Thursday, January 21, 2016

Story 118: Office Doppelgänger



            Employee shuddered as Boss rolled into her office.  “Hi – what’s up?”
            “Oh, I don’t know, EVERYTHING!”  Boss said as she dropped a pile of papers on the desk.  “This is a mess.  Clean it up.”
            “It was fine when I sent it in – ”
            “Well it’s not now!”  Boss practically shrieked.  “This is unacceptable!  You’re lucky you still have a job!  And your desk is absolutely filthy!”  Boss swept her arm across Employee’s desk to knock everything excluding the computer and including the phone onto the floor.  “I don’t know how you get anything done.  Tool!”  She left on roller skates.
            That night, Employee called Friend.
            “I always say I can’t take it anymore, but I can’t quit!  Can I call in sick, every day, until I retire?”
            “I have a better idea,” Friend said.
            THE NEXT DAY
            Boss strolled on foot into Employee’s office.  “So, I heard rumors that you actually leave your desk for lunch and WHO THE BLAZES ARE YOU?!”
          Friend was sitting with her hands folded at Employee’s desk.  “I’m Employee today.  Whatever you want to say to her, you can say to me.”
            “Oh?”
            “Certainly.  Feel free to continue your thought.”
         “OK... oh yeah: I can’t be having my workers thinking they can just pick up and leave whenever they feel like it!  I don’t know how seriously you take this job, missy, but the quality of your work speaks for itself when you whiningly insist upon such things as ‘bathroom breaks,’ and ‘eating,’ and ‘leaving on time.’  Who do you think you are?!  I think you think you’re me.  Well, you can’t be me, because I’m the boss!  Which you can never be, ever!  And while we’re on the subject – ”
            “Are you finished?”
            “I – clearly not!”
            Friend stood.  “Sit down.”  Boss sat on the floor.  “Here is the reality you cannot see: you are inadequate.  You do nothing substantial with your life except yell at people because you feel like garbage.  I hacked into your computer this morning and found cat and celebrity videos in your browser history, so you obviously are the only one not really working in this office.  My guess is that no one likes you, and they’re not so much afraid of you as irritated by you, as one would be by a fly that constantly buzzes around one's ears.  Think of this, if you would: people wish you would vanish in a puff of smoke when you enter a room, and feel the sweet relief that is freedom when you depart.  You have no friends, and you’ll probably be terminated by upper management next quarter, and then what will you do with your loathsome self?  You can go now.”
            Boss fell out the door.
            THE NEXT DAY
            Employee sat apprehensively at her desk as Boss peeked around the corner.
            “Oh, it’s just you," Boss said as she came in.  "Um, I wanted to say, I think we’ve been getting off on the wrong foot for the past three years.  I know you work hard and you do good things here; I’m just under a lot of stress from higher up to meet our goals, you know?”
            “Uh-huh.”
            “OK, thanks, well, glad we got that out of the way!”  Boss stood to leave, headed towards the door, and turned back.  “Oh, one little thing: when you’re talking to clients, don’t be so courteous and polite to them.  I know it’s good customer service, but you’re not being paid to gab here, and you’re too nice to them, and – ”
            Friend appeared behind Boss.  “Sorry, I missed that last bit, what were you saying just now?”
            Boss screamed and ran down the hall to hide in her office.
            Employee smiled at Friend.  “Thanks for all that, you’re a lifesaver!”
            “Sure!”  Friend said.  “I’m available 24/7 – anyone else here you think needs me?”
            “Possibly Boss when her boss calls her in, ironically enough.  The cycle never ends.”

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Story 117: Author Interview



            Host: We’re in the studio today with our guest, author ---- ------.  Thank you for joining us today; such a pleasure.
            Author: Thank you.  You’ll soon come to see that the pleasure is all mine.
           Host: …So, your new book was just released yesterday and has been described quite forcefully by a number of critics.  Several have been quoted as stating that your book is “an insult to anyone and everyone’s intelligence,” “dreck,” “desecration to the memory of the trees that were sacrificed to print this abomination,” and, the old chestnut, “offensive to humanity.”  Pretty harsh reviews, I’d say.
            Author: And you’d be right.
            Host: Now, what is your response to all this criticism?  One newspaper had a two-page feature where the reviewer proposed that you, and I quote, “were unleashing disgust upon the world in apparently the only way the author knew how: the written word.  The grammatically incorrect written word, it must be added.”  Now, how does one respond to this vitriol?
            Author: Well, there really is only one response.  (Faces the main camera) You are all correct.  I wrote this book specifically to insult your intelligence.  My plot holes and nonsensical twists and turns were all created purposefully to drive you mad with impotent rage.  I gleefully crafted a vile mess of unintelligible garbage just so you would regret paying my publisher $27.95 for the unpleasantness.
            Host: (Laughs uncertainly) Yes, that’ll stick it to them.
          Author: I am deadly serious.  I wrote solely to offend the senses and repay my fans’ years of loyal patronage with faulty product.  If I could reach through the pages of each copy of the book and slap every reader in the face, I would.  In the meantime, I have to settle for the same effect in a metaphorical sense.
            Host: Uhhh... why are you saying all this?  People could have forgiven a well-intentioned misfire, but you have just now completely destroyed your career, the public’s goodwill, and quite possibly your personal safety, all in the span of less than a minute.
          Author: Because if they think I wrote this horribly by accident, their contempt would overwhelm me.  Now that they know it was all part of the plan, they admire my bravery for letting it all out there.
            Studio Audience: Boooo!!! (Paper airplanes are thrown in disdain)
            Host: No one likes being played, now get off my stage.
          Author: (Exiting) You all talk big, but you know you won’t resist my next book: Yes I Still Write and Yes I Still Don’t Like You!
            Host: Ooh, when’s it coming out?          

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Story 116: That’s Not How It Happened in the Book

            (The two sisters settle on the couch to watch the movie)
            Sister 1: I really think you’re gonna like this – the book it’s based on was great!
Sister 2: I remember when you were reading it, and it sounded like a movie already.
            Sister 1: Yeah, the author practically wrote a screenplay.  I bet she was angling for it to be a movie all along; they probably didn’t even have to tweak it that much to film it.  I really can’t wait for – no, you’ll see.  (She smiles the smug insider information smile)  Let me just say it’ll be awesome.
            Sister 2: The suspense is killing me!
            0:15:33
            Sister 2: Was the book this…?
            Sister 1: Slow?  Tedious?  Plodding?  Pedantic?
            Sister 2: I was going to say “deliberate” – at least in the beginning?
            Sister 1: No.  The treasure was stolen by now.
            Sister 2: What treasure?
            Sister 1: Exactly.  My stomach is brewing a horrible feeling of foreboding.
            0:37:22
            Sister 2: I’m confused: are those two twins?
            Sister 1: No they are not.
            Sister 2: Then why do they look alike and keep trading places as if we wouldn’t notice?
            Sister 1: Your guess is as good as mine.  It adds nothing to the primary storyline.  It’s not even entertaining as a secondary storyline.  I think the actors are the star’s nephews, so that may explain everything.
            0:45:00
            Sister 2: I don’t like this guy.  He has annoying mannerisms and keeps hogging screen time.
          Sister 1: Especially since “he” should be a “she” who had a tragic backstory and a pivotal contribution to the story.  Now, though, this character is just nothing.
            Sister 2: I wouldn’t say “nothing,” just “irritating.”
            Sister 1: Even worse.
            1:03:07
           Sister 2: Wait a minute – is she dead?!  That doesn’t make any sense!  There was such build-up to her being the one to deliver the medicine and save the soldiers!  Did she die in the book, too?
          Sister 1: (Speaks around the couch pillow she is shredding with her teeth in rage) I’m sorry, what?
            Sister 2: Never mind.
            1:35:25
            Sister 2: I’d say the romance is sweet, if it hadn’t come out of nowhere.
            Sister 1: That.  It.  Did.  And so did those two characters.
            2:05:17
           Sister 2: Wait, that’s it?  It’s over?  What happened to the prisoners?  Where did the evil secret agent go?  Why did that moon explode?  Are they actually making a sequel to this pointless plot?  What are you doing?
         Sister 1: Checking online for the name of whoever Frankensteined this abomination of a screenplay so I can wreak my vengeance upon him, her, or them by flame war…. Oh no!  The author wrote the screenplay?  Oh author, how could you destroy your creation in such an awfully spectacular fashion?!
            Sister 2: Maybe she wanted to be remembered forever for ruining her own story?
            Sister 1: I’d disagree, but it’s hard to argue with the evidence.