Posts tagged ‘annoyances’

November 13, 2009

MS 11/12/09: Annoyances

One of the many annoyances of living in NYC is that a production shoot will frequently interrupt your daily routine. Today was a freezing cold, windy and rainy day, but for some reason, everybody was shooting in Greenpoint. Some project had trailers parked all up and down Driggs Ave., but I didn’t see anyone out in the weather, other than a few workers taping down wires. Then, there was a commercial shooting at the track. A little tent had been erected next to the track, and about ten people and all their equipment huddled under it. A guy dressed like a referee stood out on the track opposite four muscular dudes in summer running gear, who posed squatted down as if about to race. They must have been freezing. An aide with a showy sense of urgency stopped me and requested I run around behind the tent, so as not to mess up their shot, so I had to squelch through the mud, dodging trees and benches, every time I did a lap.

Exiting the food court adjacent to the Lex & 53rd subway station, an Indian guy in some sort of food industry uniform chased two Hispanic guys who both wore a different restaurant’s uniform. ‘Mexico, Mexico, everybody from Mexico!’ the Indian guy was saying, while the two other guys rolled their eyes at each other, and clearly tried to out-walk him. ‘I love tacos! But I am just not [unintelligible]. Seriously, Mexico is a beautiful country, a gorgeous country.’

On Park Avenue, a car failed to go promptly at a green light, causing several cars to lay on their horns for a good long while, which in turn interrupted the phone conversation of a thin blond woman whose tweed pencil skirt met her black leather boots in a perfect horizontal line across her kneecaps. ‘It’s just so loud here,’ she screamed into the phone. ‘It is just too loud, I mean. This whole city, I don’t – this city is soloud, and I really, I feel sorry for people who have to…’

September 29, 2008

Fliers and Change: Two Things I Wish Would Go Away

I never take fliers.  It is very annoying to be walking down a sidewalk and be abruptly clotheslined by somebody shoving a piece of paper into your face.  Who the hell on this green, revolving Earth ever wants a flier?  For anything?  Who ever has followed up on whatever was being advertised on said flier?  Nobody.  When somebody hands somebody else a flier, they are either handing them litter, or a piece of trash to be carried until the receiver finds a trashcan.  Everybody else should do as I do, and decline to take them, so that whatever stupid freaking business owners are still fliering will freaking stop it already.  I.  Hate.  Fliers.

Along the same lines, postcards for shows are a giant waste of money and a thoroughly ineffective marketing tool.  Nobody ever, ever, ever goes to a show they weren’t already planning on going to (because they have a friend involved with it) because of a damn postcard.  Best-case scenario here is that one or even two lonely old people in from out of town might possibly, conceivably go to some show just because they saw a postcard for it, but even if you get three such audience members (which is an improbably high estimate), their admission is not enough to recoup whatever you spent on the postcards.  I hate being handed postcards more than fliers, because I actually have to take the postcards and act interested, and then I have to carry them around until it’s ok to throw them away.  Even if I actually plan on going to the show, I’m going to look in my email inbox (where undoubtedly there are at least fourteen different messages about whatever show it is) to remind myself of the time and place, not paw through my various handbags looking for some torn-up flier I was handed at a party three weeks earlier.

In marketing, it’s like…somebody starts doing something, and everybody just does it forever, whether it’s worth a damn or not.  These measures are not effective, and they are annoying, and they result in a huge build-up of worthless clutter in my purse.  Everybody, just stop it.

Another thing nobody agrees with me about – and I know with the economy in the shitter this is hugely optomistic of me – but can we just be done with change already?  It’s heavy and it’s dirty and it gets everywhere and it makes whatever else is in your purse smell like coins, and I amass pounds of it, and then when I try to actually use it up by counting out exact change when I buy something, it massively pisses off the cashier and everybody behind me.  The only thing you can really do with it is give it to homeless people, but then you have to juggle your bag and root around in it and shake it back in forth, all in a moving subway car, while you totter back and forth, and the homeless person politely waits and also totters back and forth, and everybody in the car stares at you and then you look like a real stingy asshole for not just giving the homeless person a dollar, especially after they stood there while you rooted through your purse for five minutes, and anyway, everybody (including the homeless person) knows you’re just trying to offload your obnoxious coins.  I hate small change, and I can see no good reason for it, and with the way prices are these days, why can’t things just be rounded up or down to the next stupid dollar?  At the very least, get rid of everything but quarters.

So, and but this is pretty funny.  It explains how to shut up a music geek at a party.  I used to kind of do this (make up a fake band) on occasion when some snobby guy at a party asked me what bands I like, but now I just never go to parties where I’m likely to run into any guys like that.  Or maybe it’s just that everyone suddenly realized it’s rude to grill strangers about their musical taste.

April 3, 2007

Sometimes the World Seems a Lot More Fixable…

…like when you discover all of the ads you hate are actually created by the same company.

March 22, 2007

I’m Not the Only One Who Hates Yoga

Slate, on one of the many topics I’m sick of hearing people go on and on about.

March 6, 2007

Questions I’d Rather Not Be Asked

I have recently moved to NYC, and I’ve noticed in my initial conversations with New Yorkers that there’s a certain question set that seems to be addressed to each new arrival. I don’t have a good answer for any of these questions, and so they all annoy me to no end. Because I’m sure to be asked them again and again, I think it’s probably time I came up with some good answers in advance, as I would do if I were going on interviews for jobs or graduate programs. To wit:

 

1. Where are you from?

  • Problem with this question: I am from Knoxville, Tennessee, at least as far as I attended high school and college in that city. But to say that would lead the interviewer to believe I have recently arrived in Manhattan straight from a small, Southern city, which is quite far from the truth (also, it never fails to lead to the extra annoying and equally unanswerable ‘where’s your accent’ question). After college, I lived in Chicago for four years. I could just say I’m from there, but that is also misleading, because I haven’t lived there in almost a year now. I spent the summer in Knoxville again, and then I spent three and a half months backpacking Asia, but I can’t say all that, because it’s running on about myself.

  • Answer I’ll be giving from here out: I’m from Jersey.

2. Why’d you decide to move to New York?

  • Problem with this question: What exactly do they want me to say? Because the honest answer to this question is, ‘Why not?’ But I think they just expect me to say I’m an actor. Even though that’s true (more or less), I think it’s a lame answer. But it certainly saves time, and any other answer merely confuses everybody, so I think that’s what I’m just going to say from now on.

  • Answer I’ll be giving from here on out: I’m an actor.

3. Really? So, have you been going on auditions and everything?

  • Problem with this question: Because this question always follows the asked-and-answered ‘I’ve been here three weeks,’ and because the question is always posed by someone who is himself an actor (because it’s no mere stereotype that everyone in New York is an actor), this question always plunges me into a flurry of panic and self-doubt. Not only have I not been on any auditions, but I have no idea how to go about auditioning. I don’t even know how to find out about auditions, and I don’t know how I’d ever get up the energy to actually go on any and I haven’t auditioned in months and I’ve entirely forgotten how to audition and I hate auditioning and I don’t believe in the efficacy of auditions and I don’t believe it’s possible to show myself off well at auditions and I don’t want to audition and everyone else is managing it so much better and they’re all really fabulous and being an actor is stupid and unoriginal and I think I’m not really an actor but if I’m not an actor I’m just a server and but I really do want to be an actor but all other people are better at being actors and who the hell am I anyway and what is the purpose of life?

  • Answer I’ll be giving from here on out: I’ve already booked a national commercial and two short films! This market is incredible!

4. Do you like it here?

  • Problem with this question: Its vagueness. Like it? Like it how? Like it as opposed to what? Who really “likes it” anywhere?

  • Answer I’ll be giving from here on out (in a confidential whisper, while glancing furtively from side to side): Do you think it likes me here?

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