Twitter is actually a pretty interesting application.  I have been “tweeting” for a while, and in addition to being able to post my migraine musings, I get to follow the posts of many people I like and respect.  Most of the folks I follow fall into one of three categories: ESPN football commentators, Chefs, and Comic Book creators.  (Oddly, most of the Comic Book creators I follow live in Oregon, making me wonder why it’s such a creative mecca.  If anything happens to Oregon, 80 percent of my comic reading will go away…)

One comic artist I follow in particular is Italian-turned-Southerner Francesco Francavilla.  Francesco uses his twitter feed to “meet” fans such as myself, but to also post links to new art.  Francesco is a brilliant artist and designer, but he also has a goofy sense of humor.  A sense of humor that I totally identify with.  For example, he and writer Paul Tobin came up with an idea for a squadron of attack ducks going after Batman, with Elmer Fudd as Robin.  If that ever gets made into a comic, I will buy several copies.

Want to see for yourself?  Here are links to Francesco’s sites:

If you read Detective Comics, you will soon be more familiar with Francesco’s work, as he has just been announced as the artist for the Commissioner Gordon monthly feature in Detective.  His creator owned action mystery book with Jeff Mariotte, Garrison, is wrapping up soon from DC/Wildstorm comics.

I have come to love Francesco’s work from both a purely artistic sense, and from a design point of view.  Covers done for various series have been so good that I have given up on titles I read just to buy comics with his covers!  He’ll post these wonderful images of classic pulp heroes or homages to classic films…  and then he’ll hit you with an idea for “what if Batman and Star Trek were combined?”  I responded to that idea with a sketch my wife helped dub “Loquackus of Beak,” a borgified duck. (If you’re nice, I’ll post it…)

Francesco is a great artist, a kind fellow, and ultimately responsible for my wanting to get back into cartooning.  At some point, as I recently told Francesco, I would really like to own a piece of his original art.  His reply to me – suggesting a particular character in duck form – triggered a really goofy idea which I had to put to paper.

So, if in the near future I do get back into cartooning and start up a regular posting of comic panels – don’t blame Canada.  Blame Italy.  (Prego!)

And Francesco, thanks for everything.  I still look forward to hoisting an ale with you some day.  In the meantime – enjoy the cartoon.

And so, I present to you, evidence of why sketchy art and bad puns shouldn’t mix…  I present…  THE TURDUCKINATOR!

"I'll be QUACK!"

Click (if you dare) to embiggen.

(By the way, one thing I realized during this exercise is that I really…  REALLY need a scanner.  And better pens.  And a real eraser…  And stock in Michael’s, apparently.)

So…  I noticed recently that Scripps, the company that owns Food Network, DIY and HGTV, has purchased the Travel Channel.  This got me thinking about a couple of things.  First, the Food Network started out being a network supposedly devoted to teaching people how to cook or improve upon already existing skills.  Someone at the network decided that if Emeril needed a Tonight Show style audience and band, then food was entertainment…  So why not give viewers almost nothing related to the original mission statement, and go with dog (biscuit) and pony (keg) shows?

While I’m slightly encouraged by the re-emergence of a channel devoted to teaching everything from basic skills to advanced concepts, I fear for what might happen when advertisers catch on, as they did a few years ago with Food Network.

By the way, if you’re reading this, Alton, I’m still waiting for you to show me how to turn a thirty dollar fish tank into a home sous vide machine.  Another aside: will we now be able to see shows actually about traveling on the Travel Channel, or will ownership by the Food Network simply continue the run of fratboy-appeal overeating shows?  I also wonder if Bourdain is ticked he’s working for Scripps again…

Back to our show…

So, if the Cooking Channel will in theory teach us how to cook…  What then happens to the Food Network?  This got me thinking of what the future landscape of television will be.

I present to you my vision for a few new channels we can expect on the horizon:

  • The Cooking Channel: A network devoted solely to showing you people cooking.  No instruction, no fuss, just voyeuristic video of everyday people cooking.  Graduation to The Next Food Network Star is prohibited.  (Hey!  You in Illinois!  No frying bacon naked!  Get a robe!)
  • The (New) Food Network: Video of nothing but food.  Peppers.  Tomatoes.  Pizza…  If you want to look at food, this is the network for you!  Inspired by the now-classic network…
  • Hearth in Home: During Winter months, it’s video of a fire in the fireplace, and during warm months, it’s an unlit fake log from Noon to midnight, and a flower arrangement in the hearth from Midnight to noon.  Or a sleeping cat.
  • The Article Network: No, it’s not a new news network.  It’s devoted solely to the words “A,” “An,” and “The.”  Why?  Well shoot: y’all watch American Idol…you’ll watch anything.
  • The Warhol Network: Are you a fan of Jon & Kate?  Their precocious 8?  What about those dynamic citizens on Real Housewives or Jersey Shore?  Wonder what happened to all those Survivor losers?  Even Liz Hasselbeck?  Then this is the network for you!  But don’t turn away!  Every attention-hungry jackass that led to the “reality boom” is here, but only for fifteen minutes, at which point they are deported to the Arctic Circle.  However, if you must continue to follow the “exploits” of these nitwits, you have only to thank…
  • The Cold Day Of Hell-raisers Network: Combining America’s love of penguins with their love of preening idiots!  Thanks to a single, stationary camera strategically placed at the North Pole, you can watch every former “reality” star or overall self-important teevee doofus huddle for warmth in front of the camera!
  • The Superiority Network: Saddened by the intelligence level of the average American?  Then this is your network!  Sit back and enjoy infomercials for the EZCracker, the Slap Chop, the Perfect Fit Button, or the Bender Ball, all designed to make you feel far superior to your fellow Americans!  Operators (carefully selected to be dumber than you) are standing by!
  • ESPnueve: Because it’s inevitable.  This channel features Curling and Figure skating, those once-every-four-years cold weather sports people say they love.  Well, here’s the test.  (Network note: if this doesn’t work, we’ll simply combine the sports, and have the Canadian Women’s Curling Team yell constantly at the skaters and see who survives…)
  • The Inferiority Network: Is Eeyore your role model?  Can’t bear to get out of your pajamas, much less your bed?  Then this is your network!  Sit back and enjoy infomercials for the EZCracker, the Slap Chop, the Perfect Fit Button, or the Bender Ball, products designed to make you feel better about yourself and help you learn to interact with the average American!  Operators (carefully selected to be nice to you) are standing by!
  • Foxseeyennen: Hate news but want to at least appear to have a clue?  Then leave your dial (dial?  what’s that?) tuned to the news network, Foxseeyennen, where you get all the day’s news, 24-7, in the latest time-honored tradition: Yelled at you by people too stupid to understand what they’re saying!  (Note: there is nothing wrong with your set; yes, there are two different stories being yelled at once, with a crying narcissist stuck in the middle.  That’s how we like it.  And that’s how you like it too.  Because we said so.)
  • The Channel Channel: Can’t decide what to watch, then have we got a solution for you!  Better get a big teevee, ’cause we’re broadcasting to you every channel live!  However, because there are so many channels, each one is allowed only one pixel, so you may want to sit close.  Bonus: See which historical dictator/genocidal madman is hidden in each day’s broadcast! (Sponsored by MagicEyestrain.)

And there you have it!  Aren’t you glad you’re still paying $200 a month to those cable or satellite companies?  So far?

Wow…  It’s been a while since I posted anything here…  Well, I’ve got a post that will be up in a couple of hours, but I wanted to post a couple of notes and observations on long gone stuff no one cares about anymore:

  • Did anyone watch that two-day “special” on ABC recently called Thin Ice?  It was a screwy ice skating competition designed to take advantage of the recent Olympics, and copy once again the Dancing With the Stars success.  Well, at least ABC hoped it would share that DWTS success.  They even went so far as to copy the judging format: like DWTS, Thin Ice featured a hot Asian with plenty of knowledge of the activity in question (Kristi Yamaguchi), an aging poof no one really cares about (Dick Button), and the out-of-their-skull foreigner (Katarina Witt).  They even had the kinda-cute yet mostly annoying co-host (Elisabeth Hasselbeck) paired with the trying-too-hard host (Kurt Browning).  SOmehow, I doubt this show will be back.
  • Formula One is back!  Woo!  This makes me almost as happy as the fact that Michael Schumacher has been out-raced by his younger team-mate both races so far.
  • Re-listening to the old NPR radio drama performances of Star Wars: Empire Strikes Back, and as good an adaptation as it is, it does make me laugh that to fill “dead air” during purely visual scenes from the film, added dialogue makes Luke whinier!
  • I don’t normally get into (poor choice of words) celebrity scandals or the like, but I have to say…  (A) His name is Jesse James.  That should be clue one that he’s not the most trustworthy.  (B) His second wife was a porn star.  Why are we surprised that he’s a bit freaky? (C) “Skittles Valentine?”  Please.

In the next couple of weeks (starting in a couple of hours), I will be posting entries on the gullibility of the average American, why Virginia’s governor needs some schoolin’, and what’s wrong with thie newest trend in food: Umami.  Thanks for coming back!

Part two begins…

JULY

The Republican party got a sense of deja vu when the courts awarded the vacant senate seat in Minnesota to Al Franken.  India outlawed their ban on homosexuality, going against the cold-weather trend.  Citing a lack of “VP Candidate level perks and an inability to see much financial future in politics,” Sarah Palin resigned as governor of Alaska to better help herself.  44 people, including three New Jersey mayors, were arrested for corruption and money laundering after no one told them the Sopranos was just a TV show.  South Carolina’s charge to infamy burst out of the gates in July when a Conway man was arrested for violating his probation.  He had been on probation for having sex with a horse.  He violated his probation by having sex with the same horse!  Sadly, this means that criminals practicing beastiality are more faithful than the state’s governor.

AUGUST

Figuring Bill was better than the other option, North Korea released the two jailed US journalists at the request of the more masculine (well, visually at least) Clinton.  Canadians everywhere rejoiced as Jeremy Roenick finally retired from the NHL, and moved on to annoy the TV and film industry.  “No Politician Left Behind” poster girl Sarah Palin protested death panels that did not exist and were also not in any form or draft of any legislation whatsoever.  Handlers suggested that no matter how dreamy she thought Heston was, she should stop watching Soylent Green constantly for ideas.  Cited for everything BUT job performance, Ben Bernanke was nominated for another term as head of the Federal Reserve.  A man from South Carolina (of course) died after he robbed a store having spray-painted his face to conceal his identity.  Edward Kennedy, longtime lion of the Senate, and the last politician to say that he cared about “regular folk” and actually do so, succumbed to cancer.  He will be missed.

SEPTEMBER

Kate Gosselin filmed a talk show pilot with Paula Deen, calling into question both the nature of fame and the need for talk shows.  The mayor of Willford in (say it with me) South Carolina issued an order preventing police from chasing certain suspects in order to save the town money.  President Obama gave an address via CCTV to students all over the country, stressing that they work hard and stay in school.  Republicans immediately adopted a “stay lazy and skirt through” policy, modelled after the successful plan of the previous president.  In an emotional and unplanned outburst, Representative Joe Wilson of South Carolina yells out “You Lie!” at the president during his joint session speech about health care.  Wilson would be rebuked by Congress a week later not for his outburst, but for being from South Carolina.  YO! YO! I’M GONNA LET YOU FINISH, YO, BUT I GOTTA SAY THAT CALIFORNIA HAD A WORSE YEAR, YO! Moving on…  Mackenzie Phillips released a book about why we all prefer Valeri Bertinelli.  Glenn Beck announced on Fox and Friends that he believed Obama to be a racist with deep-seeded hatred towards whites.  Obama refuted these claims, saying that he loved “all people.  Well, except for the batshit insane white folks on teevee with no link to reality or sense of decency.”

OCTOBER

Rio De Janiero won the 2016 Olympics over Chicago with a simple proposal of “it’s the summer games.  Whose citizens do you really want to see in bathing suits?”  President Obama wins the Nobel Peace Prize for his July Beer Summit at the White House.  Tiger Woods led the US team to victory in the President’s Cup despite claims he still needed help with his putter.  Ballooning for Children becomes a nationwide rage, quickly replaced by attic hiding.  Roman Polanski is arrested in Switzerland for his 1977 charge of molestation, after he was told to come to Zurich to accept his Publishers Clearing House prize.  The Assistant Attorney General of South (wait for it…) Carolina, Roland Corning, was arrested when he was discovered in a cemetery with various “aids” and an 18-year-old stripper.

NOVEMBER

A heat wave swept through Maine, so the state repealed the new same-sex marriage law.  Analysts pointed to the new 10% unemployment rate as a clear indicator that the recession was over.  It was revealed that there was in fact water on the moon.  It was in a Deer Park dispenser left there from 1969.  The government changed the insurance regulations and standards to change the standard age for mammograms for women to 50, while changing the standard age for free viagra to “whenever a man damn well pleases.”  A 600 pound cow fell from the sky and landed in a swimming pool in…  South Carolina.  Oprah, clearly defying the Mayans, announced her show would end on September 11, 2011.  In response, Jon and Kate ended their television show, and a nation shrugged its shoulders.  Tiger Woods, again having driving problems, ran into the ultimate sand trap.

DECEMBER

President Obama announced on national television that there was a timetable for withdrawal from Afghanistan, but that immediately, troop increases would take place.  The mayor of Arlington Texas, Russell Wiseman, claimed that our “muslim president” strategically timed his announcement to deliberately block the broadcast of A Charlie Brown Christmas.  Obama responded that a real Christian would own the DVD.  GE was able to sell NBC Universal to Comcast by convincing the company that Seinfeld and Cosby were just on a temporary holiday.  The divorce of Jon and Kate Gosselin was finalized, thereby confirming the Republican’s drive to save the sanctity of marriage.  South Carolina almost made it a month, were it not for the announcement by state First Lady Jenny Sanford that she was divorcing her husband, once he got back from the Appalachian Trail.

*Sigh.*

HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYBODY!

(Well – not you, South Carolina…  TRY to stay clean for 2010, okay?)

Part One…

To misquote FDR, 2009 is a year that will live in infamy.  Particularly if you are from South Carolina…  as I am.  While other states tried to take the spotlight from my home state, nothing worked, and my home state led with the biggest “WTF” moments throughout the year.  So, join me as I look back on a strange and screwy 2009, with a special focus on the inglorious, infamous events in and from South Carolina that proved that the South really isn’t all that deep.

JANUARY

The year began with Steve Jobs taking a leave of absence from Apple, prompting Circuit City to close from the stress.  U.S.Air pilot Chelsey “Sully” Sullenberger successfully tested the new Hudson River test landing strip, using flight 1549 as a flotation device.  The year of infamy started for South Carolina when state Senator Robert Ford (a former confidant to Martin Luther King, Jr) entered legislation to ban “saggy pants” and profanity.  No one was sure if the ban on profanity was to quell still lingering “WTF” reactions to Ford’s previous legislation combining MLK day with Confederate Memorial Day.  In one of the longest ceremonies ever, which included a lip-syncing cello and the Mad Hatter, Jesus was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States.  The year’s other theme, “dubious fame for the overworked uterus,” began with a California woman giving birth to eight babies and one agent.  An ignominious end came for the Democratic Party / Hair Club for Men experimental partnership when Rod Blagojevich was formally removed from office in Illinois (his hair was finally extricated in June).  The month ended with Michael Steele, the only black man able to make Cliff Huxtable look more “street” than Shaft, was named head of the Republican Party.

FEBRUARY

The Pittsburgh Steelers won their sixth Super Bowl in team history, in an effort to help the city forget about their baseball team.  Macy’s cut 7,000 jobs, including the Simon Bar Sinister balloon, leaving Underdog no one to chase.  Photos “surfaced” of Olympic hero Michael Phelps trying to get a water-pipe out of its wetsuit.  The photos were taken, of course, in South Carolina.  Congress voted another stimulus package into law, guaranteeing the financial solvency of Bernie Madoff’s lawyers.  Facebook announced new Terms of Service policies, which were promptly protested by millions of users updating their statuses.  Hugo Chavez won a huge victory as President of Venezuela when he had term limits eliminated.  From his ranch in Texas, George W. Bush asked if it was too late to do the same here.  In a televised address to the nation, President Obama announced his plan to end the war in Iraq on August 31, 2010 or December 21, 2012, whichever came first.

MARCH

The year of dubious uterine fame continued with rumors that Jon and Kate Gosselin may be splitting up.  The individual agents for their 8 children had no comment.  (Gosselin is apparently French for “the public’s albatross.”)  New Mexico ended their use of the death penalty, prompting every anti-death penalty group in the country to take sole credit, even though no one was paying attention.  After a long and bitter power struggle the President of Madagascar, Marc Ravalomanana, resigned and was replaced by four penguins.  The U.S. pledged $40 Million to Afghanistan to ‘facilitate’ elections under the new “Cash for Kandahari” program.  A Greenville woman continued South Carolina’s march when after unsuccessfully attempting to secure a babysitter for her four month old, she took the child with her… on an attempted armed robbery.

APRIL

Vermont and Sweden separately legalized gay marriage.  North Korea launched a rocket in order to prove to the rest of the world that they still knew which way was up.  Sallie Mae brought over 2,000 jobs back to the United States from overseas.  All 2,000 were assigned to be tech support for India.  Kim Jong Il celebrated his re-election to President of North Korea by singing “To Dream a Dream” on “Britain’s Got Talent.”  Tax-day “tea-party” protesters cheered on Texas Governor Rick Perry when he threatened that Texas might soon secede from the Union.  Perry does not follow through, even though most of the country was fine with his plan.  South Carolina struck again when a wildfire that ravaged Myrtle Beach and environs was revealed to have been a small debris fire started by a man named Torchi and unsuccessfully snuffed by two different firefighters.  Just in time for the annual Memphis in May barbecue competition, Swine Flu reached epidemic proportions in the U.S.  Longtime Republican Arlen Specter changed affiliations and became a Democrat, citing he “just couldn’t stand that Lieberman guy anymore.”  Justice David Souter resigned, citing a similar feeling towards colleague Antonin Scalia.

MAY

Fifty-to-one long shot Mine That Bird won the Kentucky Derby, reminding the country for a moment that people still race horses.  Maine decided Vermont needed a partner and also legalized same-sex marriage.  Scientists revealed the discovery of a missing link of homo sapien, a 47 million year old primate nicknamed “Ida,” who had apparently died after having gone missing after asking for directions of early hominids.  In an effort to help consumers, Congress passed a law restricting the practices of credit card companies.  The companies replied by destroying the credit ratings of everyone in the country, and bombarding the airwaves with more of those “free credit report” singing ads.  A judge in California ended our collective gastro-suspense, throwing out a lawsuit by a woman claiming she was misled by PepsiCo and Quaker into believing that crunchberries were a real fruit.  The Chinese furthered their reputation for being community-minded when a man contemplating suicide by jumping off a bridge during rush-hour was pushed off the bridge by a driver tired of waiting in traffic.  California banned same-sex marriage, convincing everyone that same-sex marriage is only for those in cold climates.  Judge Sonya Sotomayor was chosen to replace David Souter based solely on her ability to intimidate Scalia.  South Carolina gets the last word in May thanks to a Waffle House waitress who pulled a gun on her customers when they complained that her service wasn’t of a high caliber.

JUNE

New Hampshire spotted an opportunity to finally challenge California for tourism dollars and legalized same-sex marriage.  China blocked any and all commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the Tienanmen Square conflict after entertainers submitted as the proposed opening theme “Tanks for the Memories.”  North Korea sentenced two American journalists to 12 years in prison, or until someone other than Hilary Clinton visits.  Former state election chair got South Carolina rolling in June when he compared first lady Michelle Obama to an escaped gorilla.  In Iran, President Ahmadinejad won a landslide re-election, confirmed by a careful scrutineering of ten percent of the ballots forged by his family.  Former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf, after being arrested for breaking and entering, apparently only needs enhancement surgery to be an adequate example of every use of the word “bust.”  Jon and Kate continued their efforts to be the John and Lorena of the 2000s when they announce their legal separation.  Agents for their 8 kids had no comment, and rumors that Jon was dating the Octomom and that Kate was trying to re-form “Flock of Seaguls” were also dismissed.  Michael Jackson died suddenly, and was honored in a moving ceremony sponsored by Isotoner and Ray-Ban.  Jackson’s death was not enough to keep South Carolina out of the news, as it was revealed that Governor Mark Sanford did not like to hike the Appalachian Trail as reported, but in fact was flying back and forth to South America to have an extramarital affair with an Argentinian woman.  Most South Carolinians breathed a mild sigh of relief that Sanford was not sleeping with a cousin, which would have furthered the embarrassment of South Carolinians everywhere.

However…

The year was young!

Next week…  Part Two!

You may have noticed that the current “Migraine Musing” is from 2004.  That’s because this week marks the 12th birthday for my little corner of the internet(s)!  So, I decided to dredge up a classic rant, particularly for those that may not have read it when I first wrote it in 2004.  It’s not at all a perfect example of this blog or its history, but it is one of the most read articles I ever posted.  Shortly after I posted it, it was linked from Television Without Pity and the Food Network message boards.  Reactions to my post may have contributed to the demise of the FN message boards at the time.  Unfortunately, the post did not mean the end of the “show” in question.  Since another show is referenced in the post, I went ahead and pulled that post as well, a rant on a “cooking” show once aired on the Discovery networks.

It may have to wait until tomorrow, but I have two other posts planned: a review of the Wilson Center program Dialogue, and a recent photo of the wee one!

So enjoy some ICRVN history, and check back soon for current ramblings!

See you then!


From April 18, 2004:

  • SEMI-HOMEMADE = BARELY EDIBLE
    Oh… Dear… Lord…

    There is now officially a worse cooking show than Cookin’ in Brooklyn: Semi-Homemade Cooking with Sandra Lee.

    I want Martha Stewart back. That’s how bad this thing is.

    The whole premise is Martha Stewart for busy women. You know – “homemakers.” Those women supposed to take care of the house while the man of the family earns the money.

    Right.

    I’m not even going to address the tired gender issues there.

    Nope – I’m saving my venom for the wacked-out space case hosting the show, Sandra Lee, whom I have on more than one occasion named “Sandra Dee,” and not always by accident.

    Remember my rant on Cookin’ in Brooklyn where I was (and still am) dumbfounded by the entire bag of pork rinds in the chili recipe?

    This woman tops that. She tops it, adds more crap, and tops it some more. Then colors it pink.

    Now, even I will cut a corner here or there when I can in a recipe to save time. However, at the heart of my cooking is a knowledge that fresh is best. Sandra Lee seems to think that as long as you provide enough alcohol, no one will know better. Ugh.

    This trainwreck of a show is on a couple of times a week, and has become all but required viewing in our house. Not for tips or recipes, but simply to see what she has the gall to do next, and how much alcohol she requires to make it palatable. Virtually every show features a display to showcase the new recipes, and each show has some form of alcoholic cocktail, which she of course samples at every opportunity.

    While Rachel Ray is not as bad, I am bothered a bit by these new cooking shows that emphasize two things: shortcuts and booze. Now, my alcohol consumption borders on teetotalling, mainly because I just have no use for “social drinking.” But I can see where every now and again a nice cocktail or glass of good beer or wine is a good thing. But this woman worries me. I realize she is in the “entertaining” business (you know what, so is Jenna Jameson now that I think about it), but does entertaining these days rely so heavily upon getting smashed?

    Moving on…

    Even if you were to “consume mass quantities” of alcohol, I cannot imagine people with any sort of palate at all eating much, if any, of her recipes. Well, actually, if you were to eat the actual recipes, they’d be better for you. At least you could take solace in the fact that you were getting more nutrition from the fiber in the paper than in whatever ingredients she uses.

    Take the most recent episode of the show, “Mexican Fiesta.” The menu consists of:

    Cream Cheese Flan

    Fiesta Fondue

    Guacamole

    Las Chalupas

    Mango Margaritas

    Mexican Pizza

    Let’s start with the fact that this Mexican Fiesta includes a dish from Sweden and a dish from Italy. That is the first issue I have here. It didn’t even phase Lee that two of her dishes were based on other continents.

    Those Flan? Oy. Evaporated milk, condensed milk, eggs, honey, and cream cheese in a blender, then baked until they jiggle slightly in the center, about 45 minutes. They came out a little overdone, and I couldn’t get the image of the two different canned milk products out of my head. Alton Brown’s recipe for flan is milk, 1/2 and 1/2, vanilla, eggs, sugar. Sounds good. Lee’s just looked, well, odd.

    Fiesta Fondue. Should you ever decide to make this, simply leave a note for your family, kiss the kids, pack a few outfits, and go to the nearest insane asylum, and settle down for a long winter’s nap. The first ingredient is cheese soup. From a can. Then jarred salsa, milk, and pre-shredded cheese. She then stirred all of this in her expensive non-stick pot with a wire whisk for a few minutes. At this point, my stomach was trying to find an easy exit from my body. One of the dippers she suggested? Jicama! Go out of your way to find and cut Jicama into sticks, but by lordDon’t forget the cheese soup!

    Guacamole. I love Guacamole, and it’s easy as hell: I spoon out 2 Haas avocados, and stir in some finely diced tomato, onion and garlic, and add a bit of lime or lemon juice, salt and pepper. Done. Easy. But, apparently there are shortcuts here, too. Lee takes two avocados and adds jarred salsa and sour cream (?!). Oh! And she also adds some “juice from a jar of peppers.” (More on this later.)

    I’m not going to address the margaritas. I’ve said enough already about alcohol.

    However. Las Chalupas and the “Mexican” Pizzas.

    The Mexican Pizza starts with half a can of refried black beans, smeared on a Boboli pizza crust. She then topped this with (over-fried) chorizo and jarred salsa. On top of this goes “Mexican” pre-shredded cheese. After baking for a few minutes, the pizzas are topped with lettuce, tomato, crushed tortilla chips(?!), and ranch dressing!

    I am just waiting to see this show “sponsored by Pepto Bismol.”

    Ranch fricking dressing. Of course, from a bottle. (The “Hidden Valley” envelopes are too stressful, I suppose.)

    And then the “piece de résistance,” which I believe is from the French for “dear lord don’t let her food near my children,” the Las Chalupas, which twice she told us were just like pizzas, but “so much better.” Then, if I may, why make the Mexican Pizzas?!

    For the Pizzas she bought Boboli. For these, she actually fried flour tortillas in oil. Okay – she used way too much oil and the tortilla came out suspiciously like a cowpie, but I digress.

    She then spread a meat mixture that would confound any good lunchlady: beef, “taco seasoning” (usually found right next to the MSG), more jarred salsa, and 1/4 cup “jalapeno juice.” More on the juice later.

    You are supposed to take the fried tortilla, top it with meat and cheese, and broil until the cheese melts, then top it with lettuce, tomato, olives (the recipe clearly states that these olives must be “from a can”), sour cream, and “Store bought guacamole.”

    Um…

    Didn’t she just “semi-make” some?

    At this point, even Mr Spock would throw up his hands, say “Eff it – there’s no logic here at all,” and leave the ship via the airlock in hopes of a swift end.

    The garnish to these things is the store bought guacamole and sour cream, with fresh sliced avocado on top.

    Yes. Fresh sliced avocado on top. Because of course you won’t have any left over from your store bought guacamole.

    Alright.

    I’ve let it go long enough.

    She never once opened the jar of peppers and used a pepper from the jar! She only used the juice. At the end of the final recipe involving “pepper juice,” Lee very proudly turned to the camera and shared “a trick.” And I am not making this up.

    “Now, I want to put the juice away, but I want to show you a little trick. Run this [the jar] underneath the cold water so that you fill your peppers back up. Put this in the refrigerator and then the next time you go to make Mexican food, you have juice all over again. You didn’t have to buy a new jar.”

    At least I can take solace in the fact that she has sired no young, and therefore has not propagated this drivel to the next generation.

    But dear lord – she lived in Wisconsin for crying out loud. She should know better than to use pre-shredded cheese!

    Gah!

    From January 31, 2004:

  • A SIGN THAT THE END IS NEAR…One of the “benefits” of the flu is sleeping a lot and catching some really… Weird stuff on TV. Now, I’m sure I’ve railed on some of the more questionable cooking shows on the Food Network, but I inadvertently stumbled upon what must be the worst cooking show ever. On the Discovery Home & Leisure channel is a series of cooking shows – mostly old PBS stuff, and the occasional new show. One of those new shows features a dip named Alan Harding, host of Cookin’ in Brooklyn. Dear lord. I really now have to ask: why the hell don’t I have a cooking show? People with years of culinary training get shows alongside people whose sole experience in a kitchen is passing through it on the way to the television.What makes this show so bad is the fact that its moronic host has five restaurants in the Brooklyn area! FIVE!Five restaurants, and his recipe for chili includes some very questionable ingredients. I can’t reproduce the entire recipe here for you, but I can give you some samples:

    1 package ground beef

    1/2-1 lb. frozen turkey

    1 fennel

    1/2 eggplant

    3 Tbsp. fig jam

    1/3 jar of pickles (with juice!)

    1/2-1 cup rice

    1 handful of baby arugula

    1 small package of crushed pork rinds

    This is only about one quarter to one third of the ingredients. What struck me about these particular ingredients is the vague nature of their inclusion. Apparently you can pick any size package of beef. Now, not only is that not very helpful, but the turkey is supposed to be ground. Hopefully, those actually (yuk) attempting this recipe will read the whole recipe before shopping. Imagine trying to find a one pound frozen turkey. Read on and you find that the recipe calls for half of an eggplant. Two things here: first, the episode shows that it is a small eggplant, which is never mentioned in the recipe. Second… What kind of freak puts eggplant in chili?! Fig jam? Ew. And he put in some half a cup, not three tablespoons. The pickles? Maybe – but for crying out loud be more specific. In the show he used a small jar of cornichons and pickled onions, but the recipe makes it seems like you could pick a two pound jar of sweet gherkins and be okay. He never mentions anywhere in the recipe that the rice is already cooked (in fact, in the episode he says that you can put in “used Chinese rice.” You know… After you spit it back up again, I suppose). Arugula? Whatever.

    Pork rinds.

    A bag of pork rinds.

    I’m southern, so I like pork rinds. Hell, where I’m from, the only part of the pig you don’t use is the oink.

    But… In chili? Uh, no. First, the recipe says a small package. In the episode he used an eight ounce bag – which is pretty big when you consider the fact that pork rinds are mostly air.

    This is the most ridiculous and disgusting recipe I have ever seen.

    Five restaurants.

    I just don’t know what to say.

    Except that the inclusion of pork rinds in a chili recipe is a true sign of the aporkalypse.

  • It’s been a busy couple of weeks, as we gear up for Squirmese’s 4th birthday and the obligatory bash therein.  Let’s begin the cranium clearing, shall we?

    • Did we really need to have that much coverage given to the death of Michael Jackson?  While I agree he was influential to the worlds of Dance and Music…  It all seemed wildly excessive to me.
    • A friend of mine, John Milewski, is now blogging regularly over at the Huffington Post.  He mostly blogs about politics and world affairs, but if our in-person discussions are any indication, he’s got a good hockey rant coming soon…
    • I really cannot believe how idiotic Bernie Ecclestone and Max Mosely are.  First, they are allowing Formula One racing to fall apart thanks to their egos.  Secondly, Ecclestone actually said to a reporter how much he believed that dictatorships are a good thing, and that Hitler “got things done.”  He also suggested that Mosely, whose dicatatorship over F1 is what’s causing the potential breakup, would be a good Prime Minister for England.  Really?   The same nitwit whose father was the head of the British Union of Fascists and a supporter of Hitler and Mussolini?
    • RIP, Mollie Sugden.
    • For that matter, RIP, Steve McNair.  Whatever exactly happened (and I doubt we’ll ever really know) the biggest tragedy is that his family (particularly his wife and four children) have to pick up the pieces in a national spotlight.
    • I just have to say that Gretchen Carlson from Fox & Friends is a real nitwit.  Of course, that means nothing has changed for her since her WRIC days in Richmond.  (Just ask her about Kevin McGraw…)
    • Finally (at least for these mini-notes), did y’all see the story about the Chinese man who held up traffic at a bridge in Guangzhou?  He was threatening to commit suicide by jumping off the bridge, and after several hours, a concerned citizen decided to help the man…  By pushing him off the bridge!  This kind of compassion is clearly why people from North Korea are fleeing into China!
    • More in the next two posts…

    While I realize that this blog isn’t exactly setting any records for readership, I have tried to accomodate anyone who does read my little corner of the ‘net, whether or not I know them, making the blog as open as possible for comments and discussion.

    Not so much anymore.

    The last real comment I got about a post was in November, and since then I have been bombarded with spam, and it takes up enough time that I have decided to make one final change to the comments rules for this site.

    If you want to comment, you have to set up a WordPress login for yourself, plain and simple.  Sorry to go draconian, but it has become a necessary step to keep me from wasting as much as 20 minutes a day cleaning out spam.

    Forgive me a moment of digression first…  And yes, it matters:

    Remember Designing Women, the CBS series featuring Dixie Carter and Annie Potts as decorators in Atlanta during the Reagan/Bush I years?

    Okay…  Good.

    Remember the Alice Ghostley character Bernice Clifton, who had an unusual interest in Anthony, played by Meschach Taylor?

    Remember how looney Bernice was?

    Why am I bringing this up?

    Because – and this is probably just me – every time I see President Obama and Nancy Pelosi in the same place, I cringe in fear that she will break out singing “Black Man!  Black Man!  Where did you come from?!” just like Bernice Clifton.

    Another one of those multi-topic posts of whatever I’ve had on the brain of late.  Starting with:

    • Apparently, not long after leaving office while giving a business address in Canada, former President Bush announced he would soon begin an international speaking tour.  Like his town hall meetings, the audience is to be preselected to his skills as an orator.  Bush hopes to be able to open for Raffi at least ten times this year.
    • Alton Brown recently sat for a series of video interviews on the food blog Serious Eats.  The best is the description of some fried chicken he had during the motorcycle tour broadcast on Feasting on Asphalt.
    • It amazes me that in today’s economy, where auto companies are severing ties with dealers (and not allowing said dealers to return the cars to the manufacturers) and nearly every industry is downsizing, that this online dealer remains in business.  After all, it’s hard to slum it in a $150 sundress.
    • Caught a few minutes of a cooking show on American Life TV (yes – before a rerun of M:I) where one ingredient was referred to as Graham Masilla.  Ah, the wonders of diversity.
    • A new football league is starting up.  No, not the UFL…  The LFL – the Lingerie Football League.  I’m guessing this is Victoria’s Secret.  (This, or that lingerie models stink in a 3-4 defensive formation.)
    • Saw Star Trek with the wife.  Holy crap what a great movie!
    • And finally, I’ve succumbed.  I’ve been borgified.  I’ve started a Twitter account.  Weep for me.