The Tragically Unhip

a blog with three fingers on the pulse of uncoolness.

From firings to hirings that should occur merely to fire me July 10, 2009

Filed under: Manifesto,Work — Meagan Burbidge @ 6:03 pm

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am writing you this particular letter in response to your particular job posting because the futile caliber of my previous cover letters has proved itself to be insuperable and has thusly resulted in the following paragraphs.

I have spent over a year applying to literally thousands of employment opportunities (that never initially articulate the necessity for one to work without their clothing), with the information (concomitant with a positive, outgoing and homogeneous comportment) as follows:

i) I attended courses and was awarded a Bachelor’s Degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor; an institution considered, by some, to be as laudable as various Ivy League institutions, yet about as meritorious as a PhD from the Hogwart’s School of Witchcraft and Wizardry in conjunction with my current circumstances.

ii) With over ten years in the workforce, I have the ability to speak clearly and politely to customers and clients, answer telephones and cashier with kindness and enthusiasm, multitask, and alphebetize.

iii) In regards to my technological capabilities, I have the capacity to read, write, type, answer more than one telephone line, use Microsoft Office applications (including Word, Excel, Outlook, Entourage, PowerPoint, Access, and Solitaire), and Adobe Creative Suite (including Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, FinalCut Pro, InDesign and GoLive), make a copy, fax a document and file.

iv) I can also take notes, schedule a flight with one airline and arrange a connecting flight with a completely different airline to whichever destination one is so inclined to arrive at, schedule multiple meetings and various appointments in the same day or specified time frame, order lunches, order dinners, make reservations, pick up or send out items requiring laundering, pick up caffeinated or acai-infused beverages, withstand the not-so-sunny disposition of others, refrain from the use of Facebook in the span of a traditional or nontraditional workday, manage a bank account, set up a new bank account, place phone calls to individuals one may desire to speak with and subsequently transfer the line over to an entirely different telephone, decipher semi-legible handwriting, play a mediocre rendition of Chopin’s Prelude in Eb minor on the piano, recite countless lines from a collection of Audrey Hepburn films, and prepare a lovely bed of field greens in sauce vinaigrette with haricots vert and goat cheese timbales.

This is most likely not the most opportune time to apologize for the substance of this letter. However, the prefatory phrase “In this economy…” has grown simply ineffectual in terms of remedial justifications. At the very least, if you have happened to reach this point of such detrital, ill-advised rancor, I have accomplished a brief, yet unexpected juxtaposition to the four hundred or more letters that undoubtedly mirror what I should have sent you, as I vacuously relish in the gratification of having for one day earned your disregard in contrast to merely obtaining it.

Thank you so much for any time you may have spent on this and I will be certain to prepare any fast foods or coffees with the best of care should we ever meet in the future.

Warm Regards and Best Wishes in your search for a truly applicable applicant,
Meagan Burbidge

 

More Like “Rainbow Brite Does Dallas” February 14, 2009

Filed under: Advertising,Body,Books & Mags,Fashion,Hipster Culture,Shopping — Meagan Burbidge @ 3:12 pm

If I were to experience that incredibly irritating and deluded reverie in which a genie or sorcerer or Jesus tells me that whatever it is that I want, he’ll grant me it, I would immediately wish for the interior layout of the place of which I am employed to be switched around.  That is all.

 

I am not entirely assured in regards to the mental stability of whoever happened to establish the design of this particular space.  However, I do suspect an underlaying affinity for neo-Dadaism at the heart of it.

 

I spend forty waged hours a week in a medical professional’s office.  Most of you, I presume, are familiar with the ideologies of such a place: white walls, teal countertops (sometimes chocolate or Pepto-pink), framed art prints, and a visually communicated “front” or reception desk.  Traditionally, this desk is situated in a non-specific location within the waiting room area, sometimes in an enclosed space.  Its only unified position, in being that it faces the entryway and floor, procuring the respectful fear—through preemptive, paranoiac observation—of the occupants in hypertensive anticipation of an impending and scientific doom.

 

My situation is, of course, iconoclastic and individualistic of its own accord.  The front desk (albeit in name only) juts out of the middle of one wall, causing the door to be idiosyncratically stationed behind the desk.  This postulation for alternative or anti-order operates as the catalyst for patient befuddlement and my haphazard contortionism capabilities.

 

There exists an element of disquietude that far supercedes the spinal discomfort ensued.  As a result of limited activity (typical chiropractic patients are ‘sporty’ and in fair health, meriting little to no urgency in the acquisition of our services), I am often left to my own devices.  These devices typically involve hours of Facebook, Myspace, last.fm, and Vice magazine online.

 

Vice is fantastic because it renders various articles and literary tidbits that you wouldn’t often find in predictable publications such as Time, Newsweek, or O.  It also merits alternative versions of advertisement; the kind that could convince the creative minds behind the Coca-Cola campaign to buy clever Vitamin Water.  This is all fantastic, unless of course every person that passes by your computer screen is guaranteed to be privy to the contents of your desktop.  So, for example, when your boss comes up behind you, and you happen to be reading a review with album art in the left column, and that album art consists of a pink filtered photograph of tucked-back genitalia: nobody looks “good”.

 

I’ve always been a fan of the visual arts in the media.  Album art, tasteful and interesting upcoming film posters; I am the sort of person who still buys Vogue to simply peruse the advertisements. (Articles about which Prada bag to wear to which Libertarian luncheon or mid-afternoon movie, or, what sort of Bermuda shorts best describe me as a person on my next Mercedes Benz-drawn safari really don’t speak to me directly.) I have never really been able to pull off the dark and twisted alternativian/hip/un-jive/over-jive/under-jive/artist’s “Damn The Man and his attempted assuage of my preternatural lust for consumerism and the finer things in life” ideology.  (I am unsure if that is the exact dubbing of practice, but you should get the idea if you have ever met a person who enjoys Phish or only listens to record on vinyl.  Only.) The advertisement experience can be visceral as I pick through the pages while wearing Banana Republic or GAP or something from Target (very much in the spirit of when I would watch Julia Child prepare lobster something or other while eating McDonald’s).

 

I find it necessary to iterate this appreciation for advertisement because, despite the confusion that gold pants and unitards bring me, I often find myself considering various solid color additions to my wardrobe that could be easily obtained by American Apparel.  The problem is that every time that I have such a thought, American Apparel just has to go ahead and fucking ruin it.

 

Being in New York City, land of the eternal billboard, as well as on various hipster-driven websites, I am unquestionably exposed to the marketing campaigns of prior-stated apparel companies in droves.  Perhaps I’m just a tad more prudish than I give myself discredit for, but the photographic concepts provided by American Apparel just slay me.  There’s some aspect to each and every one of its campaigns that just makes me feel morally unclean.  There’s something remarkably trashy (but not in a fun way), and dirty (but not in a consensual way) about it that I have yet to unearth.  I’ll give it this much, it has the capacity to make me feel exactly the manner in which I imagine that I would feel if I were ever to be exposed to incest or kiddie porn directly.  Engaging in an American Apparel advertisement is like watching soft core porn scenes that take twenty minutes of dialogue in regards to “Cheryl” using the shower: get to the point already.  And then, it happens: that pivotal moment when you realize that you don’t have to wait anymore; that all of the secrets of the universe may not be answered, but they are well on their way, as a direct result of the event that you just witnessed.

 

Phlebotomizing along the right-hand side of a cannibal’s interview was everything I never knew I always needed: a breast.  Granted, this breast was attached to a woman.  This woman had only a pair of white pants on.  There was no notation, or labels, or emblems, or headers, footers; no text or icon-based branding whatsoever.  She was simply topless, in pants that occupied a mere 5% of the bottom right corner.  And yet, somehow we all knew exactly what we were supposed to buy based off of this simple image that, in varying degrees obviously, has been threading through Occidental art history for centuries.

 

One cannot measure the intensity of such mitigation.   Finally!  “Cheryl” (American Apparel) is “taking her clothes off and emulating the act of sweet love-making to the torso of someone” (no analogy required). And just then, in our greatest moment together, a new patient walks up from behind me in the office.  Naturally, this was at the precise moment that the Flash application starts to stick and the brief “American Apparel” that appears has given up hope, leaving the breast permanently frozen on my screen.  It is aware that God will always resent me, and accordingly abandons me, leaving me with this total stranger and a particularly gratuitous angle on screen.

 

I did what all other creepy, porn drenched computer nerds would do, which was react in an uncoordinated and overly flustered manner, ex-ing out of the page and pretending that I was doing something respectable, like donating money to the poor children of somewhere or ordering a sundeck umbrella.

 

I thought that the situation might have heightened as my boss entered the room.  However, I think that we have reached a point in our routine that no longer warrants incredulity, or even so much as a disrupted glance.  I think I need to improve upon my knitting abilities or learn to carve radishes into orchids and intricate fishes, something to occupy my time and my hands.

 

I remain perplexed by the nature and by the nurture of the million and one American Apparel colors. But now, having been bested by it, I do feel compelled to wear (in the Scarlet Letter sense of the word) a Golden Unitard: the bitch tag for the bright and splendid cotton adorners of this generation.

 

But I’ll Still Wear Black January 26, 2009

Filed under: City Living,Musings — Meagan Burbidge @ 10:05 am

I had quite a thought on this fair, non-specific day in Brooklyn, sitting around listening to Crystal Castles and Kap Bambino with just a hint of The Kinks and Chopin all day.

 

I’ve always been of a certain inclination that if you truly are of something, you should possess the constitution to relish it without promotion. (That goes for you, too, E-Train Jesus-Plagued Preachers.) However, I feel that it is necessary for me to post it for all three of you to witness so that I cannot take it back tomorrow when I remember that I don’t have a washer and dryer.

 

This idea spawned sometime ago, only I was too arrogant to acknowledge it. And now, as I sit and try to catalogue all of the various things/people/animatronic caterpillars that I could possibly dismember in order to reveal my literary dark intuitiveness and rapist wit to “the world” (previously mentioned unascertained “three”), I am at a loss.

 

Tomorrow (which is today; because I am still edgy enough to stay up late), will be as it always is: My coffee will still taste like battery acid, I will fuck up my omelet, my neighbor’s children will continue to be paradigms of perpetual dudgeon while interpreting inexorable stampedes for 18 hours each day, and someone in my neighborhood will still look disappointed when they discover that I continue to be white.

 

I am contented.
Isn’t it wretched.

 

Will Hang You Out to Dry January 17, 2009

Filed under: City Living,Money,Musings,Neighbourhood — Meagan Burbidge @ 2:39 pm

I don’t know if it’s just me, with my simple Midwestern features and misleading mannerisms that indicate to many that I should be engaged in all their trials and tribulations, but it really seems as though it is nearly impossible to so much as stand in line to buy chapstick and ballpoint pens without someone exclaiming, “Do you know how bad the economy is right now?”

 

I usually just smile and nod politely while scream-humming Arab on Radar in my head.  For me, so long as I can afford a pack of cigarettes and a place to rest my increasingly-worn shoes, I’m all right.  Sure, I miss dining on fancy cheese with Tiffany silver and wiping my ass with Egyptian cotton toilet napkins, but I’ve really embraced falling on tough times.

 

In all seriousness, I haven’t really felt the cold sting of an ungracious economy.  In college, I was too busy drinking 2 for $10 bottles of foul Shiraz and nursing my preternatural angst to apply for valid internships or look for relevant, resume-filling work opportunities. Chances are, regardless of the state of the union, I would be doing exactly what I am now.  That being: working jobs that are painstakingly underwhelming and sitting in my apartment thinking about how much easier it would be if someone would just deliver me a grownup kit, complete with tie and glasses, and I’d start work in the morning.

 

Perhaps I was just worn out from the constant flood of nay-say that came my way upon my decision to move to New York.  People would apply witty catchphrases to conversation, such as: “When you shake someone’s hand in New York, check to make sure you still have all five fingers!”, which merited my response of: “People shake hands in New York?” Most would continue on to say that what with the “hustle and bustle” and the “Angry New Yorker” persona (which I’ve only experienced with visitors, but take care—that will come later, I am sure of it): “You’ll be destitute! Do you know how expensive it is there? Do you?!”

 

Truthfully, the only thing that I’ve noticed a difference in price with is the cost of cigarettes, and frankly, they’re worth every penny. Other than that, I can understand the “cost of real estate” argument (location, location and all that), but if you subtract insurance, gas, tires, oil changes, and the will to live that it costs to drive around that suburb collectively known as America every day, and you will probably even out.  If you can wrap your brain around not dining at Jean-Georges four times a month, then you’re set, as far as Manhattan is concerned.

 

All this reasoning, of course, came before I walked into the abomination of the Way of Things and Natural Order: I am of course speaking of your local Brooklyn laundromat. I came prepared with your expected laundromat staples (water, trail mix, Vogue, detergent, and a roll of quarters), but when I arrived, everything went horribly wrong.

 

Apparently, modern washing machines are too sophisticated for the average American quarter; don’t insult it.  These days, they only accept a specific magnetic strip card—never to be misinterpreted for the sub-standard credit card—which you are required to pay 99¢ simply to obtain from a machine that is also anti-coin, pro-paper bills, and anti-reason, rationale, and general convenience. Once you’ve signed away your rights as a citizen to get the magnetic strip card, you have to pay $4.00 per load for the average single-person load, or $2.00 per load to use the smaller machine: a real bargain if you happen to be one who only washes a single washcloth and perhaps a pair of underpants (but you may not want to overdo it; nobody likes a glutton).  After that, it’s a mere 30¢ per 8 minutes to of dryer time. Fifteen-minute intervals would be menacing.  Be serious.

 

I’ve wanted to move to New York for as long as I can remember: the shoes, the music, the films, the grime, the practice of being in the midst of millions of people and still having the advantage of being entirely unto yourself.  I couldn’t resist and thus made a very hasty decision, one that had bright-burning warning signs that read “ARE YOU FUCKING CRAZY? DO NOT DO THIS!” This decision involved moving into the living room of a single, 45-year-old (legally 60) female owner of three bastard sons of The Renegade Angel Lucifer (her “babies”, better known as “cats”) on the Upper West Side. Decent rent, fantastic neighborhood, bat shit insanity.  It’s an epic and convoluted tale that has so scarred my psyche that I don’t ever imagine being able to cleverly adapt it into a satirical greeting card or miniseries.  (Those of you who are intrigued, know that it involved cats shitting where I slept; statements like “Well, since I’ve gotten through menopause…” followed by “…but that wasn’t until after I stopped using cocaine”; and awakening to find her watching me as I slept.)  Needless to say, there was an in-building laundry room, sympathetically priced at $1.25 a load, and I was blissfully unaware of how good I really had it, in laundering terms.

 

This is The Man: weighing me down, cuh-cuh-cuh-crushin’ me.

 

Late Night Letters: Words of Dad December 27, 2008

Filed under: Culture & Society,Home,How-To — Meagan Burbidge @ 7:50 pm

Dear Christian Parenting Weekly, Daily, and For The Rest Of Your Hell-Bound Days, Monthly Editor, Mrs. Michael Noah Callahan, III:

 

Allow me to start this letter by saying that I found your article on using real butter very insightful. I never thought of olive oil and other substitutes as un-American but when you really think about it…

 

Anywho, I have a situation that I really think your staff might have some opinions and/or thoughts about. The other day, maybe it was night (I’m losing track), I came downstairs to find my children watching television. I know that in the typical American home, this is not uncommon. However, I wasn’t so much surprised at finding human beings watching television in my home nearly as much as I was surprised to discover that these humans were my children.

 

Now, before you start name-calling, hear me out. This has been difficult for all of us. I mean, here I am, in my own house—my castle—and these little bastards are just sitting there: existing. It was the strangest sensation of betrayal. Now I know how Heston must have felt when he realized that he was actually on Earth the whole time in Planet of the Apes.

 

Being a go-getter, a glass-half-full sort of person, I decided to make the best of it. I thought to myself, “These kids need me. They need to know they need me or their spirits will die and they’ll just crumble.” So I engineered a character-building and connection-based obstacle course for them: a character-building connectstacle course, if you will.

 

I began with a lesson in dominance. This was easily accomplished as they were sitting down and I was standing. I obviously towered above their tiny structures to show them I was boss. I also pulled on their ears and flicked their noses, which I thought worked because they looked rather disturbed, which I read as: “Whoa, I better not mess with this guy.”

 

Except it didn’t work at all! The girl poured herself the last cup of coffee and went outside with a cigarette. I looked to the boy, who was hurriedly making a ham and cheese sandwich, which I presumed was for me as an apology. Instead, he just returned to the couch and ate it himself while watching rap videos.

 

So next I tried stern verbal reprimands. “Bad! Up!” I exclaimed. There was no response. “UP!” I repeated more aggressively. Still no response. At this point I recalled a passage I had read about Rottweilers and how disobedient they can become if they are not employed. So I said nothing and left, returning shortly thereafter with three full baskets of my dirty laundry and a stack of hand-written business letters that needed to be proofread and typed.

 

Four hours later, I returned from the local “watering hole” to find not my alleged children clean and pressed and smiling up at me with high hopes of more employment, but an empty couch and—you’ll never believe it—the three baskets of laundry and the stack of letters completely untouched! To say I was a bit upset would be a lie. I screamed and yelled (and cried, a little). I even broke my poor late mother’s favorite cricket dart. I bemoaned to the Heavens: “What could I have done to deserve such lazy children?”

 

Hours later, I figured I should try a more nurturing approach. I called up a pediatrician and asked for a recommendation. They asked if my child was screaming and moody and unresponsive to my attentions. I said yes and they told me that it may be the Terrible Twos, to which I told them that yes, I have two children. In the end they recommended freezable chew toys for teething, which I quickly obtained from our Armenian neighbors.

 

When I asked my wife what in the creeps I could do about all this stuff with the kids she asked me, “What kids?” I explained to her about the people I found in the living room, in silent hopes that perhaps I was mistaken or that I was like Nicolas Cage in that Christmas movie and would just wake up in my Financial District penthouse. But instead my wife told me to get the eff out of her room and locked the door behind me.

 

As it turns out, my children are 19 and 23 years old and there are rumors of yet another one somewhere out there. I don’t know. I guess I just got my days and months mixed up somewhere in that time frame. Honestly, all this time I thought that the neighbors just had a really loud TV. I figured the small-sized bikes were part of some strange circus-inspired aerobics regimen my wife was on.

 

So, CPWDFTROYHBD Monthly Editor: Help! I have slightly older children who need to be taught to respect and fear me. Suggestions are urgently requested!

 

Please send more pudding samples.

 

Thank you,
Papa “T-Dawg” Burbidge

 

Auto-Obituary No. 3 December 17, 2008

Filed under: Manifesto — Meagan Burbidge @ 1:51 pm

SEPTEMBER 3rd 2008 – West Bloomfield, MI – Of Michigan, Meagan: known to [contractually] close friends as ‘Meagan’; Stunt double for various television personalities and characters (typically anything with interesting dancing—in her kitchen mostly); Consumer of cheese products; Reader of Television Guide and the Williams-Sonoma Catalogue, died September 2nd, 2008 from complications due to long-term displacement in Brooklyn, New York.

 

Meagan of Michigan is survived by her mother, Elizabeth, her brother, Hermano, her beagle, Orwell, her friend, Mme. Lindsey K. Yeo, her neighbor Mike, her shoe racks, an unnecessary and rarely-used compost heap contraption in the backyard, and the West Bloomfield Board of Zoning Appeals Chairman (’til 2010!) Corinne Khederian.

 

Meagan of Michigan’s childhood was a simple one, but happy. Most days were spent applying rhinestones and sequins to her badminton racquets, while sharpening the ends for more aggressive tournaments. Summers were spent superimposing the top-halves of Electric Light Orchestra members onto automobile sketches to look like futuristic Robot-Centaurs. Holidays were spent microwaving marshmallows and mailing Snoopy valentines to registered sex offenders in her neighborhood.

 

Meagan of Michigan would later attend Harvard, Yale, and Brown for brief periods in her life, each enrollment hastily revoked when faculty came to understand that she was not, in fact, Black. To every naysayer’s surprise, she got into Lansing Community College and showed ‘em all.

 

The family of the Deceased has requested that, despite the incapacitating woe and in between the unrelenting despair, the thoroughly-distraught Bereaved be sure to observe Better Breakfast Month and donate substantially to the National Pediculosis Prevention Society, in lieu of flowers.  Meagan of Michigan’s final request was to please remember to forward all her mail to her new address in Brooklyn, lest she have to log into every account and make individual changes to every one of her credit cards.

 

Meagan of Michigan’s memory lives on in our hearts and on the tips of our tongues. Also in wildly impressive articles in world-renowned publications, several of G-Unit’s rap lyrics, and the “Celebrities: They’re Just Like Us!” pages of US Weekly.

 

Michigan will never be the same. September was officially a Month of Loss. Bed-Stuy, meanwhile, just got a whole lot Whiter.

 

Animal Collective December 11, 2008

Filed under: City Living,Musings — Meagan Burbidge @ 12:28 pm

It’s no mystery that these are troubled times. Just open up a copy of Guns and Ammo or The Albuquerque Tribune and you will find its illustrious pages, once saturated with jubilant prose of economic promise, now sullied in financial obliteration. One may ask, “How can I ‘live the dream’ when I’m two blocks away from the breadlines?” This very question crossed my mind as I snacked on Coulommiers and fresh apricots. I spent hours in deep rumination, until visions of my destiny bolted into my psyche like a right hook from Christ: I would be the Chief Executive Officer of the Paramount Motion Picture Group.

 

I sprang into action, heading toward the County General emergency waiting room, to employ my lawyer-friend. That was until my Doberman/Affenpinscher, Orwell, interrupted me by regurgitating the Coulommiers and Milka bars I had tossed him. I shoved him into the arms of my mother’s doorman and was struck by an incapacitating thought: Who, on this Earth, would be qualified enough to take charge of Orwell while I dot the I’s and cross the T’s out in Hollywood?

 

I tried the Internet, despite the fact that I have never found anything useful on it outside of the E! Network site. I skeptically employed the assistance of my mother’s cheeky 7th grade neighbor, Billy, for a half pint of Seagram’s. I asked him to try and conjure some sort of government-censored set of codes in order to crack into IRS records of fauna custody programs. Billy looked annoyed, confirming my assumptions that this quest would warrant itself fruitless.

 

Evidentially, there exist numerous service and information sites for what is called “pet sitting”. The National Association of Professional Pet Sitters (NAPPS) offers pet owners an alternative to the hassle of dealing with the sights and smells of a kennel and the common people in it. The site recommended monitoring the habits of your pets and translating that information to their certified sitters. Some of these included eating and sleeping (Orwell’s favorite), as well as walking (?) and running (?!) schedules. The site reads: “Animals get to stay in their familiar environment, maintain their diet and exercise routine and are attended to by caring professionals.”

 

Unfortunately, “diet”; “exercise” and “caring” are all terms that are unfamiliar to Orwell. I had to tap into my creativity database (my brain) to think of an alternative to the NAPPS Alternative. Most of the pet sitting “dog” category was too liberal for Orwell. I couldn’t leave him to the devices of the runners and the walkers and the Prius drivers.

 

All Orwell liked to do was sit, so a sit-ter seemed appropriate. I decided to settle on a cat sitter because Orwell identifies more with cats: the sloth, the vindictiveness, the vomiting. He’s an individual and will not be swayed by the showoffy standard of “active” dogs. So off Billy went again, down the digital superhighway. Each cat sitter was worse than the next until I happened upon a snippet about a dreamer named Tammi Liston.

 

Tammi, like everyone, had spent her youth wanting to be a veterinarian until she realized that it’s gross, and committed to something easier, like a Certified Personal Accountant or a parent. According to a 2001 Yakima Herald article written by Paul Dunn, “Her love for animals, an obsession since childhood, is deeply rooted, but her love for blood is not. ‘When I was a little girl I wanted to grow and be a veterinarian,’ she says, ‘but I couldn’t be because I can’t stand to see animals in pain.’”

 

Now, here she is, eons later, doing what she does best: caring for animals, so long as they aren’t sick or missing limbs. That is precisely the kind of person I want looking after Orwell.