Betsy Devine: Funny ha-ha and/or funny peculiar

Making trouble today for a better tomorrow…

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Entries from May 2003

Good things happen in NH

May 9th, 2003 · Comments Off on Good things happen in NH

GoldenrodMenu: Goldenrod Restaurant and Drive-In, Candia Road, Manchester, NH
One of the things I love about NH–I get stuff I want without spending too darn much. Just for example, here’s part of the menu of Manchester’s Goldenrod Restaurant and Drive-In.

And, just for example, my blogfriend Critt drove all the way up from Boston to Nashua last Thursday night. He wanted to see Howard Dean. He was hoping his dream for our nation’s political future could maybe come true. And he too was not disappointed in New Hampshire. Just a short quote from his first-person account of meeting Howard Dean at a NH “Meetup.”

I chose to listen well, rather than attempt to take detailed notes. I’m a blogger, thus I’ll leave voice transcription processing to the pros. Surely a full transcript will become available? But, I will tell you something now – some things I learned and felt from tonight’s meeting.

It is time for us to stop temporizing and compromising.

We are tired of being divided by race.
We are tired of being divided by income.
We are tired of being divided by gender.
We are tired of being divided by sexual orientation.
We are tired of being divided.

Howard Dean’s Call to Action is about giving you, giving me, a reason to stand up for what we believe in….Howard Dean is resolute. And, you know what? 

So am I.

Go, resolute Critt! Go, Howard Dean!

And (woo hoo!) I am tired but resolute too!


Tags: New Hampshire!

Goldenrod Restaurant and Drive-in: NH Fifties Food

May 8th, 2003 · 6 Comments

Goldenrod Restaurant and Drive-in
1681 Candia Road
Manchester, NH
Exit 6 (Hanover St.) from Rte I-93
603-623-9469


Picnic tables outside. Lots of pickup trucks. The menu includes fried smelt, chicken croquettes, grape nut ice cream. If you sit inside, there is a smoking section.

Yes! Yes! In a brand-new world where people confess to the most embarrassing stuff–yes! I confess! I love the Goldenrod.

I love the fried shrimp and belly-clam plate, half and half, with melted butter, red spicy sauce, tartar sauce, salllllty french fries. . I love sitting here with so many NH people, enjoying ourselves, eating yummy high-calorie foods for not much money.

Does God exist? Brilliant philosophers argue either side, and I can’t understand a word they say. My two arguments for a loving God are simple, based on food:

  1. Strawberry-rhubarb pie is possible only because strawberries and rhubarb come in season together.
  2. The Goldenrod Restaurant and Drive-in in Manchester, NH still exists.

(John Fladd at HippoPress.com also gives Goldenrod a super-top rating.)


Tags: New Hampshire!

New–New Hampshire!

May 8th, 2003 · Comments Off on New–New Hampshire!

NH: NH stone wall. Boulders brought rocks to NH and rubbed them smooth. Then lichens and moss and snow and rain made them smoother. Then farmers dug them up out of their fields and built the New England stone walls. Now many lie covered again by decades of falling leaves in renewed NH forests. Who knows what their future will be?
There’s something about the landscape you grew up in. The trees are just the right color, in every season. The mountains have just the right shape. And everyone’s accent is so familiar, so welcome.

The landscape I grew up in is New Hampshire. And New Hampshire always seems just right to me–not just the postcard pretties, the mountains and lakes, but all of it. Manchester’s Elm Street, once the world’s broadest main street. The roadside fruitstands. The bustling strip malls. The gold-domed State Capitol. So many small red-brick towns with few stores left. Families who go for a walk to get ice cream cones and stand around swatting at each other’s mosquitoes.

So, if you wondered why I’m adding a new “New Hampshire” section to my weblog–that’s why!


Tags: New Hampshire!

Magic, Metal, Military, and More

May 6th, 2003 · Comments Off on Magic, Metal, Military, and More

What is the strangest thing you’ve bought on the Web? Hard to narrow it down to just one, isn’t it?

Long ago, in a galaxy far away, I needed sound effects for a joke-telling program. In fact, I needed clips of children laughing.

Picture some sage in a B-grade movie shaking his head, telling this uppity woman, “I’m sorry. Some wonderful things in life are not for sale. One of these [dramatic pause] is the sound of happy little children laughing.”

Well, BZZZZT! Wrong! You can listen to, download, and buy a whole lot of sounds of laughter in the sound-effects emporium of SoundDogs.

I love the SoundDogs website. Their individual sounds are pretty cheap, and you can browse the entire collection without buying anything. What can you hear there? Their sound-effects page starts you off with this clickable catalog?

Airport, Amphibians, Animals, Applause, Aviation, Bars,Restaurants, Basketball, Bells, Birds, Boats,Marine, Buildings, Buses, Cars,Specific, Cars,Various, Cartoons, Casino, Communications, Construction, Crowds, Crowds,Kids, Dogs, Doors, Farm Machines, Feet,Footsteps, Fight, Fires, Foley, Glass, Guns, Hockey,NHL, Horns, Horses, Hospitals, Household, Humans, Industry, Insects, Low Frequency,Boom Tracks, Machines, Magic, Metal, Military, Motorcycles, Nature, Office, Police,Fire, Rain,Thunder, Rocks, Science Fiction, Snow, Sports, Synth, Toys, Traffic, Trains, Trucks,Specific, Trucks,Various, Vehicles, Voices, Water, Whoosh, Winds, Wood

My find of the day was a gladiator striptease.

Go to “Foley” subcategory “Drops,Armour,Shields,Clothing.” A little mood music, please, here comes Russell Crowe. Let the sound effects begin!

Put Down Belt, Put Down Boot, Put Down Boot, Put Down Broken Armor, Put Down Broken Shield, Put Down Buckler Shield, Put Down Chainmail Armor, Put Down Chainmail Armor, Put Down Chainmail Armor, Put Down Cloak, Put Down Glove, Put Down Glove, Put Down Helmet, Put Down Helmet, Put Down Helmet, Put Down Large Shield, Put Down Leather Armor, Put Down Leather Armor, Put Down Leather Armor, Put Down Medium Shield, Put Down Plate Armor, Put Down Small Shield, Put Down Belt, Put Down Boot, Put Down Boot, Put Down Broken Armor, Put Down Broken Shield, Put Down Buckler Shield, Put Down Chainmail Armor, Put Down Chainmail Armor, Put Down Chainmail Armor, Put Down Cloak, Put Down Glove, Put Down Glove, Put Down Helmet, Put Down Helmet, Put Down Helmet, Put Down Large Shield, Put Down Leather Armor, Put Down Leather Armor, Put Down Leather Armor, Put Down Medium Shield, Put Down Plate Armor, Put Down Small Shield.

Bye now–and have fun at SoundDogs!


Tags: My Back Pages

What’s the best way to see Canada in a day?

May 4th, 2003 · 1 Comment

I’m feeling foolish tonight–and I’ve got company, all over the Web. From my nerd joke collection, here are a few favorite bloopers:

  • Questions people ask at Banff Park (Bert Christensen’s Truth & Humour Collection)

    “So it’s eight kilometers away… is that in miles?”
    “How do the Elk know they’re supposed to cross at the “Elk Crossing” signs?”
    “I saw an animal on the way to Banff today – could you tell me what it was?”

  • Questions people ask at Mesa Verde National Park (Compiled by Alan Silverstein):

    “What did they worskip in the kivas — their own made up religion?”
    “Why did they build the ruins so close to the road?”
    “Do you know of any undiscovered ruins?”

  • Questions people ask in Edinburgh, Scotland (Compiled by Alan Silverstein):

    “Do you have any photgraphs of the castle under construction?” (The castle dates back to the 10th century AD).
    “Wouldn’t it have been better if they built the castle nearer the stores?”

  • Remarks from tourists at dinosaur track sites(Compiled by Glen J. Kuban):

    “I know dinosaurs were heavy, but I never dreamed they could punch footprints in solid rock like this!”
    “You know Billy, these dinosaur footprints are hundreds of years old!”

  • Responses to the US Forest Service’s request for backpacker comments:

    “Trails need to be reconstructed. Please avoid building trails that go uphill.”
    “The places where trails do not exist are not well marked.”
    “A small deer came into my camp and stole my bag of pickles. Is there a way I can get reimbursed? Please call.”

So if anyone tells you “There are no foolish questions”–just tell that person to read this foolish page!


Tags: Learn to write funny

Great unspoken lie, great unspoken truth

May 3rd, 2003 · Comments Off on Great unspoken lie, great unspoken truth

From the Official Dean weblog, Howard Dean’s closing remarks at Saturday’s debate:

We can’t win this election if we worry so much about electability that the American people can’t tell the difference between us and the Republicans.

The great unspoken political lie, which comes from stages like this, is elect me and I’ll solve all of your problems.

The great unspoken truth is that the future of this country rests in your hands, not mine.

You have the power to rise up and take this country back. You have the power to give this party the backbone to challenge this President, and all of the harm he has done to our country. You have the power to create jobs, balance the budget, and bring us our dream, which Harry Truman put in our platform in 1948 – health care for every American.

The reason people don’t vote in this country is that we don’t give them a reason to vote. This campaign is about giving all of you a reason to vote.

Abraham Lincoln said, “A government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth.” President Bush has forgotten the ordinary people of this country.

It’s time to take our party back and it’s time to take our country back.


Tags: Good versus Evil

My face just fell…

May 3rd, 2003 · 3 Comments

OldMan: The Old Man of the Mountain, New Hampshire's natural stone profile that looks like a gnarled human face, fell from its mountainside overnight, a state official said Saturday....    The profile, about 40 feet high and 25 feet wide, was one of the most photographed sites in the state and was considered New Hampshire's state symbol, appearing on travel brochures and even the state quarter.    It was located in Franconia State Park, about 70 miles north of Concord, and to the west of Interstate 93, about 1,200 feet above Profile Lake.
Last night, a few tons of granite fell down a NH mountainside, injuring nobody, landing on more tons of granite that fell before it.

But this new heap of granite used to be special. It was NH’s landmark stone profile, our “Old Man of the Mountain.”

Daniel Webster made speeches about it. It was the subject of thousands of amateur sketches and watercolors before anybody invented the camera. Every NH kid was dutifully taken to admire the craggy stone face. After you looked at the face for a while, you looked at the upside-down version reflected in Profile Lake. Then you and your folks could all go drink local birch beer and hike in the Flume.

I grew up in NH, and though I don’t live there now I took my own two daughters to see the Old Man. Now I’m having a lonely feeling inside, thinking of generations stretching ahead who won’t see what I saw, what Daniel Webster saw.

I also grew up enjoying clean air and clean water, a strong Bill of Rights, and a sense of being part of one human family. There wasn’t a darn thing I could have done to save the Old Man, but I’m going to keep working to pass that other stuff along.


Men hang out their signs indicative of their respective trades; shoemakers hang out a gigantic shoe, jewelers a monster watch, and the dentist hangs out a gold tooth; but in the mountains of New Hampshire, God Almighty has hung out a sign to show that there He makes men.

Daniel Webster (1782-1852) — also known as “Black Dan”; “Defender of the Constitution”; “Great Expounder of the Constitution”

Tags: New Hampshire!

Bloggers and alien sex

May 2nd, 2003 · Comments Off on Bloggers and alien sex

Aliens: Fred and Laliari about to kiss, she reveals her real but affectionate nature...
“Ansible,” a crazy Brit sci-fi email newsletter, is one of very few I subscribe to. Today’s issue says that the incomplete biog of sci-fi great Robert L. Forward is now online. Forward is perhaps best known for Dragon’s Egg.

Forward’s neutron star physics and exo-biology are spot-on–he’s a hard-sci-fi master–and _Dragon’s Egg_ also has some of the wackiest, most convincing alien sex scenes ever.

Want more alien sex? You may get a bang out of the species with 3 genders in _The Gods Themselves_ by Asimov.


I met a bunch of great Boston-area bloggers Thursday at Dave Winer’s Harvard blog meeting:

http://www.scripting.com/ “Scripting News: Dave Winer’s weblog about scripting and stuff like that”

Dave was there fixing our blogs and having fun with subjects from Chinese households to NH primaries.

http://radio.weblogs.com/0120875/ “Shiny Glass Beads: Shiny Glass Beads:
Pay it forward: Got a penny? Leave a penny. Need a penny? Take a penny.”

Critt Jarvis blogs about politics, collaborations, and of course blogging. Lots of good snips and links.

http://critt.weblogger.com “One Co-Intelligence Avenue/
Exploring wholeness, interconnectedness, and co-creativity”

A new group blog where Critt Jarvis will be a contributing writer.

http://www.castleblack.net/mikeb/ “Castle Black: It Made Sense at the Time”

Michael Booth’s blog–here is just one insightful quote:

“It is okay, within limits, to talk about an absent person, but when someone is in the room you are supposed to either invite them into the conversation or leave them out of it. The problem with the Web is that the whole world is in the room, so you can’t really talk behind anyone’s back.”

http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/stanleyc/“Stanley’s Weblog: Technology investing is my thing”

Stanley Cohen’s new blog invites comments on micro-cap stocks and broadband strategies.

http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/natureisprofligate/“Nature is Profligate or so it seems… “

Amity Wilczek is a Harvard biology grad student, who blogs about some wide-ranging bio interests with wit and a lot of fun pictures. Disclosure: I do aleady know her, because she’s my daughter.

Jamie, Mike, and some others whose names I don’t know

Start up your weblogs soon!

p.s. Most blogs link to the Daily Show’s own Bush versus Bush debate; I couldn’t get their plug-in to work. That’s why I linked yesterday to a different 12.4 M mov. version


Tags: funny · Learn to write good · Metablogging