Technology and Me, a Horror Saga

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Man, I love technology, especially the sleek way it looks and the cool things you can do with it. I love everything from smartphones to guitar tuners that work by neck vibrations, from my GPS that marks trout streams in the middle of nowhere, to the DVR that tapes The Daily Show and Downton Abbey, from a flatscreen HDTV that shows the seam spin on an Adam Wainwright curveball, to the Ipad I’m using in The Froth House to write this.

However, when things go bad, it’s not like changing the flapper on our toilet upstairs that trickled water all night. It’s not like gurgle, gurgle, detach the corroded rubber gasket inside the toilet tank, run to the hardware store, find one that looks the same except for the corrosion, run home, pop it on the fill valve, flush the toilet, yep, it works. Two points.

Technology is not like that.

Here’s my latest saga. When we moved into our house in Madison over three years ago, our first service hookup was a bundle for internet, cable TV, and phone. I thought we had everything, a re-wired house, wi-fi, high speed internet for streaming videos, and even the company’s virus protection. Then the internet went out. The cable guy, whom I’m sure I had seen before on Star Trek, came to our house, scuttled around our basement, and said, “Your splitters are in the wrong order. Internet is more demanding than your TV. I fixed it.”  The next week, our cable TV went out.  The cable guy who came this time, a guy I’m sure I saw on the ads for Duck Dynasty, scuttled around our basement and said, “Your splitters are in the wrong order. Cable TV is more demanding that your phone. I fixed it.”  The next week, our phone went out. This time I complained loudly to four people and two computers that answered the help number, and the cable guy who came out was Darth Vader himself, a guy all in black, including his eyebrows and deep eyes. He had the look of a man who had just emerged from two weeks of hacking China’s Central Committee computers from somewhere underground.

“The last guys who crawled around our basement-” I said, but he interrupted – “I don’t need to crawl around your basement. Your return signal is so weak that it is telling our system that everything is turned off.”

“But our signal splitters-” I said, and he merely raised a hand at me. “I hate splitters. I’m installing three separate power supplies to your lines, so your phone, TV, and internet lines will have the same power we use for a business of 100 offices. I’m plugging in the transformers where the line comes into the house. Don’t unplug them. Don’t put your ear next to them, even though they emit a pleasant hum. Do you wear a pacemaker?”

“Not yet,” I said.   “Good,” he said and then disappeared into a foul-smelling mist.

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That was three years ago, and everything worked until….

You can stop reading here if you think it’s normal for a cable bill to double and double again to the price of a car payment every month, which wouldn’t be so bad if I had high-powered cable and the car I was paying for, but in this case, there was no car, only the car payment every month.

So I tried to log on to the “contact us” screen using my high-powered, Chernobyl cable system, but it wouldn’t let me access my account because either my username, my password, or my security question based on my favorite sports team was wrong – and it wouldn’t tell me which. I tried every possible combination, with caps, without caps, using the names of teams I liked and some I only sort of liked. I even looked at my hidden file of three pages of passwords and usernames, beginning with AARP and ending with University of Wisconsin. No luck.

I picked up the phone on my separately powered transformer and called the company, using the number on my car payment bill without the actual car, just the bill. The first machine that answered was a pleasant-sounding voice that told me to simply state my concern, such as “I want to install new services,” or “I need to upgrade my TV package.”

“Shit,” I said, and the line immediately went dead. Apparently, the computer was not amused and was also programmed to shut down after expletives.

I waited a few minutes to calm down and called again.  A different computer voice answered, but it said the same thing. I said, “My bill is more than the cost of the pacemaker I can’t wear because of the power transformers in my basement.”

Either the computer did not understand metaphoric comparisons or it was not programmed for bill questions.  I heard three clicks and the whir of something like The Wheel of Fortune. A real woman’s voice came next, who said, “Hi, my name is Shelly.  How can I help you, Mr. Haberl.”

“You know my name?”

“It’s attached to your phone number and account. Would you verify your address and favorite sports team, please?”

“Don’t you already have that information?”

“Yes, but I need to make sure YOU do. What if you’re a hacker for the Central Committee in China or some African sweepstakes winner?  We wouldn’t want that, would we?”

“But I’m calling you from my home phone which popped up on your screen. Why would a Chinese hacker or an African sweepstakes winner break into my house just to use my phone and call the cable company?”

She apparently looked down her list of proper responses, couldn’t find anything, and then went with the most general script.

“Um, um, Mr. uh, Haberl, I’m excited about being able to help you today.”

After I convinced her I was not a hacker, she listened to me explain that I could not log on to my account, no matter what sports teams I named, and my monthly bill was approaching the level of a drone-fired hellfire missile, which I was thinking of using on their cable system as soon as I could find one.

Shelly gave a nervous laugh, which I took as a good sign.

“Okay,” she said, “You’d like to lower your bill and you can’t log on, is that correct?”

“Yes.”

“Okay, well, I only arrange for new services and upgrades, and you don’t want either of those, so I’m going to transfer you to a specialist who does service removals. Please hold.”

They have a specialist for service removals?

A moment later, a voice said, “Good morning, Mr. Haberl, my name is Becky, and I’m excited to help you today.”  It was the voice of a sixteen-year-old cheerleader who just got a prom date, no it was worse than that – it was the voice of a cheerleader whose team was already losing 64 to nothing and she believed everything depended on her cheeriness. I sighed.

“Okay, Becky, my total bill is way too high and I need to know what is the lowest cable package available.  I’m also thinking about discontinuing our phone service since we mostly use our smartphones, and I want the slowest internet money can buy.”

“I’m so excited to help you. Here’s what I can do – let’s see – I can reduce your phone cost by over half because of our new You-Deserve-It-All package, and we’ll pay the tax, so your phone service will be $19.95, and you were already on the slowest, cheapest internet service, but we’ve installed new routers in our Faster-Than-the-Speed-of-Light package, so I can double your speed for the same price you were paying and your modem is still the fastest one we have in homes, so let me push that button, and – there – done – and I see that the cable package you have is based mostly on sports. I can give you a lower package but your wife might not be happy.”

“Why not?”

“She won’t be able to watch Oprah or one of her soap operas.”

“She doesn’t watch Oprah any more, and her soap opera went off the air two years ago.”

“Okay, so let me push this button, and – there – you now have our “Husband-Gets-Sports-and-Wife-Gets-Romantic-Comedies package, and, let’s see, I’ve reduced your bill by over $60.00 per month. Does that help?”

“Yes, but-”

“And you need to re-do your login. That’s a different specialist, so hold please.”

I was still in shock. All she did was push two buttons, which could have been done any time in the last three years, and my monthly bill would have gone from a car payment to a new bicycle every month.

“Good morning, Mr. Haberl, my name is (because of his talking speed and accent, which could have been Indian, Swahili, or Polish, I think his name was either Antwan or Yeshblinka, and I couldn’t tell which), and I am so excited to help you today.”

“Um,” I said.

“I see that you tried to log on to your account eleven times this morning, and you were locked out four times because of too many failed attempts.  What was the problem?”

“Um, either my username, my password, or my favorite sports team security question was wrong, and I couldn’t tell which.”

“You know there is a help screen to download answers to the most frequently asked questions.  There’s a blue button in the top right corner.”

“But don’t I have to be logged on to my account to get to the help screen?”

“Of course, how silly, I’m so excited to help you today. Let’s see, do you still like the Cardinals?”

“Yes.”

“And is your username ‘Flyfish?'”

“Yes.  So what was my password?”

“That is blocked out on my screen.  You wouldn’t want me or hackers from China to-”

“But-”

“I am happy to announce to you today that all is not lost. I cannot quote your password to you today, but I can help you reset your password to a new one, and you can get in that way.”

“Isn’t that what hackers do?”

“Yes, some do that, but I assure you, I am not a hacker and I am not in China or Africa.”

“But wouldn’t I be hacking into my own account?”

“Not exactly.  What you will be doing is authorized hacking. You authorize yourself with your new password to go into your account.  It’s like a side door. It works every time. So, what would you like your new password to be?”

I gave him a new password and on the fourth try we agreed on one was long enough, had at least one capital letter, a number, and a symbol.

He told me to write it down very carefully and read it back to him.  After that, he said, “And do you want any upgrade or new services today?”

“No,” I said, “I’m trying to reduce my bill and -”

“Oh, I am so sorry. I am not a reduction in services specialist. I must transfer you.”

“No, please,” I said, but I was too late.

A fourteen-year-old cheerleader whose team had just lost 75 to nothing came on and said, “Hello, Mr. Haberl, I am so excited to help you today. You say you want to reduce your bill, is that correct?”

“Yes,” I said.

“Well, I see that you have our old Husband-Gets-Sports-and-Wife-Gets-Romantic-Comedies package. I can give you a new lineup in which you get all the sports you have been watching but I will cut out competitive bungee jumping, the World Series of Gardening, and the Moving Sponge Obstacle Course.”

“But I kind of like obstacle courses. I mean, this phone call alone-”

“But you haven’t watched it for three years.”

“Yes, you’re right.  What about my wife?”

“Our new package will reduce your bill by eleven dollars and twenty-three cents, and your wife will get the Oprah network and some new soap operas. Is that agreeable?”

“Um,”

“Okay, I just push this button here – and – you’re all set.”

“What’s this new package called?”

“Um,” he paused and I heard some papers shuffling. “Um, it’s so new, it’s, uh, it’s, called the ‘You-Deserve-It-All’ package. I am so excited to help you today. Please hold for a short survey and entry ticket into our sweepstakes.”

“No, please-” I said, but I was too late.  Sometimes I really don’t like talking to people.  Just give me a machine and three choices. That’s what I got.

It was another overly cheerful voice that asked me to hold for a brief survey to improve their service, but this one had a slightly metallic ring to it, like the woman who recorded it was in a spaceship, which would explain where my cable company got its technical support guys who made house calls. It went through the usual loaded questions, such as “Was the technical support person cheerful? Say ‘one’ for very cheerful, ‘two’ for moderately cheerful, or ‘three’ for not very cheerful.”

“Which support person?” I answered, and the alien in her UFO said, “That is not a valid answer. Please say ‘one’ for…” and so on.  After fifteen minutes of trying to get through six easy questions, I’d had enough, said good-bye, and ended the call. I wouldn’t have won the sweepstakes anyway. The survey was probably taken by 10,000 people that day alone. Man, I hate technology. I want to put it all in a box, take it out to a field, and beat all the components with a baseball bat. I have a good memory of some guys doing that.

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I know robots will eventually solve our problems. We won’t fight wars anymore; we’ll just send our robots against the enemy’s robots in some forsaken place like Afghanistan, and then watch the whole thing from drones. The winner will get all of the loser’s assets, which will merely be numbers in some IMF account. It’s not like we’re going to advance enough to end war; we’ll just change how we fight it.

When we realize that football has become too dangerous because of players who are too big, too fast, and too well-trained to follow piddling rules like “It’s a fifteen-yard penalty to hit a defenseless receiver in the chest or back with your helmet,” we will have robot football, and actual heads will fly off, or at least pop up like those toy red and blue boxers used to do after a direct shot to the chin.  I think those football players will look like the droid on the Fox Sports leads, you know, the one with the logo on a shield that appears out of the robot’s shoulder. That will be football, our latest substitute for war. Timeouts will exist only to retrieve shrapnel, run a Zamboni over the gridiron to scoop up arms, replace batteries, and allow viewers to get more popcorn, pizza, or whatever new combination of salt, sugar, and fat the latest corporations hawk to us.

Please excuse me while I look for my baseball bat.

Advice to Women on Sports and Men

I suppose this fits under the heading “Men are from Mars.” While most husbands/boyfriends and their eyes are laser-pointed at a flatscreen during any football/basketball/baseball game, the look on a typical wife/girlfriend is that of one who has just opened the hood of her new car. It is a look of XUG, which is one click beyond another acronym. Here’s what a caring woman needs to know.

First, a short cut. One of my favorite true stories is of a good friend/lawyer/banker, a brilliant woman who was forced to go to Soldier Field by her boss to entertain clients, and she knew-nothing-and-could-not-care-less about the violent game of football. Her partner, a very wise man, told her not to worry because she only needed to say four things, and she could say them over and over again. After anyone kicks the ball, always say, “Special teams always make the biggest difference.” After either team scores, always say, “Defense wins games. No defense – no win.” Any time there is a time out, even at the end of the half, always say, “Well, let’s see if they make adjustments.” Any time there is a yellow flag on the field, just mutter, “Are you kidding me?” I know you women are thinking, “Are you kidding me?” but honestly, I’m not. These four things work every time.

I don’t know if she won over her clients, but she has been working at the same bank for twenty years, so I assume the men were duly impressed.

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Football isn’t really a game, not any more than a soap opera is a TV show. It is a substitute for war, a campaign with territory won, players described as offensive weapons, passes that are bombs, defensive plays that are blitzes, quarterbacks who have rifle arms, defensive players who have nicknames like Samurai Mike, and a battle that is won or lost in the trenches. Women who care about men should first appreciate that these men are not actually killing each other. The other thing to remember is that a football game is the one occasion in which an otherwise uncommunicative man can show an emotion. A smart woman would capitalize on that. If you’ve been invited to a Saturday morning bike ride in Wisconsin, show up in a green Aaron Rodgers jersey and see what happens. If you’re in Chicago, you can choose from Urlacher, Tillman, or Marshall. You could wear a Cutler jersey, but this year, that is somewhat risky. If the local team loses, look sad, or better yet, look angry. It’s amazing how a furled brow and grimace can make a guy think you are Athena, or better yet, Venus.

If you’ve already attracted a guy with your football jersey but you’re not sure how to start a conversation, simply ask, “Hey, what time is the game?” Be sure you say, “THE game.” Even if it’s the middle of the season, it’s still “the game” to a guy.

After the football season is over, men focus on basketball. The easiest thing to remember about basketball is that the refs are always wrong. Even if they call a foul that benefits the home team, a typical guy thinks the foul should have been a technical foul, which is a really bad thing, kind of like telling a woman her jeans make her look, well, um, like a heifer. A technical foul, you see, is a really bad thing.

I’m not sure why, but women don’t usually look good in basketball jerseys, so don’t buy one. Just wear the local team’s colors. Basketball is only slightly different from football. It’s not an all-out war; basketball is more like a series of skirmishes. There are fast breaks, screens, setting a “pick,” running the floor (after all, where else could the players run?), and steals. Besides complaining about the refs after every call, there are a few things a woman can say during a basketball game. Whenever you see two players moving at the same time, just yell, “Pick and roll! Pick and roll!” It doesn’t matter whether your team has control of the ball or not. It doesn’t matter if a woman even knows what a pick-and-roll is. It still works if you yell it out.

Another thing a woman needs to know about basketball is that it is more like gambling than war. Statistics like shooting percentages, the current number of fouls, how many time outs are left, and who is “hot” – those things mean a lot in basketball. The best thing a team can do, as in gambling, is go on “a run.” That means one team has outscored the other team by, say 10 points to 2. A final thing a woman can do any time the game is going, no matter whether the home team has the ball or not, is yell, “Back door! Back door!” I’m not sure why, but in basketball, it’s more effective if you yell out something twice in a row.

I’m going to add a text note here. Some men will argue that after football season comes hockey season, especially in places like Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Canada. The problem is that – unless you are a woman who likes cold climes, you may not want to impress a man with your knowledge of hockey. Besides, it’s a very fast, very violent game, in which there are a lot of official rules and a lot of unofficial rules, and the rules are usually only applied after a referee notices blood on the ice. When a hockey referee gets bored or is tired and wants to slow the game down, he calls “icing,” which is sort of like a delay of game, and it’s supposed to follow a rule, but usually a referee calls it whenever he feels like it.

Another problem is that hockey is four games in one, which doesn’t make a lot of sense, unless you understand J.K. Rowling’s Quidditch. Much of hockey is like speed skating to see who can get to a puck first. Then it becomes soccer with passing, blocking and trying to score a goal. If the puck gets close to the net, it becomes a wrestling match, and after that, it degenerates into one-handed boxing where you hold the opponent’s jersey with your left hand and flail away at him with your right. If you actually hit him and you’re both on skates, he’d slide away from you, and a boxing match with only one punch isn’t very sporting, so you have to hold on to his jersey. I don’t mean to insult hockey fans, but I wonder about a game where fighting puts a player in time out for 45 seconds, and most players have lost their front teeth years ago. I think hockey was invented by bored dentists in very cold places.

After basketball and hockey, it’s time for baseball which lasts through the spring and summer. Women look cute in baseball jerseys, especially pinstripes or flannels that button down the front. Even cuter is a woman who wears a baseball cap and puts her ponytail through the little gap above the sizing tab in the back. Baseball is a slower game than football or basketball, so a woman might actually have a conversation with her date at a baseball game. Baseball has a lot of strategy, though, so some guys don’t talk all that much. In the old days, a baseball game was a bad date because the slowness of the game meant a lot of beer drinking, but today, beer in a baseball stadium is so outrageously expensive that drinking it has become an economic issue that favors conversation and cracking open peanuts.

Here’s what a woman can say during a baseball game. First of all, whenever a player is out, just say, “Good pitching always beats good batting.” It doesn’t matter who has just batted. Fans used to imitate Little League players by repeating a senseless litany that went like this: “Hum, baby, hum, baby, humma humma, swing batter!” That is outdated now, so a woman is safest shouting out after any pitch, “You call that a slider?” Pitchers have lots of other pitches – fastballs, curves, and change ups, but in today’s modern stadiums and the current price of tickets, to most fans all pitches look like sliders, which could be a fast curve or a curving fastball. Do not confuse a baseball slider with a White Castle hamburger. If you do, it will be your last date with that guy. If you want to get rid of him, misusing the “slider” word will do it.

Another thing a woman can do during a baseball game is read the scoreboard. It usually has so much information on it, even scores from other games, that a woman can narrate any piece of it during a slow game, and a guy will appreciate her knowledgable contributions. Also, if you really like the guy you are with at a baseball game, you can attract him by saying, “You know, Tom (or Joe or Mike or whatever), I really appreciate a guy who’s not juiced.” Most guys don’t take steroids, so he’ll appreciate that.

In some cities is easier to be a fan than in others. If you live in Chicago and go to a Cubs game, after the game is over, you can always say, “Just wait till next year.” It’s also good to have a list of names to say out loud. You don’t have to use a verb or put the name in a sentence. Just say the name and he’ll fill in the rest of the information. You can say the names any time during the game, and it will be appropriate. The Babe. Ted Williams. Joe Dimaggio. Stan the Man. Ernie Banks.

If you’re sitting next to two guys and you want to see them fight to ease your boredom, just say, “Pete Rose.” They’ll argue for the rest of the game.

In baseball, there is also a trump card you can play any time. You can say anything you want, even something silly like, “Was that strike four?” and if the guy looks at you with that XUG look on his face, one click beyond the usual acronym, just say, “Yogi-ism.” Yogi Berra said the most inane things and fans loved him for it, so you can too, and then repeat them as often as you like. It’s deja vu all over again.

Holidays

Yes, ’tis the season, and what so many complain about is all the periphery: Black Friday, football Thanksgiving, decorations up right after Halloween, Cyber-Monday, Santa Claus, and so on. I recently saw a headline that read: The War on Christmas Has Started Early this Year. Okay. I have a different “take” on all of the hype.

People, especially pundits, who are scandalized by all of the holiday sub-plots (since I’m a writer, I thought that term ought to have acceptable use) misunderstand or misinterpret the signs they see. I’m not denying the signs, the “holiday trees” (and what is a “holiday” but an elision for “holy day?”) the gift buying, the car commercials (with Santa driving a red Mercedes behind eight silver ones), or even the jewelry commercials which blend Christmas lights, romantic love, and some perfect diamond. As this paragraph shows; it’s all parentheses.

The point is that for anyone who is Christian, Jewish, Zulu, or any other culture that celebrates this season, all of the things I would put in parentheses, including the Mercedes, the perfect diamond, and even the newest iPad, are merely additional layers that make the holiday more fun, but do not replace it. Someone who is a pagan and doesn’t believe in the original meaning of Christmas or Hanukkah or Kwanzaa, at least participates in some way, and for the rest of us, it’s more icing on the original cake.

Keep in mind, the original holidays were made up by us anyway. Anyone who has studied some theology has probably learned that Christmas is celebrated on the wrong day because early Christians adopted a pagan holiday, and they probably also had the year wrong. At least that’s what the Pope says in his Christmas book just out. That doesn’t bother me. We all decide on what anything means, and it doesn’t have to be a collective decision. I decide (and so do you).

The Christmas of Charles Dickens is not the same as the Christmas of Charlie Brown, or the Christmas of White Christmas (such a wonderful song writen by Jewish Irving Berlin while living in California and sung by Bing Crosby, a Catholic), or the Christmas of It’s a Wonderful Life, and yet, I believe each version enriches our celebration. The Christmas of Luke isn’t even the same as the Christmas of Matthew in the New Testament.

Of course there are people who go crazy; some who light up their house with computer-driven sequenced eruptions; some who knock others down at Toys R Us sales while trying to get the latest “hot” toy to celebrate the holiday of peace and love; some who celebrate by going to Disneyworld. These are outliers, though, not the majority, and that’s why they are newsworthy. Even then, they cannot escape the continuous re-runs of It’s a Wonderful Life, the manger scenes on lawns and in front of churches, the stars, angels and other subliminals on top of Christmas trees, or the menorahs. These are good things. No action, no celebration, no tradition, will ever be celebrated by one-hundred percent of the people in perfect “kosher” style. That’s okay. Their laxity does not affect my celebration and its meaning to me unless I let it.

I greatly admire and believe in the Jewish principle of zikharon, memory or remembrance, a practice once explained to me by a Bible scholar lecturing on Passover. The belief is that time is merely a construction by us, that eternity is “all at once” to God, and therefore, for a family celebrating Pesach, reading the prayers and being part of the ritual, they participate in the actual event as if they were there. That’s my Christmas, and as a Christian, I celebrate the birth of Christ the Lord. You may celebrate however you wish and it won’t affect me.

I don’t need the Mercedes to celebrate or Disneyworld or a new giant flat-screen TV. Smaller things, some egg nog with German chocolate cake or chocolate anything, a hug and kiss from a family member, a card or two, some beautiful carols, a tree, a Cabela’s gift certificate, It’s a Wonderful Life, A Christmas Carol, and a few battery-powered candles in the windows – those are just extra layers in a wonderful celebration, icing and candles on the cake.

Happy holy-days, everyone, however you celebrate, and may there soon be peace on Earth.