Posted by: bmj2k | February 5, 2010

Breakfast with Bob and Betty

February 5, 2010

Need some help here folks.
Back in the early to mid-eighties, there was a morning radio show called Breakfast with Bob and Betty. It aired in NYC on, I think, the old WMCA. (That was long after it left the “Good Guys” music format behind, but long before the current “God Guys” Christian talk format.

It was a really strange show. I was young and I used to listen to it as I got ready for school. I’m not sure what this says about me. Every other kid was listening to Z100 (their motto: “You can never get too much A Flock of Seagulls”) pop hits, and I was listening to old folks talk about used razor blades.

So what was the show about? It was an attempt to recreate an old-style radio show from the 40’s or 50’s. Bob and Betty were a real-life senior citizen married couple who “invited” listeners into their “kitchen” where they served coffee (coffee was a major sponsor) and discussed the day’s events. “Neighbors” would “drop by” to give traffic and weather updates. Strangely, they would drop by regularly every twenty minutes or so. Bob and Betty should have gotten a better lock.

Bob and Betty would read the paper and discuss news events, and they would sometimes, somehow, include the listeners in their conversation.

BOB: I see that the President is at it again.
BETTY: Oh dear. And what do our listeners think?
BOB: They’re shaking their heads in amazement.
BETTY: Would they like more Maxwell House Dark Blend Coffee, from the container with the Stay-Fresh seal?
BOB: Of course!
BETTY: Yummm!

They were also folksy and talked about such things as when to replace your razor-blades. Bob, a few days later, claimed that the listeners didn’t stop calling about that topic. It really caused a stir. (It seems that Bob changed blades every month, while his listeners were aghast- they got three months out of a blade. I think they were just too cheap to buy a new blade.) They talked about cleaning your drapes, washing the dog, all the sorts of things you’d expect a happily married 1950’s-style radio couple to talk about on the radio.

But they weren’t happily married. It was clear that they were having real-life marriage problems and they often seeped into the show. Some days the banter between the two of them would be icy. The coolness between them was thick and palpable. Some days they wouldn’t talk to each other at all, and the newsreader would be stuck in the middle.

BOB: I see that the President is at it again.
NEWSMAN: Well, he is proposing some new initiatives that-
BETTY: Perhaps our listeners would like more Maxwell House Dark Blend Coffee, from the container with the Stay-Fresh seal?
NEWSMAN: Sure, um, more coffee would be great.
BOB: What were you saying about the President’s new initiatives?
NEWSMAN: Uh, he feels that-
BETTY: I think our sponsor is more important than the President, don’t you?
BOB: I’m stepping out on the porch for a smoke.

On other days, you’d get only one of them, and you were never sure if it would be Breakfast with Bob or Betty. On those days the newsreader would sit in all day and banter. Invariably, the remaining host would take thinly-veiled shots at the absent host.

Soon enough both Bob and Betty were fired and the newsman became the host of a new morning news program.

That’s really all I remember. Did any of you listen to the show? Can any of you give me any more information? I really want to know.

Posted by: bmj2k | February 3, 2010

Pepsi Points

February 1, 2010

I saw that on a billboard advertising Gatorade. Or “G” as they now call it. Like “Gatorade” is too hard to remember. Anyway, on with the blog. (Or “B” as I call it.)

Great quotes by great people. Wisdom. Words to live by and other crap. Below is a list of some of the quotes that I find particularly relevant and useful. Hey, if I find them worthy, why shouldn’t you? (Besides that fact that you may be better educated or wiser than me, I mean.)

I felt like poisoning a monk- Umberto Eco
Right up there with “Because it was there” and “Why do you rob banks? Because that’s where the money is” is this gem. Umberto Eco came up with this when asked “Why did you write The Name of the Rose?” I think it is much nicer than saying F- you. Think about it. The next time some idiot asks you why you did so and so, just answer “Because I felt like poisoning a monk.” That’ll shut them up.

The two most abundant things in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity- Harlan Ellison
Who doesn’t love Harlan Ellison, one of our time’s most curmudgeonly smug writers and all around cuddly cynical warmth? Is any of that even possible? Anyway, hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, fueling suns, thus explaining why there is so much stupidity- everyone is full of hot air.

Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority- Dr. Who, The Wheel in Space
(I follow Harlan Ellison with Doctor Who for no other reason than Ellison once wrote an introduction for some Doctor Who novels. Simple as that.)
I’m not saying that Doctor Who coined that phrase, but that was the first time I heard it so it will forever be a Doctor Who quote in my book. And since this is my blog, it is my book.

If one is to be called a liar, one may as well make an effort to deserve the name- AA Milne
The creator of Winnie the Pooh said that? What a creep.

I don’t deserve this award, but I have arthritis and I don’t deserve that either- Jack Benny
In other words, shit happens, so if you happen to stumble into something good, shut up, take the money, and run. Jack Benny should know. In one of his most famous bits, he was asked at gunpoint “your money or your life.” After a long pause, the gunman demanded an answer. Benny responded with “Wait a minute, I’m thinking!” What a genius. He didn’t even poop his pants.

Often in life one is confronted with a situation that demands a classy reply. One can do worse than one of these classy gems. If none of them leap to mind, you can still shout HYPERIZIN’ ILL-DUNKIFICATION! and run.

Posted by: bmj2k | January 27, 2010

STOP THE PHONE BOOK INSANITY! (Phone Book Blog 2)

January 27, 2010

In my last blog, I went on and on about the FOUR- yes, freakin’ FOUR- phone books that arrived at my house. Well today I got a fifth. Who in the world needs FIVE phone books? This one was the Ambassador Yellow Pages, and it may actually have been the real yellow pages since A- it was all spelled out in two words, not an easily trademarked one (yellowpages) and B- it had that old “let your fingers do the walking” logo. So I did.

I picked it up in my fingers and walked it straight out to the recycling bin.

Does anyone even look in that book anymore? And who would look in four yellow pages? They all have the same information! At least the cosmos had the right sense to send me only one white pages, but why why oh why did I get four competing yellow pages? How can anyone make any money from that? How can I make money from that?

I wanted to complain and ironically I could not find the telephone book’s telephone number.

Posted by: bmj2k | January 24, 2010

The Phone Book Again? Really?

January 24, 2010

Last week’s snow storm dumped 48 inches of phone book right in the lobby of my apartment building. That’s right, in the middle of the snowstorm, when even the mail carriers took the day off to polish their shotguns, the phone books got through.

And nobody cared.

Why should they? For most of the history of the phone book it has been totally useless. When Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone, he was the only name in the phone book. Back then, the book was a mere 19 pages, 18 ½ of them ads for lawyers and sexual dysfunction pills. As soon as a second phone was sold, he promptly had his number unlisted.

As phones spread to rural areas, so did the phone book. (Phone books follow the phones like hookers follow sailors. And herpes. But I digress.) Farmers, though, had no use for the phone book as every single call had to go through an operator who would dial the number for you, then listen in on your call.

FARMER JOE: Hello, Sam?
SAM: Joe? Is that you?
FARMER JOE: Yep. Has you seen my boy Lucas?
SAM: Not since last week’s plowing. Anything wrong?
FARMER JOE: Tarnation, he’s been messing around with that Josie Smith girl. Claims he got her with child.
OPERATOR: Oh no he di’n’t! Shut yo’ mouth!

In the 1970’s phone books in New York City were the size of the Federal Deficit and required Charles Atlas to carry around on his back. They were no fewer than 3,000 pages long and were good for standing on to reach high shelves or to smash bugs with. You couldn’t actually look up any phone numbers because the paper was so thin the pages shredded as soon as you tried to turn them. On the plus side it was easy to line hamster cages, but on the minus side made the book fairly useless. To make matters worse, we got two phone books- a white one for residential listings and a yellow one for ads, er, I mean commercial listings.

Today’s phone book is a lot thinner, mainly because whoever is smart enough to own a phone is also smart enough to know how to unlist it. Who actually has his home number in the phone book? Who wants to be contacted? Are they so lonely that they are begging people to find them? In the classic film Rat Pfink A Boo Boo (I am totally not making that one up, Google it.) the heroine CB Beaumont is terrorized by three thugs named Link, Hammer, and Benjie simply because they picked her number at random out of a phone book. (Unfortunately for them, she is also the girlfriend of Batman rip-off, Rat Pfink. I’m telling you, look this up.) I am not going to take any chances on being terrorized by thugs, mainly because I am not dating a superhero.

BTW- Rat Pfink A Boo Boo also stars “Romeo Barrymore” and Kogar the Swinging Ape. Seriously, stop reading this and check out that film.

Anyway, on this particular day that I started writing about and then totally ignored, the phone books arrived, all four of them.

Four? Yes, four. Four different phone books, all really the same.

The first one is The Yellowbook, which I think is the new name of the old Yellow Pages. “Yellow Pages” apparently could not be trademarked. (Copywrited? Whatever.) More on this later. It is about 650 pages for all the businesses in Brooklyn and comes with a big magnet glued to the front for a law company fronted by a washed up actor. Which law company? Take your pick. They are all fronted by washed up actors.

The next is the Superyellowpages, all one word, by Verizon (their motto- We Don’t Care Too Much.) See what I mean about not being able to trademark Yellow Pages? This book has its title all in one convenient word. It just trips off your tongue, say it with me, slowly, SSUuuperrrrRRYELLlllloooowpaaaaaagessssssss. Ahh! Anyway, I’m not so sure what’s so super about it because A- it has the same ads as the Yellowbook, and B- is an inch shorter, making it that much less effective for smashing bugs.

The third book was even smaller, a slim 450 pages. Also by Verizon, it was the local book for my specific neighborhood. This one combines the residential and commercial listings into one useless book. Why is it useless? Because I, like most people in the city, drive, and like to frequent businesses more than five blocks away. Also, being so thin, you can never reach the top shelf by standing on it no matter how good you are at tippy toes.

Lastly and most uselessly, is the Verizon White Pages. Although it is easily the thickest of the bunch, over a thousand pages, there is nobody in it. You have a cell phone- are you in it? No. I have a cell phone- am I in it? No. People with cell phones, which are almost everyone, don’t get into the phone book. And Verizon should know this; they are one of the largest cell phone providers, despite being inept and full of a-holes. (Yes, I carry a grudge.)

And why pick up the phone book anyway? If I want a number, and the phone is in my hand, I call 411 and the operator (HA! HA! There are no more operators, they are all computers!) connects me. Or I can find a number online. Or better yet I find the website online, or just use Twitter which doesn’t require a phone at all.

This is why, one week after they were dumped in my lobby, 99% of them were dumped outside with the trash.

January 18, 2010

Who is the best 1970’s television role model?

Round Three was a hard fought brawl between two icons of justice, Barnaby Jones and Abe Vigoda. Despite heavy Geritol use and accusations of Viagra-juicing, the clear winner was Fish, setting up our

FINAL ROUND
THREE-WAY
WINNER-TAKE-ALL
BRAWL-FOR-IT -ALL:
Esther Rolle        Vs.     “The Man”        Vs. The Fish                               
“panties”                 “Which way to the Wonka-crapper?”    First GQ cover

Before declaring a winner, let’s take a final look at our contestants.

I’m not sure what is going on in this picture, but JJ sure looks uncomfortable. Any minute I expect Chris Hansen to walk out of Thelma’s bedroom and offer some lemonade.

Here we see Jack “The Man” Albertson in a scene from the 1977 made-for TV movie, “Not Without my Psoriasis,” which exposed the then-little known danger of moles and skin lesions.

For decades, Abe Vigoda has been plagued by rumors of his death. These rumors began in 1978, when he actually died, and later came back as a mummy.

Here we see him attending his own funeral:

Before we reveal the winner, what does the Best 1970’s TV Role Model win? This fabulous trophy!

No, not those fabulous trophies, this fabulous trophy:

Before we reveal the winner, let’s take a look at two men who almost made the finals.

 QUINCY, M.E.

Quincy was ruled ineligible when it was discovered that he used performance enhancing drugs and lied to Congress during the MLB steroid inquiry.

 FRED MERTZ

Despite having died in 1966, we wanted to include him for the memorable TVLand commercial that featured his pants.

 Yes, his pants.

AND THE WINNER IS:

 WHITMAN MAYO!

Whitman Mayo?

Yes, Whitman Mayo.
Whitman Mayo: Sanford and Son’s Grady.
Whitman Mayo:  Diff’rent Strokes mean Uncle Jethro, who tried to take Willis and Arnold away from Mr. Whitey, er, I mean Drummund.
Whitman Mayo: Star of

 Crash Corrigan Meets The Kelp Men


This serial is also notable as the first clothed appearance of porn star Monte Blue.

In this serial, Whitman Mayo spent 13 spine-tingling chapters evading this tin can robot:


Eventually, Whitman Mayo defeated the robots with a device that looked suspiciously like a cross between a fishing pole and a view master. In Chapter Eleven, Flaming Death, Mayo cemented his status as the Best TV Role Model of the 1970’s when he first uttered the immortal words that would become his catchphrase, “Great Googley Moogley!”

That locution, that seedy beard, that eerie resemblance to Wally “Famous” Amos, truly, the Best TV Role Model of the 1970’s!

One can only wonder what would happen if he were pitted against the Best TV Role Model of the 1980’s…..

NOT COMING SOON:

Who Has The Best TV Mustache?

Posted by: bmj2k | January 7, 2010

1970’s Role Models Round Three

January 8, 2010

Who is the best 1970’s television role model?

Round two was a hard-fought battle of the unlikely, with “The Man” coming out of retirement to win a Charo-fueled win over Sweat Hog Juan Epstein. What did it prove? Sadly, that “The Man” can still keep a Latino down. (Just ask anyone whose bank turned them down for a loan.)

Round Three
“Battle of the Lawmen”

BARNABY JONES                           VS.                                             FISH          

 

BARNABY JONES                                                                         BARNEY MILLER

Barnaby Jones was a Quinn Martin production. Quinn Martin was a prolific TV producer who had the idea to cast an old man in a detective show. Unfortunately, the actor was a bit too old, as evidenced by the picture above, where Barnaby is not quite sure which is the phone and which is the gun. In the picture below, a gun-wielding thug has almost talked Barnaby into buying into his time-share.

 

The casting of the lead role was controversial from the start. Quinn Martin wanted an established television star for the role. After a long and deliberate casting process, he settled on this man, currently starring in the autobiographical Beverly Hillbillies:

      

It was never explained just how Barnaby made the jump from hillbilly to cop, but in a strange twist, both of this round’s contestants served together in an elite peace-keeping force:

 

Detective Phil Fish was born well over one hundred years ago, yet no matter how old he was, he never looked his age. He looked at least twice his age.

Early on it was noted that Detective Phillip “Abe Vigoda” Fish bore an eerie similarity to another television personality, Richard Simmons.

 

However, as he lost his hair, he became a dead ringer for Boris Karloff.

    

As you can tell from these rare photos, the resemblance was uncanny.

Fish went on to star in a series of films with Bela Lugosi, whose main claims to fame were that he played Dracula, became a drug addict, and he played Dracula.

 

This particular still is taken from 1935’s Universal release, The Cramped Fingers of Evil, starring Detective Fish as Professor Barnabas Lennsing and Bela Lugosi as Dr.Vampire J. Hammitup.

The battle was very close, but the win has to go to Fish. Why? Check out this very rare comic book from 1979. Barnaby Jones never had a view-master reel, let alone his own comic book.

 

WINNER: FISH

Coming Soon:

FINAL THREE-WAY
WINNER-TAKE-ALL
BRAWL-FOR-IT -ALL:

Esther Rolle Vs. “The Man” Vs. The Fish

Posted by: bmj2k | January 4, 2010

1970’s Role Models Round Two

January 4, 2010

Who is the best 1970’s television role model?

In round one, overweight single mother Esther Rolle beat overweight single mother Mabel King to advance to the next round. What powered Esther to the win? Her picture was funnier.

Round Two

“THE MAN”                                                VS.                              JUAN EPSTEIN

               

CHICO AND THE MAN                                            WELCOME BACK KOTTER

Chico and The Man was the heartwarming story of a grumpy old racist who took in Freddie Prinze Jr.’s father. He was drunk most of the time, due to the fact that he kept a bottle of whiskey hidden in his hat. Many years before, The Man traveled through time in a time machine he invented in his garage.

 

However, heavy drinking had left him a shell of his former self. To survive, he became a part time mechanic, part time gigolo.

 

1970’s icon Charo often paid for his services. What was Charo famous for? I don’t know.


“Cuchi cuchi!”

Juan Epstein was a Sweat Hog. What does that mean? You don’t want to know. Welcome Back Kotter was best known for igniting the career of Marcia Strassman.

 

Ms. Strassman went on to guest star in an episode of Murder, She Wrote and later had an uncredited role in 1994’s Honey, I Shrunk the Audience. (I know it sounds like I made that up, but sadly, I did not.)

Epstein was one of the many twenty-something’s that television has tried to pass off as high school kids over the years. His teacher was this man, Gabe Kaplan, professional poker player.

 

Look at that mustache. Would you trust that man with your kids? At any rate, Juan Epstein was a good for nothing, but he always had a note from his mother. No homework? He had a note. No book report? He had a note. No alibi for the night the Sweat Hogs knocked over the liquor store? Don’t worry; he had a note from his mom.

WINNER: “THE MAN”

Why? So I have an excuse to run one more picture of Charo:

 

 Coming Soon: Round Three: Barnaby Jones Vs. Fish

Posted by: bmj2k | January 1, 2010

1970’s TV Role Models

January 1, 2010

It is the New Year, a time for reflection. I find myself thinking back on the many things I did and did not accomplish over the past twelve months. One thing sticks out, and for my own peace of mind, it is time to answer the question

Who is the best 1970’s television role model?

Round One

MABEL KING VS. ESTHER ROLLE

WHAT’S HAPPENING? Vs. GOOD TIMES

Mama was the semi-rotund mother of Dee and Raj, and by extension the mother of their friends, Dwayne and Rerun, who smelled so bad that his odor lingered in a room ten minutes after he left, hence his name. Mama worked as a housekeeper during the day and exotic dancer at night. Mama’s style of parenting was the “threaten to kill” style, and Dee would often taunt Raj with “ohhhhhh, Mama’s gonna kill you and dismember your corpse!” (Raj, by the way, is short for Rajer. Sigh.) Her husband, played by Thalmus Rasulala, had walked out on her years earlier. He was a womanizer and a gambler. He is seen here, sexing it up with Pam Grier.

On the other hand, he did manage to destroy Blacula in the film named, coincidentally, Blacula. Any man who could banish the immortal William Marshall could not have been that bad a husband.

NOTE: When searching for Mabel King, do not confuse her with professional wrestler King Mabel, though there is a slight resemblance.

Esther Rolle played Miami Florida, and her biggest challenge was her son JJ:

In some episodes JJ delivered chicken for a restaurant and he wore a chicken on his head. No stereotype there, mover along.

Miami also had an absent husband. James had died some years earlier when working on the Alaskan Pipeline. During a freak snowstorm, James drove his truck into the lair of an angry polar bear and neither made it out alive. It was a very close thing, however, as this is what the bear had to face:

His body was never recovered, and many suspect a CIA cover-up, as months later an “Admiral James” took a high level cabinet position.

It was never clear what Miami did for a living, though she sometimes left the house early in the morning and returned late at night. Eventually she remarried this man,

known on the professional golf circuit as Buffalo Woods.

In the final analysis, the contest between Mabel King and Esther Rolle comes down to intelligence, and Esther Rolle was smart enough to leave her show, at least until the producers lured her back with more money.

WINNER: ESTHER ROLLE

Coming Soon: Round Two: “The Man” Vs. Epstein

Barnaby Jones

Abe Vigoda

Crest Cavity Creeps

Posted by: bmj2k | December 28, 2009

Monday Night Was Magical 3- Enough of Ruby Tuesday

December 28, 2009

In order to spare you the pain and discomfort usually caused by reading my previous blogs, I’m providing you with a handy QUICK RECAP of the previous two blogs in this series. Of course, there is little I can do to spare you the pain and discomfort of reading this new blog, but hey, we all take our chances in life.

QUICK RECAP: The Earth cooled and life began. Plants flourished on land, while in the seas the oceans teemed with life. Eventually life got a foothold on land, the dinosaurs rose and fell, extreme weather conditions totally unrelated to man-made carbon emissions caused catastrophic Earth changes in a scientifically proven cyclical nature, and millions of years later my brother and I went into the city. (Brooklyn people always call Manhattan “The City,” as if we live in bucolic wonderland this side of the Battery Tunnel. But I digress.) We were on our way to a Rangers game, but first we shopped at Mid-Town Comics (their motto: “If you can make it up our stairs, why not spend $200 on graphic novels?”)

As our story today opens, Curtis is still recovering from his car accident, Rhonda and Janine are reading Blake’s diary, and my brother and I have made our way to the second floor of an oddly dark brown Ruby Tuesday restaurant, have been seated, and are perusing the menu while our black-clad Dark Jedi, er, waiter, hovers nearby….

The menu was-
“Let me tell you about our menu.” The waiter buzzed right in over and around my right shoulder and hovered over us. He had perfect diction, the kind you only hear when someone is trying to make a bus driver understand English in a non-English speaking country. I only wish I could enunciate like him. Not only did you hear each individual syllable, but you could hear the perfect echo off of each of his perfect teeth. Like every other server in the place, he seemed to be an (I assume) out-of work actor. I must say, he had memorized this script well.

“Our menu has changed recently. Have you been to a Ruby Tuesday before?”
“Well, I-“
“That’s wonderful. We now offer a greatly expanded salad bar, with new and fresh sides. Our salad bar used to have only one type of lettuce, but as you may have seen as you passed through to your table, we now have three.”
“Uh, I noticed.”
“That’s wonderful. You may see if you open your menu that we now have a selection of steaks that covers nearly half the page. Our old steak section only went down about a quarter of the page.”
“Ah.”
“That’s wonderful. Below the steak you’ll find out selection of mini-burgers. These are fresh ground beef and come in a variety of types, each with a selection of special sides. If you prefer soup…?”
“Soup? I don’t know-“
“That’s wonderful. Do you have any food allergies I should be aware of? Because I can alert you to various potentially dangerous items on our menu that may cause a hazard to you wellbeing.”
“I’m allergic to penicillin. Do you have antibiotics on your menu?”
“Ha, ha, no.”
“That’s wonderful. Give us a couple of minutes to decide.”

I know what you’re thinking. And no, I’m not making this up. In fact, I have considerably edited his speech. To me, the menu looked like the menu at any other franchise, except the food was pictured on square plates instead of round. Truthfully, despite the fact that I had, in reality, not noticed the three kinds of lettuce in the salad bar, I did notice the square plates. They were nice.

Our server buzzed away, nearly ten whole feet, and buzzed around another table. They already had their food but he buzzed about them just in case.

When he flew back, I made the mistake of ordering a lemonade.
“Ohh, wonderful choice. Our lemonade comes in three flavors, and you have three choices of fruit to mix on the bottom.”
Ugh! After wondering if I could just get a Pepsi, I got a regular lemonade with peaches on the bottom. It may be tart, I was warned.

 It was. It was so tart as to be undrinkable and I asked for a Pepsi instead.
“That’s wonderful.”

We finally got around to actually ordering actual, “wonderful,” food. I had two mini burgers with the salad bar on the side. My brother ordered some sort of bacon cheeseburger (well done) with a silly pseudo-French name. (“Le Bacon Burger Avec Fromage, or something like that.) His appetizer (boneless buffalo wings like you could get anywhere, even Wendy’s, but only be charged a fraction of the Ruby Tuesday price) came and I went to the salad bar.

True, the salad bar did feature three types of lettuce and square plates. What it did not feature were croutons. In place of croutons was a jar of small pieces of soft white bread. Had to be a mistake, I figured, and looked for the croutons. The soft white bread was the croutons. So I took one kind of lettuce, some broccoli, carrots, cheese, onions, and Thousand Island dressing. I passed on the cherry tomatoes, the cauliflower, the strange raisins and carrots in hot cream sauce concoction, and totally pretended I never saw the German potato salad with the green hue and things that may or may not have been pimentos mixed in. There was also a large urn of soup. I couldn’t see into it but the sign on the urn said that the urn contained SOUP-HOT. I remembered that my server said something about soup, but he also said something about every single item on the menu, including items no longer found on the menu.

I skipped the soup.

I returned to the table to eat my salad, which turned out to be quite good. While I was gone, the server had switched my lemonade for a Pepsi. I’m good. I can tell a dark brown fizzy drink from a light yellow drink with fruit on the bottom, especially when the brown fizzy drink is in a glass labeled “Pepsi.” I may not know the capital of New Jersey, but thanks to my NYC public school education I can tell a Pepsi from a lemonade.

Swoosh! It was my server. Before I had both cheeks settled on my seat, there he was. “I made that change you wanted.”
“Thank you.”
“The Pepsi for the lemonade. It was too tart. I told you it may be. We use fresh lemons, not powder and some find it too tart.”
“Umphrgrub.” (I had a mouthful of salad.)
“That’s wonderful. I’ll tell the kitchen to get moving on your entrees.”

At around this point we started worrying about what kind of tip we’d have to leave this guy. My brother suggested we tip him now so he’d leave us alone.

A different server brought out our main course so we were saved from Hamlet’s soliloquy. This server, a cute young girl, had a perky smile, perky hair, and other perky anatomical parts that I appreciated but I’ll leave to your imagination. I would have much preferred she stayed awhile because as soon as she left, and the plates were still settling down on the table and getting comfortable, our server swooped in and asked “did you get your meals?” Jeez, THEY WERE RIGHT IN FRONT OF HIM. This guy NEVER deviated from the script. I merely pointed to the plates.
“That’s wonderful,” he smiled.

My two mini-burgers were tasty, not too unlike White Castle’s truth be told, but even with the salad bar, were not worth the $21 dollars I was charged. My brother’s “Le Bacon Burger Avec Fromage,“ well done, was only well done until the first bite, when we realized that the burger was light pink inside. Rather than deal with the waiter he ate it anyway. He decided it was preferable to risk the parasites.

We signaled for the waiter, who was reciting the dessert menu even before he reached us.
“…..in both sundae and float varieties-“
“Sorry, sorry, we just want the check.”
“No time for dessert?”
“No, we have to get to the Ranger game.”
“That’s wonderful.” He turned to look straight at me. “I like your shirt,” and he walked away.

I looked down, suddenly curious to see if my Fantastic Four t-shirt had spontaneously morphed into a nicer shirt. It had not.

The check came and, annoyingly, it had an 18% tip already included. Larry David did this shtick far better than I can, so I’ll let you find it on youtube. Suffice it to say that after some calculations on my phone’s tip calculator, we figured the server was entitled to another $4.58, which we rounded down to $4.

Now it was time to go. We were going to jump on the subway one stop to the Garden and had time to get there early if only the waiter would take our check. For the first time all night he was nowhere to be seen. I was just fed up with the place and we left the money on the table, something I never do. I always imagine that as soon as I walk away somebody from a nearby table will reach over and steal the money, and I’ll get grabbed by security on the way out. But at this point I didn’t care, and no, we weren’t stopped.

The Ruby Tuesday restrooms were harder to find than the elevators but I managed. (The trick was to look behind the benches. Yes, they had benches blocking the entrances to the restrooms.)

We took the crowded spiral staircase down, and made our way to MSG. Despite the fact that the Rangers lost on an overtime shoot-out, Madison Square Garden and the Broadway Blues always put on a good show. We sat in the next to top row, and I have always maintained that there is no bad seat in the Garden.

Well I was wrong. Section 401 is one of the only places in the building with obstructed view seats. Believe me, the way the Rangers played, I was glad not to be able to see some of it.

Later on, the evening over, as we took the train back to Brooklyn, I just had one question still bothering me; what kind of soup was in the urn? I knew I should have listened to the waiter.

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