so far.

I thought Doug’s team would be ranked higher at this point, but he just doesn’t seem to be able to throw the points up there. His 4-3 record is the same as 5 other teams, but the low point totals keep him in the basement. A win against Kas this week would be huge for him, as many of the other 4-3 teams are playing each other. I look for Kyle and Doug to move up to 5-3 this week, with Aaron losing hard to Mary and Smith hitting the brick wall that is “Bugger Da Hearn.”

A-ron has, so far, ridden an easy schedule to a high ranking, although his point totals are pretty high. This team could go either way, and a lot rides on this weekend. If he beats Mary, he goes to 5-3, and could have enough points to jump 3 or 4 spots in the standings. A loss sticks him at 4-4, and the following weeks’ games could go either way; the only gimme-game he gets the rest of the season is a week 9 contest against Kas.

Unga’s squad needs help; his low point totals are keeping him out of the race, even with that 57-55 point squeaker against Bo in week 3. I don’t see him getting more than 1 or 2 more wins this season, although if he really comes on strong in the second half and wins 5 or 6 of the 7 games, he could possibly squeeze into the bottom run of the playoffs. He’d have to be REALLY really lucky, though.

None of that analysis tells the real story, though, which of course is that I’m going 7-0 to finish the season at 11-3 and run through the playoffs like Mo Vaughn through a plate of chicken wings. Count on it.


Queries? Problems? Your brain leaking from your nose? I don’t care. Ah, just kidding. Shoot an email to spam(at)matthearn(dot)com.

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October 20th, 2003 No comments

Someday, at my first AA meeting, they’ll ask me, “Well, Matt, why would you think that drinking scotch at 9 am is a normal pastime?” And I’ll have to simply reply, “Homecoming.” And everyone will smile and nod, and possibly a few will take a quick nip from a hidden flask.

Most folks think that the end-of-year holiday season kicks off with Halloween. They are wrong. Halloween is just an excuse for people to try to eliminate annoying children through diabetic coma. Homecoming is the perfect way to begin the holidays: with a bang! And quite possibly police action!

This year’s University of Delaware Homecoming Spectacular was the first in recent memory that didn’t involve a bunch of my friends arriving at my house for an all-day party. This year, Sarah put the kibosh on another Hearn Homecoming Extravaganza, partly because she didn’t want another case of morons getting drunk and running around the yard screaming expletives at the neighbors, and partly because she was embarrassed when our friends would arrive at 9am and I’d already be trashed and naked.

This year, we actually got tickets for the game, and drove down to tailgate. We parked at the Chrysler plant across the street, using the logic that the UD cops break up all the tailgating as soon as the game starts, but the Chrysler plant is not UD property, so we could hang out after the game, drink some more, wait for the crowd of cars to clear out, and leisurely get on the road. We sat around, saw some people, drank some beers, downed some scotch, admired some sorority whores, and just before noon went over and got our seats for the game. The game itself was a blowout, 55-10, with Delaware leading 35-0 by halftime; by the end, they had their third-string QB in. We did have thunder sticks, though, so our dorky enjoyment was magnified.

After the game, we headed out. I realized I had to pee, so I ran over to the field house where we had drained a few times earlier. UD, in its infinite wisdom, had closed and locked the building. Why? I don’t know. Probably because UD is run by idiots. Anyway, no problem, I just pissed on the building and went to meet my posse at the truck.

Except that for some reason, roughly 200 cops of various organizations were there. When I found my friends, they told me that apparently a riot had started, and mace was involved. Nothing but good times, particularly the stupid woman who hadn’t done anything wrong, but insisted on screaming profanity at a cop until he just arrested her and threw her in the car to shut her up. Moron, party of one!

There’s really nothing that brings you out of your post-game hangover than some pepper-spray and a nightstick to the throat, I’d reckon. Too bad I missed out on the fun. Oh well, there’s always next year!


Queries? Problems? Your brain leaking from your nose? I don’t care. Ah, just kidding. Shoot an email to spam(at)matthearn(dot)com.

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October 17th, 2003 No comments

I’m not sure anymore if there’s a God, but it’s fairly clear that supernatural gears are at work in our lives. Don’t believe in curses? Neither did I, before this week. Okay, maybe just a little. But I tell you now, curses are real and at work in our lives.

The Boston Righteous would slay me for saying it. “There’s no curse, you idiot! Harrumph, Harrumph!” They’re just kidding themselves, the naifs. The Curse of the Bambino is alive and well, and spanking their asses.

Actually, it’s not so much a curse as it is a demonic possession. The Boston Red Sox are possessed by Satan’s minions. The Sox are owned, outright; no lien on that property. The Yanks made a $125,000 balloon payment in 1919 (not to mention the $350,000 loan) and have been dumping on the land ever since.

Ask yourself: your starting pitcher has done fine up to this point, only allowing two home runs and no other runs at all. It’s the bottom of the 8th, one out. He’s got two men on, the tying run at the plate. He’s thrown almost 120 pitches, despite worries of his arm being sore at the beginning of the game. You take him out, right? No way you could leave him in in this situation. No rational human being would let Pedro continue to pitch, particularly the way the Sox bullpen has been knocking down batters like clay pigeons. What does the Sox manager, Grady Little (or as I like to call him, “Moron”), do?

No contest. Any rationality left in Little at this point has been completely suppressed by the demons, the voices in his head. Pedro stays in. 5 minutes later, the three-run lead has disappeared like the dodo, taking with it my girlish laughter and much of my dignity. After that it was merely a matter of waiting for the Yankees to make the game-winning play; Aaron Boone swings at the first pitch of the bottom of the 11th, and the game is over.

The Cubs’ curse is more mundane, which makes it all the more humiliating. They can’t get to a World Series because of a freakin’ GOAT. (Also because their shortstop bobbles easy plays and contributes to giving up 8 runs in 2 outs.) In their case, though, there is a simple solution. ATTENTION WRIGLEY FIELD FRONT OFFICE: GET A DAMN GOAT INTO THE STADIUM FOR ALL GAMES.

The Red Sox problem is not so easily solved, although getting rid of Dan Duquette was a good start. How do you remove a hex based on a man that died in 1948? I don’t think digging his piano out of the harbor is going to square things, but it would at least be worth a try. Maybe pour a bottle of scotch on his grave.

In the end, I guess it doesn’t matter. There are more important things in life to worry about than baseball. Such as when Andy Reid is going to give his crappy West Coast Offense the heave. (#@%&ing Eagles.)


Give the Governor a Harrumph! You watch your ass.


Comments? Questions? Quizno’s got you down? Shoot an email to spam(at)matthearn(dot)com and complain away. I won’t listen, but at least you’ll have the satisfaction of knowing you DID something with your day.

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