Product manager: Ok everyone, let's get started. We have a new product ready to launch, and we need to come up with a name.
Marketing manager: What does it do?
Product manager: It's a shaving razor. It's capable of skinning a Bengal tiger in one swipe. It can topple a Redwood with the flick of a wrist.
Lawyer: Sounds dangerous. We have to think about customer safety and our potential liability.
Marketing manager: Eh, let's just call it a safety razor.
Product manager: Brilliant.
Lawyer: We see no issues.
CEO: Great job everyone, let's call it a day. See you at the bar.
What other products are inaccurately named?
.
Call Me Cleatus
There was a time, long ago, when I was physically active. I wrote this back then.
I like playing
softball. The only problem is that I’m
not that good at it. I’m a better
observer than player. This is not a good
thing, especially on the field.
Grounders go through my legs and strikes loft into the catcher’s glove
undisturbed.
I heard that our
church had a coed softball team in a local city league, and was looking for
participants. “You’ve been excellent at
warming the bench for years at the little league”, my mother told me. “Why don’t you go warm the bench for the
church team?”
It
seemed a good idea, but I’ll admit I was a little skeptical at first. Our team would be defending the city league
championship for the second time. We
would be playing many challenging teams from large corporations around
town. What if they were too overbearing
and talented for us? What if I messed
up? Would I be ostracized and humiliated
by my fellow Lutherans? Could I play up
to par? The city’s deputy police chief
was on the team. He was a brute. He had muscles in places that I haven’t even
got places for. When he hit the ball,
the ground shook. We should have
nicknamed him Casey.
Regardless
of the obvious pressure, I signed up, knowing that I would thoroughly enjoy it
and that it would provide an obvious opportunity for me to go buy a new pair of
cleats. New cleats are vital to the
success of a ball player. If the
shortstop misses a sharply hit ground ball, take a look at his shoes. If they’re old and worn, that shortstop has
no excuse for not stopping that ball because he’s a veteran. He’s been marked and doomed by his cleats for
all to see. If, however, the second
baseman misses a slow dribble, and he’s wearing new cleats, no one holds it
against him. He’s obviously new at
this. Boy, did I ever need those cleats.
My
troubles began right with the first practice.
Softballs carry differently than baseballs. This was a lesson I learned the hard way…as I
ran…long distances…after the balls I missed.
Softballs are also harder to throw in a straight line. When I throw them, they tend to float down
like snowflakes. This gives the opposing
team plenty of time to calmly waltz around the bases and score many runs
against us while the catcher has a nap waiting for the ball I’ve thrown to
land.
Hitting
was only slightly better. You’d think
that after having baseballs whipped at me by gorillas on the pitching mound in
little league, slow-pitch softball would be a breeze. It was.
I could feel several breezes each pitch.
First came the breeze made by the ball floating by me. Then came the breeze made by my bat hitting
air. Then came the breeze from the coach
as he exhaled deeply in an effort to remain calm. The balls came in at an angle I’d never had
to deal with before when hitting: straight down. It was as if it was hailing softballs the
size of…softballs.
To
top it all off, they told me I had to learn a whole new set of rules. Some, such as the ten run, sixth inning mercy
rule, were meant to shorten the game to its strict timeframe of an hour. Another was the pitching count. You went up to bat with a ball and a strike already on you. I thought they were joking. Then I heard “Striiiiike two-yerrrrr
out!” Seeing as how this was a coed
team, other rules had been changed to “even the playing field” (everything but
the pitcher’s mound). The batting order
had to alternate between the sexes.
Women got to hit a smaller softball.
It carried farther and was easier to throw. Men got the regulation-sized one with
dimensions roughly the same as an Oldsmobile.
If a man got walked, he advanced directly to second, and the woman
batter behind him got the choice of taking her chances at the plate or taking
the easy way out and going straight to first.
Other rules simply were made to throw a loop in things. For instance, if you hit a ball out of the
park, it wasn’t a home run. It was an
automatic out. Luckily, I never had that
happen to me. I was worried, though, and
tried my best not to hit the ball hard.
It’s the only reason my season batting average was 2.75, honest.
Despite
my best efforts, we still won the championship that season. In a weird turn of events, I even came off
the bench to hit in the winning run, which happened to be our deputy police
chief. He landed on home plate with only
a minor earthquake. I had tapped a
little dribbler to the left side of the shortstop, and the second baseman
bobbled the ball off her chin. I made
sure to thank her afterwards.
What do you not excel at?
.
Home Delivery
I recently came across this bit I wrote in college. Made me laugh, so here you go.
No, I’m not
talking about giving birth. I’m talking
about The Wall Street Journal. I recently began receiving this wonderful
publication when a subscription to it was strongly recommended to me by my
marketing professor in exchange for a passing grade in his class. I immediately agreed to these terms and gave
the bill to my dad.
The Wall Street Journal comes
once every business day. Really, really
early every business day. Sometimes it
is so early that it gets here yesterday. Punctuality for this organization does not
seem to be a problem.
The impressive
thing about The Wall Street Journal
is the customer service. If you think a
retail store lacks customer service, be thankful The Wall Street Journal doesn’t run the place. They take the concept to a whole new level.
The first day I
received The Wall Street Journal,
it came folded in my mailbox. The next
day it was waiting for me in the driveway.
On the third day, it was also in the driveway, but encased in a bag. Where it got crazy was the fourth day. I woke up and discovered a mint on my
pillow. Startled, I sat up…to find the
paper on a tray next to my bed…with a steaming cup of doctored coffee…and a
Danish…all accompanied by a handwritten note that read, “Enjoy!”
While convenient,
the polite intrusion was still very unsettling.
However, this perk was easy to grow accustomed to. The nice invisible people of The Wall Street Journal were
doing their best to make sure that I got the most out of my subscription.
One night after
class, I was heading to my car to go home after a long day. As I put the keys in the door lock, I felt a
sharp jab in the small of my back. While
inexperienced in such matters, it did not take a genius to conclude that this
was the business end of a handgun. I
froze as a gruff voice commanded, “Give me the keys and be quick about it.”
What happened next
is hard to describe. There was the sound
of a painful grunt and an aborted cry.
Then there was a soft thud and a quick flurry of movement. I still had not moved, and was very
frightened, to say the least. After the
movement subsided, there was silence for a moment, and then a piece of paper
came fluttering down onto the hood of my car.
I picked it up and read, “It’s safe.
Have a nice night and sleep well!”
I slowly turned around and saw my would-be assailant on the ground about
ten feet away, hog-tied and gagged. Not
that it mattered, because he was out cold.
Until then, I didn’t know that The
Wall Street Journal included tae
kwan do in the training for delivery people.
After a couple
more weeks, another unexpected event occurred.
It was a cold November morning, and I was getting ready to head to
work. As I approached my car, I noticed
that the windows were scraped and the engine was running. I slowed my stride and took a cautious glance
around the neighborhood as I opened my car door. The heater had already done its job. I cleared the seat of the packed lunch (!)
and took my seat behind the wheel. I
noticed the note, timidly picked it up, and read, “Have a wonderful day.”
I guess you could
say that I’m really enjoying my mysterious subscription to The Wall Street Journal.
The birthday presents (a La-Z-Boy and bigger coffee mug, for a more
enjoyable Wall Street Journal
reading) were a nice touch. The oil
changes don’t go unnoticed. It doesn’t
even bother me anymore that I still have yet to meet the delivery person. What bothers me is how this nice, caring and
thoughtful stalk- uh, person (and his employer!) is going to take the
news. You see, I’m finally canceling my
subscription to The Wall Street
Journal…due to the fact that I’ve never sat down and read it.
What's the best/creepiest customer service you've ever received?
.
Packin’ It
“Food?”
“Check.”
“Water?”
“Check.”
“Hiking boots and extra socks?”
“Check…unless you want clean ones.”
“Ben-Gay and other assorted pain-relieving medicines?”
“Check.”
We were about to embark on a dangerous and exciting
mission. One that would change our lives
forever. One that would make us men.
“But I don’t want
to be a man,” whined my sister. She was
always whining about things like that.
My mom, who looked forward to our yearly trip with great anticipation,
said, “Enjoy your back-packing trip.
HA! I don’t have to go traipsing
through the mud and muck! My brain is functioning just fine! I get the house all to myself for two whole
days!”
“What, dear?” asked my dad.
“I said to enjoy your backpacking trip with our kids,
honey. I hope you have a fun time!”
“Oh. I thought you
said something else. Was that a
snicker?”
“You must be hearing things.
Off you go now! Bye! Suckers!”
The five of us – one Dad, one sister, two brothers and one
Yours Truly – piled into our bright orange Volkswagon van. (My friends and I would later come up with a
song for our beloved van:
“Ora-nge jalopy, orange-orange jalopy. Jalopy!”)
We were off for the boonies; also known as the Sandia
Mountains (Sandia means “the place of hot uphill travel and softball-sized
mosquitoes”). Here we would brave the
elements and my dad’s crunchy green macaroni for two days of backpacking.
Yes, I said backpacking,
not camping.
I do not go camping.
Lazy, smart people go camping. I,
being neither lazy nor smart, go backpacking.
What’s the difference, you ask?
Pipe down, I’m getting there.
Camping is when you city pansies decide to “harmonize with
God’s gift of Nature” and “get away from it all”. Which you promptly do by taking it all with
you in your SUV’s as you head for the hills.
Showers, TV’s, La-Z-Boys, butlers.
All these comforts of home are as easily available as a portable hotel
room. There are flocks of families
reclining in the mountains ordering catered room service while watching HBO.
Backpacking is when you park your beat-up VW van at the base
of the mountain and hike your jug of water and box of macaroni and cheese up
the face of your local Mt. Everest.
Backpacking is trying to find a flat, treeless plot of ground on which
to pitch your tent before it gets dark.
Backpacking is when you fail to get it up in time and tempers grow short
as you miss the tent stakes and hit your thumbs with the rock you’re using
because you don’t have a hammer with you because you left it in the orange
jalopy.
Campers wake up in the early hours of the afternoon to hot
coffee and pastries served in bed. Then
they read the paper for the stock market report and then move on to a hot
shower. They make sure to share their
lovely rap music and beer cans with the rest of us. No one ever said they weren’t nice!
Backpackers wake up in the dead of night with a bladder
problem that needs direct attention. We
muster our courage and make a run for the nearest tree. We don’t find it; it finds us – right in the
nose. After picking our whimpering,
bare-foot, frozen selves off the icy tundra, we fix the problem at hand and
follow the skunk tracks back to the tent.
We then stand at frozen attention until sunrise when the skunk gets out of
our sleeping bag, stretches, and wanders off to find better
accommodations. My sister says, “Next
time we’re bringing the hotel room. Boy,
was it c-cold last night! What’s for
b-breakfast?”
Then we eat cold oatmeal, pack up our two items (tent and
pack, no hammer), wave goodbye to the skunk, and stagger back down the mountain
to our orange jalopy, which, if we’re lucky, will run long enough to take us
back to Mom.
What were your outdoor family traditions?
.
The Investigators
We were on the
lookout. There was a job to be done, and
we were setting out to do it. We had to
go undercover, you see, because there were criminals on the loose. A gang of the ‘bad ones’ had busted loose and
had yet to be recaptured. What was
unfortunate for those on the lam was the fact the local paper had printed
mug shots of each on the front page and now we were on the case. We were bounty hunters, so to speak, minus
the bounty. Our community needed us and
we were happy to oblige. We
were both armed to the teeth and had clever disguises designed to make us look
innocent enough.
There was no
discussion about what needed doing. Each
knew what the other thought and agreed, so we hit the streets at an early
hour. As we rode through the dry summer
heat of the desert, our spirits waned from the initial excitement and eagerness
of the hunt. Sightings were few and far
between. There were fruitlessly searched
miles behind us, and an inexhaustible supply of fresh ones ahead.
Our pace slowed to
a crawl. Our throats were parched and
our muscles cramped. Without warning,
one of our tires blew. Our failure
seemed secured. That’s when we saw your
place, ma’am. At first, we were certain
it was a mirage. The heat waves
distorted our view. You were no mirage,
though, ma’am.
You were a
Godsend. As we pushed our crippled ride into your driveway, you met us halfway with iced lemonade. With sweat dripping off our youthful faces,
we drank your refreshments and sat on your weeds. We filled you in on the days’ events. And now here we are, ma’am. We appreciate your kindness and hospitality,
ma’am. What was that? Why, yes, I can fix the flat on my
bicycle. I’ve been doing it since I was
six, ma’am. Pardon me, ma’am? Yes, I’ll be seven this fall. My friend here is seven and he lives next
door to me and he has a pet turtle and a big brother. Are we far from home,
ma’am? Why, no, we’re not. See down the street where that red house is
with the swing hanging from the tree?
That’s my place, ma’am. It’s
where my mother lives, too. Yes, ma’am,
I’ll tell my mother where we were and that you said hello.
Well, I guess
we’ll be on our way, now, ma’am. Thank
you very much for the lemonade. I think
the bad guys got a lucky break today.
What’s that, ma’am? You say the
bad guys turned themselves in this afternoon?
Those scoundrels must have known we were on their trail, huh? Well, you know what they say, ma’am - the truth always comes out in the
end.
Song Lyrics That Annoy the Snot Out of Me
Ever find yourself singing along to some catchy tune, and then you stop to think about how dumb the lyrics are? When that happens to me, I can no longer sing the song. The song becomes something to avoid at all costs. Here's a few of my non-favorites:
Gwen Stefani, "Rich Girl" - "See, I'd have all the money in the world, if I was a wealthy girl".
No, no you would not. Well, maybe for a little while. Until you bought something. Math is hard, Gwen.
Meatloaf, "Anything For Love" - "I would do anything for love, but I won't do that."
I don't mind that there's some lines you won't cross, but could you do me a favor and change the title of your stupid song, please?
Coldplay, "42" - "You didn't get to heaven but you made it close."
Such a friendly way to tell someone they're going to hell.
What lyrics bother you?
.
Gwen Stefani, "Rich Girl" - "See, I'd have all the money in the world, if I was a wealthy girl".
I should be a song writer. |
Meatloaf, "Anything For Love" - "I would do anything for love, but I won't do that."
Anything but fight flying motorcycles with a skyscraper dragon. |
I don't mind that there's some lines you won't cross, but could you do me a favor and change the title of your stupid song, please?
Coldplay, "42" - "You didn't get to heaven but you made it close."
I wonder which smiley rich friend didn't make it? |
Such a friendly way to tell someone they're going to hell.
What lyrics bother you?
.
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