The worst game show ever

Last night, post-run we turned the TV on whilst relaxing. ABC was airing a game show called 101 Ways to Leave a Game Show. Had it been compressed into its actual meaningful bits the show would have run maybe five minutes, tops. Instead, it dragged on for a full hour before reaching an abrupt conclusion that barely left time for the fast-scrolling closing credits.

It was horrible enough to watch once in order to mock it later. Later is now.

The contestants must answer what the Wikipedia link above generously describes as an ‘educated guess question’, which usually amounts to trivia that most people would be pretty clueless on (the most hot dogs eaten in a hot dog-eating contest, etc.) The one who answers the most incorrectly (“3 million hot dogs!”) gets ejected from the show in some violent physical manner, such as being tied to an anchor and being dragged off a dock (ignore the fleeting glimpse you see of the rescue boat appearing moments after the person is dunked). To make matters worse, some questions have multiple answers provided and the contestants must choose the correct answers while avoiding the one incorrect one–except one of the contestants is randomly forced to take that wrong answer as his or her choice. I don’t think I’ve ever witnessed such idiotic game rule design.

In the episode that we watched one segment had the contestants suspended on ropes over the back of a boat. To add ‘drama’ a series of shots featuring a shark fin were shown and the trying-too-hard host pours ‘chum’ into the water to attract said sharks, the implication being that the losing contestant will be summarily devoured by said maneaters. This ignores the fact that the boat continues to speed well past the place where the ‘chum’ is dropped and if the contestants actually got eaten by sharks the producers would be serving time, not inflicting us with this imbecilic charade.

And that’s it, really–the send-offs for the losing contestants seem vaguely mean-spirited and borderline dangerous. The questions are useless trivia that don’t actually test a contestant’s intelligence in any meaningful way. Sticking random contestants with losing answers defeats any pretense to drama. As I said in the title, worst game show ever. Next time I’m resting post-run I’m going to play Bejeweled 2 on my iPhone.

Spelling? Check.

I have been known to mock the occasional misspelling. I can’t explain why I do this. I recall vaguely from years ago that I read somewhere that spelling is not related to intelligence and can vouch for knowing people who are smart but fairly terrible at spelling. Much as I can’t explain why I might mock a misspelling, I likewise offer no insight as to why I generally do not have to look up a word in order to spell it correctly.

I am, however, ready to blame the Internet for making the general level of literacy (and spelling) that much worse. It’s a convenient scapegoat and it comes with lots of circumstantial evidence, like The Best Obnoxious Responses to Misspellings on Facebook. It’s quite possible every entry on the site is faked but they ring true.

This is almost like a comedy routine (warning: salty language):

Me, I don’t fuss over the occasional typo. I might raise an eyebrow when I see ‘rediculous’, I may open my mouth as if to say something after spotting a your/you’re slip. I pretty much pass right over its/it’s since that one just underscores how arbitrary and strange English is, anyway. But I do offer one warning:

‘No one’ is two words. Noone is not, unless you are maybe referring to Peter Noone of Herman’s Hermits.

Well, that was a riot

After last night’s 4-0 loss in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final, several hundred idiots in downtown Vancouver decided to have a riot. This may be the best image to capture the absurdity of rioting over a hockey loss:

Lovers in a dangerous time

(Photo courtesy of Rich Lam/Getty and is part of the photo gallery in this CBC news story.)

I will have more on the game/riot shortly!

Weirdly painless passport application

Today I applied for my first-ever passport. The last time I traveled to the US a passport was not necessary but eight years after 9/11 it was determined that causing extra inconvenience to Canadians would protect the US from terrorists that never came through Canada to begin with, but who am I to argue with paranoia and excessive (and false) security?

The surprising thing is after getting my photos taken to the required specifications at the drugstore-that-shall-not-be-named and filling out the three pages of the application and having Alison help out as my guarantor (“This guy is not an evil clone, I swear!”) I went to the passport office downtown, winced at the huge number of people waiting but was pleasantly surprised at how efficiently they were processed. Before long I was speaking with a nice young woman who told me my passport would be ready to pick up in just two weeks. Nice!

The No Kidding Department: Hospitals are depressing

Earlier this week I accompanied Jeff to the emergency room of Royal Columbia Hospital. His ankle was hurting and swollen up like the proverbial balloon, so we went in to have it checked out. Previous appraisals had made a tentative diagnosis of tendinitis and the recommendation to not do anything that would impact the foot (running, etc.) I figured we’d be there for a good while but the emergency room was actually only sparsely populated. It turned out that didn’t matter, as we were there for three hours, anyway.

The first section — the emergency room proper — had a few people with fairly obvious ailments — a woman with her arm in a cast, a man on a gurney wearing a neck brace, while others were harder to pin down — a fussy baby, a young woman carting an IV drip alongside her. The man on the gurney complained of being bored but had four people other than his wife hunkered around him. The discussion was vague but ominous, with talk of blood and such, though none was apparent from where I sat. They eventually wheeled him off.

As we continued to wait, more people were taken past us, many of them heavyset, all of them looking either ill or bored or both. One gurney would be rolled through slowly, another more urgently. We were eventually moved to the ‘minor condition’ section to wait for an x-ray to be done. While there we heard a woman off in another room repeatedly cry out “Ow!” and “Oh!” It sounded like they were murdering her with pins. I started feeling a little squirmy at this point but she eventually fell silent as they either completed the testing/probing or she fainted/died.

She was later wheeled out into the same section as us, an elderly woman who said she had to keep her feet up and yelled at an intern “Don’t touch my finger!” as he tried to move her from a wheelchair that was sans footrest to one that had one. She apologized to him for the outburst then spent the rest of her time repeatedly asking to use someone’s cellphone, as hers had died. I don’t recall her actually making a call despite being handed a phone several times. She was eventually wheeled off and we heard from her no more. This provided some comfort as she was the only patient there actively screaming.

By this time Jeff was taken for x-rays and I went out to feed the maw of the meter in the emergency parking lot, also known as ‘How we keep the hospital solvent by charging the equivalent of a mortgage payment for 3 hours of parking’. There are handy green arrows on the floor to lead you from one section to another, so I would have no problem making my way back in. This was good as every corridor looked the same and equally depressing to me. As it turned out, the green arrows split at one point and I became utterly confused, finding myself in a room I did not recognize, one that was filled with beds and very sick-looking people and curtains that should have been closed but were not so you could see things you didn’t want to see. I turned around a few times and realized why so hospitals are such a great setting for thrillers and horror movies. I made my way back to Jeff in time to look at the x-ray and see the fractured bone in his ankle. The diagnosis was a plaster cast for the day, an appointment with a specialist the next day and probable replacement with a Fiberglas cast in a few days that would be worn for 5-6 weeks, with the fun bonus possibility of surgery if the healing didn’t proceed as desired. Jeff was understandably less than thrilled.

The diagnosis was later changed to an air cast that could be removed for sleeping/showering, with surgery unlikely, so things ended up looking better than they were originally.

About the only thing I liked at the hospital was the Tim Horton’s apple fritter I bought in the coffee shop. We shared it and it was yummy. Other than that, I can’t say I’m anxious to step in one again any time soon. Those places are enough to make you sick.

Why does this ad bother me?

Hopefully I can find a copy of the ad because visual aids always help, but in case I can’t, there is a recent promotion from a mobile phone company for a family bundle package. The slogan used in the ad is this:

The family that saves together, smiles forever.

Any proper Grammar Nazi will immediately get his hackles up over the gratuitous comma, but it’s the actual phrase that rubs me the wrong way. First, linking saving with smiling seems natural — saving makes you happy, being happy results in smiling. Logical. But smiling over savings, no matter how fantastic, is a transitory experience, not one that lasts forever. This brings to mind an image of the family all gathered in the afterlife, still grinning away over their great cellphone bundled savings, even as they no longer need an unlimited plan to reach through the nether to scare surviving relatives. Alternately I picture a pharaoh being buried with his family, sealed away for all time under a great pyramid, each family member clutching a cell phone to his or her hand. If they had cell phones in ancient Egypt, that is. Or maybe I’m projecting because of that ancient Egypt episode of Futurama I saw recently.

In any case, the slogan is creepy.

Mobile post ahoy

This is a test post from the WordPress mobile app. I believe I will do this in the future only if I succumb to total madness, which extended use of this tiny virtual keyboard on my iPhone will surely cause to happen.

New masthead, now with more picture

I finally got off my figurative butt and inserted a graphic as part of the masthead for the blog. As of this writing it is a photo I took at Buntzen Lake during a hike in January. I am planning on rotating through a number of images. I’ll probably jazz up the site a bit more in the coming weeks, though I am undecided on how best to do this. I can’t decide between animated gifs or auto-playing midi files. If only the <BLINK> tag was still supported.

In case the image mentioned above isn’t the current one, here it is below (click for full-size):

Upgraded tubes

I recently had my Internet service upgraded and speedtest.net provides a shiny-looking graphic for the test results. Here it is for my connection:

Not bad. Now I can download game demos I’ll never play faster than ever!

Complaining about the weather is always good fun

This CBC news story outlines what most people in BC already know — April and May have sucked, weather-wise.

So far in April and May, the mean high daily temperature has been 9.2 C, which is 3.5 C below normal, while total rainfall of 183.1 millimetres is 120 per cent above normal, [CBC meteorologist] Martin said.

While writing this I heard a sudden clatter outside — hail! Again. I go out and take a picture:

The weird streaks in this image of a tree out back are not photographic artifacts. They are weather. At this time of the year one should not be hearing the weather, one should be feeling it as the warmth gently caresses your skin, rather than assaulting it like God’s BB gun.

I’m sure June will be better, assuming the ice caps don’t melt in the meantime and just flip the switch right over to GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE RIGHT NOW and the joke about Canadians living in igloos becomes a sudden reality.