Life

How to do Taxes

Mission artist Elliott C Nathan recently launched a new comic Ellio McHelium's Guide to the World, which is sorta like Clarissa Explains It All, only from the perspective of a 7-year-old boy whose primarily concerned with cooking hotdogs and thieving his drunk mother's credit card.  Do give it a look.

Blantant Theft of Four Barrel's Boar Head Confirms Coffee Drinkers "Just Don't Give a Fuck"

The laughing at the end of the video suggests this was some sort of April Fools' prank, although the video was uploaded to the You Tubes on March 31st.  No matter; the fact that a bunch of fancy coffee drinkers will literally just stand around as a bunch of dapper white dudes sporting ski masks climb a ladder and lift a dead beast of the wall, waiting for a barista to get involved, pretty much screams “open season on coffee shop artwork” amirite?

[h/t Mission Local]

Frightrus Oxide

This is weird. I was taking a break from refilling my various whipped cream dispensers (I like to bake) to causally play a game of Ouija by myself and I heard a clinking in the other room. 

All the cansisters had fallen to the floor and were arranged in an odd manner. Wonder what this means

Trapped On The Muni!

The other night I was sitting at home when I got a text from my friend Nivek* saying, “Hey wanna come to my friends house to watch movies and drink $3,000 worth of booze purchased with food stamps?” Naturally I was all like fuuuuck yeah! and I definitely did not let the fact that I’d just eaten an entire weed truffle get in my way.

Since it was raining, I left my two-wheeled not-a-car in the garage and headed out to catch the 33 Stanyan to the Mission. After a few minutes of waiting, the bus got to the top of the hill, and then stood there stopped for almost 10 minutes, which I thought was kind of bizarre. I could’ve just walked up there, but you know the second you start walking is when the bus starts moving, so I just stayed put and let myself get slowly soaked. Plus, I was trying to make a fun stoner game of counting how many drops of water landed on my head and I wanted to break my high score of 17.

Finally, the bus crept down the hill, I got on, and everything was going great for about the next 45 seconds. Then we got to the next stop and I hear the bus driver say “Don’t worry now, we’ll get you off here somehow.” Wait, what?

The doors of the bus are broken. They won’t open. The bus driver keeps restarting the bus and messing with the doors and oh my god we are trapped on this bus because the doors won’t open! It was sort of like being in a real life version of R. Kelly’s Trapped In The Closet, except instead of being trapped in a closet, I was trapped in a traveling metal fart coffin full of judgmental strangers.

This is about when I started to feel the effects of the marijuana food I’d consumed earlier. That’s right–I was high off the medicinal marijuana that was prescribed to me by a doctor to treat my anorexia. So there I was, suddenly high as fuck, and I could not stop laughing at the utter ridiculousness of the situation. Everyone was staring at me because, as far as bus crowds go, this was a pretty clean, sane crowd. You know if you can’t spot the weirdo on Muni that means it’s you, and it definitely was me this time since I was sitting there cackling uncontrollably to myself while everyone else was pissed off about being stuck on a bus. It was me getting all the stares.

Now freshly paranoid about everyone looking at me like I’m seriously unhinged, I pretended to look at my phone so they would think I was laughing at something on there. It didn’t really work though because as I texted people about my crazy bus debacle, I kept thinking of more and more crazy potential outcomes of this situation. What if we run out of air before the bus mechanic arrives? What if someone goes crazy and tries to kill us all? WHAT IF THERE'S AN ORGY - that would be hilarious for the bewildered swamp of people huddled in the bus shelter!

Finally, after 25 minutes of wizardy, the driver somehow magically fixed the bus doors, and we got to wait another 10 minutes for the next 33 to arrive. It took me a total of an hour and fifteen minutes to reach my destination, most of which was spent trapped on a broken bus a mere 3 blocks from my warm, dry, snack-filled apartment.

I got off the bus, crossed the street, and got on the next 33 back to my house. That bus broke down as well. I walked the rest of the way home, made myself 27 goat cheese crostinis and ate them in bed.

This has been a story about the least crazy thing that has ever happened to me on Muni.

*Name changed, per our privacy policy

A Daring New Way to Eat Mission Burritos: Edward Burritohands

I'd like to tell you there was a reason for this.  I'd like to be able to come out and say “I quit drinking for Lent, but didn't quit drinking games,” or “Mission District seniors were hazing all the the freshmen by forcing them to strap burritos to their hands and eat like fucking animals.”  Any reason—any reason at all—to justify why I taped two of Taqueria Cancun's finest super veggie burritos to my goddamn hands.

But there is none.  All I can say is that there is a point in every San Franciscan's life when your friend says, “I'm so hungry, I could eat two burritos,” and you emerge from the junk drawer with a roll of duct tape in hand demanding that he “prove it.”

That's right, we entered into the sick realm of gastronomical gaming—a mad world perverted by the likes of milk chugging and sausage eating—in the boldest way possible: Edward Burritohands.

Edward Burritohands begins like any other expedition to the taqueria: with a couple of receipts and an appetite roaring with anticipation.  But this outing also comes with a giant roll of pink fucking duct tape.  And farts.  So many farts.

However, even getting to your table is a test of strength and willpower the rank and file will never dare attempt.  The minutes of agony standing in line, clutching your stomach out of hunger and preemptive embarrassment, are enough to send most running out the door in a state of frenzy.  But you'll stand there, awkwardly kicking your feet against the ground, looking at your friends asking, “Are we doing this?  Are we really about to eat 2,000 calories taped to our hands?”

Yes.  The answer is always yes.

By the time fate was delivered to our particular table, we began to realize we had no idea what the fuck we were doing. “Doesn't Edward Fortyhands have some rule about vomiting?”  “Wait, are we going to vomit?” “HOW CAN WE DRINK BEER WHILE DOING THIS?” And, perhaps most importantly, “is it even going to be possible for us to food blog this?”

So before singing the national anthem and diving into some hand-to-burrito combat, we came up with a few important rules:

  1. No spilling.
  2. The second burrito may remain wrapped while the first one is consumed, but you must unwrap the second burrito on your own.
  3. No outside assistance.
  4. No crying.

And away we were.

Once the first burrito is taped up, there's no turning back.  It's the fast food equivalent of hurling yourself out of an airplane: with all control lost, you're forced to disassociate yourself from the grim reality that you're about to publicly make an ass out of yourself and will, in all likelihood, not live to see the premiere of Battleship.

But the second burrito?  That's when shit gets heavy.

My Responsibility.  My burden.  My bummer.

Allow me to paint you a picture.  You've just stumbled onto the set of the Food Network's adaptation of Saw, but instead of hanging out with the babes over at the catering table, you're in Jigsaw's bathroom.  You're in Jigsaw's bathroom with burritos taped to your hands.  And guess what?  Anthony Bourdain is holding your family captive and is going to murder them unless you eat through your newfound pound-and-a-half carne asada appendages and escape.  Tic-toc, motherfucker; it's almost six o'clock.

That's how having two steamy burritos taped to your hands feels.  A game with no winners.  Should you best the challenge, you're looking at being bedridden for days and a lifetime of grisly flashbacks every time you step foot in a taqueria.  Lose, and forever be that asshole who strapped two giant cylinders of empty calories to his hands and couldn't even finish the damn things.

But at some point, you need to stop dwelling on how asinine of a game Edward Burritohands actually is and chow the fuck down.

And chow the fuck down you most certainly will.  The first burrito goes down amicably, like every other burrito you just couldn't put down.  The people sitting at the tables next to you aren't staring anymore; the mariachi has stopped laughing in your general direction.  You've made peace with the chaos of an impromptu eating contest.

Eventually you reach the knuckles and feign an attempt at eating the remaining rice and beans pooled in your hands.  Yet, that second hand is growing heavy.  Real heavy.  So you disregard the nubs of round one, open your exhausted mouth, and beginning tearing away the foil from your second burrito.

Unwrapping your second burrito is quite easily the highlight of the game, if only because you get to do something with your mouth other than eat or howl out in misery.  But really, this is the ultimate stage for showmanship.  Undress your burrito with confidence and you'll be sure to deal a psychological blow to your opponents.  And the eyes of the cooks who prepared your inevitable downfall?  They're fixed upon you, because for the last 15 minutes, they too have been wondering how the hell a bunch of softhands without opposable thumbs could possibly shuck a burrito.

It's about this point in the competition when everyone loses their goddamn minds.  Going an entire burrito without taking a drink, scratching your ass, or checking in on Foursquare is no easy feat, never mind going two burritos.  It's because of this uncontrollable urge to return to the normalcy of routine and ass scratching, someone in your party will inevitable try to answer a phone call or tweet with their tongue.  You must let them, because watching someone clean hunks of meat off their iPhone with their fucking face is an experience you'll only have the opportunity to see once.  Unless you make a habit out of doing lots of acid.  But that's another story.

The remainder of the competition is sadly anticlimactic.  When we were left with two burrito stubs, we were forced to cope with the fact we never figured how to end the goddamn game.  We tried to squeeze the remaining bites out of our hands like some sort of diarrhetic GU Energy shot, but that left us with a river of sour cream flowing down our arms and a table covered in pinto beans.  So faced with bursting stomachs and the harsh likelihood we were going to miss the first minutes of the Mad Men season premiere, two competitors said “fuck it” and began the arduous and painful process of peeling the duct tape from their limbs.

But I couldn't accept that.  I couldn't accept forever knowing I tried Edward Burritohands but never made it to the finish line.  So as my fellow competitors tossed their foul remains in the garbage, I pressed forward, walking down a dark Mission Street, determined to finish what I started.

Please note: I cannot recommend you do this.  Despite my general disdain for most of humanity, I cannot, in good conscience, encourage anyone to embark on this half-witted adventure into the depths of American gluttony.  But should you feel so compelled, I must beg of you to do this in the privacy of your own home, because if throngs of fellow gringo misanthropes begin flocking to Mission taquerias to compete, I fear I'll be left for dead in the dumpster behind Farolito.

[Many thanks to Alan for taking photos/pouring pico de gallo on our burritos for us, and Sam and Sierra for chowing down with me.]

New South Van Ness Muni Stops a Throwback to Simpler Times

As I danced down SVN last night in a frenzied state of sobriety, I couldn't help but wonder what the hell were up with all the new benches lining the street.

At first I figured it was some dumb neighbor trying to make our streets more “friendly” and “livable” or some shit, but it just didn't add up.  Why the orchestrated effort to line some 8+ blocks of South Van Ness with benches (no cheap feat, might I add) without installing plaques reveling in one's own Samaritanism?  And what kind of do-gooder would put a bar in the middle of the benches preventing two lovers from snuggling together or, more likely, cockblocking a homeless dude from laying down and rubbing one out into a rumpled copy of the Bay Guardian?

Ah yes, only the government is that heartless.

By the looks of it, the city went down South Van Ness and installed benches at all the stops for the rerouted Mission Street Muni lines earlier this week.

Sure, there might be a pile of puke, some wayward refuse, and a medley of decaying organic matter tossed about.  And they're certainly not going to keep you dry in the rain. But really, these new old school Muni 'shelters' are so much better than those freakish Clear Channel monstrosities that practically take up the entire sidewalk:

Also, can we keep the benches once the Muni lines return to Mission Street?  They, like, make our streets more livable.

USPS: The Career of Your Dreams

Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the tireless completion of their appointed rounds.

[Also, open caption contest in the comments.  Best one gets a free Jameson/Tecate donated under their commenter name on the Pop's gift drink board]

[Photo by arterial spray]

Balancing Act

EPA and Around the Bay (which, if you are not already following, is one of the Bay's finer low-key photography blogs) was roaming around the Mission the other day and came across this dude balancing a guitar in an abandoned Mission Street lot.  Which begs the question: is this some new busker routine I'm not yet aware of, or just a random training for the skinny jean freak show?

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