Allow me to enlighten you about the reasons why you should become a government employee, common misperceptions about these jobs, and how ultimately, everything can be connected to the census. Call 1-866-861-2010 to schedule a testing time near you!
In honor of thi$ week$ book club $election, I will be writing a very obnoxiou$ly punctuated fir$t $entence. I can't say I've ever listened to anything by the musician Kee$ha*, but if replacing an s with a dollar sign makes you hip, than call this guy Miles Davis. Or Mile$ Davi$ if you prefer.
That's Joel Salatin. Visionary. Entrepeneur. Chicken Farmer.
Enough flither flather. Let's get to the review. I've previously told about my extracurricular job fun. Well, my genius** brother put this book in my hands. It is a quick, clear read, written with down-to-earth colloquial honesty. One of my favorite lines is when he states "The world revolves around five-gallon buckets" without a hint of irony. Salatin shares his model for raising and selling broiler chickens. Happy chickens. Able to live their brief but very content life grazing on delicious grass. This makes for a very delicious bird and one that is free of antibiotics and hormones. There seems to be so much potential in these pages. We'll see... In fact, TODAY my brother and I went to Lowes to pick up the lumber to make our very first chicken tractor. These are the portable pens that the hens live in. Free-range chicken usually pecks one area down to a dirt patch. The pens help the not-so-bright chickens to move along. Sample some new vegetation. Much better for the earth, as they spread their manure, naturally fertilizing the soil, whereas too much chicken doo is too much nitrogen for the soil to handle, creating barren land. There I go, sharing chicken details you probably don't want to know. This book sucked me in to the world of poultry, and it should be an interesting adventure. We'll get our first 100 chicks in about a week...
* After finishing this post, I googled Kee$ha to see if I had even spelled her name right. I have not. Normally, census takers take special care to spell names correctly, but since this is not the official deal, I'm leaving it be for posterity's sake.
** Tell him I called him a genius and I'll deny it. I don't think he knows blogs exist.
Not much activity here on the blog this week. Part of that is because it was a crazy busy week, followed by a near-migraine. Every once in a while, my body says, "You have been putting me through too much. I demand you rest for a day." So that was yesterday.
But the sluggish blogging is also due to very few comments. I'll be honest, I thought I would be famous by now. I read a few weeks ago, how "The Pioneer Woman" blog is going to be turned into a movie starring Reese Witherspoon. I have never been to this "Pioneer Woman" blog, but my wife has told me about it. I could see John Krasinski in the lead role of Census Guy, while I sip beverages with little umbrellas while I lounge poolside.
But I'm slowly realize how elusive fame is and how these blogs need entire weeks to build into phenomena. So in the meantime, I can be placated by the hundreds of comments I receive every day. What? Unrealistic? Ok, how about the dozens of comments? No? How about 5? Would FIVE be too much to ask?
I mean, really, most of my posts shamelessly pander for comments, asking for your imput. But even when I put vitally crucial (crucially vital?) decisions in your hand, such as should The Test villain have a mustache or a monocle, I only get one reply!!!??? As my little blogging sister so eloquently put it, "Comments are my candy." They also validate that what I'm doing here is being seen by others and getting the word out about the census. And it lets me know that I'm funny/interesting to more people than just me, my wife, and my little blogging sister. So if you want more Renoir musings or Lost essays, send me some candy.
Perhaps I should check out this "Pioneer Woman" blog to see what makes her so successful...
So, who would play YOU if your blog were turned into a movie?
When I first applied for this job, I thought I needed to keep it on the down-low. I figured if everybody knew about the incred wage, then everybody and their dog would apply, which would lower my chances of getting the job. I figured that my little rural county would hire 1, maybe 2, census takers. Really, how many workers could it take to cover a small county?
20. As it turns out, a county with a population of around 3,000 needs about 20 workers to get the job done. And if those workers can't be found in the county, then those paychecks are going home to other counties. So spread the news, tell a friend or two, and keep the cash in your area. Call today to schedule a time and place for....the test.
That's right! I almost forgot about this blog's narrative. And every story needs a villain. And this blog's antagonist is...the test. I need to more effectively build tension. So which evil person below would make a better physical embodiment of....the test!
I tried to find a villain with a mustache AND a monocle, but I am at the mercy of google image search.
Waaaaayyyy back towards the beginning of Lost, Hurley decided to take an island census, using the flight manifesto for reference. He made a discovery. One of the island inhabitants was not on the plane. Cue the creepy music and Ethan Rom's obsessed glassy gaze at Claire's round pregnant belly. Ethan was the second fascinating supporting character to be introduced on the show in as many episodes. Just one episode earlier, Sayid discovers a crazed French woman (who speaks with an Eastern European accent) who has been living on the island for years. Danielle Rousseau, one of my all-time favorite Lost characters. That was episode 9 of the first season, and tonight we have episode 9 of the final season. It is fitting, in this season of mirroring storylines, that the episode focuses on Richard Alpert, another richly written mysterious character in the Lost mythology.
There are so many reasons to love Lost. High at the top of the list are the characters. I would contend that no other show has created such an extensive roster of characters. But with quantity, the quality does not suffer. In fact, the additional characters always serve the storyline. To sum it up, Lost has made us care about and has intrigued us with more characters than any show has ever attempted. Look at the photo below. 26 people and a dog. And that's just the surface.
So if Hurley were to do his census today, what would it look like? Because we certainly can't forget about all the supporting characters like Rousseau and Ethan that have added to the mystery of this series. The Survivors. The Tailies. The Others. The Dharma Institute. The Freighter Folk. So many layers of enigma. Not to mention all the family members and friends and foes back home that have given layers to all our main characters. This website creates a gallery of 108 Lost characters you should know. Some are certainly less important than others, but most have left an indeliable mark on the plot. Who are your favorites?
My Top 10 from the main characters would be...
Okay, I just wasted 5 minutes trying to enumerate an impossible task. Each character serves a purpose that is integral to the story. Even Anna Lucia. So somewhere in my top 10 (in no particular order) would be Eko, Juliet, Sun, Faraday, Desmond, Sawyer, Sayid, Rose, Miles, of course Ben, thank goodness for Hurley lending much needed heart and comic relief to the show, Charlie's final episode was so heroic and good, and Locke is always amazing, and Crazy Claire has been very entertaining lately, and I can't include Sun without Jin, and Jack is the bedrock of the show, and...do you see where where I run into trouble?
Even more intriguing are the peripheral characters. Sometimes a character only needs an episode or two to leave A. their mark and B. you wanting more. Such as Richard Malkin, the creepy psychic that convinced Claire the board the train. Or Mikhail Bakunin, the Russian eye-patched Other that would not die. Nadia, Goodwin, Keamy, Anthony Cooper, Matthew Abaddon and Eloise Hawking have all made an impression in less than 10 episodes out of the 116 so far.
What I find particularly fun about this season's sideways flashes is how those supporting characters, and especially previously-dead characters, are popping up in unexpected, very interesting ways. So far we've seen Ethan, Ben, Alex, Dogen, Miles, Charlotte, and Keamy show up off the island in very different roles. These people are going to be drawn together despite the circumstances. With eight more episodes until the series finale, what other characters do you hope will make a cameo appearance in this parallel world?
I'll leave you with some music from Michael Giacchino, the (now Oscar-winning) composer of Lost (and quite possibly one of the top 3 modern composers of our time) and some art from the recent Lost Underground Art Show. "Showdowns I and II" by Scott Campbell.
While I was typing that prior entry, my lovely pregnant bride brought me out a treat. It was lox on a bagel. I first read about lox about 3 years ago in Book 10 of the Series of Unfortunate Events series (since we were just talking about kids lit). When I read about yummy food, I have a little notecard where I write down the foods I want to try. This is how I first became exposed to samosas, tandoori chicken and pul kogi, later tracking them down on allrecipes.com, creating and tasing them. (And yes, I did make all those things myself, only needing my wife's help locating where the flour is kept, where the measuring cups are, etc. [basically my kitchen GPS] {I am really on a parenthetical kick tonight-FOCUS!})
So yes, lox. Oh. My. Goodness. So good. I should have taken a picture because the one she made for me looked 10 times better than this one because it had herbs rubbed into the salmon soooo goooood. And this was like the best picture I could find, and I went through like 6 pages of on the google image search.
So yes, lox. It is finely sliced cured salmon. On a whole wheat bagel with cream cheese. Apparently, this culinary treat came to the United States via Eastern European Jews. So thank you, Eastern European Jews.
My bride hands it to me, I bite it and say, "I might just have to write an entry about this." Then she provides the connection and says, "Because of the census, we can get a splurge food item again!" This made me happy, and I did my high-pitch voice I do when I'm making the baby talk, "This is good stuff! I'm getting smarter!" Do you know how good salmon is for babies?
One of the aspects about my job that I most love is how I get paid to read books. I love reading. In the past several years, I've read around 20-30 adult books every year, several more kid novels, and countless picture books. But 2010 was off to a very disheartening start. With the combined efforts of my sons, my class and my second job all pulling for my time, I had finished not one entire book as of March 14. That is pitiful. I had been dilligently chipping away at a few books, but had not finished any. And then I got my job for the Census!
While I sit at my little table outside of Alco or IGA, I sometimes wait quite a while before someone takes up my offer to talk more about a great job. So, while I wait, I read. This too has been an answer to prayers. Last week, I finished THREE books. I could insert another YouTube clip here of angelic choirs singing, but I'll spare you.
The first book I finished was The 39 Clues: Book 1-A Maze of Bones. The 39 Clues is a new mystery series, specially designed to capture children's interest in the wake of the conclusion of Harry Potter. It is a planned series of 10 books, and what I find most interesting is that the series is being written by seven different authors. Rick Riordan wrote the first book and the outline for the series. This definitely caught my attention because he is the author of the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series, a very cool look at Greek mythology. I just read Book 1 of that series to my students and they loved it. But I digress. Of the other six authors, three I'd never heard of, but the other three are very successful in their own right. This collaboration of an impressive roster of authors had me intrigued.
This is already too long. Quick conclusion: It wasn't so great. It is a noble effort and has a real "National Treasure" kind of vibe as the two teen protagonists hunt for clues about Benjamin Franklin, Mozart and other historical figures. But I wonder if the kiddos will even make it through this plodding, overly-dense intro. We'll see...