Thursday, June 30, 2016

A Firefighter Talks to Mrs. Schulz’s Middle School Class About Firework Safety


Thanks for having me here today. This looks like a great class! I want to thank Mrs. Schulz for asking me to come and speak with you.
There are all sorts of things you should know about fire safety, but with July 4th just around the corner, I want to talk to you today about how to be safe around fireworks. I know a lot of you will be near friends and family who will handle them, or you’ll be handling them yourselves, so let’s go over some important tips.

First and foremost, never light any kind of firework indoors. Second, always be on a flat surface like asphalt or concrete with nothing else around you when you’re lighting fireworks. And never try to light anything on a grassy surface. That’s how fires break out.

It looks like we have a question. Go ahead.


That’s right, a fire will spread faster if the ground is very dry, but even with the rainy season we’ve had this year, you still don’t want to set off fireworks on grass or near trees and other brush.

Yes, you have a question?


Can you shoot fireworks out of your genitals? Wow. I’ve never been asked that question. No, obviously you should never do that. In fact, you shouldn’t shoot fireworks off any part of your body or even hold them in your hands. Sparklers are about the only thing you can hold in your hand, and even those are dangerous. So be very careful when doing so.

Any other questions? Yes, you in the back?


No, you should never shoot fireworks out of your friends’ genitals either. Don’t ever shoot them off of your body or anyone else’s body. That’s very dangerous.

I’m sorry? Can you shoot them out of a dead guy’s genitals? Ok, what grade level is this again? Seventh. Ahh. Well, I get the sense that you’re trying to embarrass me, but that’s alright. I can actually answer that silly question with a serious answer. It’s illegal to desecrate a corpse in most counties, including this one, so that would be a bad idea.


Now, let’s get back to some tips when lighting fireworks. Always make sure to read the directions in full before lighting anything, even if it’s something you have set off in previous years. Safety warnings are updated regularly and… oh, it looks like we have another question. Go ahead.

A dead animal’s genitals. You know what, you guys are acting like you just learned that word, which I find hard to believe. Don’t laugh because I said “hard.” Do not laugh because I said “hard!”


Where did Mrs. Schultz go? She just left? Every day, she does that? Why did you put air quotes around “mental health break?” It doesn’t matter. Listen, I’ve got some other advice for you guys. Only you think this is funny. No one else laughs like this when they hear that word. In fact, if anyone else saw how you are behaving, they would think you’re acting ridiculous. At this age, you should really have more evolved senses of humor. So, let’s elevate this discussion to a level that’s more appropriate for the young ladies and gentlemen that you are.

Now, have any of you ever been hurt in a fireworks accident or know anyone who has? Really, you know someone? Can you tell us about it? Your brother died? Oh my goodness, I’m so sorry to hear that. Is it something you’re able to talk about? Ok, well if you wouldn’t mind sharing what happened, it could be a valuable lesson for the class.


Seriously? Are you serious right now? I never want to dismiss the loss of a loved one, but when you tell me he died by shooting them out of his genitals, I find it really hard to believe given everything that’s been said. You may not know this, but when something like that happens, parents can get in a lot of trouble and sometimes other children in the household can even be taken away from them.

Come again? You live with your grandmother now because of the accident? Oh. Ok. Wow, I’m so sorry. I thought you were joking.


You see this, guys? His family suffered a real tragedy and you all have turned it into a joke. In my profession, one of the most important tasks you have is to pick up your fellow firefighters, not just physically, but emotionally. It’s vital to have a strong support system. There’s nothing funny about losing a loved one, no matter how it happens.

You’re scared of your grandmother? Uh… well, if you want I can walk you down to the office and see if the school counselor can schedule some time to talk to you. Or if you’re not comfortable doing that, there’s a grief counselor assigned to our unit that is great with this type of thing. I’m not sure how much experience she has with kids, but… what’s that?


You’re scared of your grandmother because she shoots fireworks out of her genitals. Alright, I know I have 20 minutes left, but I’m going to wrap this up. Tell Mrs. Schulz whatever you want. And try to be safe this Fourth of July.

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Blame It on the Dog? Those Days are Over… for the Rich


If I asked you to name the company with the largest 2016 first quarter revenue increase compared to its 2015 first quarter figures, which businesses pop into your head?
Berkshire Hathaway? JP Morgan? Apple?

Nope.


What if I told you it’s a relatively new company, formed within the last five years?
Uber? AirBNB? Snapchat?

Good guesses, but no.
The company is Col-Essence, and it’s all due to their one and only product, Flatulends, the odorless gas pill. But it doesn’t work on just any noxious gases, it only works on your noxious gases. Not that I have to tell you that.

Odds are, if you haven’t bought the latest over-the-counter medical breakthrough, you’ve seen it on your drug store shelves, or advertised on TV, the internet, billboards or in magazines. It’s everywhere. The pill that you thought was an SNL spoof gone too far, has proven to be anything “butt.”
And to mark the company’s 18-month anniversary, it has announced the release of not just one, but four flavored scents – orange, vanilla, peppermint and evergreen. Looming over all of us, however, is a larger social question than the typical, “Why didn’t they come out with the flavored aromas from the beginning?” And that is this: Is Flatulends the next big thing in class warfare?

Because while the odds are high that you’ve heard of it, the odds are quite low that you have actually purchased it. Col-Essence confirmed near the end of 2015 that nearly 90% of Flatulends’ sales in the U.S. come from roughly 5% of the population – the 5% that can afford its outrageous price tag.
A 12 pack of the odor-ending pill retails for a wallet-denting $225. And industry insiders are confident the price of the flavored offerings will start out at least 10% higher than the originals, despite the fact that flavored smells negate Flatulends’ original purpose of letting the user leave a trail o’ toots without anyone being the wiser.

But with revenues what they are, it seems Col-Essence could cut the price by $200 and let the increased volume make up for the lower profit margin per pack. The demand is certainly there, and the cost of large-scale development is a virtual non-factor.
Furthermore, during an interview in December’s issue of Business Breakthroughs magazine, Col-essence president Joel Crowning confirmed the company has the manufacturing and distribution capabilities to keep up with much higher demand, but he doesn’t want to disrupt Flatulends’ brand in the marketplace. 

“Ferrari could sell a million cars a year if each one was the price of a KIA, but they don’t need to do that,” Crowning said. “Our product has proven its worth in the market, and de-valuing it at this point could potentially damage the company’s future.”
However Crowning views his role – businessman, innovator, mad scientist – his product begs the question, just like healthcare and education before it, “What should be up for grabs to those who can pay for it, and what should be available to everyone?” It’s a question that a few of the 2016 presidential candidates have started asking.

In an election cycle in which both sides have pointed the “class warfare” finger at the other, viewers of the last two Republican and Democratic debates have heard Flatulends mentioned more times than healthcare, minimum wage, and the cost of higher education combined. Some have gone as far to say the pills should be placed in bowls and set atop the check-in desks of every doctor’s office in the country.
But it’s not an issue that will decide the election, nor should it. After all, Col-Essence is a privately held corporation, so unless the federal government buys the formula or reproduces its magic recipe, Crowning is free to make and market his product how he sees fit. And since he clings to the Flatulends formula more tightly than the makers of Coca-Cola®, replicating its stink-ceasing effects is not likely anytime soon.

However, one can hope that Mr. Crowning is a sensible man that can be reasoned with. After all, not only can everyone benefit from his product, but society as a whole could benefit by everyone having it. Every shared space in the country would have the potential to smell better – locker rooms, movie theaters, the subway, and, most importantly, the bedroom. Let’s not forget the amount of embarrassment we would all forgo in those shared spaces as well.
Of the two identifiers that clearly indicate wind has been broken (sound and smell), only one of them can never be controlled. Only one gives it away every time. And now that piece of evidence can be eliminated entirely. With the right amount of effort and control, sound isn’t even a factor, which means Flatulends can free the gaseous portion of the population from the anxiety that comes with going out in public. For some, it could practically double as an anti-depressant.

Instead, given its current accessibility, the pill merely supports an idealistic view that rich people already hold about themselves: that there’s don’t stink.
But humanitarian appeals aside, money is the only thing that’s going to make a difference in this debate. That much was clear in the same Business Breakthroughs interview, when Crowning crowed, “I’m not in this business to hand out good-smelling farts to everyone. I’m in this business to hand out good-smelling farts to everyone who wants to pay for them.”

Well Joel, everyone does want to pay for them. They just can’t. Particularly given that each pill only works for roughly 24 hours. And as much money as your company has raked in already, the truth is it would make a… well… shitload of it by following the KIA model. It’s true that people buy Ferraris despite the price, but they buy a whole lot more KIAs because of it.
Don’t be blind to the fact that Flatulends can make billions of people happy and line your pockets with even billions more in profit. You may no longer have to waft in a fog of your own producing, but here’s hoping that fog hasn’t seeped into your head and enveloped your brain.

Friday, April 8, 2016

A New Hire Sits In on a Content Meeting at CNN

Executive Producer: Ok, people. Whatta we got?

Finance Correspondent
: The DOW had its worst day in 35 years yesterday. On top of that, analysts are predicting a very slow rebound.


(The Executive Producer squints his eyes, sticks out his chin, and appears to consider this for a second)


Executive Producer
: Let’s come back to that. What else?


News Producer
: There was a massive dairy recall announced this morning.


Executive Producer
: Eh. Come on, people. “Wow” me.


Foreign Affairs Correspondent
: Putin ordered the Russian military to invade England.


Executive Producer
: What is this, 1936? Let’s ask the new guy.


New Guy
: Uh… honestly, I would lead with the invasion.


Executive Producer
: Typical new guy response. So predictable. What happened to my team here? Listen, how many YouTube cat videos do we have ready to go?


Assignment Editor
: Three.


Executive Producer
: Is that enough?


New Guy
: Sounds like three-too-many to me.


(The whole room stares at the new guy, fearful of what he might say next)


Assignment Editor
: I agree. Ferret videos are all the rage now.


Segment Producer
: I don’t know. That feels like a fad.


Executive Producer
: Alright, let’s do two cat videos and one ferret video tucked in between them, so it’s not as jarring to viewers.


Foreign Affairs Correspondent
: How about we lead with a montage of Hollywood A-listers who haven’t aged well in the last 20 years?


Assignment Editor
: Nice!


Executive Producer
: I like it, I like it. Now, how many times did we break into last night’s 6 pm news segment with a Kardashian tweet?


Segment Producer
: 12


Executive Producer
: And how many times did we break in with a Trump tweet?


Segment Producer
: 8


Executive Producer:
Oooh, that number needs to triple, at a minimum.


News Producer
: The one currently getting the most buzz is his one from last night in which he bragged about his bowel movement measuring a foot and a half long. But there’s no picture.


Executive Producer
: Doesn’t matter, doesn’t matter. We can still leverage the hell out of Trump’s 18-inch turd. Did he make a joke about his name being on it?


News Producer
: No.



Executive Producer: Hmmm. Call him up, ask him to do a follow up tweet that says the turd came out with the Trump name on it. Blitzer can talk about that for 45 minutes, easy.

Finance Correspondent
: Do you still want to circle back to the plummeting DOW?


Executive Producer:
(Groans) I don’t know. How are we going to get people to care about that?



Assignment Editor: We could do a simultaneous live feed of four other people claiming the DOW is a myth.

Executive Producer
: Keep tinkering with that idea. I could be talked into the myth thing.


Segment Producer
: Just got off the phone with The Donald. He said when our segment ends about his giant poop, he’d be happy to tweet out that Ted Cruz’s poop always has “Imported from Canada” stamped on it. You know, in case we need to fill another hour.


Foreign Affairs Correspondent
: That man is a genius.


New Guy
: Shouldn’t we be informing people about the events going on around them that impact their lives?


(Long pause)


Executive Producer:
Well… that’s not really our job, now is it?


Rest of the Room
: (In unison, adamantly): No, no, absolutely not.


New Guy: Yeah, I guess you're right.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

This Will Only Hurt (Your Psyche) a Little


“Huh.”
“What? What is it?”

“Yooouuu… have a cavity.”
I suspected as much before I arrived because my tooth had been hurting for more than a week, but of course I took no pleasure in being right. The only thing I felt was shame.

I hadn’t hurt anyone or committed some selfish act or set a goal for myself that went unaccomplished, but shame washed over me nonetheless. Why? It’s not like I had to break it to my parents. And my dentist didn’t care. If anything, he was probably delighted. Now he would get to charge me more.
So what’s the big deal, I kept asking myself.

The big deal is I’m almost 40 years old, for God’s sake. Children get cavities. They eat too much sugar and don’t brush properly, then they get a cavity, and hopefully learn their lesson. I got a couple of them as a kid, like almost every kid does. But that was three decades ago.
What the hell is a grown man who spends every morning and every night reminding his two kids to brush their own teeth doing with a cavity? That’s like imploring your teenager not to text and drive, and then getting into an accident yourself because you were texting while driving.

My credibility was gone. I was one of them now. And my dentist felt the same way.
“Soooo… you wet the bed too?” he laughed as he reached for the numbing agent.

“What?!”
“Now, I’m going to give you a shot in your gum before filling the tooth. It might hurt a little. Do you want to call your mom to see if she can come in and hold your hand?”

Jesus, the guy was roasting me like I was on a Comedy Central special.
“Just plug it, you son of a bitch.”

He giggled, and gave me the shot. He could have given me 50, I wouldn’t have noticed. No amount of physical pain would have registered. There was only humiliation.
The typical barrage of questions followed as the doctor patched the hole. “How’s work?” “Kids enjoying school?” “Got any fun plans for the summer?”

I cared not how nonsensical and drooly my answers sounded. What was left to be embarrassed about?
He softened on taking jabs at my manhood, or maybe he didn’t; I wasn’t paying much attention. My thoughts turned to whether this was the start of a trend. If my teeth were weakening in my old age. Perhaps they’d all turn to dust and spill out of my mouth, forcing me to replace them with tree bark and acorns. Future meals would consist only of milkshakes and mashed potatoes.

Maybe I wasn’t a child at all. Maybe my body was in rapid decline, and soon I would wield a cane and require an electric chair lift to get up and down stairs.
When it was over, I steadied myself trying to make it to the front desk, still reeling from the effects of the shot. Fog filled my head as clear thought seemed to leave it.

The doctor picked up the basket full of suckers and peered at me over the top of his bifocals. “None for you today,” he giggled some more.
Was I hearing the voice of the guy who worked in my mouth or the guy who lives in my head?

“We’ll mail you the bill,” his assistant said.
“Oh, ok. Well… thanks, I guess.”

The doctor tapped a picture on the wall. In it, a young boy was smiling and giving a “thumbs up.” He had a Spiderman blanket draped over his shoulder.
“If you want, next time you can bring in your binky,” the doctor said, doubling over in laughter.

Curse the dentist and his jokes. Or whoever was making them.
Curse them all!

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Too Much of a Good Thing, Indeed


It’s not exactly controversial to claim that society is more demanding these days than it was even 10 years ago. We demand more rights for more of our citizens, better wages for the lower class, more accountability from our corporations… we even want the government to shut down less. And we demand more on an individual level as well. We want the internet to work faster, our phones to do more, our cars to be safer, get better gas mileage, start on their own, brake on their own and tell us how to get places.

And why not? Might as well max out, right?


So why do we get mad when we get our money’s worth? We complain all the time that the price of movie tickets keeps going up, but then we also complain when a movie is too long. Same with sporting events and books. “You know, at $29.95 for the hardback, they really should have cut 300 pages out of it. Who wants that much book? Gonna throw my back out reading that thing.”


We pay for entertainment and then get angry the more we’re entertained. It makes sense. We’re all infused with the desire to abandon our pleasures so we can pay more money for something else to entertain us until we get mad at that thing for entertaining us too long.


A lot of people argue that it’s because of our shorter attention spans, which I kind of agree with, but that doesn’t explain the whole story. We should always appreciate a good value no matter how short our attention spans get, right?


Short attention spans don’t have anything to do with complaining that restaurant portions are too big. If you can’t finish your meal, or just don’t want to devote the time necessary to finishing it, some restaurants have started giving customers Styrofoam boxes to take the rest of your food home in. It’s great.
We don’t even like getting free stuff anymore. We plunk down hundreds of dollars every year to get a phone that is virtually indistinguishable from the one we replaced the year before, and then bitch a blue streak when we find the latest album from one of the greatest rock bands of all time has been put on that phone for FREE. An album, I needn’t remind you, that we could simply delete if we didn’t want it. And of course everyone deleted it because a free U2 album was too much of an upgrade over last year’s model, apparently.

Even free stuff we like, we only want for a limited time. Remember when hit TV shows put out 22 episodes a year and aired reruns during the summer? Not anymore. Now we want our favorite shows to only broadcast 10 episodes a season and be off the air after 5 years. “Ugggh, do you believe they’re doing a 6th season of The Greatest TV Show in History? I mean, enough already.”
We just don’t appreciate value anymore. Ever hear someone over 45 complain about the sound quality of CDs or digital downloads? “I miss the pops and the scratches and the static of vinyl.” Or that they don’t like HD televisions because the picture is too clear? Who can blame ‘em? I mean, all that quality. Blech!

Think those people ever say to their waiter, “I’m sorry, I can’t eat this. It just tastes too good.”
Are we on the verge of letting Uber drivers drop us off six blocks from our destination?

Are we going to pay the same price for flights that get us halfway there and then push us out of the plane with an old, dusty parachute strapped to our back?
Would you pay huge sums of money for an organ transplant if the surgeon stopped just as he was about to stitch you up?

Are women everywhere going to start dating Asian men? (That’s a penis joke, by the way. Thank you! I’m here all week)
We're clearly headed in that direction. So, in my best effort to keep everyone happy, I better end this blog po

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Why Does Santa Smell Like Uncle Larry?


Life is full of moments that alter how we forever view the world, thanks to reality-shattering truths. Those harsh realities that don’t jive with what we’ve been telling ourselves or with what other people have been telling us. Finding out what we’ve been told is untrue is far worse than the lies we tell ourselves because with it brings the recognition of betrayal.
Long-paragraph-short: realizing you’ve been duped your whole life is a tough pill to swallow. Especially when the dupe involves Santa Claus.

Learning that a fat man in a red jump suit who has inexplicably escaped death for hundreds of years does NOT sneak into your house while you sleep is one thing (Sorry! SPOILER ALERT. I’m so bad with those), but after the dust settles, what stings the most is realizing your parents were the ones perpetuating the myth. A lot of kids usually find out from their friends, which means parents dig ourselves a hole right from the start. We want our kids to trust us and turn to us in times of trouble, yet their friends usually open their eyes to a massive lie that we started. Who would you turn to after that?
But parents aren’t the only ones to blame. Pretty much every part of society available for consumption to a non-Jewish kid is in on the lie. If we tried telling our offspring at a certain age that Santa isn’t real, that everyone they talk to and see on TV is full of bunk, that the guy at the mall is only there so he can pay his child support, it would be like telling them Kanye doesn’t exist.

“I don’t know, mom and dad. I see Mr. Kardashian’s face on all the supermarket tabloids, I hear his songs on the radio, and I’ve seen him give, like, eight speeches during something called the ‘VMAs,’ soooo… the only people who might agree with you are Taylor Swift and George W. Bush. Not exactly good company you’re keeping.”
It’s pretty illogical and totally counterproductive to have our kids believe in Santa Claus, but it’s out of our hands! It sure feels that way, at least. I’m sure the tide will turn eventually, as it always does. I’m sure there will one day be a collective understanding among parents not to tell their kids about him. It will probably start with the Millennials.

“Oh, we’re with our kids every minute of the day, including at school, even though they can’t see us due to the iHelmets we wear to ensure we never have to look anyone in the eye. We can just verbally instruct the device to upload messages to other iHelmet wearers. And we don’t let them play in any sports leagues that don’t give every child a participatory trophy. Of course, we don’t actually watch them play their games live, we only see the games, and the ensuing trophy presentations, through the screens in our iHelmets. Sure, it's a lot of screen time, but we don't own a TV. We don’t want to be “those” people. Since food no longer exists thanks to the elimination of gluten from every facet of the environment, their diets consist of nothing but vitamins and protein suppositories. Oh, and heavens to Betsy, we do NOT let them believe in Santa Claus.”
But the Millenials are probably onto something. After telling kids their whole lives not to lie, they come to find out we’ve lied to them their whole lives. And besides that, there’s something creepy about the notion that if strangers believe you are behaving properly, they will reward you for it.

Then again, that scenario plays out over and over again in all aspects of adult life. Maybe we’re not always rewarded for behaving properly, but we definitely avoid punishment by behaving properly, like at school, work, the airport, in front of police officers if you’re white (am I right?! [wink, wink]). Then there are times when strangers do in fact reward us for behaving properly. Usually the rewards consist of votes, job offers and, of course, sex.
Come to think of it, we spend our whole adult lives trying to get others to acknowledge our good behavior, so we might as well practice it while we're young. And, like finding out Santa is a lie, we might as well have our children get accustomed to not getting the recognition they deserve later in life. No matter how hard they work, or how well they perform, or how many sacrifices they make, they will never get the recognition they deserve!

NO MATTER WHERE THEY GO, OR WHO THEY TURN TO, THE WORLD WILL CONTINUE TO SHIT ON ALL THEIR HOPES AND DRE…
(Heavy panting)

(More panting while bent at the waist)
Excuse me. Where was I?

Oh right, Santa Claus.
To lie or not to lie?

Probably doesn’t matter.
I believed in him once and I turned out fine.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Dog People Have Gone Ape


I’m going to start this off by acknowledging that my own biases probably influenced how I viewed this as a kid, but when I was growing up, it seemed as if there was a collective understanding throughout society that owning a cat was weird. I mean, why would you? Cats are awful.
My bias probably developed from the fact that my family owned some kind of dog during most of my life. We never owned a cat, nor did we ever consider it, probably because no one in the family liked them.

But I clearly remember feeling a part of the majority. I certainly knew, and liked, people who owned cats, but most of my pet-owning friends and family members had dogs. And society as a whole seemed to own a dog, or at least agreed that they were fun and lovable. We bought paintings of them gambling, for crying out loud. “Awww. They have vices just like us!”
The president, no matter who it was, always owned a dog.

And we were constantly reminded of their greatness in books (Clifford, Where the Red Fern Grows), on TV (Rin Tin Tin, Lassie), and in movies (Benji, Lady & the Tramp, All Dogs Go To Heaven, Turner & Hooch, all those Beethoven sequels). One of the most famous dog movies, Old Yeller, ended with the dog getting shot after contracting rabies. And everyone who has seen it agrees that it’s one of the saddest movies ever. Hollywood wisely used a dog in the story so that packed theaters all across the country wouldn’t stand up and cheer at the sight of a cat being shot to death.
The only cat I remember holding a place in everyone’s collective consciousness was Garfield, which was a funny cartoon, but only because it depicted just how awful it is to own a cat.

The bottom line was: dogs saved kids from wells and cats got stuck in trees, which required being rescued by the fire department, which of course cost tax payers’ money.
Now, if owning a cat was weird, at the time it seemed a rather straightforward correlation that people who owned cats were weird. As Homer Simpson so acutely put it, cats are for “losers who live in apartments.” Even your sanity got called into question. Every town, including Springfield, had a woman who owned more than two cats, and everyone in those towns referred to her as the Crazy Cat Lady.

But mental health shortcomings aside, as I remember it, there were never actually negative traits that anyone associated with a cat owner. It simply had to do with the personalities of the pets – dogs are friendly, cats are not. It was that simple. As long as people kept their pets to three or fewer, there was no concern that either breed of owner was unstable.
Unfortunately that is no longer the case. Today’s generation of dog owners has absolutely lost its shit.

Now granted, cat people spend way too much time taking and uploading videos of their cats to YouTube. Videos the rest of us spend hours watching at work. But in order to see cats doing adorable things while we work, we have to rely on the internet because cat people don’t bring their cats to the office. You know why? Because there is no such thing as Bring Your Cat to Work Day.
I used to think the fact that Bring Your Cat to Work Day doesn’t exist is because non-cat owners would be too horrified by the notion, but the truth is, cat people never suggest a Bring Your Cat to Work Day. I’ve never even heard just one cat owner ask if they could pick a random day to bring in their cat, holiday or no holiday. And that’s because cat people are normal. (I just threw up a little.)

They have no desire to bring their pet to work, they know their pet has no desire to come to work, and they’re respectful of their co-workers who might otherwise have allergies or hang-ups about smelling cat piss. However, we’re about a month away from Tuesday permanently falling out of the week in place of Bring Your Dog to Work Day.
And since being away from our pets for 8-9 hours a day, 5 days a week, has gotten so hard, imagine how hard it is to go on vacation without them. Well, dog owners don’t imagine it. Not anymore. Going on a cross-country flight? No problem. Your dog doesn’t even have to ride with the luggage. Buy it a seat right next to you so it can shit in the aisle. And it will nervously shit in the aisle because like many people, dogs get a little freaked out when they ride on an airplane. But just keep telling yourself this isn’t what you want, it’s what he wants.

Maybe you sympathize with these folks by offering up the logic that it’s hard to be away from your pet for that long. Which is true. But what about the hour it takes to do your grocery shopping? Or the 10 minutes it takes to run into the post office? Doing both of those on the same day? Oh my God, then you have to bring your dog!
These days, if you know just a handful of dog owners, you likely know someone who loves their dog more than their kids or is in love with their dog more than they are with their spouse. You thought of at least one person instantly, didn’t you?

This is definitely a new phenomenon. It started innocently enough with the knitting of sweaters, but quickly grew into more intimate activities.
Remember the medical report that came out a couple of years ago that said it was bad for your health to let your dog sleep in your bed with you? Doctors didn’t release medical statements like that 30, 20 or even 10 years ago. That’s because the general public used to say things like, “I love my child more than life itself. I would do anything for her. I work at a job I hate so that she can have a better future and raise children that she will one day love as much as I love her. I also have a dog. He sleeps on the floor.”

Now the reverse is true.
If that’s not enough, we’ve all heard stories, some may be real, some not so much, of people using all varieties of food spread to, let’s say, “cajole” a dog into participating in activities it otherwise wouldn’t. I have never heard of anyone doing this with a cat. Ever. That alone is enough to say I wish I wasn’t a dog person. I don’t want anyone drawing any parallels between me and someone who would say, “I have peanut butter. I have a dog. I have plans for Saturday night.”

I wish I could say that dog people are getting dangerously close to surpassing cat people in terms of weirdness, but we eclipsed that threshold long ago. In fact, cat people should probably be insulted by that statement for insinuating they were ever weirder than the folks who take their pets to the hardware store, restaurants, ice cream shops, sporting events, shopping malls, etc… (sigh)
Like a certain surging GOP candidate, let's do all we can to end this trend.