A LITTLE BIG PROBLEM

The turkey was too big. Stace moved it around on the counter and for a moment a sense of helplessness nearly overwhelmed her.

Her oven had been broken for months. She’d been making due with a toaster oven and a microwave that had a “conventional oven” function. This turkey was too big for either.

When she ordered the turkey from the grocery store, she’d assumed it was a small turkey based on the price. She’d imagined something the size of a football maybe, compact and easy to handle.

This was a full-sized turkey. It was heavy and frozen and took up a good portion of the small kitchen counter.

After staring at it for a long while, she shoved it into the refrigerator for future-her to handle. Then she went into the living room to watch the rest of the Chinese drama she’d started earlier. It wasn’t very good but the female lead was pretty and she wanted to know how things were going to turn out. (There was an awkward “will they, won’t they” between the female lead and the two male leads.)

Thoughts of the turkey now taking up most of the fridge hovered in Stace’s mind. She firmly pushed them away.

Future-her would figure things out.

. *. *. *.

It took days for the turkey to defrost. By the time she poked it and felt some give, she’d come up with a plan of attack.

When her parents and brother showed up she would have a turkey dinner ready to eat. No signs that she’d struggled to sleep with thoughts of turkey on her mind.

She spent Christmas morning preparing the turkey.

First she cut a garbage bag open and covered the counter. Then she got out several big knives and a large serrated knife. She didn’t have a wide range of cutting tools in her arsenal, but she hoped her few big knives were sharp enough.

She arranged the square Pyrex dish that fit in the microwave next to the garbage bag. After thinking, she also readied the toaster oven pan by lining it with tinfoil. She lay a glass cutting board on top of the garbage bag.

Then she got the turkey out of the fridge and pulled on a pair of disposable gloves.

She stood there for a long while, unmoving. Once she opened the turkey, that was it. There would be no turning back.

The turkey juices would be released and she would have to deal with the intimidating situation before her. There would be no going back once she breached the plastic.

Stace drew in a deep breath, then used the serrated knife to slice the plastic. She cut at the top of the turkey and peeled the plastic down. The pooling fluids were all at the bottom, and she was careful when lifting the turkey up and pulling the plastic free.

She lay the turkey on the cutting board and bundled the discarded plastic together, careful not to let any of the blood escape. She was glad the garbage can had a foot pedal and she could easily throw away the plastic.

Then she faced the large raw turkey. There were dimples here and there on the smooth skin and the red dot of the doneness button.

She pulled the bag of giblets and organ meat out of the cavity and set them to one side of the cutting board. Then she used a little effort and pulled the red button out of the turkey. The inner stem was white plastic and sharpened like a golf tee.

She tossed the turkey neck into a saucepan before taking up a slender knife and beginning to cut.

She struggled through removing the drumsticks and wings. It wasn’t as easy as she’d imagined it would be, and at one point a bone popped apart and juices splattered across the front of her shirt. It made her shudder in disgust but she couldn’t stop cutting.

She had two aprons but both were dirty. She felt that she should have washed at least one. Who would have thought that a turkey could be so messy?

She put the drumsticks and wings in the Pyrex pan. She would season and bake them in the microwave.

She cut off the breasts and lay them on the toaster oven pan. Then she messily removed other slices to lay on the pan.

Stace cocked her head, gauging the size of the carcass. It was much smaller than when she’d started, but still big with all the bones.

She glanced at the empty stock pot waiting on the stove. It was tall but narrow, more of a fashion accessory than the tool of an experienced chef. She’d bought it on sale and had never used it for cooking. It mostly stored unopened bags of sugar, flour, and rice. Which were now stacked on the bread machine that took up too much counter space in her small kitchen.

She tried to visually measure the size of the turkey carcass and the stock pot. It looked like it would be a tight fit. There was still a lot of meat on the bones, but she didn’t have any other pans ready to hold the raw meat.

Finally she decided “Fuck it!” and sawed at the bones, hoping to split the rib cage in half.

It didn’t work. Her knife wasn’t sharp enough and she became scared that she would accidentally stab herself if she didn’t stop.

Stace picked up the carcass and carried it to the stove. With a bit of effort she was able to force it into the stock pot. On one side there was a lot of empty space and the other side was full, but the bones refused to bend in any useful way. She pushed the bones all the way down to the bottom of the pot and told herself it was good enough.

Then she realized that she’d dripped turkey juice on the floor. And stepped in it.

Cursing to herself, she went back to the counter and gathered up the knives and cutting board and put them in the sink. Then she carefully bundled the garbage bag and put it in the trash can before pulling off the dirty gloves and dropping them in.

Then she washed her hands and got out bleach wipes to first wipe the bottom of her slipper and then the floor. Then she used more wipes to disinfect the counter and anywhere else that could’ve been contaminated by her messy turkey handling.

After washing her hands again, she set about cooking three kinds of turkey. Baked, broiled, and souped.

And she promised herself that unless she somehow managed to move into a place with a real kitchen–or got a working oven–she would never buy a full-sized turkey again.

It wasn’t just a lot of effort. It was gross. Especially the spatters on the front of her shirt.

. *. *. *.

By the time her parents and brother showed up at noon, Stace’s smile was back to bright and cheery. She’d showered and changed into a particularly ugly Christmas sweater and she’d exchanged the broiled turkey in the toaster oven for a small pan of green bean casserole. The dinner rolls were baking in the microwave. The only turkey still cooking was the soup simmering in the stock pot, to which she’d added some chopped yellow onions and carrot peels for flavor.

She accepted the hugs and kisses from her family, and took the large plate of sugar cookies to the coffee table in the living room. They’d be perfect to snack on while watching their annual movie marathon.

Her heart was light as she cued up the first movie: the director’s cut of “Alien.”

They sat down and watched the first part of the movie, and after the crew had their terrible meal, they moved to the dining room to enjoy their own Christmas dinner. Stace thanked her brother when he complimented the pattern of 8-bit xenomorph eggs decorating her red and green knit sweater.

She turned and lifted her hair to show him the back with the black alien queen on it. His clear envy made her laugh in delight.

The family talked and ate while Ripley battled aliens in the background. Then they went in the living room to watch the second and third movies. Halfway through the fourth movie they ate turkey noodle soup with crackers.

And it was a good Christmas. Because they were together. And nobody mentioned the mauled appearance of the broiled turkey or that the drumsticks and wings had obviously been cooked separately from the bird.

Everything had come together in the end. They were well-fed and well-entertained and she was no longer haunted by thoughts of a waiting turkey.

She didn’t let herself think of all the dishes waiting for her in the sink and on the counter. That was future-her’s problem.

=END=

Prairie Fires at Amazon

Man. This one fanfiction author is a fucking BEAST.

There’s updates in what feels like every five minutes, every fucking day. My inbox is full of her update announcements. It’s to the point that I no longer follow along with her writings because there’s so many I can’t figure out if they’re updates to stories I’ve started or not.

I’m actually kind of envious of her writing ability. If I could, I’d rip out her writing magic and wear it like a second skin because wow.

She’s honestly amazing 🤷🏻‍♀️

Allies & Enemies at Amazon

After hearing about it so much, I watched the HBomberguy’s “Plagiarism and You(Tube)” video and wow.

I don’t really follow YouTube drama. Like, I’ll occasionally watch a how-to video or I’ll get sucked into watching a movie here or there, but otherwise I don’t have much interaction with YouTube. I’ve just never been that guy.

Maybe I was too old when videos started appearing on the Internet lol ^_^;

But anyways, Hbomberguy’s video is excellent. You should watch it => https://youtu.be/yDp3cB5fHXQ <= even though it is 3 hours and 51 minutes long. It’s definitely worth the hype.

He covers multiple instances of YouTube plagiarism. And he talks about some of the historical instances of plagiarism. It’s a really good video. You should watch it and join the conversation that’s happening.

Plagiarism is bad. And now we all know how to do it (not really) lol.

Pax,

~HarperWCK

Small Gods at Amazon

Train to Busan

“Train to Busan” is such a perfect movie. It’s one of those ones that can be watched multiple times and it’s still good.

The first time you watch it, the focus is always on the “zOMG zombies!” angle of things. But on following views you can’t help noticing the deeper messages of corporate malfeasance, corrupt government officials, and personal responsibility.

The biggest hero of the movie is the conductor that did everything he could to protect his passengers and get them to their destination. He went above and beyond the call of duty, because if he’d only focused on saving himself he could have locked the engine cabin, not announced that there was a blockage on the track up ahead, and sacrificed the passengers to get himself to the smaller train that is used at the end.

The father is a corporate dickhead that ignored environmental warnings and instead of warning people or doing what he could to halt the disaster sold the stock in the company and went about his business. In a regular, non-zombie related environmental disaster, he would have gone on with his life and not faced any consequences for his actions. That he rediscovered his love for his child and showed a bit of kindness toward others doesn’t change the fact that he did a great evil in the name of personal wealth.

The government official was an ahole from his very first scene and he only got progressively worse. He went from pushing people and not apologizing for his own rudeness to literally opening doors and shoving people out to be eaten by zombies. He actively made the whole situation worse and it was likely his fault that nearly everyone died. Because when people were saying “Let’s all work together!” he was saying “We should kill some of these guys so the rest of us can make it.”

That everyone kept listening to the government official even after he showed himself to be a giant piece of shit… Like, someone should have stood up and said “Dude, you ain’t leading but two things here: Jack and shit. And Jack left town.”

The most innocent characters of the movie are the little girl, the pregnant lady, the teen girl, and the baseball player. The strong husband was a hero even when showing that he likely had a history of delinquency. There were some times when his rough edges wanted to show, but then he would look at his wife and you could visibly see himself softening his manner and trying his best to be a kind person, especially toward the little girl.

The homeless man showed that owning a house and having money doesn’t make someone a good person; their inner spirit does. There were several instances when he could have left the group behind and survived on his own, but instead he chose to put himself into danger to save the little girl and the pregnant woman. He was a hero. The kind of person that will give someone coal in the snow.

There are multiple ways to enjoy “Train to Busan.” If you like gory horror movies, you can simply think of it as a zombie movie. If you like interpersonal relationship pieces, you can see the interactions between the father and daughter, the husband and pregnant lady, the girl and pregnant lady, the father and husband, or the teen girl and baseball player. If you like corrupt politicians getting their comeuppance… you can be a bit disappointed because that asshole lasted way too long, which is likely a metaphor for real life and how some monsters will keep on doing what they’re doing until they die, by which time they’ve already poisoned the well and ruined things for everyone.

You can watch the movie and imagine how their lives could have gone if only there hadn’t been a zombie outbreak. What would have happened if the father’s stock shenanigans had been investigated? The life the little girl would have lived with a father in prison; whether she would have missed him and their fancy life, or if she would have come to hate him for the things people would say he had allowed to happen. The environmental damage he’d helped cover up.

You could imagine the husband and pregnant lady reaching their destination. Their life together after their daughter is born. How they might struggle, but their love would remain strong and their child would grow up in a loving household to have a brilliant future where she would take her elderly parents on expensive vacations and she would bring a love interest home to meet them and there would be kdrama hijinks and getting together to make a giant batch of kimchi in a bright kitchen. And she would look beautiful in her wedding dress as her father leads her down the aisle.

You could imagine the corrupt politician reaching his mother’s house only to find the police waiting. All his wheeling and dealing coming to light, and a “Law and Order”-type situation taking place. There would be the satisfaction of watching him be led out in cuffs to serve a very long sentence.

You could imagine the teen girl and the baseball player having a thoroughly cute kdrama romance with easily solved problems and a happy ending. Or maybe they would have a cute high school romance that would end during their college years and they would separate for a decade and meet each other again in their adult lives. And there would be issues to get past, but their love would be lasting and true.

There’s an open-endedness to the characters in “Train to Busan.” We get a taste of who they are, but nothing is as concrete as the life of the father and daughter. Their story begins and ends and we are left satisfied by the ending of the movie even as we lament the fates of the people within.

It’s a movie worthy of being a classic.

The sequels, the animated one and “Peninsula,” were disappointing. They both tried much too hard to be popular rather than having stories worth watching. None of the original characters appear, which could be forgiven, except the stories are more intended to shock and show “Zombies! There’s zombies!” rather that displaying any furtherance of human emotion. They’re all flash and gore with “cool” characters that are actually very difficult to connect with as people.

When “Peninsula” was announced I was very excited. I pre-ordered the movie and practically counted down the days until it would be out.

And then I watched it.

I honestly wish I would have just bought “Train to Busan.” At least then I would know that I would watch it over and over again. Because it’s a genuinely good movie. To the point that there are scenes in other zombie movies where characters don’t have to explain “There’s zombies! Run for your life!” to their shocked and disbelieving friends. They simply have to say “It’s ‘Train to Busan!'” and the situation is immediately understood.

Classic.


News of the World

So, Israel on Twitter (and likely elsewhere) keeps recommending a link to hamas-dot-com–which is a site Israel owns–that is LOADED with malware and viruses. I don’t know why they would do such a thing, but it’s really quite terrible on their part.

Several people on the comment thread were complaining that while trying to swipe past the post, they accidentally clicked the link.

Why would a country do that? Purposefully use social media to load malware and viruses on peoples’ devices? It’s sick.


movies

Currently watching “Gray Matter,” a movie about 16-year-old Aurora who has psionic abilities. Her mother has kept her hidden from a secret agency that wants to use their abilities for nefarious purposes. It’s all right so far.

This kind of movie makes me think of others in the genre: “Freaks” with Emile Hirsch. “Fast Color” with Gugu Mbatha-Raw. “Firestarter” with Drew Barrymore. “The Witch: Subversion” with Kim Da-mi (excellent movie btw).

One that seems part of the genre but that is actually something completely different is the movie “Stephanie” with Frank Grillo. I watched that one and was honestly surprised, though I would have to watch it again to know for sure that it holds up to my memory. All I know is that the ending was pure inspiration for story writing.