Category: humor

  • Fun Trivia Questions

    Answers to all these questions are found here at the bottom of the same page.

    (I found these questions on a subreddit for Jeopardy fans. I’ve done light verification of these facts, nothing too in-depth. If any of the questions are seriously wrong, let me know!

    1. What animals were the Canary Islands named after?
    2. What is Michael J. Fox’s middle name?
    3. Which of these animals can see best in total darkness: a dog, a cat, a skunk, a human?
    4. Which US president was married to a woman whose first name was Eleanor?
    5. Which US state is geographically closest to Africa?
    6. What country has the longest land border with France?
    7. Who is the only male actor to win an Emmy award for the NBC sitcom “Friends”?
    8. Which major league baseball pitcher had the most wins but never won the Cy Young award?
    9. How many Qs are in the name of the capital of New Mexico?
    10. According to the 22nd amendment to the U.S. Constitution, what is the maximum number of years a person can serve as U.S. President?
    11. How many time zones are there in China?
    12. How many years was the Pony Express in operation?
    13. What’s the second biggest country in the world?
    14. Who was the youngest U.S. president ever inaugurated?
    15. How many letters are in the answer to this question?
    16. Who was the first Black American, (also the first person of African descent), to receive the Nobel Peace Prize?
    17. Which American president’s first language was something other than English?
    18. What planet is on average closest to Earth?
    19. (BONUS) A riddle: What is orange and sounds like a parrot?

    Random Trivia Facts

    If you live further than an hour from an ocean, you live closer to outer space than an ocean. (Read a longer explanation).

    In 2011, 165 years after its discovery, Neptune completed one orbit.

    Answers

    1. What animals were the Canary Islands named after?
      The answer is dogs. Ancient Romans reported finding lots of dogs on this island.
    2. What is Michael J. Fox’s middle name?
      Andrew. He did this because another actor in the Screen Actors’ Guild had the same name, so he did this to distinguish himself.
    3. Which of these animals can see best in total darkness: a dog, a cat, a skunk, a human?
      Nobody can see anything in total darkness (perhaps bats can “see” using echolocation).
    4. Which US president was married to a woman whose first name was Eleanor?
      Jimmy Carter. For anyone wondering, Eleanor Roosevelt’s first name was Anna.
    5. Which US state closest to Africa?
      Maine. (See this article). And if Puerto Rico ever becomes a state the closest state to Africa would still be Maine! By about 30 miles
    6. What country has the longest land border with France?
      (Brazil, with French Guyana)
    7. Who is the only male actor to win an Emmy award for the NBC sitcom “Friends”?
      Bruce Willis won 2000 Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series.
    8. Which major league baseball pitcher had the most wins but never won the Cy Young award?
      Cy Young
    9. How many Qs are in the name of the capital of New Mexico?
      Zero, it’s Santa Fe.
    10. According to the 22nd amendment to the U.S. Constitution, what is the maximum number of years a person can serve as U.S. President?
      10 (most people say 8)
    11. How many time zones are there in China?
      One.
    12. How many years was the Pony Express in operation?
      1.5 years, replaced quickly by the telegraph.
    13. What’s the second biggest country in the world?
      Canada.
    14. Who was the youngest U.S. president ever inaugurated?
      Many people reflexively say Kennedy. Theodore Roosevelt is the youngest person to become U.S. president, taking office at age 42 in 1901 following the assassination of William McKinley
    15. How many letters are in the answer to this question?
      Four
    16. Who was the first Black American, (also the first person of African descent), to receive the Nobel Peace Prize?
      Diplomat Ralph Bunche who won it in 1950 for mediating the Arab-Israeli conflict in the 1940s.
    17. Which American president’s first language was something other than English?
      Martin Van Buren who spoke Dutch as a child at home and learned English in school.
    18. On average which planet is closest to Earth?
      Mercury (Computing an average means that Venus’s trajectory on the opposite side of the sun is very far away from Earth while Mercury with a smaller orbit around the sun generally remains closer. ).
    19. A riddle: What is orange and sounds like a parrot?
      A carrot.

  • “It’s Not What It Looks Like” (Screenplay Cliches)

    (Captured from a subreddit thread and a screenrant article on screenwriting cliches). A lot of these don’t carry over into the world of fiction writing. I’ll have to make my own list for that.

    *************************************

    We’re not so different, you and I.

    When someone says anything even remotely scientific and someone replies, “Ummm, in English please??”

    “You still don’t get it, do you?”

    It’s not what it looks like. (Funny compilation clip here )

    Person 1: “Hey”.

    Person 2: Stops and turns around.

    Person 1: “Thanks”. “Thanks” can also be swapped out for “Be careful,” “I love you,” and “Nothing.” just as frequently. This one needs to die.

    “Don’t just stand there DO SOMETHING!!”

    (Badmouths somebody)” .(S)HE’S BEHIND ME, ISN’T (S)HE?”

    WE CAN DO THIS THE EASY WAY, OR THE HARD WAY.”

    “YOU LOOK LIKE SHIT.”

    __ IS MY MIDDLE NAME.”

    “IF YOU TOUCH ONE HAIR ON HIS/HER HEAD…”

    “IS THAT ALL YOU’VE GOT?”

    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Secret of the Ooze played this well.

    That was easy.

    Yeah, a little too easy.

    It’s quiet

    Yeah, a little too quiet.

    Look, it’s Raph!

    Yeah, a little too Raph.

    Ok sort of the opposite of this and I LOVE IT every fucking time is: “NO! Not in a MILLION YEARS. There is NO WAY you are DRAGGING me to this STUPID, WASTE OF TIME BULLSHIT…”

    Cut to….

    [Deep sigh]

    “Goddamnit.”

    “Do you remember when…” Usually used to tell us a plot point instead of thinking of a creative way to show us.

    Not a specific line but I’ve worked for both an agency and a management company as an assistant so I’ve read a lot of incoming scripts from people trying to get signed and let me tell you: The amount of scripts where the writers have their protagonist longingly stare at a photo of a dead loved one is just incredible and (99% of the time) reads as very lazy. Grief is one of the most complicated, powerful emotions we feel and how a character expresses it can tell an audience so much about them. Find new ways for your characters to show grief people!

    Or how about walks into their closet… lightly ruffles their fingers through the clothes of a lost one, smells it, and then begins to dance with it. (Honestly as cliche as that sounds it tells much more about a character picture-staring. ANYTHING BUT THE PICTURE STARING PEOPLE)

    Enemy henchman: “Let’s go. This place is giving me the creeps…”

    “Forget, everything you think you know.” (MITCH HEDBERG: I saw a commercial on late night TV, it said, “Forget everything you know about slipcovers.” So I did. And it was a load off my mind. Then the commercial tried to sell me slipcovers, and I didn’t know what the hell they were.)

    “Then it’s settled” or “It’s settled then.”

    “Is everything just a joke to you?” (in romcom argument)

    “Look, you’re my little brother, and I love you, but…” You’re my (twin brother, oldest friend, cousin, mom, etc.) – I’ve never once in my life heard someone reiterate their relationship to another person. I’ve never had to remind my sister that she’s my sister, but it shows up in movies way too often.

    Which has now become “So let me get this straight, you want to?” Silence. “Yeah. Pretty much.” Silence. “Well okay then.”

    You’re gonna get us both killed!”

    If we’re going to get through this, you’re going to have to trust me!

    When the writer is too lazy to let the conversation unfold organically, they’ll start the scene with one character asking another out of the blue: “Can I ask you a question?” The subtitle should read: “Can you deliver some exposition?” (LOST did this a lot.)

    “We got company.”

    That’s what I’m talking about! (Almost always said by a supporting person of color) Don’t forget the classics like “Aww shieet,” “Damn!” Or my personal favorite “Aww hell nah!” Pretty sure you can throw in a “That’s some bullshit!” somewhere in there.

    “I have a bad feeling about this.”

    “How long have we known each other? Ten years?” “Twelve.” type exchange. Writers still do it, but even the little variations on that stand out now. I think that crap makes most writers groan, but even very casual viewers will subconsciously hear that stuff and tune out even if they don’t realize exactly why.

    “Let’s get out of here.”

    “This ends tonight”

    I cringe every time I’m watching an action movie and someone says a phrase using “gentlemen” when speaking to tough guys with guns. Like, “gentlemen, we’ve got company….” Maybe it was cool and ironic the first time but now it just makes me roll my eyes.

    Argument descends into chaos, multiple people all shouting over each other at once. Sitcom character: “Stop! This doesn’t help anyone. We’re gonna have to work together…” or some variation of.

    record scratch “Yup. That’s me. I bet you’re probably wondering how I got here.”

    A hated thing of mine is when a character says something, and another character takes the last word or two of what was said and poses it as a question. I particularly hate if it goes on a while. As in:

    Character A: We’re going to need a plasma gun.

    Character B: Plasma gun?

    Character A: Yes, a gun that shoots beams of plasma.

    Character B: Beams? Of plasma?

    A police officer that says “ I didn’t sign up for this” dude you’re a cop.

    When the hero or their ally returns to help in the climactic battle: “You came back!”

    “I can’t perform your appendectomy until the stone of Wilburglibrwur is safely in the escape pod..”

    “This is bigger than both/all of us.” The second I hear this line or some variation of it, whatever I’m watching loses all credibility.

    “Welcome to __”.

    “I thought we were friends.”

    Hey “name”.

    Short pause.

    Good luck.

    Uuuggghhh

    Supporting character discloses a major plot point by accident: “[Name], you’re a genius!”

    “Could someone just please tell me what’s going on here?”

  • The Ultimate Death Playlist

    I’ve been working on a music playlist to give people after I die (hey, do I have anything better than to do?) I imagined it as a kind of final gift to the world, but what’s preventing me from making the list today?

    It’s a good playlist, a compilation of favorite tunes with a lot of emotional range and nostalgic touches. But lots of other playlists do that too. Nothing is really unique about the one I have been cobbling together.

    I do like the idea of a musical playlist. These are less about my creative expressions than the auditory artefacts I have stumbled upon during my life. I have always needed music to keep me going. It’s hard to imagine a life before a person could listen without interruption to recorded music or listen. Digital music comes with the tradeoff that we have to deal with global warming, a carnage of birds, rapidly declining biodiversity and noise pollution that people a century never had to deal with: leaf blowers, car horns, jack hammers and the incessant trodding on highway concrete. Before the era of digital music, people played musical instruments or sang or recited poetry or went to the theatre. A few hundred years later our multimedia will become more ornate and sophisticated and autonomous, but I suspect people will still be listening to Bach’s Mass in B Minor and Beethoven symphonies and Machaut motets. So a musical playlist — while not as creative as a novel or diary — will still be able to display a person’s personality and emotional timbres from that person’s life well beyond one lifetime.

    It is a nice fantasy to imagine one’s own funeral. Who would be there, who would be fraught with grief, etc. Actually, over the years I’ve heard about many people whose deaths were unremarked upon and practically unnoticed. This is practically a given for any author who hasn’t won an international prize. No matter how prolific your output was or how committed you were to the artistic craft, if it didn’t make a lot of money or bring a national prize, your literary output will probably count for nothing at a funeral. Your family will still have to pay for it and write your obituary.

    Probably the best way to have an eventful sendoff after death is to be married and have children (or grandchildren). This is proper because family-oriented people make sacrifices to their offspring; having a decent funeral for them is the least one can do. If you can’t do that, it helps to be married or at least in a long term relationship. What this means at the age of your death is unclear. The people who stayed with you for this long may have done so for reasons more practical than romantic or spiritual. In those later years, your siblings have to take up the slack. And what if you have only one sibling or none at all? What if they all died before you? Frankly, old age is terrifying for people who are single or unattached. Who’s going to clean up your mess? Manage your financial affairs? Manage your health care decisions when you are unable to?

    I currently live with my mom. At 80 she is still reasonably healthy, but frankly her healthfulness is diminishing; it’s unclear how quickly little issues will become big issues and (one day) fatal issues. I cannot comment about that, but I’ve noticed just how stressful the financial aspects of health care can be for her. The bills are inscrutable, the sticker prices are ridiculous, and it’s time-consuming to get a question answered. A visit to the doctor or hospital can spell financial ruin. And she’s not really experiencing any serious medical problems! I’ve long been an advocate for health care reform for financial reasons, but practically speaking it would reduce stress levels and the energy one has to expend just to understand the financial responsibilties.

    In addition to having children and grandchildren, it helps to be rich because it makes it easier to accumulate a retinue of assistants and recipients of your charity. People active in the church probably are going to have good funerals as well (in a way that morticians and funeral parlor directors are going to make their final farewells tasteful and appropriate). Religious people are already aware of the importance of ritual and future salvation.

    Helping professions often get good send offs. Doctors, teachers, social workers, nurses. These are tough professions to have during their time on earth. Grateful recipients of their care will be in heavy attendance. It also helps if your peers and cohorts are still alive. People under 30 will almost always get a good sendoffs — if only to console parents and siblings. A funeral for people of that age is an acknowledgement of the enormous potential never realized. A 20 year old dead from an auto accident or cancer will cause people to wonder what the person would have made of their lives if it were allowed to continue a few more decades.

    Many an old person finds that a majority of his friends are no longer alive — many are randomly scattered across the country. When you get over 50, even if you feel relatively young and healthy, depending on your job situation and social life, you can spend a lot of time around people significantly younger than yourself. You end up wondering, Is this anecdote I’m going to tell about X going to resonate with this younger person? Or will it simply call attention to the age gap and reveal my different perspectives and priorities? You learn to omit discussing your past — on your resume, dating profile and cocktail party conversations; instead you focus relentlessly on the latest TV shows and music. The hard lessons you learned in your 20s or the overseas travel you took to Africa several decades ago might have been meaningful to you, but it may not be relevant or interesting to someone in their twenties now.

    I mentioned before that single people don’t make out particularly well at funerals. Poor people too, but these two groups can overlap. I read somewhere that on average a single person in USA has a shorter lifespan than a married person. (The statistic has been disputed somewhat). From my youth I assumed that I would always get married and have kids, but things didn’t turn out that way, and I’m fine with it. I just can’t figure out how single people manage death and dying. I am mainly talking about finances; perhaps single people retire with more assets to help them than married people do, but that definitely won’t be true for me.

    Poor people often have a wide circle of friends and family to help out during critical times. Frankly though people have become more relaxed about funerals, calling them “celebrations” and scheduling them like ….whenever. I like that. There’s no longer any urgency about a funeral or cremation. My friend Jay died and then had a celebration of his life months later. That allowed friends to fit it in their schedule so more people could attend. It turned out to be a very memorable occasion. Sure, we were all bummed out that Jay had left us so early, but we had already had time to process our grief and frankly, everyone was up for a little party. (Jay was a wild character too with many friends, so it made for a very good mix of people).

    The obvious thing is that if you are dead, the self or soul that is you is completely indifferent to what happens afterwards. The you who lives in the current moment cares a lot more about your legacy than the mass of decaying cells (or its burnt remnants).

    I remain hopeful that during my lifetime it will be possible to transplant my memories into a machine. But who knows? Maybe the best I could hope for is a chatbot whose speech/language patterns resemble my own. Then again, I’m a writer, so it’s not hard to make such a thing. Most people don’t write all that much, so the best one might hope for is an avatar made of a composite of photos, videos and audio.

    I remember an episode from the TV show Cheers where someone announces the death of someone and the people in the bar give a cheer. Apparently there was a stipulation in someone’s will that the last surviving relative would inherit some massive amount of cash, and one by one the relatives were dying off, leaving only two people remaining. I found that amusing and actually thought it would be a good idea to have some kind of door prize for any funeral or life celebration. Doesn’t need to be as crass as cash, but maybe some heirloom with more than merely sentimental value. I’ve read that much of what people leave behind is worth significantly less than it was when purchased — even rare items like jewelry and furniture. Sometimes an item may hold the potential to be sold as an antique, but most of the time, it is too much trouble to locate a buyer willing to pay a fair price. Speaking only of books, I haven’t tried to collect rare or valuable books, but my collection is pretty great, and there’s a fair number of semi-rare books that I’ve gathered over the decades. Still, my family has no love for the books or even an appreciation of its economic value. Indeed, later generations find books less relevant, just bulky souvenirs from a time when almost nothing was digital. I fully accept that my books will be disposed of in as painless way as possible. What else do I own — TV, computer equipment, a phone, a digital music collection? Perhaps those would be suitable doorprizes for any funeral — and an incentive for people to show up at least.

    Other events might be scheduled to make the evening special.

    Of course, there will be no gravestone, but a symbolic gravestone might be set up in a remote area of a field somewhere so anyone (but presumably male) who wanted to could piss on it (one at a time, for the sake of privacy).

    Perhaps two funeral separate funerals could be held — one for people whom I didn’t particularly like. This alternate funeral could feature things that I despised or drove me crazy. People could watch the football game together, or eat hamburgers from an overpriced restaurant, drink Starbucks coffee or sing karaoke or make videos for social media. Lots of alcohol could be served and a Trump imitator could be invited to talk about how great a person he (meaning Trump) really is. Perhaps everyone could get together and do housework or mow the lawn in the blistering heat. Perhaps everyone could visit the gas station to fill their tanks with gas (assuming that those things are still around). There will be a reading of Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom and perhaps even the Bible. The event would end with a marathon playing of the card game Uno (I feel certain that the devil himself will insist that all of hell’s inhabitants play this game nonstop).

    A certain tasteful ceremony of remembrance will be scheduled for ex-girlfriends and those who regretted never becoming romantically involved with me. They should be able to pose with a life-sized cutout of me, perhaps making lewd gestures or mock kisses. At the end all attendees should be presented with a certificate (signed by me) thanking them for their affections and offering my heart to them for an eternity. This certificate should be written in a way to avoid having to specify the name of the woman, and yet despite tinges of light-heartedness and silliness should have no hint of satire or mockery (but be totally sincere).

    A trivia contest will be held to test their knowledge of my life and tastes in TV shows, food, books and music. The winner should receive a check (signed by me) for 10 billion dollars.

    A reading of the will be scheduled, but with imaginary poetic assets instead of actual ones. (“My literary license which has provided endless hours of entertainment will go to X;”). It would only be appropriate to conclude with a showing of the Saturday Night Live sketch called Betty Davis Video Will starring Bette Davis’ (Jan Hooks) family watches the long, rambling video will she created before her death. [SNL Season 14, 1989]

    A 3 mile bike ride will be scheduled at a cool part of the day to visit the local library (or its current equivalent). Afterwards, there would be a pool party at a nearby swimming pool, with watermelon, veggie burgers, Diet Coke.

    The evening part of the ceremony will feature the showing of several comedy movies I enjoyed: My Cousin Vinny, Hear My Song, Daytrippers, Breaking Away, Life of Brian, Les Comperes, Withnail and I, Stranger than Paradise, Clueless and Talladega Nights.

    20 years after this party, there will be an academic symposium to discuss my books and perhaps my influence on future generations. Big announcements will be made in publications and social media, and venue space will be rented — a ballroom at a fancy hotel for instance, with catering and break out rooms. Then, when nobody actually shows up, the local homeless shelters will be notified, letting people without means have a nice catered meal and a nice air-conditioned room to relax (for the day at least). And maybe rewatch My Cousin Vinny ….

    *********

    Postscript: As of May 2026, for my “death playlist” I have created a Spotify playlist containing 460 tracks, totaling 32 1/2 hours. To tell the truth, this list contains mostly pop songs. I still haven’t added classical music or jazz to it. These songs are very personal to me; I doubt that others will enjoy them half as much as I did.