Monday, May 15, 2023

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Napoleon Bonaparte on Idiots ...

 

Napoleon Bonaparte

"Never ascribe to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence." 


Napoleon Bonaparte

Dairy Queen Gravy ...

 

Dairy Queen Gravy 

 

by: Tim Rose

 

I went to a Dairy Queen. They have the best chicken strips around - MMMMMM chicken strips. The reason they are the best is because instead of serving them with BBQ sauce or honey mustard or some other sodium benzoate goop, they serve the chicken strips with HOT homestyle white gravy - southern style! YEAH!

 

However on this occasion, I wasn't extremely hungry and I was short on cash, I decided to order the 'kid's meal' version which had 2 strips instead of 4 and was about 3 bucks with a drink and fries. When I ordered it, I of course, requested that it come with the gravy - and plenty of it because chicken strips without gravy are...well, ...McNuggets.

 

So the classic Taco Bell response was - " Sorry we don't serve gravy with the chicken strips." To which my obvious reply was "Do you no longer have the ability to make gravy?" No, we have lots of gravy, we just don't serve it with the kid's meal. Ok, can I have some gravy with my kids meal? No. Why do you not serve the gravy with the kids meal? Because the gravy is HOT.

 

 Exactly. That is kind of the point of having gravy with the chicken strips.

 

We can’t serve gravy with the kids meal.

 

If I were to order the large serving of chicken strips, would I be able to get the HOT gravy?

 

Yes.

 

Then how about giving me the HOT gravy with my kids meal? We cant serve gravy with the kids meal Ok, I'll bite - WHY NOT?

 

Because kids might burn themselves.

 

Ok, but it is for me - I am clearly an adult there are no children with me and I cross my heart that I wont go out and resell it to some wandering 8-year old out on the street and you just said you would give me the gravy if I ordered the larger size. So if it is ok for me to burn myself with a large order, can I not have the freedom to burn myself with the kids meal?

 

We can’t serve gravy with the kids meal.

 

Is the gravy a controlled substance? How about if I order the kids meal and request a side-order of gravy?

 

Sure, we can do that.

 

So I paid the extra $.50 - but I had HOT gravy...

 

 I think I burned my tongue.

 

We Are NOT Alone , The MotherShip...


 

We Are Not Alone by:

 

 Dan Rose

 

Summer of '72...

 

... the North Side of Scottsdale AZ didn't exist at that time ... Pima Road was a dirt rd and Bell Rd was also ...

 

The cliques in high-school back then were fairly distinct ... you were either a :

 

Jock - Sports & School Spirit

CowBoy - boots , hats , chew

Pencil-Geek ( Nerd )

Square - Straight laced

Head - Hippy / Doper / Surfer Dude

Lou - Loser

Rich - Rich Snobs

 

OK , I was a "Head" ...

 

Any how the area of Bell & Pima was a notorious "boondock-party" area that was very cool set-up for stoner teenagers ... The CowBoys had their Bonfire party with about 30 guys drinkin' Coors and standin around sayin stuff like .. whuttt ...? ...  

 

...anyhow ... the guys that wanted to light-up went just past the CowBoys to hang out have a couple Miller High-Lifes' and toke a doobie ... The CowBoys didn't mind this arrangement and when one of the two Scottsdale Police Officers showed up and told them to pour out their Coors and go home , we had enough warning to make sure that no Bob Marley odors were in the air by then and slip out a while later.

 

This ONE particular night Myself and Charlie & Steve & Jim went to "The Majeem" ( Mu-gheeem " ) I don't remember where this came from , just our nick-name for a geographic area to party at night in peace.

 

We got there early that night , passed the CowBoys , waved ... got to the big berm that is now The Central Arizona Project Canal bank ( water from the Colorado River ) ... rolled over it and parked .

 

BEFORE we could crack a cold one , BEFORE we lit a Jay , There it was , right in front of us zooming at our direction with very intense speed and ... quiet ... no dust no wind no noise of any kind , all of the desert animal sounds were silent , we could no longer hear the CowBoys party.

 

Have You ever seen Close Encounters of The Third Kind ...? Remember The Mother Ship ...?

 

Hmmm ... All of us were silent . We stared at this huge THING in front of us bigger than any airplane we had ever seen , more like a Cruise ship suspended right in front of us , with , yes , all the pretty lights and immense proportions , It was there for only about 30 seconds just THERE , just sitting there 30 ft off the ground , whoosh ... as fast as we could comprehend it leaving us to the north and then veering to the East it left us . Not any SOUND ! ...??? no wind no dust no physical normal signs that a thing as big as 2 football fields had just left at thousands of miles per hour. We were all in shock ... I remember that slowly the desert noises started comming back , the Cicadas, the Quail cooing the breeze through the Creosote bushes etc ... We all looked at eachother and all said in unison WHOAAAAH !!!

 

 

WTF was that ...???!!!

 

As we were leaving we drove by the smoldering campfire where the CowBoys had been only a few moments ago. ( I think we went to Taco Bell and went home early that night. )

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

A few years ago I called Charlie and asked , hey Charlie , do you remember that night in '72 when ... "Yup"

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

I can not explain it. I can not tell you what it was. I can without any hesitation in this world tell you:

 

 "We are NOT Alone"

 

SpaceAge

 

You Can't Get That Dessert from here...

 

You Can’t Get That Dessert From Here !

 

Carls Jr. “The CheezeCake Chronicles™”

 

By: Dave Rose   

 

 On a warm day years ago when I was errand-boy for my Dad, I found myself driving down Miller Road in Scottsdale.  It was about lunchtime, and I was probably on my way back from some task for Dad.  (More than likely, it was after lunchtime, and I was probably hungry because I had slept in past noon and missed the free salt-laden Luby's lunch with Dad and Al Stevens.)  I passed the Carl's Jr., but I didn't consciously seek to stop in.  I do like most of their menu, but prices were higher than most other fast food joints, and a loser like me needed to save his last three dollars for the inevitable six-pack of Milwaukee's Best later that night.   Anyway, I wasn't planning on stopping, but my peripheral vision saw the word FREE in two-foot high letters painted on one of their front windows, and my head snapped over as I passed and I quickly read the advertisment.  Ahh, a deal, I said; let's check it out!
   I deftly reversed direction and entered the establishment only a moment later.  Since it was the "dead hours" (post-lunch, pre-dinner) the lobby was empty.  In fact, the entire restaurant was eerily quiet.  I did note later one occupied table in the back of the place, but no one else was to be seen.  I double-checked the deal painted in the window (yes, I can read backwards) and also noted a stand-up card advertising the meal on the counter.  Clearly, this was a promotion that all at the store level knew, or should have known about.   The deal was get a free slice of cheesecake (might have been a new item; not sure) when you order the combo with the featured sandwich.  I think it was some kind of burg with green chiles on it or something similar.  Anyway, I think it was a new sandwich on their menu, and the store had taken great pains to get me to try it.  I mean, paint the windows and give away a pie, too?  Cool!
   So, after confirming that THE DEAL sounded edible and determining I could afford it (and still have three dollars left over for later), I moved up to the counter and assumed the "Well, I'm here at the most obvious register available-looking hungry-got my money in my hand-where's the ordertaker dude so we can get moving" look.  Presently, a Grandma-aged employee shuffled up and amiably greeted me.
   I told her I was driving by and the deal in the window caught my eye, especially the part about the cheesecake, as I pointed to the picture on the counter-card in front of us.   I clearly stated I wanted the Sante Fe Combo Deal, or whatever it was called.  She asked the inevitable "For here or to go?" and I replied "To go, please", as I had no desire to spend more time in this dead zone listening to the Bee Gees or Carly Simon on their Muzak system.  She took my money, accurately gave me my change (!) and said that will be out right away, etc.  Then she handed me a triangular plastic wedge with a number on it, proclaiming I was number 32.  This should have been my first clue all was not well here.  Even the novice Carl's Jr. customer knows that a FOR HERE order gets the wedge, so you can place it on your table and they will actually bring your meal to you.  A TO GO customer gets a plastic bookmark with differently sequenced number on it that you use as a "claim ticket" when they announce your TO GO order is ready.  Actually a pretty efficient system when properly employed in a busy diner because it clears the lobby a bit - you can sit down (FOR HERE) or hang out further away (TO GO) while filling your soda cup and scanning for babes, etc. without worrying about your order sitting on the counter, cooling and unclaimed, because you missed that five second window of eye contact when they look for you and don't see you 'cause you're in the bathroom.......
   Anyway, I filled my cup with carbonated high-fructose corn syrup and obediently sat down in the booth adjacent to the drink station, positioning my number wedge properly for all to see.   Several minutes pass as the speakers shift from Wham! to Barry Manilow.   Please!  Get me outta here!  And then the Grandma arrives with my burger and fries on a tray; as if I wanted to stay!  She places the tray on the table, takes back the wedge, and meanders back behind the counter and disappears.  I was thinking, well, whatever, I'll just grab some napkins and go anyway.  Then I notice, duh, the much-anticipated cheesecake is MISSING.  How can this be?  Do I have to eat my meal and claim the slice as my prize for finishing?  Does Grandma just want to be sure I don't eat it first?  No, of course not, she just forgot.  I have to get up anyway; I'll ask her to get it for me on my way out.  Maybe ask for a bag, too, if it's not too much trouble.
   After a bit of waiting, Grandma reappears and asks if there's something else.  I explain about the missing cheesecake, and she says I didn't order the cheesecake.  I told her I clearly ordered THE DEAL in the window and even had commented about trying a new dessert item by pointing to the picture.  She recalls no such event.   I tell her, look, I came in solely because of the ad, I ordered the item in the ad, I paid for the items in the ad, I would like the cheesecake, please.  She attempts to look at the register receipt to see if in fact it was THE DEAL that I ordered, can't figure out how to do it, and turns away mumbling something about getting the manager.
   I don't know what she said or didn't say, but Manager came out with a bit of a "What Now" look on his face instead of the expected "How May I Help" look.   He says, "Grandma (or Carol or whatever) says you didn't get your cheesecake" and I said that's right.  He says, "Well, in order to get the free cheesecake you needed to order the New Santa Fe Combo (or whatever THE DEAL's real name was) and you ordered the Albuquerque Combo (or some such equivalent) and that doesn't come with the free cheesecake.  So I repeated to him about how when I ordered I told "Carol" that I had seen the ad in the window that was lovingly painted by a professional, how I had pointed to the picture card on the counter and  mentioned my anticipation for a rare dessert to be added to my fast food diet and I don't how I possibly could have said, or misspoke, or been misheard to say "Albuquerque Combo" instead of "Santa Fe Combo", but I suppose anything's possible.   He said "Well, I don't like that you're hassling my employee".  I said I hadn't hassled anyone, I just wanted the free cheesecake, whatever the meal is that gets me that, that's what I came in for.   Besides, I added, I asked for the meal to be prepared TO GO, not FOR HERE, so I'm betting that "Carol" just typed it in wrong or something, it's not that big a deal.   I suggested we start over and make the right sandwich so I can get the cheesecake or, since I've already been here ten minutes and so you don't have to throw anything away, just stick with this burger here, either way is okay with me.  With the merest of grunts and a dirty look, Manager, with incredibly polished precision, reaches under the counter, grabs the correct bag, pops it open with one snap of the wrist, jams the burger in the bottom and crams the fries on top, spins and stoops 180 degress to the reach-in cooler behind him, snaps out the offending cheesecake, spins back and literally, and I mean literally throws the dessert in the bag.  POP! SCRUNCH! SLAP! BAM!  Then he says, and I am NOT making this up "Now get the Hell out of my restaurant and don't come back!"
   For about one full second I fight through the shock of his reaction and prepare to hurl an appropriate epithet in return.  Then I scan my brain for a snippet of any possible training in my storied restaurant experience that would account for Manager to be justified in his actions.  There is no such thing.  In the next second I recognize that well, I got my cheesecake, my burger's now in a bag, and I've been told my presence in no longer appreciated.   Common sense prevails and without more than a curt "Thank You" I turn and leave.
   I wasn't until later that I have decided that "Carol" probably, in her confusion, relayed the story to Manager with some exaggeration or untruths, or perhaps she really did interpret my questioning as being more impolite than it was, I don't know.  But for Manager to handle the situation the way he did was just uncalled for.   I never did return to that store.
   When I got back to the office or wherever I ate the prized cheesecake, it wasn't until then that I realized, or course, that I didn't get a fork.  Sigh.....