YouTube is a Time Suck
You Tube is a time suck. I sat down hours ago to write a post about Dingo Girl’s birthday and ended up watching videos like the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain’s rendition of "Hey Ya," and at least three different versions of Kate Bush’s "Wuthering Heights." I finally realized that tomorrow’s lesson plan is not going to write itself and Scrubs is probably the best sitcom I’ve never seen. It seems they have a song and choreographed routine for every occasion. Hell, anyone that can belt out tunes and Boys2Men footwork at a moment’s notice is a friend of mine. And, if you can do it in a hospital without slipping on blood-drenched floors or tripping over bed pans, well, you’ve got my Neilson rating. Where has this show been all my life?
Like JD and Turk, I have a song for everything. EVERYTHING. You know that game where you have to start a sentence with a word beginning with the first letter of the last word in the sentence? No? Geez! What did you guys do on your long-assed family road trips, or was that just an ingenious game invented Mom to keep me stumped and quiet after she said, “Yesterday, I went for my x-ray?” Well, anyway, my life is kinda like that game. I have a song for anything anyone says. I’m sure it often makes Mr. Dingo feel as if he’s trapped inside a 1970s station wagon with wood panel siding and no air conditioning headed to the Grand Canyon but, well, he’s stuck with me. I’ve been playing this game all my life and I’m good. I’m also not proud. I’ll dredge up Schoolhouse Rock.
Mr. Dingo: I can’t find the macro function on the camera.
Me: (singing) Conjunction junction, macro function? Hooking up words and phrases and clauses.
Mr. Dingo: Are you done?
Me: (singing) Conjunction Junction, how’s that function?
I got three favorite cars
That get most of my job done.
Conjunction Junction, what’s their function?
I got “and,” “but,” and “or.”
They’ll get you pretty far.Yes, now I’m done.
I admit that it’s probably annoying but I can’t stop.
My blog should really be called, As I Was Singing. A childhood raised on musicals, church camp, country music, Motown, and Casey’s Top 40 made me the most versatile singer not in the business. I would stage musicals for my neighbors and, at ten cents a ticket to my backyard performances, I thought they were getting a great deal. Where else could you see a nine year old make a seamless transition from Grease’s “Summer Nights” to A Chorus Line’s “Dance: Ten, Looks: Three?” Oh yeah, Momma was proud. I think she stayed home from church the next morning just to plan my Broadway debut.
With MTV, VH1, and the internet, my musical repertoire expanded. Mr. Dingo, Dingo Girl, and Not a Dingo are the grateful recipients of my musical endeavors. The problem is that once I hit puberty, my vocal prowess went the way of Peter Brady (“When it’s time to cHAAngE…”) and never came back. I can’t carry a tune in a Kate Spade hobo bag. No, no, I’m not being modest. I really can’t sing. But I can’t sing loudly. I mean, I can’t sing but I do it loudly. In the seclusion of my own home, of course. Or the car. Or on deserted running trails. Yeah, it’s that last one that causes a bit of embarrassment from time to time.
On days when I haven’t encountered another runner since leaving the trail around The Reservoir, I feel as if I’m the only one in the park. Yesterday the cherry blossoms blew their heavenly scented petals in my path and the sun was shining brightly. Life was a Disney movie — before the Elton John sellout and all that Circle of Life crap. I’m talking Snow White. Squirrels and pigeons gathered around my Saucony running shoes to guide my steps over the uneven bridle path, so it seemed perfectly natural to crank up the iPod and start singing. Toward the end of my run I like to kick it to Melanie C’s “Suddenly Monday.” It gives me that extra boost I need not to sit down on the curb and start crying to keep going. Singing along is fine. But this song makes my tired legs want to dance as well. Singing or talking to oneself while running is not unusual. I see perfectly normal looking people singing to themselves as they run all the time. Singing to oneself and breaking into a jig is not normal. It’s just bizarre. But yesterday I couldn’t help it. And of course as Melanie C and I are singing and dancing to “together we flyyyyyyyyYYYYyyyy….” this couple comes from out of nowhere and passes me, giving me wide berth and trying to pretend like they’re not frightened by my wailing and flailing but they clearly are. I’m tempted to turn all Aquaman on them and direct the squirrels and pigeons at my command to attack — but I restrain myself. I do not want to go from Disney to Law & Order in one morning.
So that’s the end of my post. Nothing witty or wise to get you started on this Monday morning. Nothing but Melanie C and “Suddenly Monday.” Enjoy. And I DARE you to listen to it without dancing.
Posted on Monday, May 05, 2008 at 02:50 AM.
Tags: City Wildlife, La Vida Loca, Leaps and Pounds
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