Then I have an easy Astronomy Lab report.
An easy Comp Sci assignment.
Lots of Calc homework.
But I can do this.
*takes another swig of his Tropicanaâ„¢ Twister Orange Soda*
Yep.
I missed FitRec today when I over-slept my nap. Guess that means the rest of the week is going to be one, massive POWER SESSION.
*orange soda*
Just gotta start.
Any second now.
I kept trying my hand at the S2 template system all day yesterday. No tomatoes. AND I'M SUPPOSED TO BE A COMPUTER PROGRAMMER, GOD.
Maybe this relaxing Friday will be the trick!
oh look someone set the science building on fire. *sigh*
Here's a song I like. Maybe you'll like it too.
DVNO by Justice
MP3 in Zip file
8.7 MB
(for preview only, don't steal music)
keke tired. Erik has jury duty in 20 minutes. I'll see you with a new post later today.
*coffee coffee coffee*
There's this guy I've seen around. I first met him during orientation. A little forward - a little too forward, which means something coming from me - and cliché in his use of catch-phrases during conversation. You can tell by his mannerisms that he's the type to acquire (that is, by force) popularity. I learned he was part of one of our University's more "elite" colleges. A real go-getter, this one. Also a complete jerk.
Erik (my twin brother) and I hop into an empty, downward-sliding elevator. At the floor immediately below ours, jerk kid and a division of his posse (which consists, ironically, of some other, less odious individuals from the aforementioned orientation) join us. I can deal with this sort of thing; I have seen his serial-killer face (sorry) often enough around campus. Now we're traveling slowly downward. (When I first moved in here, I considered these worn, tired elevators positively breakneck in speed. Like other forms of time-dilation, I've discovered it all depends on your company.) Stop at floor ten. Two additional, female car-mates.
Floor five, one floor above the main floor, which is four. Doors open, the girls exit. As is fairly common, some innocent bystander, standing at the bank on the same floor, inquires as to the direction of the lift (he wants to go up, we're going down). Depending on the car (there are three), you have between two and five seconds to dispense an answer before the doors shut and you're on your way again. In my typical, congenial, stumbling, muttering way, I blurt "down." There's a split-second of processing before I realize jerk-face has said the same word coincidentally, only - and this is evidence of how he wears his jerk badge so arrogantly - he tacks on two absolutely revolting words in his filthy, snake-eyed tone: Sorry buddy.
Before you start thinking, "Wow, cry me a river newb" allow me the opportunity to dissect Sorry buddy. Imagine the words are surrounded by a facial expression similar to the one below. Then, add a vocal sneer and some biting sarcasm. Lastly, make it speedy (the phrase took about a second). This was a deliberate, in-your-face institution of nastiness. The final implications? Sorry buddy, you lose because this elevator is going down, not up. Stay away from me or I'll mace you.

Door closes and jerk-face is quite smug. Out of the elevator and out to the line for the dining hall. God. Of course he's standing right behind us. Past the card-swiper, into the hall. I'm standing in line for sliced potatoes floating in mucous (I'll explain later) with a plate of heel-bunion meatloaf. Once again, God. He's still behind me.
Tray with plate of heel-bunion in hand (I've become quite skilled with the one-handed tray-holding business; I could totally bus tables), I find a seat. Forgot water. Up, out of seat. God, there he is again, at the soda fountain. You bastard. Get out of my way. Go terrorize some first-graders.
I spent the next twenty minutes extemporizing (Erik calls it "whining") on preludes to true jerkdom.
And that was just a petty moron! Imagine how much time I spend smacking around the real jerks. There are so many of them. Criminy.
Tomorrow, then.
Next Posting: This morning I stepped into the shower and turned on the water before I realized my pants were still on.
For those of you who don't know, the day after is significant not as a precursor to Plan B, but rather as a sort of blogging flood barrier. The day after prevents overzealous people like me from posting three updates per minute (a la Twitter) and clogging up what few Friends Pages I am fortunate enough to infest. Of course, I'll likely write once or twice more as a means of procrastination, then abandon this poor beast mercilessly... for the fourth time since I became a member.
Ah, doesn't that put a spring in your step!
I've been looking for a way to enjoy music again. Not that I don't enjoy music, because I do. Only a jerk or a criminal wouldn't enjoy music. The trouble here is that, lately, my biggest exposure to new music has been through soundtracks. Movie scores and anime soundtracks, mostly. Yes, Yoko Kanno is a mighty woman, but even her albums deserve a break (especially seeing as I scorched iTunes' shiny gray gradients when her songs caught fire). What is a wayward audiophile to do? The iTunes Music Store, while useful in many respects, doesn't often suggest music I enjoy. The Billboard charts scare me (one too many VH1 specials), Amazon doesn't make sense anymore, and eBay only offers bootlegs.
Cue Pandora. As it turns out, I signed up with their service just as they launched some years ago and subsequently forgot they existed. Today was the day I rediscovered the magic.
Unlike other, "Would you like to listen to this? We think you might like this because you liked this other album by a completely different artist in an unrelated genre. Go ahead and listen to this suggestion for free and then we'll charge you $.99 before you realize the song is thickly encoded at a horrendous bitrate and dripping in DRM" services, Pandora has some real techno-magic behind it. It's all thanks to the Music Genome Project. I won't attack you with the details, but the concept is fun and fresh.
When I first joined, Pandora didn't have much of a library to draw from, which is probably why I never caught on. Today, however, they have a delicious smattering of eclectic stuff, and - most importantly - a healthy collection of Yoko Kanno's music. Now we're talking!
I created my very own Yoko Kanno Radio station, and now I'm listening to some pretty interesting tracks. I've never heard of any of the following artists, but they're now on my "buy these" list:

That's it for tonight. I'm off to love me some Virginia Woolf.
Next Posting: Why Jerks Suck
