A NIGHT TO REMEMBER

>> Monday, February 23, 2009

Dear Readers,
Last night, the Academy Awards show was on TV and, as usual, I found something else to do instead of watching it. I'm not a big fan of awards shows in general, this grandaddy of 'em all in particular. I'm content to read about the winners the next morning and have a brief chuckle over the reviews by people who had to watch the doin's and how - every year - they complain about the length of the show and yadda-yadda-yadda.
I think, that for the most part, people who make films are smart and confident, so it's with some puzzlement that the actors and filmmakers who win an award invariably give a nervous, breathless, 'unprepared' and tearful acceptance speech, seeming to have been utterly taken by surprise that they actually won. Is it me or does that seem phony? I mean, these are people who live their lives in front of audiences, are used to being adored and catered for, and besides, just being nominated gives you at least a one-in-five chance of winning, so why the fragmented shock and awe? It's all an act, of course, and the irony is that an actor usually gives his or her worst performance when they pick up an award for having given the best performance. Not having seen the program, I don't know who did what and how, but I'll bet some of Hollywood's biggest names did a poor imitation of a Publisher's Clearing House Sweepstakes winner.
I guess the managers and publicists advise the stars to behave like that, so as to appear to be humble and not the sort of people who have perks like 'only red M&M's in my trailer' or 'no one is allowed to look me in the eye' written into their contracts. Watching stars-as-people just like us is a bit like watching WWE 'Wrestling' - you have to suspend disbelief to enjoy it properly. Perhaps it's this fiction-as-fact-as-fiction conundrum that cost Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler)the Best Actor Oscar -either that or his do-it-yourself plastic surgery. Anyway, a bit of harmless escapism is welcome in this time of economic turmoil and the winners were all highly deserving, I'm sure. I just wish that, one day, an Oscar winner would bound up to the podium, grab the statuette out of the presenters hand, hold it aloft and proclaim "I'm the King Of The World". Oh, wait, that happened already. James Cameron did it in 1997, after he won it all for Titannic. And he hasn't made a movie since.
The Oscars may not be my cup of tea, but real tea is, so as the kettle boils, I sit and quietly contemplate the clock inching towards 4 o'clock, where somewhere, the award for best break from the working day is being given to me. With biscuits.

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THE TWSB RESTAURANT REVIEW

>> Thursday, February 19, 2009

Striving to become a full-service blog, Tea With S.B. introduces a new feature - the restaurant review. To handle this assignment, we reached out to the United Queendom and lured noted gastro-gnome, A. Anton Grot over to the United States to sample the cuisine of one of Britain's more notable colonies. His brief will be to go to any city, region or neighborhood - incognito, of course - and order as many dishes as is required to give a fair and balanced opinion of the cooking on offer. We hope you will enjoy this vital and vicarious victual experience.
-The Editors.


"A TABLE NEAR THE TOILET" By A. Anton Grot

Le Chiot Malade ,147 Tex Ritter Highway, Thelma.

Finding good French food in France is a snap, requiring nothing more than going in to the first restaurant you see. Even cooking at a French hobo camp is superior to anything I've ever tried in the US. So it was with particular dread that I ventured out to Thelma to visit the newly-opened Le Chiot Malade, a fresh venture by the recently-exiled master chef, Gaston Merde. (It can be said of him that he never merited 4 Michelin Stars, but did begin his career on 4 Michelin Tires, as his first business was a frites wagon). After checking my eligibility for American hospital coverage, I asked an old girlfriend along to help with the review. (Not wishing to kiss-and-tell, I will refer to her as The Wench). She's very good company and will eat just about anything. Also, she makes up some wicked limericks which she'll gladly recite in a loud, faux-Norwegian accent (especially after she's had a few).

Teething troubles are nothing new for a upstart enterprise, and the look of a just-opened restaurant can be a tip-off. The decor of Le Chiot Malade is sort of high-concept-meets-low-bank account, which can sometimes work, but not here. It begins well at the front with an elegant combination of adobe and hammered copper, but about half-way towards the back, the walls suddenly shift to a 1960's-style pink flocked wallpaper, which, it must be said, goes well with the plastic patio tables and beanbag chairs. But as you reach the back of the room, you're surrounded by glued-to-the-drywall pages of The Fort Worth Star-Telegraph while sitting on filched milk crates with your plate on your lap. The lighting throughout is harsh and industrial, and makes everyone there look like an extra from David Lynch's Eraserhead. I know start-up money is tight these days, and contractors in this area usually demand cash on the nail, but blowing the decorating budget even before you get to the bar area is unforgivable. Artwork on the walls reeks of high-concept design too, with a tiny postcard of The Eiffel Tower in a huge gilt frame (as you might expect), which is supplemented by faded posters featuring The Leaning Tower Of Pisa, The Acropolis , The Kremlin and, oddly, Al Pacino as Scarface. However, we were here to eat, and we were eventually shown to our table in the half-eaten dining room, after a wait of only 1 hour. As the waitress (dressed in a green-day-glo Burka) handed us the menus, I told the Wench to order big, as this was for a review. But a quick glance at the menu revealed some difficult and disturbing choices. Chef Merde is one of those culinary anti-snobs who thinks Americans should broaden their choice of foods and branch out from the usual beef-chicken-pork-fish routine. The French eat everything that flies, crawls or swims, so I knew we were in for something of an adventure, but I didn't expect it to be Apollo 13.

For starters, I ordered the Seaside Seaweed Salad with Seahorse Croutons, a dish that self-respecting starving vultures would not go near. The Wench had the Earthworm Sashimi with Toadstool Couli, which she promptly regurgitated into her oversize handbag. (Thank goodness she decided on such a roomy purse, as I figured it was going to be a rough evening). I had the Soup de Rapport Officiel next, which tasted exactly like wallpaper paste (c'mon, you know you've tried it) and came with what I took to be a brush-shaped baguette. Later, I discovered that it was wallpaper paste with an actual wallpaper brush, as my order got mixed up with the decorator's supplies in a kitchen obviously still trying to find it's feet. The Wench skipped soup, as she was feeling a bit unwell (her greenish complexion beginning to compliment her fuchsia hair) and instead tried a glass of the house wine, which the server had decanted from what looked suspiciously like a thermos on which pour vider seulement was written in crayon. As for mains, the Fourmi Cuite was all right, but after plowing through the dense layers of puff pastry and ragweed, I was a little disappointed at the smallish ant and rather put off by it being placed in a carrot carved to look like a little coffin. The Wench mistakenly decided on Les Pis Fous de Vache, a grotesque pinwheel of cow's udders hanging from tiny meathooks, braised in what looked like a sauce made from cat's hairballs. One bite of this, and the Wench was off to the toilets, and I never saw her again for the rest of the meal. Reluctantly, I tried dessert, and plumped for La Maison le Gateau Special which turned out to be chocolate-covered burnt toast with a half-melted creamsicle (stick still in) planted in the middle, surrounded by cooking twine cut-offs marinated in what I hoped was only pickle juice. Original, I'll give them that (the French let rien go to waste), but horrific.

As the dishes were cleared away, I began dreading the bill for this gastronomic nightmare - the menu prices looked like a spreadsheet from the Wall Street Bailout plan - and wondered where the Wench had gotten to. Suddenly, I looked out the window and saw her behind the wheel of our car, pulling up to the front of the restaurant and waving for me to hurry up and jump in. Apparently, she had recovered enough to escape through a low window in the ladies' room and make her way to the parking lot. I bolted for the door and just made the car as she floored the accelerator and screeched onto Tex Ritter Highway, expertly weaving around oncoming ambulances and running a series of 'pink' lights. It was then I remembered how she was a lousy lay but a very, very good driver.


Rating: 1 Stomach Pump (out of 4)

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LOVE IS...

>> Saturday, February 14, 2009

Today is Valentine's Day and Tea With S.B. is no exception. Like millions of other publications, our crack research team has come up with a number of quotes on the subject of Love. You may add any of them to the card you will give to your loved one...

"Love is just a four-letter word"
Christian Bale

"Love is $3,000 for the hour - no extras included"
Ashley 'Kristen' DuPre

"If I give this heart to you, I'll have to send Igor out for another one"
Victor Frankenstein

"Love is never having to say you're 'sorry'. Or 'thanks'. Or 'Your loan is approved".
Kenneth Lewis, CEO, Bank Of America

"There is no cure for love, except a series of painful abdominal injections"
The U.S. Surgeon-General

"Love is the drug I've been looking for"
Amy Winehouse

"My love, I compare thee to a summer's day - hot, sticky and a temperature of nearly 100 degrees"
Al Roker

"Love is like credit card debt, you never stop paying for it"
Donald Trump

"Love stinks"
Pepe LePew (retired cartoon character)

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THINKIN' OF LINCOLN

>> Thursday, February 12, 2009

If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, he'd be 200 years old.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, no one would have ever heard of John Wilkes Booth, let alone his brother, Edwin.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, Rudolph Valentino would be on the penny.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, Ford Motor Company's luxury car would be called "The Filmore Continental".
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, he would have collected $351,245,087.39 in social security benefits by now.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today he would have had the time to read all of the 15,000 or so books printed about him over the years.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today his 'Twitter' log-on name would be Abraham Lincoln.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, Southerners would still be PO'ed at him.
If Abraham Lincoln were alive today, his favorite TV shows would be 'The Office" and "Survivor".

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'ROIDS RAGE

>> Monday, February 9, 2009

Dear Readers,
You really have to chuckle a little bit at the people who are in such a high dudgeon over the admission by Alex Roidruguez that he took performance-enhancing drugs for several years. It's not that I ever suspected he did, or just assumed that every sports figure these days 'juices', but it just strikes me as odd that we expect professional athletes to be so doggone pure.
Listening to sports-talk radio reveals the predictable reaction; people call up and go all moral about how these sports idols are heroes and role models to their children. Hello? Does anybody out there remember what it was like to be a kid? Sure, we all were fans of all sorts of stars, but I doubt if any of us -except the more obsessively disturbed of us - were modelling our lives after these people, we just liked some of the stuff they were doing in public, and had no idea whatsoever what they were like on their off days. I know that when I was a kid, I never looked to sports stars as role models. Truth is, back in my childhood, I was a Detroit Tigers fan, and that was back in the day when most players had to get part-time jobs in the off-season to help boost the family income. Quite often, they could be seen in the Detroit area selling men's suits and used cars in November, and I don't ever recall wanting to do any of that. What happens to us when we grow up, do we forget how knowing we were, how we used to snigger and laugh at the behavior of grown-ups? If it was true in my day, it must be quadruply so in the age of computer gaming, Facebook, music file-sharing and, most of all, the revealing silliness of most of the content at You Tube. No, the real disappointment, I suspect, comes from the romanticizing adults, who seem to be the ones using sports heroes as role models. I mean, what guy wouldn't want to be a famous zillionaire with a girl or three in every major-league city? When A-Roid gets caught cheating, adults suddenly get all righteous and moral and know that they would never stoop to anything like that, no sir.
I don't really think using performance-enhancing drugs is such a great idea, but I don't know what the pressures are to get an edge in professional sports, either. I just assume it's like, say, being a big shot on Wall Street, where you just keep doing what you can for maximum profit (illegal or not) until somebody catches you at it. How anyone could seriously be surprised that rich, greedy, spoiled people(such as modern-day athletes and bankers) would jump at the opportunity to get more, is beyond me, but at least dopers in sports aren't pocketing wads of public money. And I don't exactly buy the argument that school-age athletes will be badly influenced by hearing about their heroes with syringes in their butts, after all, where better for a kid to get drugs than from another kid. Let's face it, the most powerful role-models kids have are their peers. I know it was true for me.
In 1918, eight members of the Chicago White Sox took mob money to throw the World Series, so big-time cheating is no modern phenomenon. Major League Baseball came down on them like a ton of bricks when it was discovered, banning them all from the game for life. But Baseball not only survived, it grew into the multi-billion-dollar behemoth of today that attracts all sorts of curious characters willing to help athletes get an edge. Seems to me that one might be more surprised that Britney Spears went off the rails than A-Roid did what he did. Didn't she used to be on The Disney Channel? 'Nuff said.
The great thing about pro sports is that it's such wonderful escapism, its only 'problem' being that it's populated with real people, not computer-generated androids. They're subject to display the same strengths and weaknesses as anybody, and with such enormous temptations such as money and fame, who of us can say we wouldn't behave differently? This talk about 'role models' is understandable, but not very sound. Perhaps it's time we dropped this malarkey about sports heroes as examples for the way we should live. Cut them some slack, after all, they're just like you and me, just more talented in a certain way - and maybe more driven, too. So now, when I think back to that Detroit Tiger selling shoes in the off-season to get new coats for his children, maybe he was somebody I ought to have modelled myself after....nahh, I was just a kid!
Well, there's nothing purer than the sound of a kettle boiling, and that sound can only mean one thing! Somewhere, it's four o'clock, and time for a nice, pure cup of tea.

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JOKES FROM EUROPE

>> Friday, February 6, 2009

It's been a rough week in Warshington, DofC, and I thought the movers and shakers in the Capitol who read my blog religiously might appreciate having a few, new, imported, European jokes to tell other movers and shakers on the weekend party circuit.

(These were overheard at the Economic Summit in Davos, Switzers-land.)

Two parrots are standing on a perch, one of them says "Do you smell a fish?"

Why are pirates called pirates? Because they arrrr...

(This next one makes more sense spoken out loud)

Knock, Knock. Who's there? Europe. Europe who? No, YOU'RE a poo.

What do you get from a pampered cow? Spoiled Milk.

What do you call a French man walking along the beach in sandals?
Phillipe Flop.

What's brown and sticky?
A stick.

Where do Polar Bears vote?
The North poll.

What did the ground say to the earthquake?
You crack me up.

Well, pass these gems on - when and if you've recovered from laughing - and remember, while you're losing your job, Bernard Madoff is confined to his 50-Million dollar apartment in Manhattan. Things could be worse!

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DON'T GO BREAKIN' MY HEART

>> Thursday, February 5, 2009

Dear Readers,
Politics generally bum me out, but I'm really bummed over all the hoo-ha that's gone on in Warshington this week.I never could figure out the Tom Daschle thing, as even goldfish know that he's a lobbyist in all but name, and President Obama said he wasn't going to hire a bunch of lobbyists for key jobs. I'm kind of glad that Daschle got busted for non-payment of taxes, as it saves a lot of long-term grief for everybody, but it's disturbing how many tax deadbeats have been tapped to be in the new administration.
Timothy Geithner 'forgot' to pay his taxes, too, a rather disturbing oversight for the guy who's our new Treasury Secretary, but Obama just had to have him, as he's so indispensable to any hope for economic recovery. Let me be the 9 millionth guy to remind everyone of Charles DeGaulle's famous comment that "the graveyards are full of indispensable people" (he said 'l'hommes', but...), a fact that needs repeating, especially in a time when ordinary people know in their bones that there's a double standard for the rich and powerful. The Republicans could have filibustered Geithner's nomination to death, but they gave Obama a mulligan on that one, the only one he's ever likely to get from them. But allowing another indispensable to get away with cheating was too much, and I reluctantly must agree with the GOP for once.
Meanwhile, the Democrats in congress have been larding the Economic Stimulus Pill with pork, which not only imperils a worthwhile attempt to help the economy, but adds a distinct, non-kosher whiff to a bill that would look better if there was some bi-partisanness to it. I guess that's to be expected, as that's what congress always does to legislation. But what surprises me is that Obama apparently didn't see this coming. Maybe it's because he's been away from Warshington for two solid years, campaigning, and forgot what the place is actually like. He may have thought that he had at least 58 Democratic friends in Congress, who would make sure there was enough in the bill for at least some bipartisan support, but he forgets that every morning, 100 senators look in the bathroom mirror while brushing their teeth and see a potential President. And most of them probably think they deserve it more than some upstart from Illinois who was only there for a couple of years before he decided to go for it.
Look, I'm like most people, I don't really understand what goes on in the game of big-time politics, but I know there are no Jimmy Stewart characters ('Mr. Smith Goes To Warshington') to stand up for the absolute right, and those who are there, while not actually crooked, are at least aware that politics is a not-so-subtle game of power and promise. I'm sorry, Mr. President, but change hasn't come, and you haven't helped matters by nominating people who obviously think that the rules don't apply to them, while allowing the Senatorial satraps to stink the place out with business-as-usual.
So, my amateur advice to the President is; take the moral high ground - it's yours, as no one else in the nation's Capitol seems to want it, and pleeeeeeeze don't go to some @#$%*&ing school to read stories to first-graders (ala 'W' on 9/11 and Katrina) while Rome burns. After Wall Street raped and pillaged the US taxpayers and Congress acts like a bunch of drunken sailors, we desperately need someone to take charge. I know you can do it, man, 'cause you're the only guy we've ever elected who knows how to work a Blackberry.
@#$%% tea today, cause I want all this to work out. Come on, people!

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