Have you ever noticed that when you learn a new word, see a new movie, or find out some new fact, all of a sudden it starts popping up in your life?
You find out that “canard” is a word used to describe “an unfounded, false, or fabricated report or story”; then two days later you hear someone describe Lou Dobbs’ entire career as a case study in the use of “canards” and suddenly, it all makes sense.
If you finally decide to sit down and watch a famous movie that you’d never bothered to see before, I guarantee that you’ll hear at least a half-dozen references to that movie over the next few months. Is it just a coincidence, or have you been unconsciously suppressing references to that movie for years? It’s hard to say.
On Monday I was listening to a “This American Life” podcast entitled “The Wrong Side of History,” when a perfect example of the topic of the show popped up into my life.
In the segment in question, Adam Davidson --an international economics correspondent for NPR-- is trying to convince his cousin D.J. that he has made a horrible mistake by dropping out of college. To help him win his argument, Adam elicits the opinions of Pietra Rivoli, an economics professor at Georgetown.
Without getting into all of the details, D.J. has gone through a series of blue-collar construction jobs. Surprisingly, Dr. Rivoli says that she’s not worried about D.J. or his future. She says that the people she worries about are low-skilled workers whose jobs have been, or will be outsourced. There will always be a need for blue-collar skilled workers. This country will always need people to drive trucks, repair cars, and build houses.
It’s all a matter of perception. Professional people are sometimes guilty of confusing education with intelligence, which is a terrible mistake. I’ve known people with graduate degrees that I wouldn’t hire to be a crossing guard, and conversely, two of the most intelligent men I’ve ever known only managed to get to the 10th grade.
I was walking to work as I was listening to this podcast. I have a routine I go through every morning. As soon as I get in, I walk over to the boiler room where the snack machines are located. I buy a 20 oz bottle of Dr. Pepper and one small bag of Cheeze-Its. The noise in the boiler room usually drowns out the sound of my ear-buds, so I paused the podcast discussion between Adam and D.J.
When I got to the machines I was hit with the terrifying realization that the soda machine was only accepting exact change; all I had were three $1 dollar bills. The soda is $1.50 and the Cheeze-Its are $0.90. The math didn't add up... Anybody who really knows me knows that if my routine gets thrown off in any way, shape, or form, I’m a total mess. I needed that Dr. Pepper. I needed those Cheeze-Its.
Not knowing what to do, I simply stood there staring at the machines for roughly 30 seconds in total disbelief.
Suddenly, a maintenance mechanic by the name of “Animal” walked up on the scene… let me give you some background on “Animal”. First of all, I have no idea what his real name is. I’ve known the guy for 4 years and I’ve never heard anyone call him anything other than “Animal”. He’s like 5’5” with long, unruly hair, a thick beard; he smells like beer, he’s always smoking a cigarette, and I once saw him shoot a snot rocket 30 feet across the parking garage of the Rayburn House Office Building… He reminds me a little of Charles Manson only his hair is brown as opposed to black.
So anyway, “Animal” walks up, looks at me, and looks at the machine, sizing up the situation… Without saying a word he takes a dollar bill from my hand, slides it into one of the other machines, presses the “return change” button, and out come 4 quarters…
“Now you got exact change,” he mumbled as he handed me the change and walked away. A cigarette was dangling from his lip the entire time.
It was the perfect scenario to bring my podcast discussion to life… Blue-Collar skill isn’t going anywhere, education doesn’t equal intelligence, you don’t have to worry about D.J., and you certainly don’t have to worry about “Animal”.
...Got a request for a movie or fast food item you'd like to have reviewd? Or maybe just something to say? Drop a note in the chatbox on the side column...
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
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10 comments:
1) Which President is on the $3 bill?
B) How many did you have?
@) For tomorrow, I'd like you to discuss the value of the American dollar when compared to the Japanese yen.
Good day, sir.
Jim might have actually been right you little dickhead.
I never knew it was up for discussion; we both knew he was right.
You forgot the part about DJ being a bouncer at a strip club and the professor saying strippers' jobs likely won't be outsourced as will the bouncers' jobs. I thought that might be relevant considering your guide to strip clubs.
Oh, btw, my mom always used to tell me that I was book smart but had NO street smarts. She had a point.
cindylu- believe me, the strip club reference did not go unnoticed. in fact it probably helped pull my short attention span back to the topic. i'm sure I was probably drifting off, heard "strip club", then started to really pay attention because I thought they might talk about boobs or something. really, I think I could master any subject if every 10 minutes the professor would mention cleavage or asses... anyway, I thought about throwing in something about the strip club bouncer job, but then I would have had to talk about 'non-tradable services' and seriously, nobody wants to read economic jargon from a guy with a blog called "Farting in the Shower".
also, as a fellow TAL listener, do you have any advice for how Moe can get past Ira Glass' voice? I made him start listening to the podcast a few weeks ago, and he likes the stories, but hates Ira so much that he can't stand to listen... I've tried to tell him that if he keeps listening he'll eventually get past it and it might even grow on him, but its not happening. I need him to get into TAL as much as I am so I can have someone to talk to about it!
moe- btw, my 3 dollar bills typo(which wasn't really a typo, just a sentence that could have been written more clearly) has been fixed... not because I thought other people might be confused, but because I wanted people to read your comment and think you were the one who didn't make sense.
Ira Glass went to Duke.
LMAO!!!!
i have nothing for moe. you can talk to me about TAL. i love it and i actually really like ira glass' voice. you know whose voices i find weird? sarah vowel and david sedaris. man.
TAL- I agree on David Saderis, and I also think Starlee Kine's voice is just down right bizzare, but much like with Ira's voice, its its grown on me.
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