BREEDING RAINBOW
New Rule:
Now that the army is letting in gays and lesbians,
Glee
has to add at least one character who’s straight. Just for variety. My memories of high school are kind of fuzzy, but I’m pretty sure not every single human being in the building was gay. Television has an obligation to present America as it really is: ten percent gay. Ten percent real housewife. And seventy percent vampires.
BRISTOL-WHIPPED
New Rule:
Bristol and Levi have to get back together. Come on, you two. You made the baby, fell out of love, and now it’s act three of every horrible Katherine Heigl movie ever. It’s the last scene, Bristol is plodding through one of her abstinence speeches. Suddenly Levi appears in the back of the room, and Bristol says, “Screw this! I love you, and I love sex!” They embrace, and the audience goes wild as they realize abstinence is just a big stupid joke in a world where you can wear a condom and fuck all you want. The end.
BUDDHA CON
New Rule:
The fortunes in fortune cookies have to be fortunes. “You surround yourself with good friends” is not a prediction, it’s a compliment. Quit kissing my ass, cookie. If I’m going to sit through a plate of MSG-LADEN twice-cooked kitty cat I want a real fortune, like “That meal you just ate is going to give you cancer.”
THE BUG-EYE STATE
New Rule:
Your sunglasses shouldn’t be bigger than your head. When did looking fly mean looking like a fly? There’s only one reason to wear sunglasses this big: cataract surgery. You don’t look sexy, you look like a transvestite Larry King.
BUMBLE PIE
New Rule:
Since we’re running out of bees and being overrun with bedbugs, scientists must breed a bedbug that shits honey. It can’t be worse than Splenda. Oh, right, like that’s so much grosser than where we get silk and eggs. Ask for it by name: Bedbug Ass Honey: For When You’re Itching for Something Sweet™.
BUZZ ALTERIN’
New Rule:
The women’s vibrator industry has to get back to basics. What is this thing? Does it make you have an orgasm or water your plants? Do I use it to play Xbox? Do I speak into it? And why is everything named after rabbits? Jack Rabbit, Power Rabbit, Rabbit Ears, Wascally Rabbit, Bunny Love, Water Bunny, Bunny Honey. I’d buy you one, but I’m worried you’ll get rabies.
SENIOR, BITE US
New Rule:
When a woman over sixty has a baby, it’s not a miracle from God. It’s a miracle from genetic engineers, fertility experts, and the good people at Merck. Here in California, a sixty-two-year-old woman, with eleven children, twenty grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren, gave birth. Again. To a forty-year-old man who walked out. At an age when most women are content to putter around the garden or perform the opening number at the Grammys, Janice Wulf, age sixty-two, told the press at a news conference, “Age is a number. Every time you revolutionize something, there’s going to be naysayers.” To which the reporters replied, “We’re over here.”
And lady, you’re not a revolutionary. You’re a vagina with no off switch. Twelve kids? Lemme guess: You’re either a Catholic or a hamster.
Look, I don’t want to be the one to say that this lady is too old and she’s already had enough children, but this lady is too old and she’s already had enough children! Hey, when you’re sixty-two and you want children, you have two choices: (a) in vitro fertilization, or (b) luring them into a house made out of candy.
I wouldn’t make such a big thing out of it, but it turns out Mrs. Wulf is not the first over-sixty-year-old to have a baby in the last decade—there is a virtual epidemic of granny sluts who insist on squeezing out children who, when they get a little older, will face many uncomfortable moments, like when it’s parents’ day at school and the kid shows up with an urn.
Why is creating life, under any conditions whatsoever, so applauded when there are already millions of unwanted kids around the world? And Angelina Jolie can’t save them all. In fact, someone’s gotta tell Angie that sometimes when you go to a foreign country—it’s okay just to bring home a T-shirt.
—February 24, 2006
CALL GRRR
New Rule:
If I called you, and our call gets dropped,
I call you back!
See, because if you’re re-calling me while I’m trying to re-call you, we both go to voicemail. Which—to be honest—I was hoping to get in the first place.
CALLING PAN
New Rule:
It’s okay for AT&T and T-Mobile to merge, just so long as they retain the individual qualities of each company: frequently dropped calls
and
phantom charges on my bill. Also, they must develop an app that tells the chick texting in the car in front of me that
the light has turned green.
CANNED HAM
New Rule:
On the next season of
The Apprentice,
Donald Trump has to fire himself. His casinos are bankrupt. The only industry in the world where people give you money in exchange for nothing, and he blew it. Seriously, Choctaw Indians can make this work.
CANNED JOB
New Rule:
Instead of killing 99.9 percent of germs, Lysol has to just go ahead and kill them all. Why spare the remaining 0.1 percent? So they can return to their villages and tell the other germs, “Dude, do not mess with Lysol”?
CAR BERATER
New Rule:
Hey, car, you know that light you keep on for a few minutes after I park? You can go ahead and shut that off when I close the door. Why keep it on? Denial? Because you miss having me inside you? I’m gone. Why does everything have to be a process? I’m getting out of my car, not pulling out of Iraq.
CARDINAL SIN
New Rule:
Birdwatchers have to wear uniforms so I don’t mistake them for perverts trying to peep in my windows. Look, I’m sorry I chased you down the street naked and screaming—I thought you were TMZ. Can’t we let bygones be bygones and agree to drop the charges? Look on the bright side: For a bunch of octogenarians, you ladies sure can run.
CARGO KIDDER
New Rule:
Spirit Airlines, the airline that wants to charge for carry-on baggage, must merge with . . .
. . . Ryanair, the airline that wants to charge for using the washroom, and form a new carrier:
CELL MATE
New Rule:
If this device tracks my every move, down to the second, but it still won’t let me talk, it’s not a phone, it’s a woman.
HYPE-OCHONDRIA
New Rule:
Drug companies have to stop making up diseases. I don’t know what the terrorists are planning next for America, but if I had every problem they talk about in medicine commercials—breathing, lifting, walking, sitting, sleeping, crapping, not crapping, getting a boner, and male pattern menopause—I’d welcome death. Bring it on. Deadly nerve gas? Please, I’ve got seasonal allergies!
It seems like every time I turn on the TV these days I see some ad for some drug I never heard of to treat some disease I never heard of. That’s not a stomachache you have from eating the chili-cheese fries at Johnny Rockets, it’s irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS. Or, as I call it, BS. Which would also apply to the dreaded social anxiety disorder, or, as we used to call it, shyness—and we treated it with an old home remedy: scotch and water.
Your wife doesn’t get turned on? It couldn’t be because you’re a snowman-shaped sausage casing so full of beer you sweat hops. It’s because she has female sexual dysfunction. And before they came up with restless leg syndrome, did it even exist? Did you ever hear someone say, “Sorry I couldn’t make the party, Bill, the old restless leg was acting up”?
I’m waiting for the ad that tells me my morning hard-on is actually superfluous rigidity syndrome, or SRS, and has a cartoon bunny who says, “Are you bothered by morning stiffness? Try Flaccidix. Flaccidix is specially formulated to make your penis shiny and more manageable. Side effects? You bleed from your pores, then explode and die. And/or dry mouth.”
—April 28, 2006