The first day of the rest of my life (or at least of my summer vacation)
After packing up the entirety of my earthly possessions
(which I am somewhat ashamed and somewhat proud to admit can fit into my Mazda
Protégé), and stowing them in the zombie-shelter, I boarded a flight to LA to
visit some friends for a little pre-vacation vacation. A few
highlights from Day One:
- Learning to drive a Prius: When my friend, host, and car-provider Lonestar asked me if I knew how to
operate (operate?!) a Prius, I scoffed and sarcastically responded: “Step 1: Care about ‘nature.’ Step 2:
Start a socialist book club. Step 3:
Blog on my Ipad/pod/mac while drinking a mocha-venti-frappe-latte. Step 4: Drive.” Twenty minutes and one bruised ego later, I
managed to operate my way out of the park-n-fly lot. Lesson learned.
- Picnic on Manhattan Beach: It was a perfect day
to read/sleep (for me, these two things are practically synonymous) on the
beach, neither too warm nor too cool nor too anything. It was like a beachside homeostasis
chamber—perfect temperature, sound of the waves, and not a soul around. (I imagine that this will be the vision fed
to us by our Matrix robot overlords after their hostile takeover. Or a Corona commercial. Either way.)
For lunch was the chingones sandwich
supplied by a hole-in-the-wall sub shop—a mash-up of grilled onions, french fries (in the sandwich), provolone,
grilled chicken, jalapenos, and aioli (my word—they called it mayonnaise). It was that delicious combo of flavor and
spiciness where you need a napkin more for your nose than your mouth.
- Wild
in the Streets Film Screening: If there is anything more
quintessentially LA than going to see a private screening of a documentary, I’d
like to challenge it to a mass football game (which is coincidentally the
subject of this excellent film). My
synopsis: every year the quaint English town of Ashbourne becomes a seething
mass of humanity as cross-town rivals vie for eternal glory in an ancient 3,000
player game of no-holds-barred capture-the-flag.
Except in this case, the flag is a 4-pound painted leather ball which
endows the goal-scorer with all the adulation and prestige a quaint English
town can muster. Absolutely
brilliant. If you can see it, y’oughtta.
5 comments:
I like the "soccer" videos, but I want to hear more of the Prius story...
Me, too. Why is driving a Prius so different?
It has an "ON" button rather than an ignition (but that doesn;t always start the car, sometimes it just puts it in Accessory mode), and instead of a gear shift, you just bump a lever forward for "Drive" and backward for "Reverse." There's also a whole meter for using electric vs gas to drive on, and a third mode of driving labelled "B" which I didn't even attempt.
Sounds like you're driving it with a Nintendo controller. Press up to go forward, down to go backwards, and B to use your special attack.
What happens when you enter the Konami Code?
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