October 05, 2007

When Fake Guns Are Outlawed, Only Outlaws Will Have Fake Guns

Honest to God, it's THINGS LIKE THIS that convince me local legislators, and legislators in general, exist entirely without ever using their brains.

I think the right to carry fake guns should be backed by a powerful lobbying group, like NNRRA (National Not Real Rifle Association) or something like that.

Posted by Ryan at 11:24 AM | Comments (4) | TrackBack

October 04, 2007

Tough Day

Everything was going along so well today, and then one of the longest-winded, fillibuster Internet commenters in Web history went and wrote I'm not WORTH BEANS AS A PERSON (CLEARLY).

The commenter then went on to further note: he consistently makes comments that are nothing short of childish and usually scatalogical..

Well, YEAH! He says it like it's a bad thing or something, rather than the badge of pride I wear it as.

I don't know if I can get through the rest of the day, frankly. *sniffle*

Posted by Ryan at 01:09 PM | Comments (4) | TrackBack

October 03, 2007

Trauma Drama

Ryan says: Not to be all uber-editor or anything, but this line was in a P-B article: "She suffered multiple injuries, including a severe traumatic brain injury."

Caroline says: must've been bad

Ryan says: "Traumatic brain injury" not enough?

Caroline says: "The moron suffered severe traumatic hole burn after putting a bottle rocket in his ass."

Ryan says: Because, if I suffered minor traumatic brain injury, chances are I'd still be pretty focused on the traumatic part.

Caroline says: traumatic-esque

Posted by Ryan at 10:03 AM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

A Slightly Revamped Nick Coleman Column

I thought I'd take a different approach to my usual Nick Coleman bashing with his COLUMN TODAY. Rather than tearing it apart, paragraph by paragraph, I thought I'd re-write it a bit.

Nick Coleman: 'A Columnist That's Never Been Relevant' is a sad joke 3 decades later

In 1973, I imagined myself on the cover of TIME magazine, showing off a northern pike above the words "The Good Writer in Minnesota." The story's headline as I imagined it would have been, "A Columnist That Works."

Today, that headline would stink as much as the fish, but not as much as my writing and logic, the stench of which could melt iron.

Next September, I'll be trying to hoist myself into the spotlight again, for the Republican National Convention, at which time I'll write several meandering, pointlessly outraged diatribes about God knows what, and I'll be able to expect the Star-Tribune to dutifully print my mind farts with little or no editing. If my writing remains true to "sky is falling" form, the headlines may be about "A newspaper That Is Falling Down."

My writing, and this newspaper, are in a state of disgrace.

The Star-Tribune is in free fall, failing to perform some of journalism's most basic duties and failing the citizens who pay for, and expect, news and information that's well-written, well-edited, objective and politically neutral.

We have too little of that.

Instead, we have a nimrod like me writing under the auspices of a "metro columnist," but who, incredibly, still has his job year after year after year despite writing drivel spanning the globe that has precious little to do with "metro" anything. Seriously, I can get away with ANYTHING and expect it to run.

My name is Mr. Nick Coleman, and the only reason why my boss, the Star-Tribune, hasn't replaced me with a professional and sent me on an urgent unemployment tour of the "Failed Writers Compound" in Hennepin County is that my brother is the mayor of St. Paul, my father is a former state senator and my wife has some pull in the local newspaper biz; that, and I'm older than the hills and refuse to recognize my own irrelevance. The Star-Tribune thinks my weak political connections will hopefully pay off somehow, which is laughable, but cute, so I'll be able to write here for as long as I suck air from those more worthy.

They won't send me packing, even though it may very well go a long way towards saving the newspaper.

Already worth over half a billion dollars less than it was worth just a decade ago, the Star-Tribune continues to employ me for reasons beyond most normal readers' understanding. Personally, I suspect it's because my cranky, flawed, borderline-libelous writing tends to get a reaction out of people that the newspaper figures makes money somehow. I don't know about that; I'm just happy to have a megaphone without oversight.

If I had a good track record, it might be worth the risk. But my tracks end at men's room (I never could lay claim to adequate bowel control). Let's take a look at a brief list of Star-Tribune troubles:

• In December of 2006, the newspaper was sold for $530 million, down from $1.2 billion when it was sold in 1998.

• Since that time, the paper has flailed around trying to remain relevant somehow, determined to act as a national and international player on the mass media chess board, without realizing it was a low value pawn the whole time.

• While I've spent the better part of the last few years railing against bloggers, about the most entertaining aspect of the Star-Tribune right now is a blog, BUZZ.MN.

• Those frickin' assholes at http://ramblingrhodes.mu.nu and http://koolaidreport.blogspot.com just won't leave me the hell alone!

What does it mean to you? Here's one example of how the rubber hits the anus:

Over the years, I've gotten away with outright lying to you, my column readers, without ever having to issue a retractment, or even apologize. Like, for example, that one time, when I wrote a lengthy piece about how President Bush flipped off the press corps? Didn't happen. It was a thumbs' up filmed at an odd angle.

And that's just one example. I've pulled that kind of shit countless times. I've repeatedly abused my position as the Star-Tribune's "metro columnist." Like, I'm talking REGULARLY. And, here's the kicker: I get PAID to do it. I won't float any numbers around, but let's just say you'd be utterly shocked if I told you how much I make. Granted, given the abyssmal quality of my writing, a dollar a year would be too much. Of course, I have such a raging ego, I'd gladly take the opportunity to write my columns for free. Hell, I'd pay the newspaper if I were allowed to continue to poorly pen outright lies. You can't put a dollar amount on that kind of power.

The bottom line is that the Star-Tribune and it's editorial board are complete and utter fools, manning a ship that has long since beached itself on the rocky shores of Minnesota DFL idealogy and talking points. And while most everyone with a functioning brain recognize the shipwreck for what it is, those of us at the Star-Tribune are aloft in the crow's nest, confident the horizon is within our grasp. I'll stop now, since, as is typical for me, I've taken an analogy well beyond its lifespan.

I'll just go back to talking about the bridge collapse, a topic that I positively can't let go of. I mean, seriously, I dream about the bridge collapse at night. I've even started masturbating to it.

That leaves us two questions for the newspaper that doesn't work: 1) What was I writing about again? And, 2) Why am I still here?

Posted by Ryan at 09:34 AM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

October 02, 2007

FYI

Even though Minnesota is now under a statewide smoking ban in businesses, I just want ya'll to know it's perfectly okay for you to smoke here at my ThunderJournal. Feel free to kick up your feet and smoke freely. Cigarettes, cigars, pipes, even hookas are encouraged. So, light up, my ThunderJournal readers!

Posted by Ryan at 02:36 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Not that I endorse such an activity. . .

Commenter "Joseph" linked to a butt-related bottlerocket YouTube video that literally had me clutching my gut from laughing so hard. I won't post the video here, because it's not exactly (or at all) safe for work, but it's still about the funniest thing I'll see this week, so I'll link to it below:

ASSROCKET!

UPDATE: Inspired by that video and the image of the FAIL dog, I give you:

FAILrocket.JPG

NOTE: I should give credit to my co-worker, Caroline, for actually providing the idea for the above image. Since she doesn't have her own ThunderJournal, it's up to me to see her ideas come to online fruition.

Posted by Ryan at 09:19 AM | Comments (5) | TrackBack

October 01, 2007

Pic 'O' The Day

fail.jpg

Via THIS FARK THREAD.

Posted by Ryan at 03:06 PM | Comments (4) | TrackBack

Today's Headline Exercise

Ryan says: INTERESTING HEADLINE: "Man drowns after he jumps or falls from La Crosse bridge"

Caroline says: Ooooh, multiple choice headlines! Interactive!

Ryan says: I would have gone with "Plummets."

Caroline says: Or "Man was on bridge, ended up dead in water."

Caroline says: "You do the math"

Ryan says: "Man drowns after high speed descent from La Cross bridge."

Ryan says: "Respitory inhalation of di-hydrogen oxide following gravitational pull from La Cross bridge results in cessation of vital signs for area male gendered individual."

Posted by Ryan at 10:16 AM | Comments (3) | TrackBack

Shark Jumping in Three Seasons or Less?

Look, I used to love the show "Weeds." The first two seasons were really quite good. But, just like most people who smoke weed just a tad too much, the writers for the show seem to be out of good ideas, or just sensical ideas in general. You have an elementary school kid spouting political rhetoric that's about as out of place as a cowboy at a Star Trek convention--think current day Oliver Willis as a fifth grader, which isn't hard to do. You have a slacker 30-something guy who gets drafted into the army, only to be discharged part way through basic training after he unwittingly takes a cell phone video of a guy getting killed by a kind of military drone, and has his nuts squeezed by a overly stereotypical army segeant kind of guy. Now you have the slacker 30-something guy doing catering work for a porno outfit which, I'm all for naked people and all that, but on the believability scale, this show is officially off the charts.

Then again, I also watched "3:10 to Yuma" yesterday, which also strains believability, but which is also across the board awesome.

Posted by Ryan at 08:16 AM | Comments (2) | TrackBack
I use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit my website. These companies may use information (not including your name, address, email address, or telephone number) about your visits to this and other websites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services of interest to you. If you would like more information about this practice and to know your choices about not having this information used by these companies, click here.