It’s alarming how inexpensive those restraining orders are
Groupon replied to our last email volley.
Greetings Q-Sisters,
I’ve received some interesting information from our P.R. department regarding your inquiries. The cat has actually not left his head at all— he’s merely hunkered down and pawed his way further into Andrew’s hair maze. The purring vibrations brilliantly stimulate the braincase, which is an essential part of the daily deal creating process. His name is Archer. As I have noticed that “Groupon Descriptions” are #3 in last week’s list of “5 Things That Kept Us From Slitting Our Wrists” post on July 15, it is highly unadvisable for us to provide you with Andrew’s muse-cat.
Spice now plays the organ at Chicago’s Wrigley Field and Daniel Kibblesmith is our office cobbler, so neither are up for adoption at the moment.
I hope this helps and thank you for your interest. I wish you all luck writing your historical fiction romance novels. Aaron says hello.
Regards,Jane F.
I’ll be honest, we are disappointed. We were really looking forward to Kibblesmith, or Archer as they insist on calling him although I think they’re wrong, and Spice coming to stay with us for a while. I could really use some brain stimulation and, if Kibblesmith is as good as they are implying, his aid would be invaluable.
Also, we love shoes and could use our very own cobbler.
The Sisters had a committee meeting and we decided not to reply – for now, although we reserve the right to pester them again at a later date. We’re actually kinda concerned they might take out a restraining order.
I, for one, hope Groupon doesn’t think we’re breaking up with them just because we don’t reply.
You hear that? I still love you, Groupon!
July 22
We would like it noted that none of the five things involve food this week. Well, one sort of does but we’d NEVER eat it. Just read on – you’ll see.
1. Giraffes. There was a tragic, senseless death at the zoo this week involving an apprentice zookeeper, oleander clippings, and two
giraffes. We don’t pretend to know what really happened, who was at fault, or exactly how in the hell oleander clippings got in the giraffe barn to begin with because our information is coming from local news and the Picayune – neither of which is reliable. At this point, one of the two giraffes who were fed the poison has died and the other looks like she will make it. Nevertheless, while we’re still in negotiations with Groupon for Kibblesmith the Cat and Spice the Pony, we are more than happy to take the remaining three giraffes into our custody. Many things go wrong at the Sister’s respective houses, but at this time no one has been poisoned – not that we haven’t considered it. PS – there are rumors the lioness might be pregnant. Stay tuned for more zoo high jinks as soon as we figure out a way to get ourselves a lion cub.
2. Snackerel. One Sister is currently reading The Enchantress of Florence
by Salman Rushdie. The man writes in a lovely lyrical style that makes us swoon. So lovely in fact, one particular Sister has him on her short list of people she’d leave her husband for (that’s a blog post I’ve been begging her to write). This is a passage we find particularly delightful: When the giant came to life that night he saw Argalia and said, “Aha! A snackerel! Excellent!” We’re totally keeping that word.
3. Angelina Jolie is a wack-a-loon. We discovered that Angelina’s children enjoy eating fried crickets. She
likens them to potato chips. She claims they love them so much “I had to actually ban the cricket eating at a certain point because I was afraid they were going to get sick from too many.” We say exactly one is too many. We’re sick just thinking of it. Also, if she thinks fried crickets taste like potato chips then she’s eating the wrong potato chips. We suggest Lays Classic as an alternative. Ava has a particular fondness for barbecue flavor (She is certain they are served in hell). One last thing to prove our assessment of Ms. Jolie. She claims at this point to have not eaten “tarantulas on a stick” or “spider soup”. “It does seem like an odd thing to eat,” Jolie admits of the tarantula pop. “I don’t know if I can get around the fur, but you’ve got to try everything.” FUR!?! Oh, hell no. Our policy is never to eat things with legs numbering more than four – unless they are from the ocean.
4. Pluto. The planet not the Disney character, although we’re sure he’s
perfectly nice, too. The Sisters have all felt bad since Pluto was demoted, but now astronomers have found another moon orbiting around the little bugger. That’s four moons! We say Rock on, Pluto! Good for you! Earth is an actual planet (at least we think so but we’re still waiting for our latest issue of Astronomical Stuff We’re Not Really Smart Enough to Have Valid Opinions On) and we only have the one lame moon. ALSO, Pluto’s moons all have really cool names like Charon, Nix, and Hydra while Earth just gets “moon”. Boring. I think we could have tried a lot harder, don’t you?
5. Shelley & Carol at FedEx Office and Ric at the United States Post Office.Amylynn sent off the manuscript of her second book to her AGENT
today. Shelly, Carol and Ric were instrumental in making that happen. Honestly, Amylynn went to the FedEx office full of trepidation as a previous experience didn’t go well. Not this time. Shelley was a dream. Ric, who’s name really is missing a “k” even though his mother named him Richard (we asked), offered
excellent and polite advice without rolling his eyes even once. That, dear readers, is an accomplishment. We’re fairly sure he asked for a medical leave of absence after we left.
Happy summer vacation!
Here’s my commercial boyfriend. I thought this was appropriate since it’s 80 million degrees here this summer.
I think it’s the horn-rimmed glasses that make librarians scary
Let me first state that I think the library system is a very good thing and should be supported by our tax dollars.
That being said, it could be suggested that I might actually be hugely responsible for any private funding the libraries in my town receive. It seems in my 41 years and 342 days on this planet (note the subtle plug for my birthday) I haven’t quite mastered the way the library functions.
Obviously I’m not an idiot. You sign up for a card, you check out a book, then you give it back after an appointed amount of time. It’s the giving back part that has me flummoxed. I can’t understand why. In the age of electronic communications I receive emails warning me the due date is approaching, that is has indeed arrived, that it has passed, and finally one that tells me it has really, really passed. Eventually, I’ll get an email like this.
Dear Ms. Bright (or is that an alias?)
You checked out Ralph and the Motorcycle on January 12, 2011. It is now July 13, 2011.
We are not amused “Ms. Bright”. Either you return Ralph with his motorcycle by tomorrow or we’re sending our “collection department” to your home.
At this time you currently owe $47.16 in late fees. We can do this the hard way or we can do it the easy way. We will be happy to accept your $47.16 in cash no later than 5:00pm tomorrow, or we’ll start by removing the tires from your car.
We know where you live, “Ms. Bright”. We know what you drive.
Sincerely,
Guido Santucci
Library “Collections”
Here’s the really crappy thing. I’m darn near certain Sassy never read Ralph and the Motorcycle.
Caesar thought he had it bad with Brute
Is it because it’s summer? Are the dogs taking over the world? Are they planning a coup? Are they banning together to
form a cabal?
The Sister’s have no idea what to think of this behavior. I have owned many, many dogs most of whom had weird idiosyncrasies. Hugh adored bunny slippers. No one was allowed to touch Shirley’s feet. Sophie always sat like a lady. Bytor hid hotdogs and donuts in shoes. Molly refused to eat alone. But until now, I seriously thought Roscoe the Idiot Dog was the only dog in canine history to sit on the kitchen table.
Ava’s Girl sent this picture today.
Please say hello to Rockett O’Reilly, better known as Rocky, who lives at the Louis Compound. To the best of our knowledge, neither Rocky or Roscoe have ever met. But what do we know? Perhaps they have a long friendship wherein they keep in touch by some sort of dog telepathy or a Twilight Bark system like they used in 101 Dalmatians. Hell, they may be using cell phones or Internet connections while we’re at work.
Kelli, we urge you to keep an eye on Max.
This is how empires crumble.
Et tu, Rocky? Et tu?
It’s also a really good name for a cartoon squirrel
Good news and bad news! The good news is we heard back from Groupon. The bad news is really more for Groupon and that is that we have more questions.
Here is their reply:
Thanks for your wonderful email!
I’ve gone ahead and forwarded your message to our P.R. department.
Please let me know if there is anything else I can do to
help and, in the mean time, enjoy the picture of Aaron, his bride and Spice.
Regards,
Jane F.
This is the picture Ms. F. enclosed.
We know what you’re thinking. The first thing that occured to us was, “Who the hell is Aaron?” We’ve done some research on Google and, quite frankly we still don’t know. I don’t know what they’re thinking of over there at Groupon, but there are a lot of people named Aaron working there. Also, none of these “Aarons” on the internet are wearing beards nor did they pose for profile pictures on the internet. That is very inconvenient.
Following is the letter we fired off to Groupon this evening:
Dear Cindy Lou Who,
Thank you for your response. We will now stop bad-mouthing you on our blog.
We were delighted by your enclosed picture of Aaron, his wife and Spice. While researching who Aaron is, we came across the name Daniel Kibblesmith. It that his real name? It’s a fantastic name and it may be appropriated.
When do you think the PR Department will contact us so we can make arrangements to pick up the cat. Also, if Spice is still available, we’d be happy to have him, too. We’d hate for him to be alone.
We look forward blah blah blah.
Best,
The overly anxious Quill Sisters
PS – what is the cat’s name? We can’t keep calling him “cat”, although we do think Kibblesmith is an excellent name for a cat.
As always, we’ll keep you posted on their response as soon as we receive it. We have nothing but good thoughts about Kibblesmith and Spice coming to live with us.
Hell on a one lane road
As part of the state centennial celebration, our local paper, The Picayune, has been reprinting news stories from 100 years ago. Today’s article relates
interstate travel from Phoenix to Los Angeles.
Phoenix July 1912
That the crossing of the desert between Phoenix and Los Angeles will soon become an almost daily occurrence is the prediction of Dr. H.A. Hughes, who today stated that he was seriously thinking of organizing a party of five or six cars over at the same time.
Dr. Hughes feels that the trip could be made in three days with the greatest east and not prove tiresome. In fact, he thinks it could be made in much less time but feels that by dividing the trip into three daily stretches, greater comfort would result to the occupants of the cars.
Several weeks ago, a little ford Model T, manned by Morgan Lloyd and Mark Dunbar, left Phoenix for Los Angeles and make the trip with east, the only delay being caused by tire trouble.
Lloyd and Dunbar were in no hurry and took six days for the trip, but the latter, who has returned to Phoenix, stated that it could easily be made in half that time.
The most pleasant way to make the trip would be to leave Phoenix early in the morning and drive to Yuma the first day, a leg of the journey that encounters practically no bad roads. An early start from Yuma would land the autoist in Campo by night, where excellent hotel accommodations can be procured, while the drive from Campo to San Diego and thence to Los Angeles over the coast road, which in reality is a boulevard almost equal to paved streets, could be made with east the following day.
This whole story made me laugh heartily. I would certainly kill myself before we got to Yuma if I was in that car. Or, more likely, the other passengers would kill me. I’m not a good road trip person. I hate sitting still for that long. I just want to get where we’re going already. I don’t like to make stops for bathrooms or, really, even eating. I’m inclined to just stay in the car and push on.
I will admit that three days is a lot more palpable than the approximate ten days it would take on horseback. I’m not sure how the gentlemen in the above story got across the Algodones Dunes since the plank road wasn’t built until 1915. Yes, the plank road. The speed limit on the plank road was 10mph. This makes me cry just thinking of it.
It wasn’t much of a road — a 6.7 mile one-laner with
pullouts for passing. During sandstorms, the road could become impassable, forcing motorists to wait. But sandstorm or not, it was always a rocky ride, earning the road the nickname “Old Shaky.”
In 1925, traffic increased to 30 cars per day — a problem; officials reacted by regulating the traffic: east-bound traffic would leave on even hours, westbound traffic on odd hours. But this wasn’t enough: after 10 years of use, the road was falling apart and traffic jams were frequent and sometimes nasty when the right-of-way was disputed.
Can you imagine the misery scooting along the plank road at a mind boggling 10 miles per hour? It’s 110 degrees outside without a wisp of shade, and automobile air conditioning is still decades away. But I am still highly amused by the idea of a traffic jam on the road with all of 30 cars on it a day. Regulating the departure times by odd and even hours is hysterical. Maybe that’s what California should consider with the panic over the weekend closure of the 405 Freeway.
When Kelli takes her family to San Diego next week, she can be very thankful.
As soon as there is teleportation I will be gleefully happy.
July 15
In the spirit of getting along with other people during the hot summer months, here is our list nifty things this week.
1. Chicken & Waffles. If you’ve not experienced the weird wonderfulness of chicken and waffles together we suggest you high
tail it to a restaurant that specializes in that particular delicacy. Amylynn firmly believes that food on your plate SHOULD NOT TOUCH and even she is on the chicken and waffle band wagon. When the Sisters met for lunch there this week we discovered they will now add extra yummies to your waffle –
such things as bacon bits, fresh blueberries or **get this** Reese’s Pieces! YUM!
2. Corporate Speak. In our various occupations we are doomed to hear a ton of corporate speak during conference calls and such. Our feelings about our day jobs have been well documented on this site, so I don’t think I need to dwell on that. The one thing that gives us any measure of relief is laughing hysterically at the the absurd corporate double- talk spouted during said conference calls. Some examples you ask? How about: transitional summer, hub & spoke, low-hanging fruit, backwards waterfall, customer relationship model, and ambassador of our brand were all said during this week alone. Don’t ask us what any of them mean. No one knows. We aren’t meant to know. Theirs not to reason why. Theirs but to do and die. Our jobs are hardly worthy of great poetry, but maybe while we’re sitting around we can come up with a haiku using corporate speak.
3. Groupon Descriptions. You know we wrote a letter to Groupon’s head dude, Andrew Mason, with some questions we had based on a Vanity Fair article. The Sisters have long been fans of Groupon and their hysterical, tongue in cheek, s
narky descriptions of their products. But what is really not to be missed are the daily “Groupon Says” essays at the bottom of the page. Excellent entertainment value. By the way, neither Mr. Mason or anyone else from Groupon has responded to our email. Frankly this disappoints us. A lot. We’ll keep you posted.
4. Which doctor? The Witch Doctor. One of the Sisters called to make a doctor’s appointment with a specialist. While on the phone with the receptionist who was taking down all her vital information necessary to determine if she was eligible for an appointment to see a real live doctor (things like: insurance card number, whether she was Republican or Democrat, who she picked in the Angelina/Jennifer debate) she inadvertently asked the bored Sister a question that started a whole Abbott & Costello type conversation. “Which doctor referred you?” “The witch doctor.” Things spiraled downward from that point on. The moral of this story
is don’t start something with a bored Quill Sister you’re not prepared to finish.
5. Throat lozenges. There was an absolutely enormous bug in our office today. The biggest bug you’ve ever seen. Seriously. It was practically a bug with its own horror movie. It scared Ava so badly she climbed over the receptionist
counter to avoid it. Amylynn was drawn by the screaming. Not Ava screaming so much as the security guard screaming. Just like a little girl. Amylynn got brave enough to put a plastic garbage can over it with the plan to move it towards the door. The bug growled and snarled at Amylynn and waved its antennae at her in a very threatening manner which, of course, brought on a whole new round of screaming and leaping about. The office underwriter ultimately killed it, screaming, “Denied!” Now that all the hysteria over here is concluded, let’s say a big round of thanks to the Ricola company. Riiiiiiiicoooooolaaaaaaa.
Just like Thelma and Louise – only with giggling
I left my head on my desk today with my phone. Lately I’ve been really forgetful. I must have too much on my mind or something. I don’t have
enough brain space for stuff like traffic laws because it’s full of crap like what hits the group Bananarama had in the ‘80s or what a velodrome is.
Ava and I went out the other day on a work errand. I drove. I always drive because Ava hates driving and because I’m good at it although the following story will belie that statement.
Ava was talking a mile a minute. Honestly, I don’t even remember what she was talking about. We were sitting first in line at a red light. I was watching the opposite light so I’d know when ours was going to turn green. I recall thinking that our side should get to go already because there was no one in sight going the perpendicular direction. I saw green and pushed down on the
accelerator. About half way through the intersection, I realized we were all alone. Our light was still red. I realized what I’d seen turn to green was the other directional’s left turn signal.
“Oh my God,” I said, startled. “I just totally ran that red light!” Then I started laughing that nervous laugh that rapidly goes out of control.
“Oh, I didn’t even notice,” Ava said looking around at the street scene.
I floored it hoping to put some distance between us and the pack of cars I left behind so I wouldn’t have to suffer their stares of disbelief when we drove down the road together. It was no use. The next light turned red and I was forced to stop there and wait for all the cars to sidle up next to us and ogle the stupid woman.
“Don’t make eye contact!” I urged Ava.
I couldn’t take my own advice and glanced over at a car to the right. Just as I suspected, the woman in that car was glaring at me in righteous indignation. Of course, that just made me laugh harder. By now I had tears in my eyes. If a cop had pulled me over at that point to issue me the ticket I totally deserved, I still wouldn’t have been able to get control of myself. The other driver did not find it at all amusing that I was laughing. I don’t know what she expected from me. Perhaps the etiquette in these situations is to get out of your car and personally apologize to each and every other driver. I’m not sure if even my lying prostrate in the intersection or atoning my sins via self-flagellation would have satisfied her.
I am very sorry, co-citizens. I was remiss and I promise to do better.
To My Honey: if this post makes you angry and worried then it is all made up. Ava was driving. Uh huh. Yep.
Dear Andrew . . .
Amylynn and I cannot leave that picture of the man with the cat on his head alone. It just makes us laugh over and over again. The gentleman in the photograph is actually Andrew Mason of Groupon. We sent the following email to him for further information:
Dear Andrew,
We have questions about the photo of the cat on your head in the August issue of Vanity Fair. We so love that photo that we put it on our blog (thequillsisters.com). Questions: Is that your cat? Did you pick the cat out because he looks like you or has your same facial expressions? If he’s not yours – can we have him? (We’re “cat people” and will take very good care of him.) And by the way, what happened to the pony? Can we get a picture of Spice? Thank you for your time and patience – we’re certain you’re really very busy. Sincerely, Blah, Blah, Blah
Just so you readers know – the article references a pony named Spice that was going to be a gift to the mayor of NYC – Michael Bloomberg. Per the article, the pony was never actually given to him. I should have asked for the pony as well! If Andrew contacts us – I will see if the pony needs a home!
It is quite sad how easily entertained we are . . .










