Sunday

Resolutions


Predator Press

[LOBO]

Man, I'm freaking tired.

The pace at work over the last few months has been nothing short of blistering: I like the cool lab coat and all, but if I would have known that stem cell research would be so time consuming I woulda scraped out those Petri dishes right into the toilet a long time ago.

The Christmas 'break' was all jammed up too. I mean besides the usual shopping, police harassment and anarchy, I was working a grueling schedule donating my time teaching orphans to shoplift after school: there's just nothing like the sense of satisfaction you get when you look into the gleeful, hungry eye of one that has just boosted his [or her] first iPod.

I would still be doing those $20 seminars, but one of the more entrepreneurial of the little pricks lifted my wallet. Can you believe that? Man, you can't trust nobody nowadays. They're fiercely loyal to each other too: I practically hadda squish poor lil Jimmy through a fine mesh screen before he tearfully broke down and ratted on his own brother. Growing up in that decrepit old house together must have fostered some pretty serious bonding --and I don't mean decrapit in the 'quaint' sense of the word either: that place is a total dump. Too bad it didn't foster some taste instead.

But things are winding down to a crawl, and now I have the leisure time to design and develop my Evil Robot Minions. Chrysler says they can bring my Peacekeeper v1.1 into production for the paltry sum of $458,596,054.13 apiece, which is about $458,596,032.65 more than Jimmy's scumbag orphan brother left on my debit card. Now I have to decide between rewarding loyal lil Jimmy with the winter coat I promised him or cup holders.

... But I happen to be very fond of Starbucks, and the last thing Jimmy's shithole needs is moths.


Thursday

With Great Pectorals Comes Great Responsibility

Predator Press

[LOBO]

I bust into Ethan's office, and show him the pictures.

"Christ Ethan! Did you know the Unabomber was a real guy?"

Ethan stares at me for a second. "Yeah. They caught him in Montana or something."

"Really?" I says, flipping through a few more pages of Crime Magazine. "How about the Zodiac Killer?"

Ethan puts down his pen. "Are you serious? You thought that whole 'Zodiac Killer' thing was a story?"

I walk around his desk and slap the magazine down for effect. "Hell yes! And currently, it's totally unsolved. Ethan, I think we need to hire some security. I'm a Cancer, goddamnit."

"Tell me about it," says Ethan. Incredulous, he slides his glasses down his nose. "You do realize Batman is a fictional character, right?"

Nervously peeking through the blinds, I ponder this.

"Man, I ain't never going to Gotham City."


Tuesday

Cheers

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Admittedly, I've had enough vandalism, injustice, larceny and violent fantasy to tide me over all the way until next Christmas. Why beat a dead horse?

All the little freeloading moochers are already asleep -dreaming peacefully of tomorrow's considerable load of swag- and I have some quiet reflective moments to myself. At the behest of my dear friend Lord Likely, I'm making an effort to regain some elements of 'Spirit' before it's too late.

Jesus never showed up to get the cool MP3 player I got him, so I'm listening to it now. And I know Jesus would want to enjoy the spectacular audio capabilities of this fantastic device vicariously through me, so luckily I already downloaded 3.4 gigabytes of vicariously enjoyable music on it last Tuesday.

Man I sure hope the King of Kings likes Def Leppard.


***


In my minds eye, I imagine all the things that would normally cheer me up. Like looking down on my vast naval armada from my impregnable fortress on a mountain that rains a hellstorm of bullets and laserbeams on people that get past the electric razorwire, invisible watchdogs and patrolling fighter jets. Or a giant solar-powered robot that throws gazebos and melts busses into slag while simultaneously transmitting unreasonable and contradictory anonymous demands and encrypted obscenities to random global superpowers, interlaced over hi-fidelity Korn and NFL highlights: "... Take that Kevin Rudd! That ain't football!"

But nothing seems to work.

Maybe I've got this whole 'Christmas' thing backwards. I mean maybe I should stop selfishly thinking of other people, and just start thinking selflessly of myself for a change. Maybe I should just face the fact that I have a fantastic, wonderful, beautiful and brilliant fiancé, great kids, a warm home and a full refrigerator ... the world is absolutely riddled with losers I can lord that over! I could start doing volunteer work so's I could help the less-fortunate and really do some bragging: those guys are a total mess.

And with this cheap labor pool, I shall build my sprawling and mighty empire; the triumph of my wisdom and the protection enjoyed under my iron-fisted merciless rule shall bring happiness for generations upon generations.

Wow.

... I do feel better!


Saturday

Predator Press Interviews: Joyce Hopewell

Predator Press

Joyce Hopewell enters the studio, and I am immediately freaked out: she's wearing flowing long white sungod-esque robes and a leafy Caesar headband woven in delicate strands of gold.

Without word, she sits.


Joyce Hopewell: It's nice to see you too, LOBO. I'm fine.

LOBO: Joyce! How nice to see you again. How have you been?

Joyce Hopewell: I require no assistance.

LOBO: Would you like one of our techs to hook you up so we can begin the interview?

[A headset microphone floats toward her, and the switchboard modulators adjust themselves noisily.]

Joyce Hopewell: LOBO, you haven't gotten that mole checked out yet, have you?

LOBO: I don't go for all that medical hocus-pocus stuff. God is real strict about witchcraft. He throws all those heathens in a vat of flaming acid for 10,000 years ... and speaking of Eternal Damnation, how is this whole 'Astrology' thing going for you?

Joyce Hopewell: I have gained knowledge and wisdom of things your tiny, callow mind could never appreciate.

LOBO: Wow. So how do you get those butterflies to keep fluttering around you? All I get is regular flies.

Joyce Hopewell: Seriously. You need to get that mole checked out.

LOBO: I read the post where you did a Chart on Ricky Hatton, the Champion Boxer. I thought it was great. What could you reveal about me?

Joyce Hopewell: You want me to do your chart?

LOBO: No. I mean if I fought Ricky Hatton.

Joyce Hopewell: He would kill you.

LOBO: Seriously? At his age?

Joyce Hopewell: You know your plan to mug Santa Christmas Eve?

LOBO: Yeah.

Joyce Hopewell: Santa will kill you.

LOBO: Dammit!

Joyce Hopewell: Do you want to know what happens next time you forget to feed Phil?

LOBO: What?

Joyce Hopewell: She will kill you. And Phil is a girl by the way.

LOBO: Really? I was just giving Phil his privacy.

Joyce Hopewell: You've had her for three years.

LOBO: You are joking, right?

Joyce Hopewell: LOBO, Phil has nipples.

LOBO: I have nipples.

Joyce Hopewell: Eight of them?
LOBO: Maybe it's a gene defect. I could easily have them removed by the vet.

Joyce Hopewell: Speaking of medical attention, would you please get that mole checked out?

LOBO: What mole?

Joyce Hopewell: Stop thinking about Britney Spears.

LOBO: There's nothing more depressing than your first Christmas after a divorce. And now her sister is pregnant too.

Joyce Hopewell: Her sister isn't pregnant.

LOBO: You mean on top of all that, her uterus is busted?


Tuesday

All Good Things

Predator Press

[LOBO]

"Ethan," I says. "I quit."

"You quit what?"

"I quit Predator Press."

"You quit doing what exactly?"

"Well, I was hoping you could help me out with that. I'm having a lot of trouble with my Letter of Resignation."

"What brought this on?" says Ethan.

"I've decided I want to be a sheepherder."

"A sheepherder."

"Well, it turns out the sheep is not a very fast animal."

"Do tell."

"Yeah. I figure I'll use GPS, and catch 'em in my jeep just when the little pricks think they're home free."

"Possibly," says Ethan, scratching his chin. "But you would have to protect them from predators too."

"Oh please," I says. "The only other animals I ever see around sheep are cows, and cows are pussies. My sheep will be combat-trained, hardened bad-asses that rule over the cows with an iron-fisted tyranny thusly unprecedented in their eternal struggle."

I drift off for a second.

My sheep will have leather jackets.


Sunday

Silent Night, oh Holy Crap

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Come to think of it, I guess I've always been a complete bastard.

I blame everybody else, and simultaneously forgive them.

There. I feel better. Don't you?

I remember Christmas one year. We were spectacularly poor ... Depression Era geezers used to circle us on wheelchairs and walkers, pointing and mocking how poor we were.

I often got the crap beat out of me at public school for having to wear thrift shop clothing. In Chicago, nothing will seal your inner-city fate quicker than making your debut on the first day of class dressed to the nines in ill-fitting plaid pants, a button-up green shirt and white dress shoes. Without cufflinks or zodiac jewelry! To pull off that look, you've either got to be really cool or really durable: Always leaning to the practical side, I chose the latter.

One day as the kids at school held me down while the Depression Era geezers did unspeakable things in my Dukes of Hazzard lunchbox, I accidentally busted Timmy Farkas' pinky finger on my forehead. It was pretty bad. He was bleedin 'an stuff.

I got scared and skipped school so's I could duck THE MAN.


***


I had been skipping school a lot anyway. Back then we had Truant Officers roamin the streets, and I was on a first name basis with my local guy. Invariably -after a grand chase- he'd return me by the ear to that kiddie prison of sadistic glandular freaks, drug and firearm deals and atomic wedgie-dishing where I would be safe from all the evils of the world. Long story short, I got suspended from school anyway because of the grievous wound I had inflicted on poor Jimmy Farkas.

Mom subsequently informed me that -as far as Christmas was concerned- Santa "had my number": as the virtual poster boy for 'naughty', I was essentially going to get screwed.

"Everybody tells their kid that," I thought. "Every kid's gotta get something for Christmas. You know, like a retainer!"

By December 23rd, I positively beamed with wholesome goodness and a youthful, zesty exuberance. And despite this mammoth effort, Santa's rat never changed his story or revealed his or her identity. At one point I was virtually certain it was the guy that ran the arcade. Maybe he was feeding encrypted info to the Ice Cream guy ...

... and so it goes.


***


On Christmas Eve, Mom was pretty adamant that Santa was still pissed, and at this point, I'm essentially panicked. Whoever this squealer was, he wasn't changing his story for anything short of curing cancer, and I had busted my microscope during a GI Joe interrogation months ago. ["No, Mr Joe. I expect you to die!"] And while burnin stuff down is always fun, lumps of coal aren't really the best medium for it. This was the day and age of napalm thank you.

I paced in my room, my massive soon-to-be-unfulfilled Christmas list ran through my mind like those glowing numbers on the Stock Exchange. No aircraft carrier. No F-16s. Probably not even some lousy weapons-grade plutonium.

No tanks.

Nothing.

I went back downstairs to get a last forlorn look at the Christmas tree. It was really pretty, and the colored lights danced playfully along the walls. Why I could swear there was more lights than you could count. One for every curse word Dad uttered as he dragged the box of 'em out of the garage attic, hauled them in, located and fixed the busted bulbs, and drag the ladder in to put that star on top.

Scattered around the bottom of the tree, there was already presents.

"To Mom from Dad".

"To Dad from Mom"


It was a beautiful thing. While there was nothing for me there, I stood gazing at the spectacular demonstration of love expressed between my parents.

I teared up. For it was in that one shining moment that I understood the true spirit of Christmas.

While Santa might not be coming to give me presents, he would be coming here tonight.

For them.


***


My mind raced as I padded upstairs. What kind of fight could one expect from the fat man? Was he even fat? Santa obviously had a vast intelligence network ... could the rotund, happy and good-natured image be entirely composed of a propaganda campaign? What if he's all slimmed down from a Mrs Claus-mandated diet of lowfat proteins and carbs? I pictured a Rambo-like Santa running on a Nordic Track, Glock in each hand, picking off pictures of people on his "naughty" list.

From my closet, I dug out my armor and weapons: my football helmet, pads, cup, and a nice aluminum baseball bat.

"You don't come on my turf and mess with the bull," I growled. "You'll get the horns."

Then, arching my body impossibly over the presents, I nestled myself comfortably behind the tree.

And I waited.


***


Now, I'll bet the Emergency Room sees a lot more of this on Christmas morning than they are really willing to admit.

My mom got up early and -in her bathrobe and big fuzzy bunny slippers- made coffee. In a rare moment of quiet solitude, she wandered by the tree to admire it. The big cup of coffee cupped in both hands, head slightly cocked ... in my mind's eye I can almost see her angelic wistful face admiring the splendid culmination of all my dad's cursing.

Spotting a fallen ornament, she gracefully leans down to pick it up and re-hang it.


***


I woke up to the rustling sound of activity nearby. Bleary, I listened through the helmet. No, I definitely heard something. I opened my eyes cautiously, and spotted movement.

It was time.

I tensed up and sprung out like a cat, screaming.

Now, my mom, previously enjoying a quiet solemn Christmasy moment, probably reacted pretty normally to a screaming midget in a football uniform wildly waving a baseball bat bursting out of her Christmas tree dragging huge, macabre tangles of Christmas lights and tinsel.

She screamed.

Dad, hearing us both screaming, came tearing out of bed and rushing downstairs. Now, do you know how many times this man has yelled at me about running up and down the stairs? Sure enough, he missed a stair and crashed noisily to the ground, breaking his leg.

Mom looks at dad and screams. I scream. Mom looks at me again, screams, and then faints --cutting herself on the broken ornament and requiring four stitches. I see blood and I faint.

... And so on.


***


The paramedics and police, alerted immediately by the neighbors, got on the scene in minutes.

I woke running a fever. Seems Santa not only has a sense of humor, but he possesses biological weapons and is more than willing to use 'em. Must have injected me while I was asleep.

Next year, fat man.

Next year.


Thursday

"Amazon.com" Amazonless! Worst Porn Site Ever



Predator Press

[LOBO]

I don't know how long this link will last, but if you like some great, serious Amazon.com snark CLICK HERE.

(Be sure to read the responses too!)


Monday

A Slicing Device


A Predator Press adaptation of a 2006 Predator Press adaptation of "A Christmas Carol", written by some other guy.

[LOBO]

My first goal as an "author", I suppose, is to make an impression on people's hearts.

Truth be told, I hate writing. But I'm too short and scrawny to leave impressions on people's foreheads where they tend to be much more effective, and cinderblocks get heavy after a while. Ever try to nail that oblivious jerk hogging the whole fast lane at 56 miles an hour with a cinderblock?

I rest my case.

I've had to learn to be flexible, and adapt my impression-leaving skills.

Firstly, I'm not buying a single Christmas present. At this point, just going to the grocery store is a major pain in the ass. Today at Kmart, I hadda throw six elbows in four minutes just to buy a gallon of Snickers-flavored ice cream, four boxes of Twinkies, a three layer chocolate cake and a six pack of Diet Pepsi.

Either I'm getting older, or those little old ladies are getting tougher. And some of them got back up once or twice! I ended up leaving them spitting and hissing in Isle 14 thanks to an improvised oil slick composed of Snickers ice cream, Twinkies, chocolate cake, and Diet Pepsi.

This won't end on the 25th, either; after Christmas is over, I'll once again be fighting for meals with crowds of people returning the stuff they've already inconvenienced me buying. And they will be twice as cranky because of futile and unrealistic New Years Resolutions to quit smoking, lose weight, ad nauseam.

In truth, Holidays make everyone completely self-centered homicidal jerks that only screw everything up for me, and I hope God punishes them severely for hijacking my breakfast today with their selfishness. Maybe a nice convenient electrical fire or something. I mean, there's a reason we don't have trees in our houses already, right? They're flammable! And every one of these pagans have a living room sprawled with Stetson Cologne Molotov cocktails, augmented by eight pounds of wrapping paper and a tinsel primer. It would be easy for vengeful Almighty God to smite the crap out of them.

As He should, I might add.

... I wouldn't give God any guff this year. As always, we at Predator Press stand 100% firmly behind Him.

Still, some form of formal acknowledgement of the season seems in order. Christmas is, after all, the one time of the year when all nations and religions cast aside their differences to celebrate the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Isn't it enough to just say "Merry Christmas" you jerk?

[*sigh*]


***


So at like 3:00 am this ghost comes bustin into my bedroom.

"LOOOBOOO!" he says. "I am the Ghost of Christmas Future! Boo!"

"Who?"

"The Ghoooost of Christmas Fuuuture ..."

"Why are you talking like that?"

"Because I'm a ghost, you dumbass. You know, like in that book by Charles Dickens?"

Hah! He said 'dickens'.

"It's 3am you jerk," I says.

"Yeah, I know," he says. "I wanted to catch up with you earlier, but I'm way behind schedule."

"What happened to those other two dead guys, 'Christmas Past' and 'Christmas Plus' or whatever?"

"They got downsized in July."

"Well, they were probably pretty lazy then," I reply. "Dead people are notoriously unreliable."

"I'm here to show you what future Christmases hold unless you change your ways."

"Now? Look, I need at least eight hours of sleep a night. And maybe four or five during the day--"

"Let's go," he persists. "I'm on a tight schedule, as I have mentioned. By the way, where do you find footie pajamas in your size?"


***


"Where are we?" I ask.

"We're at your place a year from now."

"My god it's huge!"

The ghost flips through some papers on his clipboard, puzzled. "This is definitely the right address. Maybe you rent an apartment or sleep in the alley."

"Wow!" I says, noticing an opulent marble statue of myself in the fountain peeing randomly all over an icing courtyard. "That's really cool."

Over the massive, solid oak doors, 'CASA DE LOBO' is inscribed.

The ghost scratches his head, "Well this is unexpected. I guess we should go in."

"What, are you crazy? Knowing me, this place is crawling with giant motion-detecting robot guard dogs with machine guns!"

"We're invisible. Nobody can see us."

"Cool," I concede glumly.

Mental Note: Give robot watchdogs invisibility detectors.

And rabies.


"Oh!" says the spook decidedly, lowering the clipboard, relieved. "We're not going inside anyway. We have to go around to the back. To the shipping docks."

"But we're invisible! How about we just find a really hot chick, and follow her around until she takes a shower?"

"I don't think so."

"You know, for a guy who is already dead, you're pretty inhibited."

"Maybe."


***


It's a little known fact that trucks, in extreme cold, are vulnerable to brake line freezing.

Which means they can't move.

I can see the back-and-forth skid marks the Hawley Enterprises truck left as it tried to break them free. There are footprints in the snow going from the driver's side door --which is oddly ajar, with snow piling into the cab.

We follow the footprints, and they lead to the truck's rear tandems. There is on object sticking out of the snow, and I bend to pick it up. It's a largish rubber mallet, sometimes used to pound frozen brakes directly in an effort to get them to release the tires.

And that's when I spot the immobile, pale blue figure.

It's Cobe.

"Is he--?" I ask the specter.

"Dead? My yes," he replies, matter-of-factly. "On Christmas day, you and Ethan made him deliver your new hot tub to the penthouse. The truck froze up, and he died trying to get it moving again."

"A hot tub, eh?"

"Yes."

"Did he get it delivered?"

"Yes. And he installed it."

I shake my head, "Well, I've got to tell you. I'm not seeing a downside here."

"You're an asshole," says the ghost.


Saturday

Measured Results

Predator Press

[LOBO]

"Dude," I says into the phone. "That was amazing. I mean, 'Ox Nuts' is going to be a major bestseller. Maybe even a movie. It's genius! I don't think I've 'punched the clown' while crying this much since, like, September ... who knew you could write like that?"

"But I post on the blog two or three times a year," says Mr. I.

"Yeah, but who reads that tripe? 'Ox Nuts' is big! Can you put in some explosions and helicopter chases? I don't want to infringe on your art, but a scene where Ox fights a giant bug or something might help get some of your boring soppy romance edited out."

"It's supposed to be a love story, you moron."

"Well how about some buxom Nordic chicks in Viking helmets, wielding electric battle axes that go 'bla-WANGGGGGG--'?"

[long pause]

"Maybe."


Ox Nuts

Predator Press

[Mr Insanity]

"Oh Ox Nuts, my love," cries Gwendolyn. "The ocean is so vast, and yet here it is, for us and us only. Our love is captured forever in this meaningless, private moment on a magnificent beach." She unties her flowing, golden hair. "Even the stars have turned away from us tonight. Take me now, you savage lustful beast! Before you are captured." Her flimsy clothing slips over her pointed nipples, her curves, finally falling around her bejewelled ankles. "I want to have experienced your mighty passion, so I can remember it fondly while you are tortured and executed by my abusive boyfriend, the vile Prince of Zanzibar. Ox Nuts, ride me like a wild stallion ..."


Idiot Bag

Predator Press

[Mr Insanity]

"You attacked firemen?" I says. "What in heaven's name possessed you to attack firemen?"

"THE BAG gave me 'firemen pork'," shrugs LOBO. "I do not question THE BAG. Ever. You would be wise to do the same."

"The bag? What bag?"

"The bag of words I pull from when I'm trying to come up with an idea."

"Every time you need an idea for a story, you pull words at random? I call bullshit."

"Behold!" says LOBO, thumping a heavy sack on his cluttered desk. "Bask in the splendor, ye non-disbeliever."

"Does it work?"

"Try it out," says the screwball. "What kind of story are you working on?"

"Let's say, hypothetically, a love story."

"You pansy."

"What?"

"I said 'Ooo, fancy'."

LOBO closed his eyes, as if in a trance.

"Oh for God's sake--"

"Silence!" LOBO demands. "Oh, mighty and wise bag. Divulge unto us your creative genius, that of which we are so devoided!"

He pulls out two slips of paper. "The title of your romance epic shall henceforth be named," he opens his hand, "Ox Nuts."

"Ox Nuts."

"Yes," he says decidedly. "Ox Nuts."


Deck the Halls to Hide the Murder Holes, Tra La-La

Predator Press

[LOBO]


December.

And we all know what that means, don't we?

Now that Thanksgiving has come and gone, it's finally that special time of the year when all hearts and minds prepare for the biggest event of the year: The Santa Claus Blanket Party.

I can sense some of you starin' at this blog in utter disbelief. Oh, get over it. You're all thinking it ... at least I've got the stones to put it in print.

That fat bastard has violated the sanctity of our homes for the last time. When that prick sneaks down the chimney 'an goes to greedily wolf down my cookies 'an milk this year, whammo, he's gettin a snow shovel full of holiday cheer right upside the head.

Too chicken to help me with this? Fine, cowards! I'll keep all those Xbox 360s for myself then! It's not like I said I was going to make Santa 'toss my salad' or anything weird; I just wanna rough the guy up a little. Maybe take the reindeer for a spin down to the Burger King drive-thru, that sort of thing. And can you imagine how much those little elves will pay in ransom for the safe return of their poorly dressed, fried-chicken scarfing king?

God, just the thought of that food-stained, grease-dripping beard gives me chills.

"But LOBO," I hear the mincing liberal pansies cry, "Santa brings joy all over the world to often less-fortunate children."

Yeah? Well screw them. I know all about being less-fortunate, thank you: one July when I was a kid, I stole our family's entire month of food stamps and had four pallets of Velveeta Pepper Jack brought to the house. There wasn't anyplace to keep it unnoticed except the neighbor's swimming pool.

I would've pulled the whole thing off, but the dumb kid that lived there dove in and tried opening his eyes in the thick, spicy, bubbling murk. Screaming, he then attempted to dry his burning eyes with fistfuls of my tortilla chips and somehow punctured one of his water wings in the process; this caused a potentially fatal downward clockwise spiral smack into the sour cream.

If that sour cream wasn't there, he most certainly would have drowned.

I'm a hero if you think about it.

We don't need any more of Santa's "selective generosity" crap: this year, the fat man pays up.

In spades.


The Legend of Cat Strangler

Predator Press

[LOBO]

If you think about it, as the head of Maintenance for the museum warehouse, I had the access to steal pretty much anything I wanted. Keys, alarm codes, you name it.

But I purposely avoided knowing anything.

Hundreds of thousands of nondescript crates of history have moved in and out of my facility in the ginger care of my forklift skills, and I knew them only by number; preserving the mystery romanticized the bad hours and mediocre pay.

I like to think that at some point, I might've moved the very Arc of the Covenant.

One night my phone rang, and a truck driver told me he was an hour away from the museum; 'The Item' couldn't be moved by boat as initially planned.

"No problem," I says. If anything, that will attract even less attention at this hour. Hanging up, I dressed quickly in a well-rehearsed sleepy fog.

Armed with a thermos full of black instant coffee, I set out to meet the incoming load.



***


In the strange silence, you could hear that truck coming for miles.

It was exactly on time.

Rumbling into view, the dark truck blinded my in her headlights; the last thing I glimpsed before a colorless, painful tide of light was a man leaning out of the passenger side window of the cab, leveling a large automatic weapon.

The truck stopped abruptly, and the air breaks screamed a metallic wail. "One move," a shrill voice called over the thundering diesel engine, "and you got no more head!"

Standing in the wide open with my hands behind my head as instructed, I called out the code: "How were the Wisconsin Dells?"

The rifle disappeared into the truck for an astonishingly short moment as the passenger door opened, and the figure jumped to the concrete. Rifle still trained on me, he closed the distance between us quickly. "I'm going to need to see some ID, sir."

He was a young pup dressed in camouflage fatigues.

"No problem," I says. With a subtle nod, I indicate the asphalt about twenty five feet in front of me. "My wallet is right there."

As the boy inspected my wallet, things relaxed; the driver of the semi started easing the trailer to the docks. "Pleased to meet you Mister Jones," he says casually.

"My name is James," I correct.

The kid laughs, lowering his gun. He gives me back my wallet. "We'll be done in less than four minutes, sir. Please stay in plain sight." Quickly moving to the dock, he shouldered the gun and began giving hand symbols to guide the driver.

It slammed into the rectangle of Dock 17, and sealed perfectly.

While the boy was extending the lever and beginning the arduous task of lowering the trailer's legs, I heard the driver of the truck disembarking. He pulled a heavy lever deep behind one of the truck wheels releasing the 'fifth wheel', took my signature on a clipboard without word or ceremony, and the two were roaring off loudly into the night.

In exactly four minutes.



***


I didn't know Phillips and Rodriguez were both up for museum tenure at the time. In fact, the last time I had even seen either one of them was on the rare occasion I had to go to the museum itself. Both were professional, friendly, and wildly brilliant as is the hallmark of the museum staff in general.

I'm kind of a glorified custodian of sorts. Aside from the occasional personal desire to watch their precious cargo being loaded and unloaded, the fact that they knew my name at all wasn't by any particular reputation, but by simple repeated exposure.

But Doctor Phillips one day, having observed how much access I had, offered me an untraceable $1,000 a month to ensure he always had secret access to the place anytime he wanted.

So I simply neglected to report that Dock 11 was badly in need of repair, and had a crumbling 20 inch gap on the top behind the rubber cushions; a vulnerable, virtually undetectable spot accessible only by climbing over the top of a docked trailer and slipping behind. It was easy money. All I really had to do was make sure there was always a trailer parked there.

I had Dock 11 repaired the same year Phillips disappeared without a trace.

The money stopped coming anyway.



***


Today, sixteen years later, Doctor Rodriguez is not only tenured, but is up for Board of Directors; the museum has been doing very well and is facing an unprecedented number of retirements.

People, for various reasons, are wanting to "go out on top".

Reflecting the success, at this point I'm sweeping the warehouse floors for about $20,000 more a year due to a few college courses. I'm now referred to as a "Curator".

When I'm there, I turn off most building security off by sections, coordinating where my activity will be so as not to trip alarms and unnecessarily bring police.

When the South alarm went off, I sent the "safe" code almost routinely. It was almost certainly rats, or possibly the salt water wreaking havoc on the aging electronics; no one had been in the South Wing for years, and there was nothing there of any value. The South Wing was where Docks 1-20 were, and they had been mortared over many expansions ago due to rapidly evolving OSHA laws.

Eventually, I found my way over to check the traps.

Near the only entrance, I found the emergency lights on, and a broken old vagrant stumbling through the maze of stacked cargo.

"Sir," I says politely. Triggering my silent alarm. "I don't know how you got in here-"

"James?" says a crackling voice from the figure. By the way his head turned, I could tell he was blind. The man staggered toward me with a gnarled, heavy looking cane. "James, is that you?"

My heart stopped. I knew that voice.

"James!" demanded the man. He waved his knobby cane vaguely in my direction, balancing on what remain of his horribly wobbly and twisted legs, obviously once broken and healed in impossible and distorted directions. "Goddamn it James. I have so sought the sound of your voice!"

He shuffled into the light, and I saw his face.

It was inhumanly old and yet alive. Long white hair and a beard framed a barely-toothed, snaggled smile. Both eyes were shut, and one looked slightly misshapen and bulging, like an egg.

"Doctor Phillips?" I stammered.

The decrepit husk of a man cackled in delight as I caught him from falling.

"Yes."

"You smell terrible!" I says. "Where have you been?"

Unexpectedly, the old man doesn't try to support any of his weight; despite his whithered 90-pound frame I struggle for a moment, feeling him lurch from weak coughs as I try to lower him gently to the ground.

"Where haven't I?" he grins horribly at me as I lower his head to the floor.

"Sir," I says. "You need a doctor real bad."

"No," says the man softly. "I just need a second to rest."

This man is no threat, I conclude. This man has only a few moments left.

"The cops will be here in a few minutes," I confess.

"I know," says the doctor.

"How did you get in here?"

"I never left."

"Doc," I says, despite the obvious. "You better just level with me."

"James. I can't. I mean I'm not sure. All I know is that I'm finally home after all this time." Impossibly, the old man's bones seem to sag even further. "Can I just rest for a second? Please?"

I'm worried. I've got a wife and kids now, and I don't know how I'm going to explain away this battered, ancient old fossil dying in my arms in the center of a high-security museum warehouse under my watch and care.

This man who has been missing for some fifteen years.

This man who was the chief rival of Dr. Rodriguez.

"Did you find your relic?" I ask finally.

The old man smiled widely, regarding me through his closed eyes. "You must tell me how you got the name 'The Cat Strangler'."

"How did you know about that nickname?" I says. "I ain't even thought of that in years."

The dry, bony doll wasn't breathing much anymore, and seemed to age rapidly before my eyes. "Tell me," he rasped.

"I got that name when I was 6 years old. My dad was a famous musician, and I played for him on his birthday. He said I played so bad, the name of my band should be 'The Cat Strangler'."

There was a weak tremor of laughter through the dying man. "And then he died."

"Yeah. That was his last words. His ankle got tangled in my guitar cord, and he busted open his head on the floor. I never played again."

Doctor Phillips faded away, chuckling softly. "God, that's the most fucked up story I've ever heard."


Thursday

About the Author

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Within a short period, I will be marrying a the most wonderful and beautiful woman I've ever met.

She has kids, so the acronym "MILF" definitely applies.

But by virtue of this, will I get promoted to "DILF"?


Tuesday

No One Falls for "Pull My Finger" Gags Anymore

Predator Press

[LOBO]

But if you tie a string to your finger, the comedy endures.


A Strange Sense of Porpoise

Predator Press

[LOBO]

WOW!

Predator Press has never been slammed with like 57 awards simultaneously before, and we would like to thank Debbie Dolphin and Joyce Hopewell.

We were slammed with one award simultaneously before, but the Marines running Toys for Tots are keeping lead strictly limited to their bullets this year: a reciprocal plug for China seems in poor taste.

That's so damn many awards, I got exhausted just moving my Dale Earnhardt commemorative plates off of the fireplace to make room for them!

Will you guys help me carry all of them to the car? And up to my apartment? On my new piano?

I always buy a piano when I win awards.

... Pleeeeease?


Monday

Pressing 50,000


Predator Press

LOBO

Every few thousand hits, I'm going to do a random screenshot of my playground. (Note that cool desktop pic: I stole that at Photos from Northern Norway.)

Thanks for reading!


Sunday

About the Author

Predator Press

This blog is a demanding and high-maintenance project already, and LadyTerri is always telling me, "You need to comment more. It will get more people involved."

First of all, I'm far too much a contrary blend of reckless carelessness and obsessive-compulsive psychotic tendencies for decent commenting; after stewing over what to say for an hour, I'll drop a little well thought-out intellectual gem on them like:


"Graet blog!"


--and completely overlook the spelling error. Then I'll break into a cold sweat: "That son-of-a-bitch's blog screwed me up!" I'll complain. "It didn't look like that in the preview!"

Then I imagine the entire internet looking at my comment, and laughing at what a dumbass I am.

That's a lot of people to have killed when you only four days off.


***


So I picked up a few comments of my own on my last post. Our friend Uri Kalish was kind enough to illustrate the definition of SEO: it's an acronym [anagram? angioplasty?] for "Search Engine Optimization".

Unfortunately, "Search Engine Optimization" is even twice as lame as I feared.

See, we figure Predator Press fans don't have any problems finding Predator Press, because one of the few prerequisites of being a Predator Press fan is actually finding Predator Press in the first place. We carefully planned for this actually: if too high of a percentage of your gray matter is tied up with respiration and lottery tickets, big words and sarcasm are only going to piss you off. And we don't have any liability insurance that covers someone poking their own eye out trying to 'bookmark' us.

Luckily, however, we've thought about them as well: by promising a few t-shirts to the more, eh, "militant" of our fans when we start merchandising, we've obviated the need for any SEO completely.

Look: every Predator Press fan knows to make Predator Press their homepage immediately, and even the dumbest ones have smart freinds that can make backups and capture cool images for their desktop. And those new smart Predator Press fans are the most valuable of all: they go to work an hour early, sneak around cubicle to cubicle and share the joy with their unwitting coworkers.

Don't -and I repeat DON'T- do that "cubicle trick" at the Defense Department anymore.

Those Defense Department guys are assholes.

And now I owe those pricks a lot of t-shirts.


***


So I'm looking at my new listing on Humor Blogs (I said I had a kickass blog: I never said anything about the continuity of the writing). And ours is one of the few without a banner.

I felt a strange pang of disloyalty. I mean just about everyone else has a banner, right? I like to think that I have a rather spectacular gift of knowing exactly how and when to collapse to peer pressure with style: it has been one of my finest qualities since junior high school.

So after thirty hours of no sleep --and when I say 30 hours, I mean 29.75 hours of trying to get my newly-pirated image editing software to work, and .25 hours of good and sound actual sheer creativity-- I had finished what I had regarded as a 160 X 40 pixel masterpiece.

Behold:




When LadyTerri saw that on Humor Blogs, she laughed her ass off. Which is cool. I mean, aside from someone having a fatal seizure and the cops finding a smouldering corpse staring at my cool new banner and us getting a "BLOG KILLS" plug on CNN, laughing at it is the second-best desired effect, right?

But it turns out she's laughing at the banner and not with it.

"That's it?" she guffaws. "These people spend a lot of time and money on banners. Those people are serious bloggers. And you throw five words in black and white up there?"

I was so pissed, I diverted the conversation to our upcoming wedding.

She must pay for this insolence.


***


We've both agreed on tattoos rather than wedding rings. I tend to work in industrial environments, and plus neither one of us take much stock in "conspicuous consumption" by virtue of gems and jewelry: her willingness to accept these explanations has saved me a bundle, and I am absolutely crazy about this woman.

"What are the tattoos going to say?" she asks.

That's actually something I hadn't thought of honestly. I thought we were just going to get bands. "I don't know. Our names?"

She says, "I'm just going to get [our new last name]."

"Okay," I says. "I'll just get [my current last name] too."

She frowns, "No. That's only your last name now."

"And that'll be only your last name then," I point out.

"Well, I just wanted to keep it simple," she says. "I've never had a tattoo before, and I've heard it hurts a lot."

"Well, we'll get really drunk," I reason, hoping to bluff into a decent position for negotiation.

"We could just get each other's first name," she offers.

"I suppose," I says. "But then the next thing you know, you're hanging around with dozens of other [My First Name]s, subverting swift religious persecution by trying to confuse God. And God doesn't take kindly to that kind of shameless manipulation."

"Oh please," she giggles.

"No, I'm serious," I says, taking her hands and looking her sincerely in the eyes. "Honey, I'm trying to save you from burning in the Lake of Fire for all Eternity!"

She bites her lip. "Okay. What will my tattoo say then?"

"I was thinking along the lines of 'Property of [My Name], the most handsomest and brilliant man in the world, and the only man I will ever love period ever again. Period. Keep Out. This Means You. Sincerely, [Her Name]. All Rights Reserved."

"You want me to get all that tattooed on my wedding finger," she glares incredulously.

"I haven't gotten to the bar code yet."


Friday

Ask LOBO

Predator Press

[LOBO]

People are always asking me, "LOBO, how come you don't have like 97 blogs?"

Well, I'm glad you asked me that.

My favorite neighbor, the Canadian Curmudgeon, has two great and well-written blogs. And from "across the pond" Lord Likely has about 12. No matter what your thoughts are on the butchery of our fine American language with that crazy accent, you have to salute the British for just sheer blogging industriousness; Lord Likely alone makes our discovery of England completely worthwhile. When's the last time you read a brilliant gem out of the Galapagos Islands? Hm?

But I'll be blog surfing in MyBloglog or blogcatalog and stumble onto some profile -invariably a weird, hairy dude with a scantily clad attractive woman icon- that has like 15 or twenty blogs, and the only thing they have in common is the disturbing desire to escape every one of them: the topics will range from something cute and fluffy like "My Intermittent Ponderings" to "How Spiders F--k".

And I'm cool with that. I mean who doesn't want to read an insightful scientific dissertation on how spiders f--k? How many legs can she get behind her head? I mean you have to click on that.

So now you're committed: Join? Not join? And then you start seeing the other stuff like "SEO Academy: Internet Marketing". Bloggers, I'm coming clean on this right now: nothing shuts my brain off faster than the word 'SEO'. It's mind numbing. I don't even know what the hell 'SEO' means, and I'm bored to death with it.

It has been long standing Predator Press policy to have people that visit but don't 'join' our neighborhood swiftly and quietly killed. But, for instance, MyBlogLog only lets you join 15 'neighborhoods' a day ... and it now I got like 18 more blogs to read by this prolific asshole! Man I was trying to relax and enjoy some web-surfing, and now you're making me make decisions.

Jerk.

So why don't I have 97 blogs? Because:

a) I don't have that kind of time,
b) I'm already complaining about stuff as fast as I can, and
c) I'm almost certain I've pointed out how lazy I am on this blog before, so back off.

Frankly, Predator Press is already beyond my control: it's a rampant and insatiable fusion-fueled juggernaut of a blog that chews up entire universes and spits out kittens. For fun. Another "Predator Press" would tear holes in the fabric of Space-Time, destabilize the "Blogosphere", and ultimately collapse the entire internet into a singular dense point that corrupts your computer cookies, downloads brownies and pizza instead, and ultimately skews your ebay feedback until you have to burn down your own home for the insurance money while fighting zombies dressed in a Speedo.

Would you really want more than one Predator Press?

I, for one, happen to like cookies.

And zombies are assholes.


Thursday

A Pilgram's Progress

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Aside from Halloween, Thanksgiving is simply one of the most darkly disturbing holidays ever ... and I've already dubbed this year "Cranksgiving 2007".

You know, I am thankful. I'm having one of my best years ever: I've got great friends, a fantastic job, and a big-assed television. Game over. I win, right? So why stick me in that viper pit of poultry pounding relatives?

Jesus. I sneak peeks around the room, and find my mind turning the same thought over and over: how the hell did I come out normal around these weirdoes?

Then I force my attention back to the football game on my big-assed television.

God I love that television.


***


Inevitably, my cozy, slothful splendor will be torn asunder: somebody forgot something at the store, and I've gotta face the cold to address an emergency cranberry deficit or something. I mean why do I have to suffer for someone else's pisspoor planning? History is absolutely littered with the arrow-riddled bodies of pilgrims toting last-minute yams and 12 packs of Coke ... even after fifty of sixty years, have we learned nothing?

Mom should be fired immediately. Hey, I'm sorry ... I understand that you were up all night poking and prodding a dead bird in the oven. But this is like the 20th Century already: we have frozen turkey dinners now. Six minutes in the microwave. Plastic sporks. Boom! On to the football.

It's called the Pilgrim's Progress, and Americas neverending quest for big-assed televisions and footbal is well-documented in all the history books. Embrace it. Learn from it. And never forget, lest ye be slain horribly by Indians too.

.. And please note that I'm not saying be mean to mom; I mean she is mom after all. Give her a decent reference. Set her up with one of them "Golden Parachutes" and a nice severance package to make sure she can afford COBRA for the duration while she seeks some other deserving nomadic tribe of needful pilgrims without microwave ovens. It wouldn't be so bad if done properly; I mean all she needs to do is hang out on the beach and wait for a boat, right?

Mom could use a tan.


***


And every family has one. The member -usually a brother- who has a new "significant other" every year. So every year you gotta mince about on eggshells to impress this new person you will never see again.

Last year, we took the new harlot aside and insisted that the entire family had been genetically blessed with a superfluous nipple that, until blessed with new progeny, we primarily use to feed the cats.

She was gone before the football even started.


***


Inescapably my mind will turn to our troops overseas. Each and every one of them is a million miles from home, friends, and family, blowin the crap out of stuff. This is the one day of the year I'm completely overtaken by jealousy of them.

And it's here that the sarcasm screeches to an abrupt and uncharacteristic halt ...

Even as I sit and write and bitch, there are people being shot at to defend me. Kids mostly. Undeniably, a quantifiable statistic of them will never see the land they are fighting for again ... and some will be so brutalized, they might wish they were part of that statistic.

I'm scared for them, and I don't understand our enemy at all; can't we all just get big televisions, and watch the Packers smear the Lions through a sated tryptophan haze?

Even just today?

Happy Thanksgiving to our troops; you are in our thoughts and prayers.

And I wish you come home safe.

... so I can complain about you next Thanksgiving.

:)


Internet Swag

Predator Press

[LOBO]

As we can plainly see, my Permukaan is scientifically
quantifiable as bigger than the average puny bebas.

But I do miss the hos.


Wednesday

Weather Proves Difficult to Blame on Grossman


Predator Press

[LOBO]

Rex Grossman has more talent in his little finger than most of you armchair wanna-bees, and you so-called Bears "fans" outta be ashamed of yourselves for sarcastic crap like this.

Seriously.

According to our supercomputer, the Chicago Bears kick the crap out of the Yankees in every single Superbowl simulation.

I'm betting everything.


Friday

Out Go the Lights

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Those silly bastards at Comcast thought that I would be stupid enough to pay them $200 a month to insult their lousy online service to the rest of the world.

So due to a complete failure in negotiations, I've decided to go back to a far more prudent $9.95 56k Earthlink dial-up modem.

... Earthlink has a 5X Accelerator now!


Tuesday

Karma

Predator Press

[LOBO]

It's a little-known fact that for extra cash in college, I hacked porn sites for fellow students at $10 a pop.

I suppose that could be considered stealing.

So according to the theory -to cancel out the 'Bad Karma'- I have to do a selfless good deed. Well, more accurately I would have to go to all those sites and give them $10, and start taking up Feminist causes.

Screw that.

Here goes Plan "B".


***



See that guy on the right?

He was a cop whose third wife was found with her skull broken in a bathtub.

After an investigation, it was officially ruled an "Accidental Drowning".

The only reason this has even came to light is because now his fourth wife, pictured, is missing.

Ladies, please.

Stop marrying this man.

(There. I feel better. Don't you?)



90210 Doesn't Hold Up Against 1856

Predator Press

[LOBO]



Monday

Blister Pack of Lies

Predator Press

[LOBO]

"Look," says Nurse Garrison, lowering her clipboard and sighing audibly. "I'm going to have to tell the insurance company something."

"Tell them it's Cobe's fault," I reply simply.

She picks up her pen, and pushed her glasses back over her nose. "Who is Cobe?"

"He's a guy that I sent to straighten out all our operations in Antarctica last year."

"So this is his fault how?"

"Well, he's still in charge of the scheduling and catering of the Company Picnic." I tear up as I stare at the wool mittens over my hands. "He did this on purpose. What kind of sicko schedules a company picnic in November?"

"But it's a clear day, and 72 degrees outside," says Garrison. "I think the guy made some pretty good choices all things considered."

"That's exactly what Cobe would want you to think," I illustrate. "But he scheduled the date and the caterer both."

"So?"

"The caterer came with a clear agenda," I says. "He sets up and starts grilling chicken. I simply asked him from time to time if it was done yet."

Nurse Garrison moaned dubiously. "How many times did you ask him?"

"Thirty four," I says. "Finally he says Sure buddy. It's done now. Knock yourself out. He never tells me that the stuff on the grill is like searing hot."

"So he caused 3rd degree burns on your hands, " she scrawls. "Were you around when he made the potato salad?"

"Yes," I confess. "Why?"

"We'll have to check you for tapeworms too." She pauses. "Colonoscopy?"

"Three weeks ago," I reply, sullen.

"Well you're due," she says, checking a box. "At your age, you can't be too careful. Now why are you wearing those cheap wool mittens?"

"They were Ethan's idea," I says, inspecting them wincing. "But I sterilized my hands in boiling hydrochloric acid first like he told me."

"Ethan told you to sterilize your hands before going to the hospital by boiling them in hydrochloric acid while wearing wool mittens?"

"This happened at last year's picnic. He figured with an HMO, getting my leg pulled would cost essentially the same."

Tearing a bloody strip cautiously from the mitten she remarks, "Is that salted Brillo?"

"Yes. But this year I remembered not to try to grab French fries out of the grease," I proclaim. "I hate that smell."


Friday

The Hunt for Red November

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Doc Mike and I finish watching Duane "Dog" Chapman on Larry King Live, and come to separate conclusions.

Doc clicks off the widescreen. "You know what would have been funnier?"

"Funnier than this guy listening to an authentic recording of himself being a racist asshole, and blaming the National Enquirer?" I says. "Not really."

"Well, this guy is a bounty hunter, right? And bounty hunters are supposed to be tough. But this guy is crying on television? He shoulda rolled with it. Shaved his head. Got some swastika tattoos. Offered a half-price special apprehending black men while spitting foam all over the place."

"Yeah," I concede, cracking open another Blue Beaver Beer. "And then Oprah paratroops in -Mission Impossible style- rips off one of Larry's legs an beats the shit out of everyone with it."

"And how about that kid that sold the tape to a tabloid?" Doc continues. "I mean that family must be a total mess."

"I'll bet Thanksgiving dinner at that house is nothing short of spectacular. The kid walks in, 'Hi dad, I want you to meet my new girlfriend ...' Then the needle screeches accross the Perry Como record, and is followed by this big long awkward silence."

Doc muses for a moment. "Can't you just picture Dog carving the turkey with the gravy boat stickin out of his back?"

"That would certainly sell a lot of Tide and Shout commercials," I agree. "It's like a violent version of 'Dancin With the Stars', with 10% more white trash." I grab my laptop and boot up. "We should get Trew Life to narrate it. The ratings will be stellar."

"And right at the end," says Doc, creative juices flaring, "Al Sharpton comes in, pours the cranberries off of the hubcap they're using as a serving dish, and decapitates everyone with a single mighty throw."

"And carrying Duane's head by the mullet," I says drafting furiously, scrawling HTML like a machine gun, "he gets away by stealing the El Camino in the yard? I'm way ahead of you."


Thursday

China Answers Demand for Lead-Free Toys



Predator Press

[LOBO]

You have to love an entire country that makes Predator Press "Quality Control" look methodical and comprehensive.

-And now there's a potential spokesperson deal for R. Kelly!


Wits End

Predator Press

[LOBO]

I hate the inconsiderate and ungodly hours Predator Press tends to hold meetings.

I've never been to a single meeting conducted before noon that yielded anything practical whatsoever.

Almost by instict, I've avoided them entirely. I regard groups of disagreeing people highly efficient mistake-making machines, second only to ones that concur. And never fail, some jerk is always yelling at me, "But we told you about the blah blah blah at the last meeting!"

Frankly, I'm just plain tired of people that operate under the assumption that I'm paying attention.

I hold meetings strictly between midnight and 2am. If you're going to disagree with me, you better be damn well committed, and fully prepared to face the full fury of your "significant other" who has to pick you up after being dumped at some nondescript Dunkin Donuts 800 miles away.

For smart cats, the quickest way to the mouse is the cheese.


Tuesday

Pipsqueak

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Look.

Nobody gives two shits about any planets other than the Moon and Saturn.

Period.

And by virtue of finding this obviously scientific and compelling jpeg on the internet, Predator Press is finally weighing in on this ancient mystery.

You know what we found? Bitchy scientist trying to make it hard on kids. Like when you make them memorize all 15 of the Presidents of the United States: it's all just academic busywork invented as a reason to pour more government money into schools.

Nine planets? Bullshit. And I'm not even talking about that whole 'Is Mars Really a Planet?' crap; as we all know, RDO destroyed Mercury six years ago and replaced it with an International House of Pancakes.

Just tell all teachers and charlatans this : "As per Predator Press, from now on there are only four planets: Earth, the Moon, Saturn, and the Sun."

They will likely be annoyed.

... We're screwing them out of billions in Student Loans.


Monday

Labels

Predator Press


[LOBO]

My second job -thanks to Divine Intervention- was a job working for none other than Steven Spielberg, and for a huge tax bracket jump to $6.50 an hour handing out the name tags at his box socials and raves and such.

As a young blossoming writer having finally achieved an annual income over five digits a year, I started to brashly share my creative gifts with the heavyweights of the Hollywood kingmakers.

Who knew the one that got 'Laci Peterson' would be such a bitch about it?

I'm not giving her any more glow sticks.


All Along the Watchtower

Predator Press

[LOBO]


The instant word was out that I was a new writing gun for hire, my historic rocket to stardom showed inevitable and undeniable signs of life: I got hired as Copy Editor for an eclectic and trendy, free-thinking hip publication called The Watchtower.

It was there I made my debut, and just look how I punched up that text on my first day:

"Consider the results of one study of at over 12,000 teenagers degrees Fahrenheit. The conclusion of the researchers: 'A strong emotional electrical connection to a parent car battery is the best guarantee of a teenager's health zombie-free human and the strongest barrier to high-risk behaviors becoming infected.' Yes, children zombies crave attention from their parents victims. A mother once asked her children, 'If you could have anything you wanted, what would you like most?' All four responded, 'More time with Mom and Dad.' brains!"

"How do you discipline or train your children without 'irritating' beating them? There are no secret formulas, especially since every child is different. and if you beat up a prostitute in frustration instead, her pimp will probably kill you."


Man these people needed me.

This stuff is pretty damn dry.


Sunday

Hollywood Writer Strike = Deep Discounts Offered

Predator Press

[LOBO]

When it comes to scab labor, I'm your guy.

$9 an hour.

Period.

I'll even make Starbucks runs and sort paper clips or whatever. Loan me the Hummer, and for a free latte I'll squish that picket line into a gooey puddle that smells like construction paper, glue, glitter and tanning oil.

Think about that for a second: for less than $30 I can eliminate your enemies and crank out six full-length movies complete with corresponding Oscar acceptance speeches ... all with ample time to surf porn and complain about having to go to Starbucks for cheap Hollywood Bigwigs while making $9 an hour.

For me it's all about the integrity of the art.

Don't believe me?

Here goes:

1) LOBO: The Motion Picture

2) LOBO: The Motion Picture Prequel: An in-depth look at LOBO's parents, and how they screwed everything up with a staggeringly laughable inability to provide Panzer ground support during a historically critical defeat. This ultimately indemnified me from ever eating Brussels sprouts again.

3) The Scalding: A psychotic waffle iron terrorizes a bunch of dumb college students during Spring Break.

4) The Office Stabby Thing: Creepy, huh? If you thought that piece of crap about the kids running around in the woods, playing with sticks and dripping boogers was scary, this will institutionalize you: it's about a giant psychotic stapler that delights in hanging snarky Post-Its on cheapskate Hollywood Bigwigs with an unsanitary steel "U".

5) No Deposit, No Dice: A documentary about a guy who robs a sperm bank and now serves a sentence for 607 billion counts of kidnapping.

6) The Making of LOBO: The Motion Picture: All CGI and Special Effects are explored, including interviews with John Woo, George Lucas, Johnny Depp, Jessica Simpson, Chuck Norris, Geoffrey Rush, and the Coen Brothers.

See that?

13 minutes.

See, I'm like that guy in "Shine" except without the talent or that freak pasty thing going. You know, like after the kids have already beat the teacher's erasers together after class. Yeah. Like all the bullies just beat the chalk out of me, and left a pasty, broken, vindictive glob of flesh that had one finger left with which to blog with. And then years later, letter-by-letter the maimed blogger has them all horribly killed.

The Control-Alt-Delete scene alone will be huge at the Sundance Film Festival.

Do I hear $8?


Thursday

Stay the Hell Away From the Light

Predator Press

[LOBO]

I staggered into the Emergency Room.

"I'm dying," I gasp, collapsing to the floor.

"I thought Security just kicked you out of here," says Nurse Garrison.

"Twithe," I says, weakly fogging the glossy linoleum.

"You have a cold."

"I'm a crawling host for billions of parasitic viruses," I paraphrase. "C'mon, woman. Heal me for God's sake. It's not like I have an HMO."

"Where did you get the hospital gown?"

"I keep a few in the car," I reply. "It might save me a few mortal seconds of begging for medical attention on the hospital floor."

"Go home and rest. Drink some chicken soup."

"Chicken soup? What the hell kind of Voodoo crap is that?" I stand. "Shall I circle the chicken over my head while chanting? Hm? Are you even licensed to practice medicine in the United States? I want to see some credentials, you Hypocratic quack."

"Get a vaporizer," she offers. "You would be amazed how much that soothes."

I was slightly encouraged. "You know," I confess, "I've never actually vaporized anyone before."

With new purpose, I shuffle out in my paper booties. "You'll still be here in an hour, right?"


Wednesday

A Predator Press Halloween

Predator Press

[LOBO]

"Thanks for the flowers. You may now
remove yourself from my presence."


My carved pumpkin was less-than-well
received at the 2007 Jedi Convention


In a perfect world, Peter Parker makes J. Johnah Jacobsen
watch the same episode of 'Spongebob Squarepants' 86 times.

Today.


No one believed that giant plastic dinosaurs
once roamed freely in my backyard.

-Until they saw the colossus 350-ton statue of
a pack of cigarettes Andy Warhol made me.


Oh, sure. Like you've never French kissed a snake.