home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!dreaderd!not-for-mail
- Message-ID: <joel-furr/faq_1083761618@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Supersedes: <joel-furr/faq_1082292761@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Expires: 5 Jun 2004 12:53:38 GMT
- X-Last-Updated: 2000/05/11
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.joel-furr,alt.bonehead.joel-furr,alt.answers,news.answers
- Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
- Subject: Joel Furr FAQ
- Followup-To: alt.fan.joel-furr
- Summary: http://www.furrs.org/FAQs/jffaq.htm
- Organization: Carole and Jay Furr
- From: jfurr@furrs.org (Joel K. 'Jay' Furr)
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 05 May 2004 12:54:50 GMT
- Lines: 2457
- NNTP-Posting-Host: penguin-lust.mit.edu
- X-Trace: 1083761690 senator-bedfellow.mit.edu 556 18.181.0.29
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.fan.joel-furr:12378 alt.bonehead.joel-furr:2779 alt.answers:72769 news.answers:270955
-
- Archive-name: joel-furr/faq
- Alt-fan-joel-furr-archive-name: faq
- Alt-bonehead-joel-furr-archive-name: faq
- Last-modified: 2000/5/1
- Version: 4.9
-
- Joel Furr FAQ
-
- Copyright 2000 by Joel K. "Jay" Furr (jfurr@furrs.org)
-
- This is the Joel Furr FAQ.
-
- It is not provided out of a sense of personal vanity but rather for the purpose
- its name states: to answer some of the Frequently Asked Questions about me, such
- as "how'd he get three newsgroups named after him" and such. Many of these
- questions are sent to me in electronic mail, usually as a result of someone
- looking for the answers to their questions in alt.fan.joel-furr and not finding
- them. It would be a good idea to read this FAQ before posting to
- alt.fan.joel-furr. This FAQ is copyright 1998 by Joel Furr (me) and may not be
- reprinted in any commercial medium without my explicit and unambiguous
- permission. This means that you may not re-print it in a magazine, book,
- newspaper, or multimedia disk, nor re-print it in an online magazine or other
- commercial website without my permission. All rights reserved.
-
- -- Joel Furr
-
-
-
- Frequently Asked Questions
-
- (1) Who is Joel Furr?
-
- (2) Why does he have three newsgroups named after him?
-
- (3) Who appointed Joel Furr ruler of alt.*?
-
- (4) What is it about Joel and lemurs?
-
- (5) Was Joel really elected Kibo, or is that just a myth?
-
- (6) What happened between Joel and those "Green Card" lawyers in Arizona?
-
- (7) What newsgroups is Joel Furr a moderator of?
-
- (8) Does Joel Furr sell t-shirts and stuff?
-
- (9) Does Joel spend all his time logged in, or what?
-
- (10) Is Joel likely to reply if I write to him?
-
- (11) What does Joel look like?
-
- (12) What's the deal with those funny black floor lamps that point up at the
- ceiling with the little knobs on the side about halfway up that you turn back
- and forth to adjust the brightness? Everyone seems to have them these days.
-
- (13) Hey, where are the seatbelts?
-
- (14) What's the 'soup du jour' today?
-
- (15) Is cotton candy a solid or liquid or crystal or what?
-
- (16) What's the 800 number for the North Carolina ferry system?
-
- (17) Where is Paradise?
-
- (18) Hey, what about those French?
-
- (19) Is it true that if I jump up off the ground, I'm technically in low earth
- orbit for as long as I'm in the air?
-
- (20) Who's in charge of the weather?
-
- (21) What is it with cats? How do they make their legs disappear when they perch
- on the arm of a sofa, looking content?
-
- (22) Does Joel Furr like fish?
-
- (23) How 'bout them Dawgs?
-
- (24) Is Joel a Democrat, Republican, Libertarian, or what?
-
- (25) What's in those bottles in the back of Joel Furr's refrigerator?
-
- (26) Where do bad people go when they die?
-
- (27) When's the best time to go to an amusement park?
-
- (28) What's wrong with Joel Furr's blood?
-
- (29) What is that thing at the bottom of that big glass jar full of water?
-
- (30) Will seagulls eat small chunks of pork barbecue?
-
- (31) St. Patrick's Day is a festive, cheery holiday wherein we celebrate our
- Irish heritage, affecting bad Irish accents and wearing green. How does Joel
- Furr celebrate the holiday?
-
- (32) Is it true that Joel Furr's car has a guardian spirit?
-
- (33) Hey, isn't that song "YMCA" that they play at baseball games really cool?
-
- (34) What's that chunk of powdery concrete atop Joel Furr's bookcase?
-
- (35) Does Joel have a wife?
-
- (36) What's the greatest cinematographic achievement of all time?
-
- (37) What is a Hokie?
-
- (38) What instrument did Joel Furr play in the Blacksburg High School band?
-
- (39) What does Joel typically say when someone asks him, rhetorically, how he
- is?
-
- (40) What's the best sort of implement to use when eating ice cream?
-
- (41) What clubs and organizations does Joel Furr belong to?
-
- (42) What's Joel Furr's ethnic and socioeconomic background?
-
- (43) Define "good eatins."
-
- (44) Joel Furr visited Las Vegas in July 1995 for the better part of a day. How
- much money did he gamble? How much did he lose?
-
- (45) What were the schools in Blacksburg, Virginia like when Joel Furr was
- growing up there?
-
- (46) Where does Carole, Joel Furr's girlfriend, come from?
-
- (47) Who is the Official Stooge of alt.fan.joel-furr?
-
- (48) What exactly is "hungus?"
-
- (49) What is the name of the night manager at the International House of
- Pancakes franchise on Baxter Street in Athens, Georgia?
-
- (50) What is Joel Furr's best category in Trivial Pursuit?
-
- (51) Who is Wally?
-
- (52) Where can you go in Durham, North Carolina, to get "spaghetti and salmon
- cakes?"
-
- (53) What is Joel Furr's favorite soft drink?
-
- (54) How many fingers am I holding up?
-
- (55) Do we need more plastic cups?
-
- (56) What color should mayonnaise be?
-
- (57) What is Joel Furr's astrological sign?
-
- (58) What is Joel Furr's Myers-Briggs type?
-
- (59) Where are your videos?
-
- (60) How is "Furr" pronounced?
-
- (61) What is the law?
-
- (62) Where do the keys go?
-
- (63) What are some of the nicknames that Joel Furr has gone by over the years?
-
- (64) What happens when you put a real, formerly alive, ocean-bred sponge back in
- water?
-
- (65) What kind of underwear does Joel Furr wear?
-
- (66) Who is the greatest cat of all time?
-
- (67) How can I embarrass myself in front of eight thousand people?
-
- (68) Why does Joel Furr have so many strange and pointless pictures of himself
- and his friends on his Web page?
-
- (69) What's special about the Duke University parking deck at the corner of
- Fulton and NC 147 in Durham, North Carolina?
-
- (70) What fortune cookie does Joel Furr always get?
-
- (71) What is "The Mother of All Rivers?"
-
- (72) So, what was it like attending Georgia Tech?
-
- (73) What book is Joel Furr currently working on?
-
- (74) Who the hell is "Yalin Ekici?"
-
- (75) What is the ultimate slow dancing song?
-
- (76) Who was President of Joel Furr's high school Science Club?
-
- (77) What is the secret of making great Bisquick pancakes?
-
- (78) Why didn't Joel Furr wind up in the military?
-
- (79) What was the most embarrassing thing that ever happened to Joel Furr?
-
- (80) When did Joel Furr learn to read?
-
- (81) What is Joel Furr's ultimate ambition in life?
-
- (82) Aren't you cold?
-
- (83) What restaurant are Joel and Carole Furr going to open soon?
-
- (84) What collectible novelty does Joel Furr have in store for us?
-
- (85) What did Wally the gopherlike being do at the 1997 North Carolina State
- Fair?
-
- (86) What does Joel Furr think of the invention known as "the third mouse
- button"?
-
- (87) If Joel Furr were a fruit, which one would he be?
-
- (88) Did Joel Furr inhale?
-
- (89) Does Joel Furr say "toe-MAY-toe" or "toe-MAH-toe?"
-
- (90) Why?
-
- (91) Why not?
-
- (92) What did Joel's supervisors and co-workers at Glaxo Pharmaceuticals give
- him on his last day of work, as a going-away present?
-
- (93) What boutique are Joel and Carole Furr going to open next door to their new
- restaurant?
-
-
-
- The Frequently Questioned Answers
-
- (1) Who is Joel Furr?
-
- Joel Furr is a writer and trainer who lives in Essex Junction, Vermont.
-
- He was born in Roanoke, Virginia on September 20, 1967 and grew up in the nearby
- college town of Blacksburg, where his father was an engineering professor at
- Virginia Tech. After graduating from high school in 1985, he attended the
- University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia from 1985 to 1988, earning a bachelor
- of arts degree in English.
-
- Inasmuch as an English degree from a notorious football school hardly qualified
- him for rapid advancement through the ranks of the American industrial elite,
- Joel went on to graduate school at Virginia Tech, where he earned a Master of
- Public Administration degree in about a year and a half and then wasted the next
- two and a half years pursuing a Ph.D. in the same subject before finally
- quitting, utterly burned out, in the fall of 1992.
-
- During his graduate school years, he spent a lot of time goofing around on
- Usenet and a few MUD systems, since his graduate assistantship position with the
- Virginia Tech Department of Public Safety, Health, and Transportation wasn't
- exactly demanding of his time and since he was expected to spend at least four
- hours per day in his office -- which happened to have a fast net connection.
- After dropping out of his Ph.D. program in Public Administration at the end of
- 1992, he tried and failed to find meaningful work in western Virginia, an
- economically depressed area with few good-paying jobs.
-
- In late 1993, he gave up looking for work in Virginia and moved to Durham, North
- Carolina, where he had friends and a few relatives. In fairly short order, he
- got work, got an apartment, and resumed fooling around on the Internet. After a
- few years of working in relatively dead-end jobs, he met the woman who became
- his wife, got a real job doing software training, and a whole new chapter in his
- life, a chapter that did not rotate solely around the Internet, began. In May
- of 1995, he moved with his wife, Carole, to the Burlington, Vermont area, where
- he works for a software corporation doing training.
-
-
-
- (2) Why does he have three newsgroups named after him?
-
- The newsgroups, alt.fan.joel-furr, alt.bonehead.joel-furr, and alt.joel-
- furr.die.die.die, were not created by Joel Furr or by anyone acting on his
- behalf. Each was created as an act of satire and/or criticism by people who did
- not like Furr.
-
- Alt.fan.joel-furr exists because Joel Furr once created a newsgroup called
- alt.fan.serdar-argic, angering the infamous Ahmet Cosar, a.k.a. "Serdar Argic."
- Cosar's infamous alter-ego was responsible for ruining many history-related and
- culture-related newsgroups such as soc.history and soc.culture.turkish; Cosar
- liked to post lengthy rants about one of his pet delusions, namely, that in
- 1914, Armenians had killed all the Turks in northeastern Turkey and in Russian
- Armenia. This is, of course, the direct opposite of what actually happened, but
- Cosar, an apologist for the Turkish genocide, was certain that he could convince
- the world otherwise if he posted megabyte-long rants to dozens of newsgroups
- per day, lowering the signal-to-noise ratio so far that many posters would
- desert the newsgroups and leave the field to Cosar and his allies. Furr created
- alt.fan.serdar-argic to give people who were sick of Cosar's childish pranks a
- place to comment and discuss what to do about Cosar. Within 24 hours, Cosar had
- newg
- rouped alt.fan.joel-furr.
-
- Oddly enough, and no doubt to the immense surprise of Cosar, the newsgroup has
- actually seen considerable use from time to time. (See also question #74, "Who
- the hell is 'Yalin Ekici?'")
-
- Alt.bonehead.joel-furr exists for a similar reason. A user named Paul Hendry
- once spent a solid two months posting hundreds of messages to alt.config trying
- to convince the alt.config regulars that the world of Usenet direly needed a
- newsgroup for fans of lampreys (jawless parasitical fish) to chat. However, he
- failed utterly because a simple grep of the newsspool showed that the only
- lamprey-related traffic in existence was on alt.config itself. Hendry, as it
- turned out later, had been trying to trick alt.config's regulars into
- rubber-stamping an unnecessary newsgroup. Why he thought this would be amusing
- is anyone's guess. Hendry finally exhausted Joel Furr's patience, and Furr
- newgrouped alt.bonehead.paul-hendry. Hendry, in a masturbatory act of excess,
- then turned around and newgrouped alt.animals.lampreys, alt.animals.paul-hendry,
- and alt.bonehead.joel-furr. None of the four newsgroups gets any traffic to
- speak of. Both sides in the affair, in the final analysis, acted childishly.
-
- The third group, alt.joel-furr.die.die.die, is not carried much of anywhere and
- isn't really considered a real newsgroup. It was created by a pseudonymous
- Netcom user without any evident provocation -- it just "showed up" one day
- without any obvious justification. Fewer than 10% of sites carry the newsgroup
- on their system, and the sites that do are generally those sites which have
- their newgrouping and rmgrouping set on "autopilot," accepting all newsgroups
- that are created anywhere by anyone.
-
-
-
- (3) Who appointed Joel Furr ruler of alt.*?
-
- No one. In fact, references to "King Joel of alt.*" are showing up a lot less
- frequently because Joel no longer gives much of a damn what happens in alt.* -
- so many garbage newsgroups have been created that the alt.* namespace is a
- hopeless mess and there's nothing that can be done about it. He used to spend a
- half hour to an hour each day trying to explain to the endless legions of
- clueless newbies why we didn't need to have sixteen newsgroups on the same
- subject, or why a newsgroup with a confusing, meaningless name would get zero
- traffic. It never made a dent in the hordes of stupid-ass bozos who showed up
- day after day begging for newsgroups only they cared about, so Joel eventually
- found better uses for his time.
-
- (4) What is it about Joel and lemurs?
-
- Joel and some friends started telling each other jokes about lemurs on one of
- the bulletin board systems (the late, lamented vtcosy.cns.vt.edu conferencing
- system) at Virginia Tech back in 1991. Neither Joel nor his friends knew
- anything about lemurs except that they were from Madagascar and had big eyes.
- When Joel and company found out there was a research center dedicated to lemurs
- just a few hours away in Durham, North Carolina, they promptly went down and
- visited. The Duke University Primate Center turned out to be a really cool place
- with woods full of lemurs on the hoof and Joel fell in love with the furry
- little varmints, especially since they were (and still are) gravely endangered
- in their native habitat and needed help so badly. Joel started campaigning
- online for donations to DUPC and continued this activity when he moved down to
- Durham.
-
- If you would like to know more about lemurs, you can visit the DUPC home page at
- http://www.duke.edu/web/primate/index.html and/or discuss lemurs with fellow
- lemur fans on the Usenet newsgroup alt.fan.lemurs.
-
-
-
- (5) Was Joel really elected Kibo, or is that just a myth?
-
- In January of 1994, James "Kibo" Parry disappeared from Usenet for a long time,
- over a month. No one knew where he had gone or what he was up to. Some people
- cared, some people didn't. Finally, Andrew Bulhak, an Australian net.user,
- called for an election to replace Parry in the role of Kibo. Bulhak accepted any
- nomination that came his way, then published a list of candidates and held an
- open vote via e-mail. When the voting period was up, Joel Furr had won with a
- solid plurality and almost a majority, with 81 votes; the nearest runner up was
- Parry himself, with around 30 votes. Parry had returned from whatever it was
- he'd been off doing halfway through the voting period, but had known better than
- to denounce the vote for fear of inspiring people to gleefully vote against
- him.
-
- However, once the vote was over, Parry started whining very loudly about it and
- actually threatened Joel Furr with legal action over Joel's frivolous use of the
- title "Kibo" in a few Usenet posts. According to Parry, his nickname "Kibo" had
- actually won him a few endorsement contracts in Boston (primarily for computer
- stores, apparently with tongue lodged solidly in cheek) and if someone else were
- also using the term, it would damage his marketability.
-
- Inasmuch as Joel had only signed two or three messages with "Kibo," having had
- better things to do than engage in the sort of idiocy practiced regularly on
- alt.religion.kibology, he had little use for Parry's whining. It was not as
- though Joel had actually set out to replace Parry as Kibo in the minds of
- Internet users - nor would Joel have had the slightest interest in attaining
- Kibo-like notoriety, since being Kibo is sort of like being the biggest rat in
- the garbage heap. Nonetheless, Parry was so whiny about it that Joel stopped
- using the nickname in disgust.
-
- As Joel said at the time, "It's ironic that Usenet's biggest jokester cannot
- take a joke himself."
-
-
-
- (6) What happened between Joel and those "Green Card" lawyers in Arizona?
-
- In 1994, Laurence Canter and Martha Siegel, the so-called "Green Card Lawyers,"
- were probably the most disliked people on Usenet. Their actions -- spamming
- repeatedly and then managing to convince the mainstream media that they were the
- wronged parties w hen their messages were erased -- made them extremely
- unpopular. Consequently, Joel Furr was asked by many people to make a t-shirt
- satirizing them. (Furr had previously made and sold about 150 copies of a
- t-shirt satirizing Ahmet "Serdar Argic" Cosar.) When he designed and began
- taking orders for a "Green Card Lawyers: Spamming the Globe" t- shirt, Canter
- and Siegel got wind of it and threatened Joel with "severe" legal action unless
- he removed the term "Green Card Lawyers" from the shirts.
-
- Canter and Siegel based their threats on two claims, both legally without a
- shred of foundation:
-
- Claim #1: They had exclusive trademark over the term "Green Card Lawyers," a
- term they had never used in trade and which in fact they had no rights to
- whatsoever. Legally, if you want to be able to assert a common-law trademark
- over a term, you must have used that term in trade. Canter and Siegel had never
- used that term as part of their business, so they had no rights to it
- whatsoever.
-
- Claim #2: They had exclusive rights to produce or license the rights to produce
- a t-shirt based on their exploits, and that "several large companies" were
- already interested in marketing C&S-based shirts. Needless to say, no companies
- ever produced such a shirt - and in any case, they certainly had no right to
- prevent someone else from exercising their freedom of speech by producing
- t-shirts satirizing them.
-
- During an exchange of email over the matter, Canter and Siegel betrayed a
- complete lack of knowledge of the law - or, if you want to ascribe to malice
- what others ascribed to stupidity, were engaged in barratry, the use of legal
- threats for harassment reasons. Canter and Siegel said that the concept of
- "public figures" being considered legally vulnerable to satire was complete
- nonsense, and they repeatedly asserted their trademark claim over a term they
- had never filed for trademark over and which they couldn't even claim common law
- trademark over since they had never used the term in trade. It was easy to see,
- after a short round of discussions with them, why they'd had to sue to be
- permitted to resign from the Florida Bar several years ago in an effort to avoid
- actual disbarment.
-
- Furr was panicked after receiving their threats, because although he knew that
- their claims were absolute garbage, he also knew that he didn't have the
- financial resources to deal with a lawsuit brought by two lawyers in a state two
- thousand miles from his home. He considered taking the term "Green Card
- Lawyers" off the shirts, but first, asked for suggestions and comments from the
- readers of newsgroups like comp.org.eff.talk and misc.legal.
-
- Two days of absolute pandemonium followed. Joel began getting hundreds of offers
- of free legal help and donations to a Joel Furr Defense Fund. Thankfully, Mike
- Godwin, Chief Legal Counsel of the Electronic Frontiers Foundation, also heard
- of the matter and offered the EFF's services in the case to defend Furr in any
- legal matters that did develop. Heartened, Joel publicly said "To hell with the
- lawyers, the shirts are going forward with the original design, let them sue."
-
- Canter and Siegel promptly began claiming that they had never made any threats
- whatsoever and that it was all a fiction invented by Joel Furr. In later months,
- after the "Green Card Lawyers" shirts had sold like hotcakes (the result of
- Canter and Siegel's effort to prevent their sale altogether), Canter and Siegel
- went around claiming that Furr had actually contacted them first and asked for
- permission to make the shirts and that they'd just told him to go away and not
- talked to him again. Since Furr had kept all the email they'd sent him and had
- it handy to show anyone who asked, this absurd claim was easily disproven.
-
- Canter and Siegel went on to publish a book about the Internet entitled "How To
- Make a Fortune on the Information Superhighway" which, from all accounts, was a
- pedestrian and rather lame ghost-written Net guide with a sad little chapter or
- two at the end declaring the authors champions of spamming. They then tried to
- run a spam-for-hire service which collapsed when no one would sell them net
- access, and after a few notable fiascoes which introduced the Net to the concept
- of "disposable accounts" (dial-up shell accounts used for spamming with the
- full knowledge that the provider would angrily delete the account once the
- spamming had taken place), Canter and Siegel more or less vanished from sight.
-
- What a pity.
-
-
-
- (7) What newsgroups is Joel Furr a moderator of?
-
- None, at the present time. In the past, he was sole moderator or co-moderator of
- the following newsgroups: comp.society.folklore, alt.folklore.suburban,
- alt.humor.best-of-usenet, triangle.singles.announce,
- soc.history.war.world-war-ii, and news.admin.net-abuse.announce (since
- superseded by news.admin.net-abuse.bulletins). He has relinquished all his
- moderation duties because married life and his demanding career as a lemur
- rancher don't allow much time for endless Usenet activities.
-
-
-
- (8) Does Joel Furr sell t-shirts and stuff?
-
- Yes and no. He used to do that a lot, but has more or less stopped now that he
- has a salaried job that requires a commute and now that he has a wife.
-
- When he has time (read: not often, these days) Joel designs various shirts and
- mugs and stuff and gets a local screen printing firm to make them for him once
- he's accumulated orders from various people around the world. People read about
- the shirts and stuff on the Internet and send orders and payment via ordinary
- postal mail. Joel collects the orders, deposits the checks, and then orders the
- shirts in the requested sizes and colors from the screen printer. This sometimes
- takes a few months from the time orders are first collected to the time the
- last shirt is in someone's hands -- sometimes it takes quite a while to generate
- enough orders to make ordering a particular shirt cost-effective, and other
- times, so many orders come in (for example, for the Perl/RSA t-shirt) that it
- takes a hell of a long time to open and enter all the orders in a spreadsheet so
- the actual shirts can be ordered.
-
- Joel does not charge a profit on the shirts; he prefers that the shirt business
- remain more or less a hobby and not an actual business. If he were to charge a
- profit, people would expect a lot prompter service and it'd probably stop being
- fun. Besides, if a profit is charged, he cannot post notices in related Usenet
- newsgroups (people resent advertising for profit in discussion- based
- newsgroups) and sometimes, a few notices to a few newsgroups are necessary to
- get the ball rolling.
-
- However, all that is mostly academic now that Joel has largely retired from
- doing shirts.
-
-
-
- (9) Does Joel spend all his time logged in, or what?
-
- No. Despite the insults from losers who, when losing an argument in a Usenet
- newsgroup, say "Hey, get out from in front of your monitor once in a while,
- bub!" Joel actually spends little time logged in.
-
- Having a wife and a demanding job will do that for you.
-
- Joel does have a real life, a life that consists of spending time with his wife,
- reading, going to minor league baseball games, driving, traveling, going to
- movies, hanging out with friends, and working on his writing. He used to spend a
- lot of time logged in, back when he was in graduate school (he had a do-nothing
- graduate assistant position), so people assume this is still the case.
-
-
-
- (10) Is Joel likely to reply if I write to him?
-
- If you write to him and ask stupid, clueless questions like "how do I set up my
- newsreader? I'm on a Mac," he'll cheerfully ignore you. If you have half a clue
- and need help, or just want to talk, he can usually find time. If you like
- talking about maps, travel in the USA, the South, minor league baseball,
- non-fiction books, and so forth, please write. He's often up late at night and
- may be around, but idle, when you send email. His preferred email address is
- jfurr@furrs.org.
-
-
-
- (11) What does Joel look like?
-
- Joel Furr is a 6'2", 210-pound Caucasian male with dark brown hair, a fairly
- bushy dark brown beard, and brown eyes. He has a very faint Y-shaped scar on his
- left cheek from a childhood accident. He typically does not have much of a tan
- because he spends most of his time indoors.
-
- When he's not at work, he tends to wear t-shirts or polo shirts, corduroy
- shorts, and sneakers. He prefers dark colors, such as navy or purple, but rarely
- wears black shirts because he doesn't want people to come up and start talking
- to him about "cyber space."
-
- He tends to wear his hair in what's called a "professional haircut" -- not too
- short, but definitely not very long. He prefers to wear his hair fairly short
- because he tends to perspire heavily in summertime and that makes long hair
- impractical.
-
-
-
- (12) What's the deal with those funny black floor lamps that point up at the
- ceiling with the little knobs on the side about halfway up that you turn back
- and forth to adjust the brightness? Everyone seems to have them these days.
-
- They like it if you have one. In fact, They like it if you have more than one.
- (If you don't know who we mean by They, sorry; we can't tell you more than we
- already have.)
-
-
-
- (13) Hey, where are the seatbelts?
-
- There aren't any seatbelts on this ride.
-
-
-
- (14) What's the 'soup du jour' today?
-
- Cream of broccoli.
-
-
-
- (15) Is cotton candy a solid or liquid or crystal or what?
-
- Cotton candy is, technically, one big molecule -- one very long-chain molecule,
- nonetheless, but one molecule. If you unraveled a cotton candy molecule of
- typical size and stretched it out straight, it'd stretch from Durham, North
- Carolina to Key West, Florida.
-
-
-
- (16) What's the 800 number for the North Carolina ferry system?
-
- 1-800-BY-FERRY.
-
-
-
- (17) Where is Paradise?
-
- Paradise can be found in the men's room of the Mardi Gras Bowling Lanes, located
- on NC 54 between Durham and Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
-
-
-
- (18) Hey, what about those French?
-
- For the purposes of the game, the French are goobers.
-
-
-
- (19) Is it true that if I jump up off the ground, I'm technically in low earth
- orbit for as long as I'm in the air?
-
- Yes. Technically, anytime you leave the surface of the Earth, you're in low
- earth orbit and the Earth will rotate slightly underneath you. The distance the
- Earth travels beneath you while you're in the air is too slight to be noticed,
- but there is a small but calculable orbital effect.
-
-
-
- (20) Who's in charge of the weather?
-
- The current Planetary Weather Supervisor is Mr. James L. Cambias of New Orleans,
- Louisiana (currently dwelling in Ithaca, New York).
-
- You can complain to him when it rains all day with no end in sight, but he
- rarely acts in a responsive fashion. He has his own agenda and until his demands
- are met (he insists that the residents of Chapel Hill learn to drive like sane
- people), he's not going to do anything about the weather.
-
-
-
- (21) What is it with cats? How do they make their legs disappear when they perch
- on the arm of a sofa, looking content?
-
- They've got little tubes up inside their body that their legs retract into. No
- one's figured out exactly why they evolved this trait, but the best guess
- anyone's come up with is that they did it so they could look cool when they
- perch on the arm of a sofa .
-
-
-
- (22) Does Joel Furr like fish?
-
- No. He hates fish.
-
- When he was a kid, he used to eat Fish Filet sandwiches from McDonald's with
- great satisfaction. This all changed when he had two bad encounters with fish
- which forever traumatized him.
-
- First, at the age of six or so, he happened one summer to be at the house of
- relatives in Florida who served up a big batch of fried mullet for dinner one
- night. It looked fairly nasty -- big platters of fried fish with bones and stuff
- sticking out -- and smelled worse. Joel didn't want to eat any, but nothing
- else had been cooked for dinner. Squeamishly, Joel ate a few bites, then decided
- hunger was preferable to eating mullet.
-
- Unfortunately, even the few bites he ate were a few bites too many. Joel
- developed debilitating nausea and a king-hell case of the hives which lasted for
- a week or so, the result of massive and previously unknown food allergies to
- mullet. It turned him off on eating fish in general.
-
- Second, while visiting relatives in North Carolina a year or two later, he went
- fishing with an uncle and promptly caught a little orange sunfish, which, in its
- gasping and wriggling and bulging of eyes and so forth so shocked and startled
- the young Furr that he dropped his pole and sprinted off, leaving his uncle to
- release the fish from the hook and put it back into the water.
-
- For some reason, this encounter left Furr with a lifelong aversion to fish --
- he's not afraid of them but can't stand the thought of touching them, much less
- eating them -- and the allergy to mullet helps justify his dislike of fish to
- people who, annoyingly, insist that he'd really like fish if he just tried it.
-
- It's a phobia. No, it doesn't make sense. That's what makes it a phobia.
-
-
-
- (23) How 'bout them Dawgs?
-
- Gooooooooooooo Dawgs! Sic 'em! Woof woof woof woof woof!
-
-
-
- (24) Is Joel a Democrat, Republican, Libertarian, or what?
-
- Joel is a registered Democrat; this is not to say that he's of a particularly
- liberal bent, but rather, that he supports the broad goals of the Democratic
- Party and opposes the "morals-based" legislative agenda of the Republicans.
-
- Joel was 13 in 1981 when President Reagan took office. He spent his high school
- years watching Reagan's insane lies and deranged, senile babblings on the news
- each night during dinner and, as a result, developed a lifelong antipathy to the
- twisted Newspeak of the Republican Party.
-
- He's not real fond of the Libertarians either, though, because most Libertarians
- he's known have been so selfish and "it's MY money why should I pay ONE RED
- CENT to help the POOR"-oriented that he's learned to ignore them.
-
- Furr worked for a little over two years in a public library and learned the
- importance of basic governmental services such as libraries. Libertarians would
- have you believe that we should ban such services and let for-profit libraries
- come into being -- never mind the fact that a lot of residents of Furr's
- hometown in Appalachia couldn't afford basic telephone service much less
- "luxuries" like a for-profit library. What would happen to the poor in a world
- where the Libertarian Party has closed down all the libraries (i.e., the
- creation of an illiterate, ignorant underclass) does not seem to matter to the
- Libertarians.
-
- As someone put it recently, you don't see a lot of poor Libertarians. People
- only become Libertarians when they decide "hmm, okay, I've made a lot of money,
- it's time to change the rules so I don't have to share it with anyone or pay for
- any government services."
-
- But anyway, in the end Furr is like many other people in this day and age in
- that he tends to vote against candidates rather than for them. The Republicans
- being such odious walking piles of garbage and the Libertarians being so
- completely out in left field, this means that he typically votes Democratic.
-
-
-
- (25) What's in those bottles in the back of Joel Furr's refrigerator?
-
- The Coca-Cola bottle and the Cobb Mountain Natural Spring Water bottle are full
- of salt water from the Pacific Ocean off San Francisco, California, collected
- from the surf near Seal Rock during Joel's vacation to California in July of
- 1995.
-
- The bottle marked "Cuzcatlan" which appears to contain cloudy, stagnant water is
- actually a bottle of Cuzcatlan "soursop" soda which Joel picked up at a Mexican
- grocery in Durham out of curiosity and which he decided he might be better off
- not drinking when he noticed that the ingredients consisted solely of "water,
- propylene glycol, vegetable gum, and glyceryl abietate."
-
- The bottle of Shasta tonic water with about one gin-and-tonic's worth of tonic
- missing is just that, a partially consumed bottle of Shasta tonic water. It
- dates from the summer of 1988 and has been with Joel through five apartments and
- one house.
-
-
-
- (26) Where do bad people go when they die?
-
- Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
-
-
-
- (27) When's the best time to go to an amusement park?
-
- Well, if you ask in terms of when will you find short lines and so forth,
- experience shows that it's best to go during a full-fledged tropical storm.
-
- One day in 1995, Joel Furr went to the "Carowinds" amusement park in Charlotte,
- North Carolina on a day when Tropical Storm Jerry was approaching and torrential
- rains were already falling. Joel had come to town to see Warren Zevon in
- concert that night and had decided to drive down early to visit Carowinds as
- well. It was raining when the park opened at 10:00 a.m., it rained hard most of
- the day, and it was still raining when Joel left at 8:00 p.m. The park stayed
- open throughout the day and there were actually some minor lines around 1 p.m.,
- but most of the day, the lines on the coasters were so short that you could just
- stay on the coasters and ride continuously for hours. Joel went on something
- like 30 or 40 coaster rides in one day, then left, soaking wet and chafed all
- over, to see Warren Zevon.
-
- It was not until the next day that Joel and friends (who'd driven down and met
- him at the concert) read in the newspaper about how Tropical Storm Jerry had
- brought extensive property damage, flooding, and a few drowning deaths to the
- Charlotte vicinity.
-
- "Oh," Joel said. "That explains why it was raining all day."
-
-
-
- (28) What's wrong with Joel Furr's blood?
-
- Joel has a rare blood trait known as "thalassemia trait" (or, in some
- references, "thalassemia minor" or "beta thalassemia"), an asymptomatic
- condition marked primarily by smaller, less mature red blood cells and a
- different type of hemoglobin from that of normal blood. It is theorized that
- this condition in some way aids survival in malarial regions, inasmuch as the
- trait is found primarily in people who live in or trace their ancestry to
- southern Europe (Italy, Greece, Cyprus, etc.) and south Asia, as well as certain
- other warm regions plagued by malaria. The trait is only dangerous to those
- whose parents both had it -- a child whose parents both had thalassemia trait
- would have a 50% chance of having thalassemia major, a condition that is usually
- fatal within the first few years of life. Note: this is not the same thing as
- sickle cell anemia.
-
- Joel's father, brother, and sister all have this trait -- but were misdiagnosed
- for years as having a similar trait known as "hemoglobin C." Medical science of
- the period 1950-1980 didn't know to look for thalassemia minor unless you
- specifically told them to, evidently, because Joel, his father, and his sister
- were all misdiagnosed. The unfortunate side of this is that Joel was treated as
- a child with iron supplements, which won't do a single thing to help with
- thalassemia minor, until someone finally noticed they weren't changing
- anything... and worse, for years he was told that he wasn't permitted to donate
- blood. Given the zealous manner in which many blood drive volunteers waylay
- passersby and demand a contribution to the cause, it made life annoying at times
- to carry a rare blood trait which was on the American Red Cross's banned list.
-
- When Joel finally found out, in the mid-1990's, that he did not in fact have
- hemoglobin C and instead had thalassemia minor, he checked with the Red Cross
- and was told "yeah, we can accept donors with that condition." Joel has wasted
- little time since this news -- he's given blood as often as possible since
- Christmas of 1996, when he first donated. Joel plans to make up for lost time.
-
- Interestingly, it turns out that Joel's blood, for all that it has small and
- slightly different red blood cells, is nonetheless quite desirable to the blood
- bank people. When Joel got his first donor card in the mail, his blood type was
- printed on it as well -- and to Joel's surprise, his blood type was the most
- desirable of all: O Negative... the so-called "Universal Donor" type.
-
-
-
- (29) What is that thing at the bottom of that big glass jar full of water?
-
- A small plastic rubber octopus. It likes it there.
-
-
-
- (30) Will seagulls eat small chunks of pork barbecue?
-
- Apparently not.
-
- They ate everything else Joel threw to them, up to and including gravel, but
- they spit out the pork barbecue.
-
- Ingrates.
-
-
-
- (31) St. Patrick's Day is a festive, cheery holiday wherein we celebrate our
- Irish heritage, affecting bad Irish accents and wearing green. How does Joel
- Furr celebrate the holiday?
-
- He wears orange. Every year, without fail. Orange.
-
- Orange, for your information, is the Irish Protestant color, and while Joel
- isn't a practicing Protestant either, he figures that an obstinate insistence on
- wearing orange is a good symbolic protest against the St. Patrick's Day
- holiday.
-
- If anyone has an explanation for why one ethnic group has managed to wangle
- themselves what amounts to a national holiday for their patron saint,
- celebrating alcoholism and leading zillions of idiots without a drop of Irish
- blood in their body to wander around saying "Aye and begorra" one day each year,
- Joel would like to hear it.
-
- And in any case, drunken driving doesn't become okay because it's St. Patrick's
- Day. Take a damn cab home, or don't go out in the first place.
-
-
-
- (32) Is it true that Joel Furr's car has a guardian spirit?
-
- Actually, yes. A small lemur statue, "Bondo" by name, sits on the rear shelf and
- theoretically keeps the car and all its passengers safe from harm.
-
-
-
- (33) Hey, isn't that song "YMCA" that they play at baseball games really cool?
-
- Or, to put it another way, isn't it really cool the way minor league baseball
- teams have taken to playing "YMCA" over the public-address system at every game,
- leading thousands of idiots who wouldn't know a fielder's choice or a suicide
- squeeze if it came along and bit them to turn out in large numbers night after
- night for no other reason than to stand up in the sixth inning and sing a lousy,
- annoying song that should have been left in the 1970's, in a stomach-turning
- display of human futility that rivals Catholic family planning efforts for utter
- stupidity?
-
- The answer: "Um, well, no. But at least it does help us identify those who'll be
- first in line for the public executions when the revolution comes."
-
-
-
- (34) What's that chunk of powdery concrete atop Joel Furr's bookcase?
-
- It's a big piece of the Berlin Wall that Julia Youngman, one of Joel Furr's
- older sisters, chopped out of the Wall in November or December of 1989 during
- the big feeding frenzy as the Wall fell.
-
- At least, that's what Julia says it is. She came back from Army duty in Europe
- with a suitcase full of concrete, but for all any of the recipients know, she
- chipped those chunks off a concourse pillar at Dulles International on her
- arrival in the USA.
-
- No Communists have shown up asking for the chunk back yet, but you never know.
-
-
-
- (35) Does Joel have a wife?
-
- Fortunately, yes. Her name is Carole and he met her in real life at a convention
- of sorts in suburban Maryland around the end of October 1995, then spent a
- solid month and a half exchanging email with her before they decided to arrange
- another meeting to determine whether or not relationship potential was present.
- Joel visited Carole at her home in northern Virginia in mid-December and spent
- part of a cold, windy Sunday afternoon strolling around the Mall in Washington,
- DC. As Carole and Joel were strolling past the Washington Monument, they were
- accosted by an ABC-TV news crew which was there interviewing tourists about the
- federal budget crisis which had caused all the monuments to be closed to the
- public that day. Carole and Joel were happy to mutter darkly about Congressional
- Republicans for the camera and then went on their merry way, not really
- expecting to make the evening news that night or anything like that.
-
- Wrong-o. Carole and Joel did make "World News Tonight" that night - one of only
- two tourist interviews from that afternoon that made it onto the air (the other,
- which came immediately before Carole and Joel's interview, was of a cranky old
- guy who likewise blamed the idiots in Congress as being responsible for the
- shutdown). Fifteen seconds of irritated grumbling, tops, but how many other
- couples can truthfully claim that their first date wound up being nationally
- televised?
-
- Joel and Carole were married in September of 1997; the ceremony was held on
- Saturday, September 13 in the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in
- Durham, North Carolina. They honeymooned in south Florida and are now making
- their home in Vermont.
-
-
-
- (36) What's the greatest cinematographic achievement of all time?
-
- That would be "Repo Man," starring Emilio Estevez and Harry Dean Stanton. The
- life of a repo man is always intense.
-
-
-
- (37) What is a Hokie?
-
- The term "Hokie" has been applied for over a hundred years to members of the
- athletics teams at Virginia Tech (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
- University, located in the mountains of southwest Virginia), informally for much
- of that time and formally since the mid-1980's.
-
- Virginia Tech, a former military school, originally played under the name
- "Cadets" and then, later on, switched to the nickname "Fighting Gobblers"
- because, believe it or not, the members of the football team tended to have
- prodigious appetites. "Fighting Gobblers" is not exactly the sort of team
- nickname which strikes fear into the hearts of opponents, so "Hokies" was often
- used as an informal substitute. In the mid-1980's, under the tenure of head
- football coach and athletic director Bill Dooley, "Hokies" became the official
- team name, replacing "Fighting Gobblers," which nonetheless remained plastered
- across the outside of Lane Stadium ("HOME OF THE FIGHTING GOBBLERS").
-
- Which brings us once again to the question, "What is a Hokie?" We now understand
- that the term refers to a Virginia Tech athlete, but we have yet to determine
- where the term came from.
-
- It's simple: it's a nonsense word which a student in the 1890's, one O.M. Stull,
- included in a cheer he submitted to a contest which was being held to pick a
- new school cheer. Said cheer went something like this:
-
- "Hokie, Hokie, Hokie, Hi
-
- Tech, Tech, VPI
-
- Solarex, solarah
-
- Polytech Virginia
-
- Ray, rah, VPI,
-
- TEAM TEAM TEAM"
-
- Okay, so it's a fairly lame cheer, but in the old days, things like that were
- all the rage. "Hokie" didn't mean anything -- it was simply filler to stretch
- out the first line so it could end in a word that would rhyme with the "I" in
- "VPI."
-
- Now, Wahoos (the hopeless, hapless denizens of the University of Virginia, a
- sort of technical and vocational school located in Charlottesville, Virginia)
- will tell you that "Hokie" means "a castrated turkey." Since you can't really
- castrate turkeys, you'd think the Wahoos would realize that their retroactive
- definition makes no sense, but sadly, asking a Wahoo to make sense is usually
- asking for more intellectual capacity than he or she has got.
-
-
-
- (38) What instrument did Joel Furr play in the Blacksburg High School band?
-
- Alto saxophone. And damned badly, too.
-
-
-
- (39) What does Joel typically say when someone asks him, rhetorically, how he
- is?
-
- "Paralyzed by fear. You?"
-
-
-
- (40) What's the best sort of implement to use when eating ice cream?
-
- Tiny little wooden spoons, the sort that look like they were cut en masse out of
- some thin piece of wood. You can get them in large quantities at Francesca's on
- Ninth Street in Durham, North Carolina. They're fun to eat ice cream with and
- they're environmentally friendly.
-
- (41) What clubs and organizations does Joel Furr belong to?
-
- Joel has never been much of a joiner in the sense of signing up for clubs and
- organizations; he prefers to have his free time to himself rather than having to
- head out to some meeting each night of the week. He belonged to the
- Demosthenian Society when he was a student at the University of Georgia and
- belonged briefly to two professional associations when he was in graduate school
- but never attended any events or conferences. Joel dislikes the petty politics
- that plague many organizations and prefers to remain aloof from the madding
- crowds who use their officership in various organizations as some sort of ego
- fix.
-
- That being said, he has belonged to Toastmasters International, the world's
- largest public-speaking education organization, since July 1, 1989, and has
- served in several District Officer positions, including two terms as a Division
- Governor and one partial term as Lieutenant Governor Marketing in District 66
- (central, eastern, and western Virginia) and one term as Public Relations
- Officer for District 37 (North Carolina). He earned his DTM (Distinguished
- Toastmaster) award in 1993 after four years of membership and has also received
- the ATM (Able Toastmaster) Bronze speaking certification. Joel has served as a
- sponsor for three new Toastmasters clubs (CELCO Toastmasters, #8108-66, ISE
- Toastmasters, #8976-66, and Bull City Toastmasters, #9891-37) and has served two
- terms as a Club President (one term with Christiansburg Toastmasters, #3715-66
- and one term with Bull City Toastmasters, #9891-37). Toastmasters is the only
- organization he's ever taken very seriously and that was mainly the result of
- boredom and en
- nui during graduate school -- serving as a Toastmasters officer gave him
- something to do that brought him into contact with people. The organization is
- worthwhile and has helped many people become better communicators but, sadly,
- the organization at the state level is often plagued by the same sort of petty
- politics and infighting that Joel prefers to avoid at all costs. Joel is
- relatively inactive in Toastmasters these days.
-
- (42) What's Joel Furr's ethnic and socioeconomic background?
-
- Joel is, to be blunt, highly educated white trash -- the scion of generations of
- poor crackers in rural North Carolina and Florida. He does not come from any
- clear-cut European ancestral background -- he's your basic American mongrel, not
- precisely what you'd call Anglo-Saxon and not precisely derived from the
- British Isles. At least one great-grandmother was still speaking Dutch most of
- her life and he does have a blood trait which is predominantly found in peoples
- of Mediterranean descent. His family, on both sides, has been resident in the
- rural South for so many years that the country of origin of any branch of the
- family is mostly guesswork. His earliest known ancestor, one Henry Furr (or,
- perhaps, Heinrich Furrer), is recorded as having arrived in the Carolinas in
- 1742, having come from Zurich in Switzerland. However, there are currently no
- Furrs listed in the Swiss telephone directory so it's anyone's guess as to
- whether Henry Furr was actually Swiss or whether he had just traveled there from
- elsewhere
- before journeying onward to America.
-
- In any case, Furr's ancestors, once they reached America, made their homes in
- the South and generally avoided those states north of the Potomac and Ohio. Furr
- has, as far as anyone can determine, exactly zero blood relatives who originate
- north of the Mason-Dixon line.
-
- His mother and father grew up in the Depression-era South: his father's father
- was a textile mill foreman in rural North Carolina and his mother's father was a
- mostly-unemployed jack-of-all-trades and farmer in a rural area on Florida's
- Gulf Coast. Both parents came from families where no one had ever gone to
- college yet both parents not only strove and toiled and studied and made it to
- college, but did so well that they each received master's degrees (father, in
- nuclear physics; mother, in botany). Both parents went on to Duke University to
- work on doctorates -- and that's where they met, in a required language class
- the morning after Furr's father had put in an all-night shift working on the
- campus Van de Graaf generator. His father asked his mother, a total stranger at
- the time, if she wanted to get a cup of coffee. When class ended that day, she
- followed him out of class and when he got done being confused at the fact that
- she'd actually followed him, a relationship was born.
-
- Unfortunately, only Furr's father finished his Ph.D -- his mother worked on hers
- for years but stopped just short. Furr's father earned his doctorate in nuclear
- physics from Duke and was offered a tenure-track position at Virginia Tech, but
- Tech made it clear that their anti-nepotism policy would prevent them from
- offering Furr's mother any position at all even if she finished her Ph.D. in
- plant physiology. Lacking the motivation to finish a Ph.D. that she would not
- get to use in any meaningful way, Furr's mother never finished her studies.
-
- Furr's father, a full professor, worked for many years at the nuclear reactor at
- Virginia Tech and, when that program was slated for downscaling and eventual
- closure, moved to the new Safety department to head up Virginia Tech's
- occupational safety efforts. Furr's mother, on the other hand, spent several
- years as a bored housewife, taking part in university events as a professor's
- wife until children finally started to arrive in the mid-1960's. After years
- spent raising kids and being a housewife, she finally took a job at the local
- public library -- and, by the mid-1980's, was running the place. Furr's parents
- both retired in 1995. They did all right for ignorant crackers from the rural
- South.
-
- Furr was born in September 1967 in Roanoke, Virginia (Blacksburg, home of
- Virginia Tech, had no hospital at the time), but grew up in the college town of
- Blacksburg, located in the Blue Ridge Mountains of southwestern Virginia.
-
- Blacksburg is home to Virginia's largest university but is surrounded by
- extremely rural parts of Appalachia to the north, south, and west -- the sort of
- places that have only one stoplight in the entire county. Montgomery County,
- where Blacksburg is located, was only somewhat less rural, and that was entirely
- the result of Virginia Tech. You can still go a few miles north or south from
- Virginia Tech and be right in the midst of darkest Appalachia.
-
- Furr does not speak with much of an accent despite growing up in Appalachia, a
- relatively accent-laden part of the country. This was largely the result of the
- averaging effect a college town has on the accents the students, faculty, and
- staff bring with them. With so many competing accents, everyone tends to wind up
- speaking Standard American before too long. On the other hand, when he wants
- to, when he's especially tired, or when he's talking to someone with an
- Appalachian or Southern accent, a muted but nonetheless bona fide cornball
- Suth'n accent does sneak out.
-
- Furr is very proud of growing up in Appalachia in much the same way that
- residents of Hell's Kitchen have convinced themselves that it's a fine thing to
- have grown up surrounded by squalor and ignorance.
-
- Furr's parents were well-to-do and Furr had ready access to all the books he
- wanted so he wasn't exactly wading in squalor or ignorance, but he saw both
- every time he drove out of Blacksburg and into the surrounding countryside. Even
- so, there are worse places to grow up in than the Appalachian Mountains. The
- countryside around Blacksburg is rolling and mountainous and beautiful and the
- Jefferson National Forest starts only two miles or so north of town. Furr feels
- awkward and out of sorts when he's visiting any part of the country that's
- especially flat and that doesn't have lots of trees. Trees are important.
-
- So in conclusion, it's fairly hard to say what Joel's ethnic group is or say
- "Joel's a ________." "White trash from Appalachia" is as good a term as any to
- describe him. He's not a WASP by any means: he's white, but not precisely
- Anglo-Saxon (though many of his forebears did come from England and Scotland),
- and he's never been a member of any church congregation at all, much less a
- practicing Protestant. Thus, he's never invited to join the good country clubs
- or included on the right mailing lists.
-
- C'est la vie.
-
-
- (43) Define "good eatins."
-
- "Good eatins" is a term often used in the South to refer to especially tasty,
- filling food: "Man, them's good eatins" or "Good eatins on that there hog." Good
- eatins can refer to a tasty cauldron of Brunswick stew, an expertly-barbecued
- pig, a fried chicken dinner with all the trimmings, or even so prosaic a meal as
- a bowl of pinto beans with onion on top and a piece of cornbread on the side.
-
- One thing that Southerners understand is that food need not be heavily seasoned
- or cost a lot to be filling and worthy of the term "good eatins." Simple food is
- often the best kind of food.
-
- Case in point: Joel Furr traveled to the mountain town of Galax, Virginia to
- attend the Galax Old Fiddlers' Convention one August when he was in graduate
- school, not being a fiddler himself but mainly just wanting to listen to an
- evening's worth of bluegrass and mountain music. Some friends from graduate
- school, all Utahns or otherwise Mormons who didn't know much about Appalachia,
- came along as well. Upon arriving at Felt Park in Galax, the traveling party
- from Blacksburg hit the midway for food. The Mormons cringed at some of the
- things being passed off as food by the locals and settled on "fajitas" -- which
- turned out to be ground beef and Cheez Whiz served hot in a pita pocket -- while
- Joel Furr instinctively headed for the "Beans" stand. This stand had the
- longest line at the midway and every man jack in that line was there to get a
- bowl of pinto beans with diced onion sprinkled on top and a piece of cornbread
- on the side. Joel toddled away from the stand when he'd received his food and
- immediately came
- in for astounded looks of confusion from his friends who could not conceive of
- anyone waiting in line for a bowl of beans with cornbread.
-
- "Them's good eatins," Joel explained, gesturing at the beans with his piece of
- cornbread.
-
- "Uh huh," his friends said, disbelievingly.
-
- Joel shrugged and tucked into his beans, enjoying his meal and feeling happy and
- content when done -- while his friends ate their "fajitas," faces wrinkled with
- disgust. Bright yellow cheese goo on ground beef, apparently, was not quite the
- haute cuisine that his friends had expected it to be -- while beans are pretty
- damned hard to mess up.
-
- Evidently, the concept of "good eatins" is unknown among the Latter-Day Saints
- -- while the rednecks from Appalachia know a good thing when they see it.
-
-
-
- (44) Joel Furr visited Las Vegas in July 1995 for the better part of a day. How
- much money did he gamble? How much did he lose?
-
- Not one red cent. Knowing that the odds were overwhelmingly in favor of his
- losing and that it's hard to stop after just one slot machine pull, Joel
- cleverly left the slot machines and gaming tables completely alone.
-
- His time in Las Vegas was spent wandering around the Strip eyeing the other
- tourists, looking at the lights, sipping a giant Margarita, and finally, going
- to see a Rockettes show at the Flamingo.
-
- Sadly, the 200-foot-tall video screen at the Circus-Circus which Hunter S.
- Thompson made famous in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas was not there anymore.
- The Flamingo didn't have Neutrogena soap in the rooms either. Apparently
- Thompson got it all 25 years ago and they never restocked.
-
-
-
- (45) What were the schools in Blacksburg, Virginia like when Joel Furr was
- growing up there?
-
- Montgomery County, Virginia is a very rural county in the sticks of Appalachia
- which, for reasons best explained elsewhere, happens to be home to Virginia's
- largest university, Virginia Tech.
-
- The local schools, therefore, had a very split personality. Most of the schools
- in the county were geared toward the kids of the locals, few of whom had any
- plans at all to attend college and who wanted vocational and business classes
- and lots of 'em. The schools in Blacksburg proper, on the other hand, had
- student bodies that were about half locals and half kids of the Virginia Tech
- professors, with a small additional population of the kids of the local
- orthodontists and doctors stuck in the middle and usually identifying with the
- professors' kids.
-
- You might think that the local school system, faced with a large minority
- population of very bright children, would take some steps to make sure that all
- the kids got good educations, making sure that each child was presented with
- challenges and material appropriate for his intellectual level. You might even
- think that they'd try to put all the really bright kids in some sort of gifted
- and talented program. You'd be wrong, though -- because Montgomery County
- intentionally tried to slow the bright kids down so they couldn't be accused of
- elitism (gifted and talented programs being considered elitist, you see) and so
- the teachers could teach at the level of the lowest common denominator.
-
- To cite but one example, Joel Furr was reading at a second grade level before he
- entered kindergarten and had advanced so far by the time he entered first grade
- that he read his entire "Your First Reader" -- which had been intended to last
- him all year -- on the first day of school. The teachers and administrators at
- his school, not wanting to have to deal with a child who was four or five grade
- levels beyond what they were trying to teach the other kids, simply stuck Joel
- off in a second-grade reading group in order to "challenge" him. Joel's parents
- were pleased that their son had been moved up to a second grade reading group,
- but what they didn't know was that the group in question was actually made up of
- the kids who were considered so stupid and unteachable that they didn't
- actually do any reading during the reading period but instead were taken down to
- the gymnasium to play dodgeball (which the local kids called "bombardment") for
- two hours each day. Joel, not knowing any better, simply played dodgeball
- some days and other days snuck off to the school library and read on his own.
-
- By the time Joel Furr reached high school, the school system had developed three
- "tracks" for the kids in grades 9-12. You could be in the "vocational" track,
- the "college-bound" track, or the "honors" track.
-
- The college-bound and honors tracks were a lot alike except that the kids in the
- honors classes were actually presented with less work in an apparent attempt,
- once again, to slow them down. It came as a surprise to the honors students to
- find that the college-bound English classes were reading more books and writing
- more papers than they were. Joel Furr took all the honors classes Blacksburg
- High School offered -- social studies and English classes, mainly -- and even
- though he was so painfully bored by school that he rarely if ever took homework
- seriously (assuming he did it at all), he was always stuck in the honors classes
- again the next year.
-
- Why, you ask, was he placed in the honors classes year after year if he had
- lousy grades?
-
- Simple: to keep him away from the "normal" kids in the college-bound track.
- That's why all the bright kids were in the honors program -- to keep them from
- disrupting the "college-bound" classes. At least, that's the conclusion all the
- bright kids tended to come to, especially after they found out that the
- "college-bound" classes were in many ways tougher. The honors students tended to
- get classes where the teacher discussed "fire imagery" in Arthur Miller's The
- Crucible for days on end. Wheee!
-
- In addition to creating the so-called "Honors ghetto," the schools also created
- a Gifted and Talented program by the early 1980's -- and Joel Furr was, of
- course, in said program. This meant that he was bused along with all the other
- bright kids to the high school in the county seat, Christiansburg, one day per
- year to be shown a day's worth of art films, short films, and films like "The
- Wizard of Speed and Time."
-
- That was it. That was the "Gifted and Talented" program.
-
- Uh huh. Gifted and Talented program, my ass.
-
- Quite a few of Joel's peers did get decent educations despite the school system
- and made it into universities like Brown and Duke and the University of Chicago,
- but Joel simply hadn't cared enough to jump through the hoops necessary to get
- decent grades. Classwork had been so utterly boring and full of busy-work
- assignments that he spent most of high school with his nose in a book. He wound
- up attending the University of Georgia. Thank Heaven for high SAT scores -- with
- his grades alone, he would have been lucky to get into a community college.
-
-
-
- (46) Where does Carole, Joel Furr's wife, come from?
-
- Carole claims to have been born on the coast of California, near Monterey, in
- the town of Pebble Beach. After moving from the town of Pacific Grove at age 5,
- she spent the rest of her childhood just outside Dayton, Ohio, in a town called
- Oakwood. Since graduating from high school, she has lived in Cambridge
- Massachusetts), Baltimore, and northern Virginia. She now lives in Durham, North
- Carolina.
-
- This is the version of events made available for public consumption, however -
- the real truth is far stranger yet.
-
- In actuality, Carole is a California sea otter in human form. Her people (the
- otters), curious about the game of golf which was regularly played by the humans
- in Pebble Beach, selected her to be sent among the humans to learn this strange
- game and bring back its secrets. She was left, clutching a putter in her tiny
- little otter paw, on the thirteenth green at the Pebble Beach golf course in
- hopes that golfers would discover her and take her among them to learn the
- secrets of golf.
-
- Unfortunately, two humans who were simply touring the golf course happened to
- stumble upon the little otter girl and took her back to live with them. Over
- time, she came to resemble the humans she lived with more and more until you can
- hardly tell by looking at her that she's a sea otter at all.
-
-
-
- (47) Who is the Official Stooge of alt.fan.joel-furr?
-
- That would be Joe Littrell of Amherst, Massachusetts. When Joel Furr was
- courting Carole in December of 1995, he wanted to send her an East Carolina
- University sweatshirt anonymously to try to hint to her that she should consider
- moving to North Carolina. Joel asked for a stooge on alt.fan.joel-furr; Joe
- Littrell volunteered; Joel sent the shirt to Joe to send to Carole and Joe
- graciously complied. Unfortunately, when Carole got the package, she instantly
- guessed who the true sender of the shirt was and never even looked at the return
- address or postmark until after she'd told Joel "thanks for the sweatshirt" and
- got asked "didn't the postmark fool you?"
-
- Sigh.
-
- Okay, so it didn't exactly come off as planned, but Joe Littrell nonetheless
- earned the title of "Official Stooge." All hail the Stooge; long may he reign.
-
-
-
- (48) What exactly is "hungus?"
-
- No one knows.
-
- At least one theory exists that it has to do with the substances crusted on and
- life forms found growing on Joe Cochrane's bathroom floor, but since all
- scientists who have attempted to analyze said substances and life forms have
- gone instantly mad, it seems doubtful that a descriptive term having to do with
- said substances and life forms would have entered the scientific jargon.
-
- At present, therefore, "hungus" must remain undefined.
-
-
-
- (49) What is the name of the night manager at the International House of
- Pancakes franchise on Baxter Street in Athens, Georgia?
-
- Hector.
-
- (50) What is Joel Furr's best category in Trivial Pursuit?
-
- Geography.
-
- Joel's a serious map junkie; he loves to pore over maps for hours and hours.
-
- One of his favorite hobbies is asking people where they're from and then,
- regardless of what they answer, somehow managing to ask a question that implies
- extreme familiarity with the locale cited. Given that he's managed, purely by
- accident, to absorb the names and general locations of hundreds if not thousands
- of towns and localities around the world as a result of his map-browsing, he
- can often startle people with this trick. (N.B.: it doesn't work very well when
- the person in question is expecting it.)
-
- It's not really a trick, though -- he really does know a lot about places around
- the globe and especially about the United States of America. It just seems like
- a trick to some people who tell him they're from, oh, Brooklyn, and then get
- asked "Which neighborhood? Flatbush?" The normal assumption is that Joel has
- been to said locality and knows it well -- when in fact, he generally only knows
- a few things about each locality and certainly hasn't been to every city in the
- USA and every country on the planet.
-
- Yet.
-
- Technically speaking, this "trick" is a form of the carnival skill called "cold
- reading," practiced by mediums, palmists, and so forth. By acting authoritative,
- speaking in ominous generalities, and making maximum use of any information the
- "mark" supplies, they can appear to have supernatural powers. Some "cold
- readers" are uncannily good. That doesn't mean they have psychic powers.
- (Neither does Joel.)
-
-
-
- (51) Who is Wally?
-
- Wally is a small gopherlike being who lives under Joel Furr's bed.
-
- Neither Joel nor his wife Carole is entirely sure how Wally came to dwell under
- the bed. Joel and Carole were doing some shopping for home furnishings in
- January of 1996 and happened to be at K-Mart loading up on paper goods,
- shelving, various chemicals, and so forth, when it occurred to them that what
- the apartment really needed was a small gopherlike being. Unfortunately, none of
- the employees of that particular K-Mart admitted knowing where the "Small
- Gopherlike Beings" section might be found. Joel and Carole were forced to return
- home, lacking the small gopherlike being they'd set their hearts on.
-
- As it happened, however, a small gopherlike being was found living under the bed
- a couple of days later, sitting in a small (gopher-sized) La-Z Boy armchair
- reading a copy of "No Exit" by Jean-Paul Sartre and chuckling to itself. This
- being answers to the name of Wally and seems hell-bent on gathering all the
- shoes in the apartment together under the bed where they can be used for
- purposes unknown.
-
- Wally competed on behalf of the Gopherlike Beings team in the 1996 Summer
- Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. His event was solo kayaking -- this being one of
- the few events in which beings only one foot tall would not be at a large
- competitive disadvantage against the humans. He had wanted to compete in
- gymnastics -- Wally is very fond of brachiating -- but the oversized pommel
- horses and rings and such were just too large to make that practicable. Wally
- spent a week or so competing on the Ocoee River in southeastern Tennessee
- against his much larger opposition and, while he did not bring home a medal,
- nonetheless made his fellow gopherlike beings proud.
-
- Wally's e-mail address is wallyglb@furrs.org.
-
-
-
- (52) Where can you go in Durham, North Carolina, to get "spaghetti and salmon
- cakes?"
-
- That would be the Pan-Pan Diner, located just off I-85 at the Hillandale Road
- exit.
-
- For reasons unknown, virtually every category of food on the Pan-Pan Diner's
- menu offers the option of salmon cakes on the side. The menu lists, for example,
- "pancakes and sausage," "pancakes and bacon," and "pancakes and salmon cakes."
- Salmon cakes are available as an option on dozens of items, up to and including
- "spaghetti and salmon cakes."
-
- No one knows why.
-
-
-
- (53) What is Joel Furr's favorite soft drink?
-
- Coca-Cola.
-
- He always preferred Coca-Cola to Pepsi-Cola when he was a child -- partly
- because he preferred the taste of Coke to Pepsi and partially because Pepsi's
- negative attack ads (which attempted to convince people that only squares and
- idiots drank Coca-Cola) irritated the living hell out of him.
-
- This preference for Coca-Cola was reinforced when he was in college at the
- University of Georgia. Coke machines were everywhere on campus and there wasn't
- a Pepsi machine to be seen. Coca-Cola's stockholders and founders and such had
- been very good to the University over the years and accordingly, no one at the
- university had much inclination to supplant Coke with a competing soda. The
- Athens community at large seemed to share this sentiment -- it was not unusual
- to walk into a convenience store and see two- liter jugs of Coca-Cola, stored at
- room temperature in the middle of the floor, outselling refrigerated two-liter
- jugs of Pepsi on sale at half the price. Coca-Cola would usually sell out
- entirely at any given convenience store before any great dents would be made in
- the Pepsi supply at all.
-
- Things reached the point of ultimate absurdity when, in 1986, the Coca-Cola
- company celebrated its centennial and, to remind us all which side our bread was
- buttered on, sponsored a special halftime celebration at a UGA football game
- which featured dancing Coca-Cola cans.
-
- Parenthetically, one of the dancing cans of Coca-Cola deflated spontaneously
- during the show and the person inside went on dancing merrily, apparently unable
- to tell that the inflated cylinder he or she was wearing was now hanging on him
- or her like a bright red shroud.
-
- Joel finished college a confirmed Coca-Cola addict, sadly, and only through
- great effort was able to switch to drinking Diet Coke in graduate school. Had he
- not succeeded in this effort, his two-liter-per-day Coke habit would probably
- have caused him to balloon to 300 pounds. Thank God for Diet Coke -- Joel
- remains a healthy 6'2" 210-pounder.
-
-
-
- (54) How many fingers am I holding up?
-
- Six.
-
-
-
- (55) Do we need more plastic cups?
-
- You bet.
-
-
-
- (56) What color should mayonnaise be?
-
- Yellow.
-
- Real mayonnaise, e.g. Duke's Mayonnaise, is yellow.
-
-
-
- (57) What is Joel Furr's astrological sign?
-
- If you believe in astrology, Joel Furr would be a Virgo, as he was born on
- September 20, 1967 at about 4:30 in the afternoon.
-
- If you have half a clue, however, you'll know that astrology is a bunch of utter
- bunkum, a pseudoscience not worthy of the billions of column-inches dedicated
- to it in magazines and newspapers each year.
-
- For one thing, the astrological tables developed millennia ago (to make it
- possible to generate horoscopes even on cloudy nights) contained errors which,
- over time, have accumulated to the point that the calculations of which planet
- is in which constellation are totally off. Evidently, actually going outside and
- looking at the sky to demonstrate that Venus is not in Aries at the current
- moment, despite what your friendly local astrologer might say, is too
- complicated for most people.
-
- Furthermore, a moment's consideration of the laws of physics should make it
- obvious that the obstetrician or midwife has a greater gravitational influence
- on a newborn child than any planet other than Earth.
-
- Finally, actually looking at horoscopes in the newspaper or the more detailed
- horoscopes you can purchase at supermarket checkout counters will make it
- obvious that the horoscopes are recycled from month to month and can't possibly
- begin to predict what will happen to 1/12 of the world's population on any given
- day.
-
- Needless to say, those who are ardent believers in astrology will retroactively
- interpret the way events actually take place to the benefit of the astrologers:
- "Well, my horoscope said I would meet a tall dark stranger who would bring me
- good fortune, and there was that guy who pulled up behind me at the light at the
- corner of Smyth Avenue and Winderly Street... and if he hadn't come to a stop
- behind me, he'd have totalled my car, so I guess he brought me good fortune.
- Wow, my horoscope was right!!!!"
-
- Uh huh.
-
-
-
- (58) What is Joel Furr's Myers-Briggs type?
-
- The last time he took the test, he got an ESTP result.
-
- The first time he took the test, he got an ENFP result.
-
- The E and the P are pretty certain: E for Extroversion and P for Perceiving (how
- one uses time, etc.), but the other two are indefinite.
-
- If you go by the actual personality descriptions in the various books that
- explain the Myers-Briggs test, the ESTP sounds more like Joel than does the
- ENFP. If you're not familiar with the test or the books that explain it, look in
- your local college library. Books include "Type Talk" and "Please Understand
- Me" but more may have come out since Joel was in graduate school and routinely
- being subjected to the scrutiny of Myers-Briggs aficionados.
-
- Joel can see that the Myers-Briggs has some validity, but still dislikes the
- emphasis some employers and administrators place on it. Dividing the human race
- up into sixteen basic personality types smacks of astrological mumbo-jumbo, even
- if there's somewhat more of a scientific basis to the Myers-Briggs than to
- astrology.
-
- Joel once worked for a man who was so into the Myers-Briggs that he had posted
- his own Myers-Briggs personality type on an engraved plastic sign on his office
- door: "You Are Now Entering 'INTJ' Zone." The "INTJ" was in big letters.
-
- Really.
-
- Once Joel grudgingly informed his boss what his Myers-Briggs type was, it was
- brought up over and over again for the rest of the two years that Joel worked
- for that office. A lot of the assignments Joel was given were prefaced by
- "You're an ESTP, so you'll love this." If an assignment turned out to be
- something Joel hated to do, he was told, with a big, cheerful smile, "No, you
- just don't understand it yet. This is exactly the sort of work you ESTP's love
- to do."
-
- Of course, this same boss once turned out all the lights in his office, sat in
- the dark wearing a hardhat, and muttered darkly to himself about all the North
- Vietnamese he had napalmed when he was a fighter pilot in Vietnam.
-
- Apparently INTJ's are good at napalming people, but they don't like it.
-
-
- (59) Where are your videos?
-
- Glassy smile. "I'm sorry, sir. We don't have any videos."
-
- Okay, okay, an explanation: when Joel Furr worked for the Montgomery-Floyd
- Regional Library system in southwestern Virginia, his job was to work the
- circulation desk, check books out and in, and answer reference questions that
- patrons brought to the desk or phoned in.
-
- Sadly, the clientele of the library were not exactly a bunch of rocket
- scientists and Joel and his co-workers wound up accumulating a lengthy list of
- utterly stupid questions that were asked over and over again by various of the
- local white trash.
-
- The most annoying of these was "Where are your videos?"
-
- For some strange reason, many of the patrons of the library had gotten the odd
- idea that a library was supposed to double as a video store and came up to the
- desk on occasion to ask where the videotapes were kept.
-
- You might be thinking "Well, sure, some libraries have educational videotapes
- and nature videotapes, so what's the big deal?" The big deal was that people
- weren't asking for educational videotapes or nature videotapes -- they were
- asking for recent-run movies that had only just come out on videotape in the
- stores, and when they were told "We don't have any videos," they'd gawk
- disbelievingly and then ask again to make sure they hadn't heard the librarians
- wrong.
-
- To be completely truthful, the library did in fact have two videos, both
- training videos the local Cub Scout troops had prevailed on the library system
- to keep under the desk for any Cub leaders who came by, but other than that, the
- place had no videos and had no plans to acquire any.
-
- With a limited budget, dollars had to be allotted between the bestseller books
- everyone wanted to read, children's books, books on tape, magazines, newspapers,
- and then general collection development. There was no money left over for
- luxuries such as videotapes, much less an extensive collection such as most of
- the patrons seemed to take for granted that the library must have hidden
- somewhere.
-
- On more than one occasion, conversations similar to this took place at the
- circulation desk:
-
- Patron: "Hi"
-
- Librarian: "Hi. Can I help you?"
-
- Patron: "Yes, where are your videotapes?"
-
- Librarian: "I'm sorry, we don't have any videotapes."
-
- Patron: "Oh, so you just have donated videotapes, educational tapes, nature
- tapes, and stuff like that?"
-
- Librarian: "No, we don't have any videotapes at all."
-
- Patron: "Oh, right. Well, could you show me where the instructional videos are
- kept?"
-
- Librarian: "We don't have any. We don't have any videotapes at all."
-
- Patron: "You mean you don't have any videotapes?"
-
- Librarian: "That's right, sir. We don't have any."
-
- Patron: "And you call yourself a library?"
-
- Grrrrr.
-
-
-
- (60) How is "Furr" pronounced?
-
- Some people pronounce "Furr" as though it was spelled "Fyure" or ""Foor" or even
- more unlikely pronunciations. The name is actually pronounced exactly as though
- it had only one "r" -- in other words, like the word "fur" which we English
- speakers use to refer to the pelt of an animal.
-
-
-
- (61) What is the law?
-
- Not to spill blood. Are we not men?
-
-
-
- (62) Where do the keys go?
-
- The keys go under the sofa. Silly humans!
-
-
-
- (63) What are some of the nicknames that Joel Furr has gone by over the years?
-
- For some reason, Joel Furr has never had a great deal of luck getting people to
- call him by various nicknames. Joel has managed to get the people at his office
- to call him "Jay" (which, for some odd reason, sometimes means that he gets
- called "Jaybird") but none of his friends seem able to make the switch from Joel
- to Jay. To his family and friends, "Joel" it is and "Joel" it appears it will
- always be.
-
- The only exceptions to this general rule came while Joel worked at the Hardee's
- on South Main Street in Blacksburg, Virginia from 1984 to 1985 during his senior
- year of high school and the summer that came after.
-
- Having found where the manager of the store kept the label-maker that made the
- label tape that went on the "Hardee's" nametags all the employees wore, Joel
- made himself a nametag that said "FLUFFY" and, when that one got old, another
- that said "STRUDEL." No one to speak of ever noticed, though he minced around as
- "STRUDEL" for months.
-
- Joel is trying to get people to call him "Jay" and is having slow success. You
- can call him whatever you like; he'll answer to either version of his name.
-
-
-
- (64) What happens when you put a real, formerly alive, ocean-bred sponge back in
- water?
-
- It comes back to life and devours you. Be warned.
-
-
-
- (65) What kind of underwear does Joel Furr wear?
-
- Until recently, Joel had been wearing plain white briefs -- had been wearing
- this style of undergarment his whole life, in fact -- but someone whom he feels
- is worth listening to has convinced him to begin wearing colored Jockey briefs.
- Any guesses who this might be?
-
- His new habiliments have resulted in occasional startled yelps ("Yah!") when he
- steps up to a bathroom fixture and sees crimson-colored fabric within when he
- opens his fly.
-
- Overcoming the habits of 29 years is not something that can be done overnight.
-
-
-
- (66) Who is the greatest cat of all time?
-
- The greatest cat of all time is Nubbins the Cat, a.k.a. Miss Kitty, Maximum Cat,
- Cuddles, Cat Nubbins, etc. etc. ad infinitum.
-
- Nubbins is a Jellicle cat and is therefore black and white in color. She is a
- somewhat rascally cat, but she means well.
-
- Nubbins is well-known among cats for her furriness, said furriness being of
- extremely high quality. Furthermore, while many cats are furry, and in fact cats
- in general are known for being furry, Nubbins takes furriness one step further.
- She keeps some of her furriness in reserve against the day when, due to
- emergency conditions or shortages elsewhere, it may be needed. Nubbins is a
- public-spirited cat.
-
- Caution should be exercised when petting Nubbins the Cat. While Nubbins loves
- everyone and is full of warmth and good cheer, she does at times chastise those
- who presume too much and pet her when she is not in a pettable mood. Such
- chastisement rarely leaves permanent scars or crippling injuries, however;
- Nubbins is a high quality cat.
-
- Joel Furr assumes no responsibility for the activities of Nubbins the Cat. Joel
- Furr accepts no liability for any property damage, personal injury, and/or
- breaches of national security which may take place as a result of her actions.
- Caution should be taken when approaching Nubbins the Cat when she is aboard her
- flying saucer; said saucer is capable of speeds well in excess of Mach 10, but
- Nubbins is at best an indifferent driver.
-
-
-
- (67) How can I embarrass myself in front of eight thousand people?
-
- If you attend a Durham Bulls baseball game, you can easily embarrass yourself in
- front of eight thousand people!
-
- During the sixth inning of each game, a lucky fan is selected and escorted out
- onto the field to try to throw a baseball through a hole in a large wooden
- target held up by two Bulls employees. The fan gets three tries. Most fans miss
- all three times... the hole is not much larger than a softball, say, and the
- target itself is held some distance away (usually about fifteen feet). If you
- get one ball through, you get a free Coke. If you get two balls through, you get
- a free Bulls cap. If you get all three balls through, you win a television or
- something. Rest assured that they don't give out a lot of televisions.
-
- Since you're actually on the playing surface, just to the right of the first
- base line in the foul area, you're easily visible from every seat in the
- ballpark -- and since the toss is done between half innings when the players are
- off the field, you're the main attraction for as long as it takes to get it
- over with. The fans boo or groan loudly with each miss and the contestant
- usually trots off the field, head hung low and feeling really stupid, night
- after night.
-
- If this sounds like something you would like to experience, it's easy to get
- yourself chosen as the lucky fan. All you have to do is be the first fan through
- the gates when the ballpark opens at six p.m. on game nights and go straight up
- to the Bulls employee selling scorecards and programs. The program is the same
- night after night -- it's a big color tabloid called "Bulls Illustrated." A new
- edition only comes out three times each season so it's not exactly a hot seller
- for the average fan.
-
- If you're the first or one of the first fans in the gate, you'll be assured of
- first dibs at the program stack that night -- and to make sure you're the lucky
- fan, all you have to do is buy four copies of the program. They're a dollar
- each, so it doesn't cost a lot. Smile broadly and walk away carrying your
- programs. When you're out of sight of the program stand, flip through the
- programs and find the signature of the Bulls' radio announcer, Steve Barnes, on
- the Mutual Drug ad somewhere in the program. Since they want to make sure that
- they have a "lucky fan" each night, they make sure and stick the signed copy
- somewhere in the top of the stack, usually no lower than the fourth copy down.
- By buying the top four copies in the stack, you've assured yourself of having
- the copy with Barnes' signature. This means that you are the "lucky fan" and can
- sheepishly report to the Fan Assistance Center during the middle of the fifth
- inning when they ask everyone to open their copies of "Bulls Illustrated" and
- look on pag
- e X for the Mutual Drug ad.
-
- The Bulls would probably be annoyed if you did this night after night, but so
- far no one has abused the opportunity.
-
- Anyone can be the "lucky fan" if you arrange things right. If you're going with
- friends to a game, get there before they do, buy the necessary number of copies
- of the program, toss all but two of the copies (the one with the signature and
- one other), and when your friends arrive, say "I bought a program but they gave
- me two by accident. Here, you can have the other copy" and give the intended
- victim the signed copy. Wait with concealed glee for the middle of the fifth
- inning when they ask everyone to pull out their copies, look in yours with
- feigned innocence, and then clap your friend on the back when he or she finds
- the signature in his or her copy.
-
- Hours of family fun -- and it only costs the cost of a game ticket ($4.50) plus
- $4.00 for your four programs.
-
-
-
- (68) Why does Joel Furr have so many strange and pointless pictures of himself
- and his friends on his Web page?
-
- Because people LOOK at them, that's why. There's no picture too pointless and
- boring that people won't look at it -- and besides, there actually are people
- who wonder what Joel looks like.
-
- The only people who complain are people who do web searches for "pictures,"
- hoping to find pornography for viewing and downloading and instead find pictures
- of Joel Furr riding roller coasters and Joel Furr playing miniature golf.
-
-
-
- (69) What's special about the Duke University parking deck at the corner of
- Fulton Street and NC 147 in Durham, North Carolina?
-
- Due to its gargantuan size and excessive lighting, it's visible from orbit. The
- wattage alone used to illuminate the structure each night would suffice to power
- the Energizer Bunny for the next six and a half million years.
-
-
-
- (70) What fortune cookie does Joel Furr always get?
-
- "DO NOT LEAVE THIS RESTAURANT. PERIL AWAITS!"
-
-
-
- (71) What is "The Mother of All Rivers?"
-
- Oddly, "The Mother of All Rivers" is a term that has come to be applied to the
- James River of Virginia.
-
- Joel Furr once took a Government Administration class in graduate school; the
- class was mainly full of students from Furr's public administration department
- but there were also two students from the forestry and wildlife department,
- including one guy named John Stanovic.
-
- John had spent the previous summer working on a fisheries project on the
- headwaters of the James River near the West Virginia border. Accordingly, EVERY
- SINGLE TIME he was called upon to do a paper presenting some proposal, it'd be
- based on fisheries management in the upper James headwaters. And EVERY SINGLE
- TIME he mentioned the James in his classroom reports, he wouldn't just say "the
- James."
-
- He'd say "when I was working on the James..." pause for dramatic effect, then
- continue, "the mother of ALL rivers," and then go on. Every single freaking
- time. As far as any of the other students could tell, he barely even noticed
- himself doing this.
-
- Listening to this over and over again for the entire duration of a semester will
- take a toll on you. Consequently, even to the present date, eight years later,
- Joel Furr cannot help appending "the Mother of All Rivers" to any mention of the
- James River.
-
- John Stanovic, wherever you are, you're going to pay.
-
-
-
- (72) So, what was it like attending Georgia Tech?
-
- Joel Furr didn't attend Georgia Tech, you low-lives.
-
- The University of Georgia is the large land-grant comprehensive university
- located about an hour's drive northeast of Atlanta in the small city of Athens.
- It's home to programs in liberal arts, sciences, agriculture, human resources,
- business, law, veterinary medicine, and so on. It's probably best known as the
- alma mater of Heisman Trophy running back Herschel Walker, but it's also one of
- the oldest state universities and has a beautiful campus and many distinguished
- alumni.
-
- The University of Georgia is NOT the same institution as Georgia Tech, a.k.a.
- "The Georgia Institute of Technology". Georgia Tech, a.k.a. "Calculator Maggot
- University," is a substantially inferior school located in the middle of
- Atlanta, known mainly for its engineering programs and for being the site of the
- 1996 Olympics' athlete housing. Georgia Tech students do not bathe, use
- utensils at meals, or speak in coherent English much of the time.
-
- While it is of course rude to mock and make sport of the many inadequacies of
- Georgia Tech students, care should be taken to note the many ways in which the
- average Georgia Tech student falls short of the physical, mental, and social
- perfection exemplified by the average University of Georgia student in order to
- better distinguish the two schools' students and alumni.
-
-
-
- (73) What book is Joel Furr currently working on?
-
- "The Big Book of Hellish Vengeance." It'll be a coffee-table book suitable for
- holiday giving. Keep an eye out for it in your favorite bookstore.
-
-
-
- (74) Who the hell is "Yalin Ekici?"
-
- "Yalin Ekici," the loon who fills alt.fan.joel-furr with megabytes of drivel
- about the so-called Armenian genocide of Turks in 1914, is believed by many to
- be none other than Ahmet Cosar, the infamous "Serdar Argic" of soc.history and
- soc.culture.turkish fame. Cosar lost his access at the University of Minnesota
- in the spring of 1995 (apparently as a result of failing to register for classes
- two semesters in a row) and was absent from Usenet for a while. He returned
- with a vengeance later in the year under a new pseudonym, "Yalin Ekici," posting
- from ephesus@netcom.com. Since this new userid makes frequent reference to "Dr.
- Argic" and is recycling the old Argic library of propaganda, most people feel
- that this is none other than our old friend Cosar, back to his usual tricks.
-
- Netcom claims to have told "Ekici" to calm the hell down and stop spamming
- dozens of newsgroups with his idiotic drivel about the evil Armenians, and in
- fact, Cosar was quiet for a few days after Netcom said they'd reprimanded him.
- However, the period of quietude did not last long and Cosar returned to posting
- his idiocy with a vengeance and Netcom has remained mute to all requests for
- information on what, if anything, they are doing about the situation. Not for
- nothing is Netcom considered by many to be a less than exemplary member of the
- Internet community.
-
- In addition to posting under the pseudonym of "Yalin Ekici," Cosar also posts
- under the pseudonyms of "Arif Kiziltug" and "Murat Kutan," apparently in hopes
- of convincing the world at large that he's not a lone kook.
-
- Important safety tip: if you feel compelled to flame him, don't reply to his
- messages directly. The algorithm Cosar uses to locate articles to follow up to
- apparently searches for references to the message-id's of his old articles. In
- other words, he looks for responses to his articles and follows up to these
- responses with random attacks out of his library of inane propaganda.
-
- It seems odd to many that Cosar would go to such incredible lengths for such a
- bad cause. No one other than him, apparently, sincerely believes that Armenians
- committed genocide against Turks in 1914. It seems to be a continuing source of
- frustration to Cosar that, despite his best efforts, we all still go around
- believing that it was the Turks who did their utmost to wipe out every Armenian
- village they could find.
-
- Even though Cosar's claims are roughly analogous to someone claiming that Jews
- herded Germans by the millions into the gas chambers in 1939-1945, he goes right
- on posting, secure in his sick delusions.
-
-
-
- (75) What is the ultimate slow dancing song?
-
- "Nights in White Satin," by the Moody Blues. The meaning of the song is
- completely irrelevant -- the song was made to slow dance to.
-
- "Wonderful Tonight" by Eric Clapton is also a fine slow dancing song, but when
- you actually listen to the words, it's about a guy who gets drunk at a party and
- has to be shoveled into bed by his wife -- hardly the stuff of great romance.
-
- Carole, beacon of Joel Furr's existence and the radiant star who guides him
- through the day, feels that the ultimate slow dancing song is "Lady in Red," by
- Chris DeBurgh (better known as the guy who sang "Don't Pay the Ferryman"). She
- may have a point.
-
-
-
- (76) Who was President of Joel Furr's high school Science Club?
-
- Jimmy Page.
-
- Yes, the Jimmy Page.
-
- Joel Furr's high school, Blacksburg High School of Blacksburg, Virginia,
- encouraged membership in the various school clubs by setting aside one morning
- per month (or thereabouts) for club meetings to be held in lieu of classes.
- Attendance at clubs was essentially mandatory; if you didn't choose some club to
- go to, you had to spend all morning being watched a like a hawk in a study hall
- run by one of the more irritable teachers. Consequently, everyone found at
- least one club they could endure and attended its meetings each month. Those
- students who were either not eligible for or not interested in membership in
- clubs like the Leo Club, the Key Club, or the Fellowship of Christian Athletes
- had various clubs like the Spanish Club, the French Club, or, yes, the Science
- Club available to them. Since it was well-known that members of the Science Club
- got to see Dr. Wightman set himself on fire one day each year, the Science Club
- was the most popular club in the entire school most years and could count on
- raking in
- the lion's share of those students who were not otherwise inclined toward some
- of the more specialized clubs.
-
- The Science Club could be counted on to accomplish precisely nothing all year
- since each month's program consisted of someone's father (usually a physics or
- chemistry or biology professor from Virginia Tech) speaking on whatever it was
- he did for a living ... surface chemistry, nuclear physics, iguanas, whatever.
- Sitting boredly in the back of the room while someone's dad set himself on fire
- was as good a way as any to spend a morning but it wasn't the sort of thing that
- led people to take the club and its mission to encourage the study of science
- very seriously. Needless to say, it was no great honor to be elected President
- of the Blacksburg High School Science Club.
-
- That's how Jimmy Page got elected President of the Science Club. The first
- meeting of the year was always the meeting at which club officers were elected,
- and one year someone nominated Jimmy Page. Since the teacher who was the
- official sponsor of the Science Club didn't have a clue who Jimmy Page was, she
- wrote the nomination on the board with all the others and, after his nearly
- unanimous election, dutifully noted "James Page" down on the officers form that
- she had to turn in to the school office after the first meeting.
-
- Page never seemed to make it to meetings, oddly, so the club vice president
- always had to call meetings to order.
-
-
-
- (77) What is the secret of making great Bisquick pancakes?
-
- Damned if Joel Furr, or for that matter, ANY of the Scouts of Boy Scout Troop
- 44, could tell you.
-
- Without exception, during the years Joel Furr was a Scout, his troop always took
- a big box of Bisquick pancake mix along on camping trips (in addition to the
- other food). This was the case for two reasons. First, one of the Troop's
- Assistant Scoutmasters was Arthur "Torchy" Walrath, author of the official Boy
- Scout Cookbook. Torchy could do amazing things with Bisquick and the Scouts
- always made sure to have the raw materials close at hand, just in case Torchy
- came along on any given camping trip. Second, Bisquick was sort of a last-ditch
- emergency ration, just in case something bad happened to the other food that had
- been brought along.
-
- Without fail, something would happen to the bulk of the food -- often, the
- reason was simple: it was all eaten on the first night in a fit of orgiastic
- gluttony -- and by the final morning of the camping trip, the Scouts would be
- reduced to eyeing the box of Bisquick hungrily.
-
- Eventually, one would say "Well, this time we know what to do to get the
- pancakes to come out right" and the Great Experiment would resume.
-
- Bisquick, used by calm, sane cooks who are not crazed from smoke, cold, and
- exhaustion, can be used to make tasty pancakes and biscuits and so forth. On the
- other hand, the Scouts of Troop 44, indifferent cooks at best (the freeze-dried
- food they took along was usually eaten cold and uncooked, with a cup of two of
- water poured into the foil packets in a futile attempt at effective
- re-hydration) and hardly qualified as "sane" under the best of circumstances...
- and were usually so enervated by the exertions of the trip that they would
- double every measure called for on the back of the box and halve the cooking
- time. If it was necessary to leave out the eggs or oil or whatever because the
- Scouts didn't have any, then hey, so be it. Strict adherence to instructions was
- not a skill the Troop 44 Scouts had much familiarity with.
-
- The inevitable result was something unworthy of the name of "pancake" -- which
- consequently became known among the Scouts as a "fritter." Your average fritter
- weighed in at a pound and a half and was sufficiently dense that fritters became
- widely feared as weapons; a thrown fritter was dense and solid enough to knock
- down most anything it struck -- AND keep its shape after impact. Eating an
- entire fritter was out of the question -- it would have been like trying to put
- yourself outside an entire sack of Quikrete. A few bites were enough to rid a
- boy of the pangs of hunger and leave him feeling as though he'd mistaken a
- sandbag for a Pop-Tart.
-
- It was little wonder that the Scouts of Troop 44 were invariably running into
- each other at McDonald's immediately after returning to Blacksburg and being
- picked up by their parents at the church; without doubt, the parents of the
- troop knew without having to be told that their sons would go through the
- refrigerator like a threshing machine if other food were not found first.
-
-
-
- (78) Why didn't Joel Furr wind up in the military?
-
- Joel wanted to enter the military after graduating from Blacksburg High School
- in 1985; he even went so far as to apply for and interview for a Naval ROTC
- scholarship, knowing full well that if he was accepted into the program this
- would require him to complete a full term of military service after graduation.
-
- His older sister, Julia, had already entered Duke University on an Army ROTC
- scholarship, so Joel was hardly ignorant of what the program required of
- applicants or what the program would require Joel to do after graduation. It
- seemed like an excellent opportunity: get his education paid for, graduate, and
- get to see the world as a member of an honorable profession, serving the United
- States.
-
- Unfortunately, there was this problem...
-
- It happened like this: In November of 1984, Joel went down to be interviewed and
- evaluated by a Naval officer in Richmond, Virginia. The officer interviewed
- Joel and evaluated whether or not he'd make a good Naval ROTC cadet. Things were
- going pretty well during the interview -- well enough, in fact, that Joel's
- father was told, after it was over, that he could 'bet [his] paycheck on Joel
- getting a scholarship.' Evidently the interviewer thought highly of Joel.
- Unfortunately, Mr. Furr was being told this as he was half-helping,
- half-carrying Joel out to the car.
-
- Joel had felt more or less okay during the drive down from Blacksburg but had
- begun to feel feverish during lunch and had started feeling really bad during
- the interview. About halfway through the scheduled length of the interview, the
- room started to swim and Joel passed out. The interview was cut short, needless
- to say, but the interviewer assured Mr. Furr that it wouldn't negatively affect
- the report on Joel and that Joel was a sure thing as far as a Navy ROTC
- scholarship went. When the Furrs made it back to Blacksburg, three and a half
- hours away by car, Joel was running a high fever and was babbling deliriously.
- He was diagnosed the next day with a full-fledged case of pneumonia.
-
- That's right, pneumonia. As diseases go, there may well be worse ones to have,
- but Joel can't recommend lying on one's back for a solid month, too weak to
- move, as an exciting laugh-fest. When he was X-rayed the next day at the
- hospital, he was diagnosed as having one lung more or less entirely full of
- green goo and the other lung about halfway full. His parents didn't tell him
- until he was completely recovered that the doctors had thought there was a
- decent chance that he'd die.
-
- Joel recovered in a month or so, spending a solid four weeks in bed unable to do
- much more than roll over now and then and occasionally swallow whatever liquids
- his parents thrust at him. It wasn't fun.
-
- When he did finally make it back onto his feet and make it back to school, he
- wasn't exactly in good shape, muscle-wise. Consequently, when the time came a
- month or so later to take the ROTC physical fitness test, Joel performed
- somewhere around the fifth percentile of applicants. Spending a month in bed
- without moving isn't exactly going to tone one's body up to the levels desired
- by the United States military.
-
- Let's put it this way: Joel did not get the scholarship. Good thing Mr. Furr
- didn't bet his paycheck, eh?
-
-
-
- (79) What was the most embarrassing thing that ever happened to Joel Furr?
-
- People who know Joel well might think that the most embarrassing thing that ever
- happened to him was the time he vomited his guts out on the Monument to the
- Confederate War Dead in the middle of Athens, Georgia's main street, Broad
- Street, at 5:00 p.m. on a bright, sunny Friday afternoon.
-
- And admittedly, that was an embarrassing moment, but it fails to qualify as the
- most embarrassing moment inasmuch as Joel felt far too ill at the time of the
- incident to really care if he was embarrassing himself or not. Drinking six
- beers and six shots of tequila in the space of about seventy-five minutes will
- do that to you.
-
- No, the single most embarrassing thing that ever happened to Joel Furr has to be
- what happened early one summer morning during the summer of 1988.
-
- Joel had graduated from the University of Georgia in June of 1988 and was
- spending the summer in his home town of Blacksburg, Virginia waiting for his
- graduate school classes to start up that fall. He tried to find a job that
- summer but had little luck since no one much wanted to hire a recent college
- graduate whose main skill was that he could write a ten page English paper in
- about two hours on the day the paper was due, without having read the book the
- paper was supposed to be about, and still get an A.
-
- Accordingly, he spent the summer lounging about, not doing much of anything.
- Some days he'd drive up into the Jefferson National Forest, just north of
- Blacksburg, and float about on the calm and tranquil waters of eight-acre
- Pandapas Pond, out in the woods of the Forest. He had a black-and-yellow
- "two-man inflatable raft (not for life-saving purposes)" he'd picked up one
- summer at Cape Hatteras that served fairly well for one man if that one man
- happened to be six feet, two inches tall and was fond of lying on his back with
- a book held open on his chest.
-
- Most days, no one much came to the Pond except to walk around the circum-Pond
- trail and then leave again forty-five minutes later. Once in a while, someone
- would arrive with a canoe on top of their Wagoneer and spend a few hours
- paddling around the Pond while Furr floated on his back, ignoring them and
- reading whatever book he happened to have along.
-
- Then came the Day of the Girl Scouts. Joel was lying in the boat, half-drowsing,
- about nine-thirty in the morning one weekday morning when he heard a tumult
- from the parking lot and, a few minutes later, saw a platoon of Girl Scouts,
- probably Juniors, with a harried troop leader in tow, portaging silver canoes
- down to the Pond. The Scouts paired off and launched their canoes, voyaging out
- over the still waters of the Pond and chattering amiably as they paddled.
-
- This was not exactly the sort of thing Joel had wanted or expected when he'd
- decided to go down to the Pond that morning. It tended to break the mood
- something fierce; imagine Thoreau feeling as he did about Walden Pond if some
- idiots in canoes had routinely showed up and paddled about on days he was
- feeling philosophical.
-
- Joel was not entirely awake, nor entirely in a good mood, and thus he can't
- entirely be blamed for not foreseeing what happened next.
-
- Joel decided he would stand up in his boat and count how many Girl Scouts there
- were in all -- and if there were more than ten, he reasoned, the Pond could be
- considered "too crowded" and he would have a legitimate excuse to give up and go
- home. Standing up in the boat was no problem; the boat was like a big oval
- doughnut with a flat bottom and Joel could actually stand up in it fairly well
- and see around the Pond and count, "two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve,
- thirteen, and one troop leader, yeah, time to split." Just as he was making this
- decision, the bottom of the boat came free of the side of the boat and he
- plunged straight down, through the boat, and into the water of the Pond.
-
- From an observer's point of view, it must have looked as though Joel suddenly
- vanished, sucked down into the Pond by something lurking underneath the surface
- of the water. One moment, he was there; the next, he was gone. His boat began a
- somewhat slower collapse, its hull integrity destroyed by when the "deck" ripped
- free of the sides.
-
- Joel doesn't like fish. Pandapas Pond has fish in it. With no warning at all,
- Joel was down where the fish lived, and he didn't like it at all. Much in the
- same fashion that cartoon characters run on thin air, Joel rose up out of the
- water and moved like a Jet-Ski for the nearest land, which happened to be the
- nearby Pandapas Pond island, smack in the middle of the Pond.
-
- "Ignominy" doesn't begin to describe it. Here was Joel, soaked from head to toe,
- hunkered down on an island approximately the same size as a postage stamp like
- some sort of primeval amphibian gazing darkly over the Carboniferous swamps.
- There were the Girl Scouts, happily learning the ins and outs of canoe
- navigation and peering curiously at the spectacle on the island. What was Joel
- to do? Swim ashore and risk touching Pond fish? Sit there and hope the Scouts or
- their leader would discreetly come over and give him a lift to shore without
- asking too many embarrassing questions about what he'd thought he was doing when
- he stood up in a cheap plastic inflatable boat?
-
- As it happened, his bacon was saved when the troop leader noticed his dilemma
- and paddled the canoe she shared with one Scout over to the island and asked him
- if he needed any help.
-
- "Um," Joel said.
-
- History does not record how Joel explained what had transpired nor the manner in
- which he requested a lift to shore; presumably he managed somehow because in
- due order he was delivered onto the shore, ruined boat and all, and wished a
- good day by the over-cheery Girl Scouts.
-
- Suffice it to say that when Joel purchased a replacement boat for future
- nautical endeavors, he concluded that it would be best for all involved if he
- remained safely seated or supine when aboard and left standing and walking for
- when he had returned to dry land.
-
-
-
- (80) When did Joel Furr learn to read?
-
- Around age 3, or maybe a little earlier.
-
- Joel's younger brother Robin was born in late July 1970, two years and ten
- months after Joel's birth. Needless to say, the newborn required much care and
- attention and Joel's parents did not have the time necessary to closely
- supervise their other son. Consequently, they did anything they could to keep
- him occupied -- reading him a book and then handing him the book to page through
- while they attended to Robin. Joel would pore over the books for hours, looking
- at the pictures -- and, as it turns out, the words.
-
- It caught them by surprise when they realized one day that Joel was studying the
- pages with rather more concentration than one would expect of a child not quite
- yet three years old who didn't know how to read. "Read that to me," his mother
- ordered, pointing at a page. Joel did so. He read them the whole book. He had
- figured out how to read all by himself, based on comparisons between what his
- parents read to him and the corresponding marks on the pages.
-
- This caused Joel some problems later in life when he was light-years ahead of
- the other kids in kindergarten and first grade -- especially in kindergarten,
- where he'd already read all the books in the kindergarten library and had very
- little interest in sitting through storytime just to hear them read through
- again.
-
- It led to some fairly immediate problems when Joel was still a pre-schooler as
- well. Mrs. Furr did not always watch Joel closely when she was tending to Robin,
- assuming that Joel would keep busy with one of the dozens of easy-reading books
- in the house for a few minutes. Joel would read quietly and stay out of trouble
- -- but, as it happened, there's such a thing as too quiet. On occasion, when
- Mrs. Furr had heard nary a peep out of Joel for some hours, a feeling of "uh-oh"
- would come over her and she'd go in search.
-
- On one occasion, she searched the house without spotting Joel until she finally
- chanced to look down under the dining table and found that Joel had used up an
- entire box of margarine sticks greasing the entire dining room floor. He looked
- up at his flabbergasted mother and patted the floor proudly.
-
- On another occasion, he was found standing with the refrigerator door open,
- happily dropping one egg after another onto the floor. He had the last surviving
- egg in his hand when Mrs. Furr discovered him standing above a heap of
- eggshells and runny goo, beaming happily at his work.
-
- "Joel," she said cautiously, "Give me the egg."
-
- Smiling agreeably, Joel hurled the egg in her general direction, missing by a
- few feet. Scratch the remaining egg.
-
- On still other occasions, Joel was found standing in front of an open commode,
- flushing repeatedly and waving "bye-bye" at whatever he had flushed down the
- toilet this time.
-
- Is it any wonder his parents adopted a practice of shoving books under his nose
- any time they saw him otherwise unoccupied?
-
-
-
- (81) What is Joel Furr's ultimate ambition in life?
-
- Joel's ambition is a simple one: a front porch overlooking a large, grassy
- lawn, a rocking chair on the porch... and a cane to angrily wave at any
- neighborhood kids who come trespassing on the lawn. To make the situation
- perfect, the kids will dutifully shriek "Run, run, it's Old Man Furr!" and
- vamoose.
-
-
-
- (82) Aren't you cold?
-
- No.
-
- Joel Furr routinely goes out in cold weather wearing shorts, a sweatshirt, and
- maybe a jacket, and feels quite comfortable, thank you... even at temperatures
- below freezing, and certainly on "cool days" where other people have broken out
- the sweatshirts and long pants.
-
- People in supermarkets and such get cold just looking at him, and inevitably ask
- "Aren't you cold?"
-
- Joel grins amiably and says "Nope. Perfectly toasty. You?"
-
- Incidentally, now that Joel lives in Vermont (NORTHERN Vermont, at that), this
- habit may undergo a little modification come winter. Bare legs aren't liable to
- constitute a "survival trait" in temperatures below 0 Fahrenheit or in
- chest-deep snow.
-
-
-
- (83) What restaurant are Joel and Carole Furr going to open soon?
-
- A steak restaurant, to be named "Yesterday's Cow."
-
-
-
- (84) What collectible novelty does Joel Furr have in store for us?
-
- Soft-sculpture crucified Jesus dolls. They'll go over big in the redneck
- market.
-
-
-
- (85) What did Wally the gopherlike being do at the 1997 North Carolina State
- Fair?
-
- He helped out at the Colonic Irrigation demo booth.
-
- If you were at the fair, you may have seen him. The booth was on the back side
- of Dorton Arena, near the Highway Safety pavilion. Wally was the small furry
- mammal who was waving cheerfully at passersby and holding up a rubber tube in
- what he apparently hoped was an inviting sort of way.
-
-
-
- (86) What does Joel Furr think of the invention known as "the third mouse
- button"?
-
- Joel Furr hates it a lot. Joel Furr makes his living as a software trainer,
- teaching Microsoft certified classes in things like Windows NT 4.0 and such, but
- also training end-user applications like, oh, Microsoft Word and Lotus 1-2-3.
- Consequently, he sees all ranges of computer users, from those who could
- practically be teaching the courses in question to those who hold their mouse in
- the air and wave it around like a television remote control. If there's one
- thing he's learned as a trainer, it's that you want to avoid overloading users,
- especially the truly inexperienced novice users who suffer from extreme computer
- phobia, with unnecessary detail. In other words, there are Things End Users
- Were Not Meant To Know.
-
- When you're training an end user in basic mouse skills, you're doing well to
- convince them that it's actually vaguely useful to be able to use the right
- mouse button for certain things. Most of the time, you're only able to get them
- to realize that one button does one thing and one button does another, and if
- they've begun to be able to recall which is which, that's about all you can
- typically expect. It's not that they're dumb - just scared. It's natural to be
- scared of new things - if humans hadn't acquired that trait, our ancestors would
- have wound up lunch for the first sabertooth tiger that happened along.
-
- Therefore, given how nervous people who've never used a mouse are when they
- first realize that they've absolutely got to learn how to use one if they want
- to use their new computer without embarrassment, you don't want to drive them
- over the edge into shrieking hysteria by informing them that, some of the time,
- they're going to be expected to understand the function and uses of a THIRD
- mouse button, especially one that not all mice have and that not all programs
- even recognize.
-
- Anything that confuses the students for no good reason is a Bad Thing. Third
- mouse buttons are a Bad Thing. Joel has spoken.
-
-
-
- (87) If Joel Furr were a fruit, which one would he be?
-
- If Joel Furr were a fruit, he'd probably be one of those weird "ugly fruits"
- they sell in the produce department, the ones that no one ever seems to buy and
- which get progressively marked down each week until they're so old and so cheap
- that the fruits are practically jumping off the counters and accosting shoppers,
- begging to be bought.
-
- It's not that Joel is necessarily desperate - he has a wife, after all. It's
- more that if he were a fruit, he'd almost certainly be the kind of fruit no one
- really knows how to use or what it's for.
-
-
-
- (88) Did Joel Furr inhale?
-
- No. Joel has been in the direct presence of marijuana once in his life and, as
- it happens, didn't want to be there anyway. Someone who had asthma symptoms off
- and on throughout his childhood and even on into adulthood generally learns in a
- hurry not to breathe strange things into his lungs. Consequently, Joel has
- never smoked a cigarette of any kind, tobacco OR marijuana.
-
-
-
- (89) Does Joel Furr say "toe-MAY-toe" or "toe-MAH-toe?"
-
- "toe-MAY-toe." Except when he's around some of his more countrified Southern
- relatives, when Joel may occasionally be heard to say "toe-MAY-ter." Or even
- "ter-MAY-ter." It depends on how redneck he's feeling that day.
-
-
-
- (90) Why?
-
- Because he had too much free time in grad school, and the devil makes work for
- idle hands.
-
-
-
- (91) Why not?
-
- One supposes he was just too shy.
-
-
-
- (92) What did Joel's supervisors and co-workers at Glaxo Pharmaceuticals give
- him on his last day of work, as a going-away present?
-
- A case of Budweiser.
-
- No idea why. Joel was leaving that last Friday and one of his co-workers, never
- mind which one, said "Oh, by the way, Joel, we have a gift for you, it's in my
- car."
-
- Joel bemusedly followed her out to her car in the parking deck and stood there,
- wondering why whatever the gift was hadn't been brought inside and given to him
- inside at his desk, when everyone standing around snacking on the farewell
- brownies... only to find out why in short order, as said co-worker reached into
- her car and fished out one of those cardboard 24-pack "suitcases" of Budweiser.
-
- "Here," she said. "We'll miss you. Take care."
-
-
-
- (93) What boutique are Joel and Carole Furr going to open next door to their new
- restaurant?
-
- A trendy little place, specializing in all things radioactive: power plant
- parts, low-level and high-level radioactive waste, irradiated rutabagas, maybe a
- little bootleg U-235.
-
- They're going to call it "If It's Nuclear."
-
- Stop on by.
-
-
- ---
- This document may be found on the World Wide Web in a completely HTML-ized
- format, at the following address: http://www.furrs.org/FAQs/jffaq.htm
-
-
-
-
-
-