Random Thoughts that aren’t enough to carry a post:
·
These politicians who are crying about “The War
on White People” are laughable. I read
there’s a guy who claims Obama is trying to divide the nation by race. Or in other words, doing exactly what the
Republicans have been doing ever since the Civil Rights Act of 1965. (Which was signed 49 years ago,
yesterday.) You want to mobilize white
people? Threaten them with black people.
·
Arguing that now small donations in large numbers
are corrupting politics more than massive corporate donations. I disagree.
At least with the small donations, they represent the will of large
numbers of people, as opposed to the bottom line of single, profit-driven
corporations. For better or worse,
that’s the way it should be. If we want
a less divisive government, we should be less divisive people.
This is me, not holding my breath.
·
Big headline on my Yahoo home page about how the Yankees were “blacklisted,”
regarding being a trade partner for top stars.
Sounds juicy, no?
The article was actually about
both the Red Sox and Rays had permission to trade their pitching aces to any
team but the Yankees. You know, it
doesn’t constitute a “blacklist,” to not want to trade your pitching ace to a
cash-laden, perpetually contending division rival, who if they retain the
player, they’ll have to face him 4-5 times a year. Complete “click-bait” article. I hate’em.
·
English singer Marianne Faithfull recently gave an interview,
in which she says her French boyfriend killed Jim Morrison, 43 years ago, by
giving him some heroin that was too strong for him.
Is this really a surprise to
anyone? I mean, no one thought he died
from high cholesterol, did they?
By the way, Marianne Faithfull
used to be Mick Jagger’s girlfriend, back in the day. Most people would know her now by the raspy
vocal interludes she did on the Metallica song, “The Memory Remains.” (Her voice is so roached out by decades of
drug abuse and cigs, the first time I heard the song I thought it was one of
the demon voices from “The Exorcist.”)
And the only reason I even mention
this story is so I can reference Dennis Leary’s rant on The Doors…
“We need a two and a half-hour movie about The Doors? Folks no we don’t, I can sum it up for you in
five seconds:
I’m drunk, I’m nobody.
I’m drunk, I’m famous.
I’m drunk, I’m fuckin’ dead.
There’s your whole movie OK?.
Big fat dead guy in a bathtub; there’s your title for ya...”
(Oh sorry… I should have said
“Spoiler Alert.”)
A Story
So, at lunchtime yesterday, I walked down to Camden Yards to
pick up a ticket to Saturday’s Orioles game against St. Louis. I had already looked up 3 prospective seats
online… I figured I’d try the upper deck behind home plate, in the cheap
seats. (I hope to take a nice, full-park
photo I can blow up and frame.)
I need a shot like this one from 4 years ago, only with
a good camera, to produce a larger file.
The reason I didn’t BUY the tickets online is that if you go to the
ticket window, you don’t have to pay the obscene $7 per ticket
processing/Ticketmaster fees. I checked
the weather before I left, and there was a strong possibility of some rain coming
in. I thought I could make it there and
back before it hit, if I was quick about it.
It’s about a 15 minute walk from my office.
There were people at each ticket window but one, so I walked
right up and ordered my seat. My first
choice was available. But when she said,
“$20 please,” it triggered my
brain. The website said it would be
$26. I figured I’d check my ticket when
she gave it back to me. I should have
said something right away.
When I looked, the ticket was for Friday’s game. But by then, another guy was up at the
window, so I waited close by. Soon, she
asked if something was the matter. I
said she gave me the wrong day. She said
“OK, just let me just take care of this
guy.” Which she did.
Which took 8-10 freaking minutes!
Do you have this section?
No.
Do you have that section?
No, the whole lower bowl inside the infield is sold
out.
How about if we break up the tickets?
No, it’s all sold out there, unless you want to pay
$150.
No, I don’t want to pay that.
On and on it went.
Meanwhile, other windows are opening up, but I figure I should deal with
the person who screwed up my order. (No, I absolutely didn’t say Friday. I said, “Sund… I mean Saturday.”) Meanwhile, the skies are getting darker and
darker, in the direction in which I have to go.
Eventually, while this schmo is still pissing around with
his seating, the next window over opened up, so I figured that was safe.
And it was no problem, except my seat wasn’t available for
Saturday. Before I could go to my next
choice, she suggested another aisle seat, one section over. I said that was OK, and she ran my card for
an additional $6. But then I got a brain
tickle.
I asked, “That’s not a
limited view seat, is it?” I’d found
one around there earlier, when I was scoping seats. I had no idea there was an obstructed view
anywhere in the upper deck. I wonder
what the obstruction is.
She said, “Um, yes it
is. I don’t know why that didn’t come up
on the screen.”
Right… it “didn’t come up,” but you can see it now. Lady, you just tried to unload a crappy seat
on me.
So now I’ve spent 15 minutes at the windows, while it’s
already starting to drizzle, and still don’t have my seat. They had my 2nd choice though, one section
closer but of course, that’s another
$12, so she had to run my card a 3rd
time. Still, at least I got out of $7 in
processing fees.
But I wanted to tell her, “If I get rained on, it’s your fault.”
I didn’t say that, because she probably would have taken me
seriously and I would have gotten blackballed.
Meanwhile, they just turned ME into the schmo taking all day at the
ticket window.
Anyway, it only sprinkled on my walk back, so I had time to
scope out a new food truck before getting back to the office. Of course, I had to wait for 10-15 minutes
there, too.
It’s no wonder I never want to leave the building.
6 comments:
On only a tangentially related note, you may have seen my FB photo taken last Saturday morning in Federal Hill. After walking around the perimeter of Inner Harbor to reach our destination, we were regularly annoyed and in awe of how many tourists, usually in large groups, stop in the middle of a path with no regard for others trying to walk. I don't know how you manage to live in a city that is full of tourists. It would drive me crazy. P.S. Camden Yards looks like an amazing ball park. Next time we are in town I hope it is for longer than 18 hours so I can go to a game. The weather this weekend looks promising for lots of sun and sunscreen. Hope you get your money shot of the ball park!
That bugs the crap out of me too, Deb. Luckily, there aren't too many tourists along my usual path, just a lot of slow moving people jabbering on their cell phones.
Yes, I saw you FB picture and hey, next time you're in town, let me know! I'd be happy to be your tour guide for an Orioles game. (Or just sit for some drinksB)
will do! I thought about getting in touch but we were there only until Noon on Saturday. Next time though I will think and plan ahead!
Don't you hate it when YOU are the guy taking 20 minutes at the ticket window. We know the feeling. Every Sunday, WE are the folks at Walgreen's dithering over coupons while a line forms with sunscreen and a newspaper. Of course THEY are tourists.
Walgreens should open another register as soon as they see you in the parking lot.
They usually do. We are valued members of the congregation, contribute every Sunday.
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