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September 28, 2004 - Tuesday

 The Most Entertaining Meal Of The Day

As I’ve mentioned earlier, my company is about to perform a massive “Reduction In Force” in which they’re laying off something like 75% of the company, me included. They’ve been letting people go on a staggered schedule — 15 people here, 20 people there — and the final release is taking place this Thursday, when the last of us will be “free to leave the building” after our exit interview — oh yeah, and after we turn in our laptops, cell phones, pagers, etc.

Management dictated that nobody could use vacation or PTO days this week, so the last few people from my department are all in the office this week, all of us with nothing to do. Seriously nothing to do. Our job has been to convert radio stations over to our software, and with all the stations converted we literally have not a single damned thing to do. So we’re chatting and surfing and IMing and talking on the phone and … we’re just basically here, taking up space and killing time as we wait for Thursday to inch its way closer.

The only bright spot in our day is lunch. There’s a movie theater right around the corner, so that’s what’s for lunch these days. Yesterday we had some nice Shaun of the Dead (two very enthusiastic thumbs up, btw), today we’ll probably try The Forgotten, and then Wednesday it’ll probably be Cellular.

Lunch. It’s the most entertaining meal of the day.


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September 11, 2004 - Saturday

 9/11 + 3

I was in Dallas, at my company’s training center when it happened. The students were straggling in from the hotel next door while we got them set up with nametags and computers and generally squared away for class, when one of them said she’d seen something on TV about a plane hitting the World Trade Center. I had this weird moment of deja vu and flashed on an old story of an Army transport plane hitting the Empire State Building back in WWII, but it somehow seemed current, and then I laughed it off and continued setting up the computer I was working on.

We started the class, going around the room for introductions, talking about what we were going to cover, students talking about what they hoped to learn, etc. Just another class beginning.

The way the training room was set up, the person actually training was at the front of the room while the rest of us were at the back, behind the students, “roaming” to help people who needed assistance. In the first hour of class, one of the other training center staff members came in and quietly told the roamers what was happening in New York, in Washington. Nobody knew the full story yet; it was all disjointed and confusing and unconfirmed.

At the first break we announced to the class what we knew and took an extended break so people could make phone calls and get information and direct activity back at their home sites and … well, whatever they needed to do. We still didn’t know the full impact of what was happening — didn’t know that it was still happening — so we called the class back to order and continued.

Nobody could focus; we were all wondering what was going on, we were all scared. As we continued we roamers worked the internet at the back of the class, gathering any information we could get, and we gave the class frequent updates. It soon became clear that this was not just an accident, not just a freak occurrence; it became clear that this was the worst thing we had ever seen. It became clear that we had to end the class.

So we did — we just stopped. We released the class, told them they were free to go back to their hotel rooms to watch the news and call family and do whatever. We’d try to make arrangements for people to get back home if they needed to. We’d do what we could for them.

And then all of us trainers gathered in the biggest hotel room among us and watched TV all day.

Ever since then, when I’m out on the road the very first thing I do when I get up in the morning is turn on the TV, tune in CNN. I’m always afraid I’m going to see bad news about Los Angeles, and I never quite trust it when I don’t. I’m always sure the bad news is going to start the instant after I turn the TV off.

I still remember the horror of that day. I feel it, I have not forgotten. I will never forget. And to those who scold me to remember, who feel they need to remind me, who suggest I have forgotten because I don’t think Bush is doing it right, I say this:

Fuck you. I remember. Always.

wtc.jpg


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September 10, 2004 - Friday

 Missed Me By ThatMuch

It’s 5:44 on a Friday evening. I haven’t heard a peep out of my boss about going to Ohio on Monday, so I’m assuming I dodged that bullet. Last I heard from Gavin this afternoon, he hadn’t heard anything about it either, so maybe the bullet missed both of us.

Or maybe they just forgot.

Either way, I’m pretty sure Ohio’s out of my immediate future now. As Chrissie Hynde would say, “A, O, way to go, Ohio.”


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September 9, 2004 - Thursday

 Back to Ohio?

Uh oh. Work is making traveling noises. My boss asked me this morning if I “feel like going to Cincinnati next week.” Uh… No? I already did Ohio — Akron, in fact. I didn’t like it.

But on the other hand, it’s another $250 in per diem if I go, and it sounds like if I don’t go then my close personal friend and co-worker Gavin will have to go and he’s already going to Gallup, NM the week after so Cincinnati followed by Gallup is adding insult to injury but that’s his problem not mine and does anyone ever really want to go to Cincinatti and I really don’t want to but I also don’t want to have to drive the 65 miles each way to the office next week and I wouldn’t have to if I was in Cincinnati but the only problem is that I’d be in Cincinnati and I already promised Zoe I was finished with traveling and…

Deep breath.

…I don’t like breaking promises to her but it is another $250 like I said and I’m getting laid off at the end of the month so every penny counts but if they need someone to go to Cincinnati then things must be going really wrong there and if so that’s a hellhole I really don’t want to be in so maybe I should just say no and stay home and stick Gavin with it and just look out for Number One?

I can’t call it. So I told my boss that I’d have to reschedule some appointments I have next week but that I can go if she really needs me to, but I think I made it clear that I should be considered a last resort. And now I’m crossing my fingers that I don’t get The Call.


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September 3, 2004 - Friday

 Thank You, Laramie, And Good Night!

Laramie, I am so out of here, I can’t even tell you. You are, as of five minutes from now — when I’ll be walking out the front door — completely and totally on your own. Don’t call my cell phone because I won’t answer. Don’t leave voicemail because I’ll delete it. Don’t send me email because I won’t read it. Don’t send me snailmail because I’ll burn it. I’m through with you people. Period. You’ve been the biggest pain in the ass site I’ve ever had to deal with and I can’t say just how happy I am to be shut of you.

…and as I was writing the above, the GM came in and badgered me for five minutes about “How do I divide this $237 bill evenly between these seven advertisers?” and then kept bitching about how it wouldn’t divide evenly dollar-wise the way the software handles it. I seriously almost punched him in the forehead just to shut him up.

So, yeah, I’m outta here. Ladies and gentlemen, the Elvis tattoo has left the building! For good!


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August 31, 2004 - Tuesday

 Be Afraid

Today was possibly the worst day I’ve had doing these software conversions. The people I’m working with will NOT talk to each other, I just found out this afternoon that spots that have been supposed to be playing since yesterday haven’t been playing because nobody bothered to set them up in the on-air system, the only two people who are worth a damn here are college students and school is back in session so they’re part-timers now, one of the idiot engineers keeps asking me for help with another company’s software that I know nothing about and won’t believe I can’t support it, blah blah blah blah blah. This day has just been a nightmare from the minute I walked in the door, and there’s every indication that tomorrow will be even worse.

The crowning glory was when the day mercifully ended and I was walking out the door. I ran into the General Manager, who asked me how things were going, and I told him bluntly that today had been a complete clusterfuck. His response?

“Can you find out for me what it would cost us to have you stay longer, at least until next week?”

They don’t print that kind of money, buddy.


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August 30, 2004 - Monday

 I Kill Me

I’m standing at the reception desk talking to a radio station employee as a woman comes in the front door and approaches the desk to submit a press release.

Woman: “Hi. I’m from the Wyoming Mental Health Institute.” (Hands over press release.) “We’re changing our name.”

Me: “You’re changing your name? Well, that’s just crazy!”

They all just looked at me. Wyoming-ans have no sense of humor.


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July 30, 2004 - Friday

 Thank You, La Grange, And Good Night!

Ladies and gentlemen, the Elvis tattoo is leaving the building. La Grange, you can keep your southern, drawling, inbred, NASCAR loving, bickering, “I don’t get it, that’s stupid,” complaining redneck attitudes to yourself.

(But thanks for the Waffle House coffee mug!)

Me?

I.

Am.

OUTTA HERE!


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July 26, 2004 - Monday

 The Rutles, Maybe

One of the program directors here is a huuuuuge Hanson fan, and she’s (rightly so) very defensive about it. She was expounding on their virtues, which include the fact that they write their own music and play their own instruments and produce their own records and blah and blah and blah … and then the poor girl just flat-out lost her damned mind.

“They’re just like the Beatles!” she said.

Oh, how we laughed at her.


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July 21, 2004 - Wednesday

 Stupid Conversion Specialist Tricks

When I’m out on the road for work, visiting these radio stations I’m converting over to the new software, the staff of the stations tend to see me as the ultimate authority figure and regard any advice I give as being The Word of God. It’s understandable, I guess, since I’ve been working with them for 12 weeks, guiding them through the conversion process and riding herd on them to make sure deadlines are met and being the point person on their Corporate Overlord-mandated conversion, but… well… Me? “The Man”? Come on!

It does come in handy at times, though. Without these people quaking in their boots when I walk in the door, I wouldn’t be able to pull these types of jokes on them…

Chuck enters Lee’s office. She practically winces at the sight of him, afraid to hear what problem he’s found now. She’s frazzled and on her last nerve. If one more thing goes wrong, she might lose it.

“Bad news, Lee,” Chuck says. “There’s a problem.”

Lee’s face pales. She looks scared. “What is it?” she asks.

“I’m paying way too much for my car insurance.”

Chuck runs for his life down the hall as she threatens him, laughing, with a stapler.

Ha. I love doing that kind of stuff. It sucks the tension right out of a room. And it’s funny…


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