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The Very Worst of Sting & The Police (Uncut)

by Bill Zam | Posted on: December 1, 2012 8:20 pm - in featured, Zamblings Uncut

My collection of Police records.

Last month I had some harsh words about the police after getting a speeding ticket. But I’ve moved on from cop-hater to lovable source of family-friendly entertainment. Kind of like Ice Cube! Unlike Mr. Cube[1], whose songs chronicled the difficulties of being a teenager in South Central L.A., I was raised in tame suburbia.

We wore the same shirts, though.

I wasn’t into NWA[2], but The Police were once my favorite band. So I don’t have a gangsta rap sheet, but I do have a few police records. Let’s review, using criminally bad Police song puns, shall we?

Citation in a Bottle
 

Growing up in my upper-middle-class town, there were very few violent crimes, unless you count those committed against mailboxes. The most frequent violation issued was the infamous “10-9” ordinance penalizing minors for being in the presence of alcohol. A typical police encounter in my hometown went something like this: “How dare you dump my alcohol out? I’m almost 19! What is your badge number? I’m telling Daddy.” Thankfully I never got so much as a citation. I’ll admit there were times I was under the influence, but never under arrest.

De Do Do Do You Know How Fast You Were Going?

Unfortunately, I was also rarely under the speed limit. All of my actual police records are for moving violations, beginning with a speed trap sting by the infamous Officer Larson. Officer Larson was the kind of super trooper who rehearsed in the mirror, accenting different words while slowly repeating, “Do you know why I pulled you over today, son?” I remember his performance well. You may remember Officer Larson from such episodes as “Zam Gets Ticketed Doing 71 in a 55 Zone” or “Zam Disappoints Parents With Higher Insurance” or even “Passenger’s Parents Pester Perp About Police in Perpetuity.” But my friend’s parents’ teasing is all in good fun, because nobody got hurt. Except Officer Larson, who has now been roasted in this irreverent article, read by millions! [Note: my editor’s last name is Millions. She’s the only one who reads these besides you.]

Driven To Tears

My second speeding ticket was in Woodbridge, Conn., which is known as “The Town Where I Got My Second Speeding Ticket.” I’m sure it’s a nice place, but that’s all I know about it. Just passing through and passing the speed limit, thanks. The officer on duty for this particular offense (56 in a 40 m.p.h. zone) was not quite as memorable, but the resulting court visit was. True story: the judge was more than an hour late, and after my case was processed, I returned to find an expired parking meter and a parking ticket on my windshield.

King of Pain

There were days when somebody else drove, naturally. On one such day I got kicked out of a pool for horseplay, which is not an unusual offense for a kid. The difference is that I was 17. And I was kicked out by the police. And it was a pool of plastic balls. And it was inside a Burger King.

The Other Day of Stopping
After that incident, I laid low for more than 20 years before getting a third ticket this year for traveling 16 miles an hour over the speed limit – the exact same number as my other tickets. Do my cars release some kind of radar pheromone at plus-16? Beginning the very next day, I was mailed several advertisements for legal services. When I say “several,” I mean “more letters than Harry Potter got at 4 Privet Drive inviting him to attend Hogwarts.” These attorneys offered to represent me in court while I stayed in the comfort of my own home. They also said they could get my case dismissed or reduced for a flat fee that was higher than the actual ticket cost. But they claimed that by preventing an insurance hike, their services would be worth it. I didn’t know any of these guys from Adam 12, though, so I ignored the letters in case it was a scam.

(Why Must I Need) A Man With A Suitcase
 

Eventually, I decided to use a lawyer, if only to avoid another parking ticket. I picked the most legitimate-looking guy in the pile, called the office, and with an easy online process, enlisted his services. It seemed legit, and I’m sure I have nothing to worry about. I just have to wait for an email confirmation of the results.

[Ding!] Ah, here it is now!

“Your Traffic Ticket Case has been settled as follows: SPEEDING reduced to 44 in a 35 zone.”

Sweet! That was easy! I wonder if this attorney handles plastic ball pool litigation.


[1] At least he got a cooler first name than his brothers, Kosmik and Rubix. (Actually, his real name is O’Shea Jackson. Irish Cube?)

[2] NorthWest Airlines still seems like a strange choice of names to me.

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Tags: arrest, attorney, Burger King, cop, De Do Do Do De Da Da Da, Ice Cube, lawyer, Man in a Suitcase, Message in a Bottle, moving violations, NWA, officer, permanent record, plastic balls, police, police record, police records, race, speeding, speeding ticket, state trooper, sting, suburb, suburbia, The Other Way of Stopping, the police, traveling too fast, trooper

Not Putting My Foot Down (Uncut)

by Bill Zam | Posted on: November 1, 2012 5:01 pm - in featured, Zamblings Uncut

I put the P.D. in podiatry.

Good news! Thanks to my stand-up workstation and plenty of walking, my bad back is feeling better and you don’t have to read about it this month. Bad news! Thanks to my stand-up workstation and plenty of walking, I now have plantar fasciitis.

Wait, where are you going? This will be fun, I promise!

Plantar fasciitis doesn’t sound like what it is. When I first heard the term, in reference to a professional athlete, I thought, “He should have used a condom.” But once I found out it wasn’t a sexually transmitted disease, I thought at the very least that it sounded fatal. It turns out that it’s only heel pain.

“Good afternoon Mr. Achilles, I’m Dr. HELLO!!! Eh hem. I’m only a podiatrist, sir, no need to remove more than your socks. And I gotta tell you, I’m pretty sure what you have is NOT plantar fasciitis. In fact, I’m going to recommend you see a specialist about that arm.”

I know I promised not to talk about my back, but that was three paragraphs ago, so I’m hoping you forgot. It was back pain that first prompted me to visit a podiatrist last year, and not because I thought a podiatrist was a back doctor. (I thought a podiatrist was the guy at the Genius Bar who fixes mp3 players.) But once I found out podiatrist was a foot doctor, I decided to see if my tendency to walk on the outsides of my feet might be creating unnecessary pressure on my spine.

“This is a supination,” my podiatrist said.

“I love America too, doc … but what about my feet?”

She informed me that it was possible there was additional pressure, but that my feet were in great shape [“foot-shaped”, I guess] and she wouldn’t subject me to the expense of custom orthotics. I realize this is sounding obsessive, but orthotics also sounded like an STD, and I was glad not to have them! Plus, I was glad she was honest and didn’t immediately try to overcharge me.

But close to a year later, I found myself standing about 10 hours a day and walking another one or two. I started to have some soreness in my foot, and thought I might be overdoing it. When I woke up the next day, it started to hurt a little more. The following morning, when I hobbled downstairs in so much pain that one of my kids yelled, “Oppa Gangnam Style!” I knew I needed to see the doctor.

My wife wasn’t convinced. Since my health insurance policy doesn’t cover, you know, health issues, she thought I should research home treatment. She didn’t want me to pay out of pocket for what I could learn on my own, especially since I was wearing pants with no pockets.

I work from home.

I walked to my computer (i.e., limped dramatically to my computer for her benefit), went online and clicked on the WebMD® Genital-FreeTM Crash-Test DummySM to determine that I did indeed have plantar fasciitis.

“Mr. Achilles, the arm is looking much better! Oh, sorry, I thought you were someone else.”

My wife still didn’t want me to go to the doctor. I told her I would not make the appointment if she would do her hair and deliver the diagnosis in high heels and a white lab coat.

So off to the doctor I went!

It was my left foot that was giving me the problem. But on the drive over, my right foot contracted a severe case of plantyour footdownhardis. I got a $240 ticket for speeding after my wife had just told me not to waste money unnecessarily. Instead of the regular sound, the police siren went WONK WONK WOOONNNNK.[1] My pleas to the trooper fell on deaf ears.

Wait a minute. Do you even HAVE ears?

“But officer! My foot is ossified!”

The sad part is that the doctor’s office is so close to my house that I would have walked if I didn’t have plantar fuckingitis!

So instead of contemplating questions about my heel heal in the waiting room, I was feeling like a heel over my ticket.

When the DPM (Doctor of Podiatric Medicine) arrived, I explained that my high blood pressure was because I met the MPD (Motherfucking Police Department) on the way over. Her examination revealed that the WebMD dummy’s diagnosis was probably correct. To be sure, she recommended x-rays. Her assistant gave me paper slippers. For a guy with size 12 feet, they were like McDonald’s hash brown bags. I’m assuming they were for sanitary reasons, but since they only fit halfway over my feet, I wondered how sanitary it would be if I slipped on the tile floor and spilled blood all over the nice, clean hallway.

But I remained upright as the assistant supplied the complimentary bulletproof vest. The room was tight, so I had to kick the slippers off – about as gracefully as one removes a scorpion from their toe – and step up onto a metal x-ray stand.

The doctor returned with a tablet – not the kind you swallow for pain, which would come later – but a mobile device to pull up my x-ray results.

“Sorry this is taking so long to load,” she said.

“Your results will be up in a moment.”

“You know what they say about big feet, right? Big x-ray image buffer,” I thought. But I didn’t say it, because I figured having to look at people’s feet all day made this woman’s job creepy enough. I opted for, “Must be taking a while to process all the lead.”

This time, the doctor recommended I get the orthotics. It turns out orthotics are custom-fitted shoe inserts, which is the opposite of STDs. More like birth control. Who wants to have sex with somebody that has custom-fitted shoe inserts? “Hey, baby. Let me slip into something a little more comfortable….” Go ahead; say “orthotics” in your sexiest whisper.

The doctor also suggested I stop wearing Nike sneakers, which she didn’t think were the best option for people with wide feet. Wait, when did my awesome podiatrist become my mother? You’re not wearing Nike’s just because the other kids have them! Here, put these embarrassing things on your feet! At least my mom didn’t charge me $390 when she was done.

“Yes, Mrs. Zam, I promise you that your child will be the coolest kid in school if you buy these shoes from me.” [WINK]

But I know the doctor only had my best interests in mind, and she delivered her advice with great professionalism. She has an excellent bedside manor. (That’s not a misspelling. Thanks to all the orthotics sales, she lives in a huge manor over in West Bedside.)

It actually looks much nicer now that they’ve finished remodeling the toe.

She gave me good medication and great advice, telling me to slow down with both the walking and the driving.

On the way home, cars were lining up behind me. Kids on skateboards were passing me … uphill. I wanted to shout, “I just don’t want to get another speeding ticket! I’m not an old fogey!” But then I remembered I had just purchased orthotics. I drove quietly home, five miles per hour under the speed limit.


[1] Spelling courtesy of my friend Kaleena, on whose phonics I am hooked.

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Tags: back, cop, desk, doctor, DPM, feet, fogey, foot, foot doctor, Gangnam Style, heal, health, health insurance, heel, heel pain, insurance, iPod, medical, mother, MPD, Nike, old, orthotics, pd, plantar fasciitis, podiatry, police, pulled over, sexually transmitted disease, sexy, shoe insert, sneakers, speeding, speeding ticket, stand, standing, STD, walk, walking, x-ray

Big League Chew (Uncut)

by Bill Zam | Posted on: October 1, 2012 7:26 am - in featured, Zamblings Uncut

Chewing on my baseball history, complete with bursting bubbles.

 

This story is about a piece of gum.

I have a new editor this month, and once she reads the previous sentence, I may be the previous humor columnist. I don’t think they brought her in to revitalize The Chronicle with hard-hitting Hubba Bubba journalism. However, I hope she (and you) will hear me out.

The gum, of the baseball-card-bubble variety, is on the desk in front of me, but not wadded up and stuck to the bottom. It’s not ABC Gum, which you may know stands for “Already Been Chewed.” It’s NBC (Never Been Chewed). But like these acronyms, the gum is from my childhood. Specifically, 1986.

I didn’t always want to be a humor writer. When I was a kid, I was going to be a Major League Baseball player. In my wealth of spare time, I was also going to be a Marvel Comics artist and a fireman.

Thanks, Goose, this could have been the greatest mustache card EVER.

But I digress. I was talking baseball, which was a huge part of my life until 1986.

No, Red Sox fans, it’s not Bill Buckner’s fault. It’s Billy Martin’s.

I’m a Yankee fan, and I realize that telling you that may cause enough Boston people to walk away from this article that it will look like a trade to the Dodgers. I technically should have been a Mets fan, but I moved from Long Island to Connecticut in the mid-1970s, in the midst of some great Red Sox/Yankees battles, to the midpoint between Boston and New York.

Dave Island.

While Carlton Fisk and Lou Piniella were brawling on the field, my schoolmates and I were brawling at the bus stop over which team was better. We were also starting to play Little League and collect baseball cards.

You’ve heard the romantic baseball card stories: mothers blindly throwing away fortunes in shoeboxes, kids flipping baseball cards into hats or putting them in their bicycle spokes. I’ll admit, I never did that, but you can’t have a conversation about baseball cards without somebody speaking about spoking.

Or spiking.

I was more of a Rain Man with my collection, alphabetizing cards by player within teams – five rows of five stacks plus one special row for the Yankees (alphabetically last, just like me).

Raines, man. Definitely not “very slow in the driveway only on Sundays.”

The teams have changed, but I can still recite them like I was 15: Angels, A’s, Astros, Blue Jays, Braves, Brewers, Cardinals, Cubs, Dodgers, Expos…. To this day I still don’t know who’s on first alphabetically, Reds or Red Sox. But don’t tell me Astros comes before A’s! Nobody calls them the Athletics.

I collected cards throughout my all-star Little League career. But in 1986, everything changed thanks to Billy Martin. Not the Billy Martin, the legendary hot-tempered player and manager. Billy Martin, the local coach who cut me from the freshman baseball team that year. My classmates can confirm whether that was his real name or whether I suffered memory loss from the psychological trauma.

Yeah, not THIS Billy Martin either.

I not only stopped playing organized baseball; I stopped collecting cards and I stopped watching baseball. I played in gym class and casually with friends, but the game accepted a utility role in my life. I switched to basketball.

But I digress; this story is supposed to be about baseball. Or gum, I forget now.

In college, baseball came back to me. I played intramural softball, I played baseball video games, and I played John Kruk one Halloween, wearing a wig under my cap and a pillow under my shirt (in the days when I needed a pillow to look fat). Kruk’s Phillies were a great media story, and I even found myself watching baseball again.

I can’t find any pictures of me from that Halloween, but this should give you the idea.

My TV-on-again, TV-off-again relationship with baseball continued for decades. In the fall of 1994, I stopped watching baseball again, along with everybody, thanks to the strike that eventually led to the cancellation of the World Series. Also thanks to that strike, the fall of 1994 found me turning my attention to a girl. I was still with her by the time the strike ended in 1995, when I discovered that she had never seen a Major League Baseball game.

The Yankees came back with a vengeance. A vengeance, and a new shortstop named Derek Jeter.

Baseball Avengeance.

So not only did I start watching baseball again; so did the girl. Together, we watched the Yankees win the World Series, which they hadn’t done since I was diving around Little League fields pretending to be Graig Nettles. Inspired, I started diving around adult softball league fields pretending to be Graig Nettles.

Like Fleer pretending Graig’s name was Craig.

Soon, we were married and had a baby. [Me and the girl, not me and Nettles. He already had several rings.] I stopped playing softball. One kid became two. (Not by genetic mutation, we just had a second child.)

Two Kidds.

Life got even busier, and you can probably guess that I stopped watching baseball for a few years, except when my kids were playing it. Now that they’re both a little older, sometimes they watch with me. Sometimes I sneak away by myself for a few innings.

For today’s game, I had company. I pulled out some “friends” that had been in attics and crawlspaces for 20 years. [Stop dialing 9-1-1, this is an analogy.] I dusted off my plastic bins full of baseball cards and sat down on the couch with Nettles, Piniella, and an infinite supply of Jamie Quirk, the journeyman catcher whose card seemed to be in every Topps wax pack I ever opened.

If I had worked on my Marvel Comics skills, I could have easily turned all my Quirk cards into Nettles cards.

At the bottom of a bin, I found one pack still sealed, as if I had just laid it down on the counter of Morton’s Pharmacy next to a Reggie bar. When I picked it up, the baseball gods opened it for me. The adhesive had dried away and the cards peeked out of the slightly open wrapper.

Baseball gods.

I held the open pack up to my nose and inhaled it like Afrin. It still had that distinctive bubble gum powder fragrance, but it also smelled like green grass and hot dog vendors and glove oil and Wiffle ball games in the driveway with the lawn-chair-strike-zone and the garage door halfway up so we wouldn’t break the glass panes and the hot tar underneath the tires of the ice cream truck where I used to buy baseball cards with my Bomb Pop money.

Pops hit 475 bombs.

There were no priceless rookie cards in the pack, but I did get one Yankee (yes!) and this lonely, ½ inch by 2-inch piece of bubble gum that sits on the desk before me.

In looking back on my storied baseball career – and the tale that you’re reading now is the only story about it – I realize that I digress, not only in words, but also in life. I don’t tend to focus on one thing too long.

Two long.

But the one constant through all the years, (Ray), has been baseball. Work stoppages couldn’t kill my love of the game, nor could steroid users, injuries or family responsibility. And neither could a list posted in a locker room that didn’t go alphabetically to Z.

Quit rubbing it in, Richie.

Sometimes we don’t realize our childhood dreams. Instead of a Major League Baseball player, I ended up becoming a minor league “card.” To paraphrase Mr. Nettles, my baseball aspirations went “from Cy Young to sayonara.” But I’m old enough now not to blame Other Billy Martin. Life, like Topps wax packs, is full of quirks.

Who would have thought that one little piece of gum could bring back memories so vivid I could almost taste them? Of course, I wouldn’t dare taste the gum. That would be stupid. I mean, the gum was never all that good in the first place, and this particular piece is two decades old.

Ah, what the hell! You can start dialing 9-1-1 again. I’m chewing the gum. When the ambulance arrives, I’ll either be dead … or watching baseball.

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Tags: baseball, baseball cards, Billy Martin, Boston Red Sox, childhood, collecting baseball cards, Connecticut, cut, Fleer, Graig Nettles, gum, memorabilia, MLB, New York Yankees, Rain Man, sports, team, Topps, wax pack, when I grow up, Yankees Red Sox fights, Yankees vs. Red Sox

Zomblings (Uncut)

by Bill Zam | Posted on: October 1, 2011 9:53 pm - in featured, Zamblings Uncut

The brains behind this column … were delicious.

by Zom, B.

It’s October: Halloween time! As you’ve no doubt realized – especially if you’re already one of us – zombies have overtaken the Earth, including this newspaper column.

“That can’t be true!” you survivors may be telling yourself. “Zombies can’t write newspaper columns. All they can say is ‘UHHHHHH….BRAAAAAINS.’”

Well, I’m a zombie, and I say, “Preposterous!” Now that I’ve eaten Bill Zam, I’m writing this column to dispel once and for all the myths that humans have perpetuated upon my (ex) people for centuries, and the first fallacy I plan to crush with my supernaturally strong fingers is the idea that we’re all brain-dead.

Au contraire, my delicious friends! Many of us are extraordinarily cerebral! Why? BECAUSE WE EAT BRAINS! You heard me – if your ears haven’t been chewed off – brains. And as they say, you are what you eat. I myself attended the prestigious Corpus-Eaton Academy, have a master’s degree from Undead State, and I am also a member of Mensa (short for “Men sandwich”).

The trick is to select the most intelligent victims from the menu to keep yourself sharp and shuffling the streets for as long as inhumanly possible. With the onset of reality television, it’s been increasingly hard to avoid eating the stupid ones. They may look juicy and well-cooked with their dark tans, but trust me, gnashing into silicone is like accidentally eating the hot pepper in your Chinese takeout.[1] Since my first bite of Botox, I’ve stayed away from L.A. and anybody that follows Snooki on Twitter.

It’s ironic, but to find the good meat, you have to stay away from fame and fortune, which is what led me to little-known, broke humor columnist Bill Zam. The body was like a hefty Thanksgiving feast, and I must say that the contents of his particular cranium are serving me quite nicely in the wit department – because I had extra servings. Get it? Servings? Drummer, can I get a rim shot? Oh, the drummer’s been eaten? Somebody smack that cymbal with a loose bone. Thanks, I’ll be here all week, as long as we don’t run out of meat.

Judging by the look of you, America, that won’t happen any time soon. Did you know that one lady actually got in her car to evacuate, but stopped at the Taco Bell drive-through? Well, we caught up to her, and ate her, as well all of the patrons and employees. We didn’t eat the tacos, though. Who knows what disgusting stuff they put in there.

Next, you horror film-addicted geeks, I’d like to clear up a pair of misunderstandings, killing two nerds with one stone-y gaze and a horrific bite to the shoulder: 1) zombies always wear tattered clothes; and 2) zombies attack malls because they are highly populated.

Yes, it is true that when the apocalypse started, a few million of us climbed out of the ground in the tattered remains of our finest burial clothes (though you’d be surprised how many families are too cheap to bury their loved ones with pants). But think about what you would have done if you were in our weevil-rotted shoes. Undead or not, one’s first reaction to realizing one is dressed like a filthy hobo is to head for the closest retail clothing establishment, eat some clerks, and get some new threads.

Contrary to what you may have seen in the movies, however, we didn’t all make a beeline for Hot Topic. Remember, most of us died old. So the senior zombies, knowing the outrageous mall prices and realizing that the teenaged punks hanging around there would taste too fresh – i.e., poorly behaved fresh – shuffled off to find the closest TJ Maxx. Only after taking advantage of some terrific bargains did they head back to the mall through the food court entrance, put on Blu-Blockers and headbands, and do some serious mall walking and stalking.

While you’re hiding behind the CD rack at FYE, let’s discuss the next falsehood: Michael Jackson’s Thriller. Sure, I bought a copy of Thriller, but so did 110 million other people! And I bought mine in spite of the stereotypical zombie portrayal in the title video. You were a film legend, Mr. Vincent Price, but what in my home Hell were you thinking when you tried to rhyme “in search of blood” with “terrorize your neighborhood?” No, I bought the album because I thought “P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)” was going to be a list of humans I could devour that weren’t past their expiration dates. Of course I was disappointed, but there was a silver lining. I had a hilarious mock argument with a fellow zombie that year: “Paul, I think I told you, I’m a lover, not a fighter. The girl is mine [CHOMP!]” But I digress.

The only thing Thriller got right is that zombies are extremely agile. Not only can we move without tripping, we can coordinate events from a well-choreographed dance number to a successful video game franchise with multiple movie spin-offs. How do you think four Resident Evil movies were greenlit? It certainly wasn’t for Best Screenplay potential. Hey, let’s switch it up this time and cast Michelle Rodriguez as the beautiful-but-bad-ass minority! Nope; just good zombie P.R.

I don’t know if it’s the disgust I feel from discussing these zombie misconceptions, or if the author I ate is not agreeing with me. He may have had some serious brain damage before I got to him. Plus, it’s ergonomically exhausting to try to type standing up with your arms extended straight out in front of you. So I think I’ll be zambling along outta here now (Zam would appreciate that one if he were alive).

As I depart, I’ll dispel the final myth – one that I’ve humored you with in this article while I’ve tried to humor you: that zombies crawl along dragging their feet. Not true. Watch as I slowly shuffle up to this dude for a few seconds before turning on the jets. The look on his face when he realizes I can run the 100 meters in 11 flat will be priceless.

Hey, buddy. Yeah, you in the not-suited-for-running flip-flops! ‘UHHHHHH….BRAAAAAINS.’

[1] Chinese Takeout, by the way, is what we called it when we ate Beijing.

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Tags: brains, eat, halloween, horror, horror films, mall, Michael Jackson, tattered, the girl is mine, thriller, undead, zombie, zomblings

A Moving Story, Part 4: A Part Meant for Apartments (Uncut)

by Bill Zam | Posted on: October 1, 2008 10:48 pm - in featured, Zamblings Uncut

There’s a place for us…somewhere a place for us.

Shhh…Be vewy, vewy quiet. I’m hunting apawtments.

You’ll have to excuse the speech impediment humor, which is powiticawwy incowwect in the 21st centuwy, but for the first few months of my seawch I was downwight be-Fudd-led.

Some of my readers noted a similar cluelessness after my last series installment, in which I ignorantly waged war on the American dream of home ownership, payable in 360 easy payment installments over 30 years. I realize that real estate is a proven pathway to fiscal stability, but sound investment advice doesn’t make for a very funny column.[1] For useful monetary guidance, turn to the financial section of this paper. If you’re reading this on zamblings.com, lick your finger and flip to another web page.[2]

The last time I looked for an apartment was in 1995, when the Internet was in Pull-Ups and Googling was still something that would make you go blind if you did it too much. With all of the real estate sites available today, I jumped at the opportunity to narrow my search in advance to a particular size, location and price range. Then I sat back down because surfing the ‘net while jumping is rather inconvenient.

Because my family and I would be moving out of state, we planned a no-holds-barred and no-bars-held scouting trip to as many places as we could see in person in just one week, living on fast food and gasoline fumes and foregoing any sightseeing or urination.

Bars-held-none.

Before we left, we put together a comprehensive list of more than 100 possibilities.

Upon arrival in North Carolina, we promptly burned through the list in four hours.

Forgive the hyperbole, but it quickly became evident that cramming a three-bedroom house into a three-bedroom apartment was going to be as difficult as, say, cramming a four-bedroom house into a four-bedroom apartment. Most properties were not prepared to accommodate our vast supply of heavy but worthless belongings without filling the Olympic-sized pool[3] by the clubhouse.

Speaking of amenities – which I later learned have nothing to do with praying – I was amazed by the available extras at these sprawling complexes, many of which gave guided tours in golf carts. I joked with one guide that we weren’t moving at all and were only in it for the complimentary cart rides. She laughed, but since we didn’t pick that place, who’s laughing now?[4]

Who’s laughing now.

I had only apartment-hunted once before, in Connecticut, where it was unheard of to find a community with a pool. In North Carolina, however, it was rare to find one that didn’t have a pool, a fitness center and a tennis court.[5]

These bonus items were very appealing, but every apartment, condo and “luxury living complex” we looked at was missing something significant, like a dining room, a third bedroom or an exterminator. Like most apartment hunters, I had a list of top criteria: low cost; cleanliness; and a roof launch pad featuring a fully fueled jet-powered escape pod equipped with a kegerator and the complete Arrested Development series on DVD. Failing that, I would settle for washer/dryer hookups.[6]

We were coming across a lot of horseshoes-and-hand-grenades places, but there was always something missing. While online realty sites were helpful, nothing compared to seeing a place in person.

“Convenient highway access.”

Several neighborhoods featured places with astonishing square footage, but getting there took a little GPS, a little Lewis and Clark, and a lot of gasoline. We’re not the type to be too far from civilization (in other words, Best Buy).

One area, which comprised a high percentage of our scouting list, featured homes that looked gorgeous online. However, the entire ZIP code fell by the wayside when we discovered that we were significantly under-armed in comparison to the other residents. I realized that maybe I would have been better off hunting apartments with a gun.

Significantly Under-Armoured.

I was getting punchy and beginning to take the phrase “apartment hunting” too literally. On the morning of day five, my wife found me in a tree stand outside the hotel, frazzled and covered in buck lure. She talked me down and convinced me to try one more website: Craig’s List.

I floundered, bleary-eyed and disappointed, through a batch of Craig’s List entries, many of which I couldn’t even remember if I’d visited. Did we tour Overwood Crest? Cresterwind Grove? Crustygrave Woods? The names were all blending together like American Chinese restaurants, which seem to be named at random from a group of about 11 English words.

We nearly skipped one place because it was so new it wasn’t even on the map. Our litter-strewn mini-van was begging for mercy, but the combination of square footage and price demanded a look. When we finally found the street and followed the property manager across the threshold, our weary stares lifted to wide-eyed optimism.

My wife spun in the oversized kitchen, bathed in beautiful natural light, and my sons bounded up the stairs, followed closely by their Dad. Each of us navigated instinctively to our respective rooms. The boys were spread out comfortably on the floor, as if preparing to make carpet angels, when my wife joined us. We exchanged no words – 10 years of marriage called only for a brief look that said, “I hope this unit’s available.”

The property manager, the friendliest of the many professionals we had spoken to that week, waited patiently out on the sidewalk as we soaked in the atmosphere. As hard as we tried to hide our excitement, perhaps she knew even before we did that we were home. We signed the lease at 5 p.m. that day.

Somehow, on the final day of our trip, we managed to find the one place in the whole county without a gym, a tennis court or a swimming pool. But the neighborhood was pleasant, the schools seemed nice and there was plenty of shopping nearby with a multitude of restaurants. I highly recommend the Crab Rangoon at Great China Wall of Golden Dragon Emerald Town.

PART ONE

PART TWO

PART THREE

PART FOUR

PART FIVE


[1] What does make for a funny column? Lengthy footnotes. People always chuckle at the hilarity of scrolling back and forth, trying to find their place. If that doesn’t have them rolling in the aisles, try using the following can’t-miss funny words: apoplectic; minx; doucheburger. Don’t believe me? Say doucheburger at your next job performance review, then sit back and wait for the Benjamins to roll in.

[2] If you know somebody who actually practices the annoying habit of licking their fingers when turning pages, remember that you can use these bodily fluids to frame them for an atrocious crime.

[3] Ha! My friend Geoff bet me I couldn’t do it, but I made it through that anecdote without mentioning Michael Phelps. D’oh!

[4] In all probability, not the people reading this article.

[5] And a hot hospitality guide named Jenna. (My wife doesn’t read the footnotes.)

[6] If you’re lucky enough to be involved in a washer/dryer hookup, set the washer to “extra spin” (for her pleasure). What starts with a Snuggle could end up Downy Fresh.

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Tags: American dream, apartment, gym, home, House, house vs. apartment, housing market, lease, move, moving, moving south, North Carolina, pool, real estate, real estate humor, realtor, realty, rent, South, tennis court

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