A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again…Again

I felt the need to quote David Foster Wallace from A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again for a completely different reason today. For one of his essays, Wallace talks about television. I’m not going to go into detail about his exact position, but I did want to highlight one part of it since it references what I have talked about before concerning The Rebel Sell.

How can even the idea of rebellion against corporate culture stay meaningful when Chrysler Inc. advertises trucks by invoking “The Dodge Rebellion”? How is one to be a bona fide iconoclast when Burger King sells onion rings with “Sometimes You Gotta Break the Rules”?

In some ways, I think this quote is kind of scary. Since corporate America is able to freely take up this idea of rebellion, will we ever feel the need to rebel? If we are done wrong by corporations or the government, will we even notice? Just something I wanted to mention…

A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again

I don’t often find writers inspirational. Or for that matter, I don’t often find something that a writer writes to be particularly funny. Except for maybe Bill Simmons, but I digress. I recently purchased A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again by David Foster Wallace, and I really loved his description of what happened after he “mistakenly” tried to carry his own bag to his room on a cruise ship instead of asking a porter. Read and enjoy…

Only later did I understand what I’d done. Only later did I learn that that little Lebanese Deck 10 porter had his head just about chewed off by the (also Lebanese) Deck 10 Head Porter, who’d had his own head chewed off by the Austrian Chief Steward, who’d received confirmed reports that a Deck 10 passenger had been seen carrying his own luggage up the Port hallway of Deck 10 and now demanded rolling Lebanese heads for this clear indication of porterly dereliction, and had reported (the Austrian Chief Steward did) the incident (as is apparently SOP) to an officer in the Guest Relations Dept., a Greek officer with Revo shades and a walkie-talkie and officerial epaulets so complex I never did figure out what his rank was; and this high-ranking Greek guy actually came around to 1009 after Saturday’s supper to apologize on behalf of practically the entire Chandris shipping line and to assure me that ragged-necked Lebanese heads were even at that moment rolling down various corridors in piacular recompense for my having had to carry my own bag. And even though this Greek officer’s English was in lots of ways better than mine, it took me no less than ten minutes to express my own horror and to claim responsibility and to detail the double-bind I’d put the porter in – brandishing at relevant moments the actual tube of ZnO that had caused the whole snafu – ten or more minutes before I could get enough of a promise from the Greek officer that various chewed-off heads would be reattached and employee records unbesmirched to feel comfortable enough to allow the officer to leave; and the whole incident was incredibly frazzling and angst-fraught and filled almost a whole Mead notebook and is here recounted in only its barest psychoskeletal outline.

Antoine Revoy

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Image courtesy of Antoine Revoy

I guess I’ve always been a little jealous of people who can draw like Antoine Revoy. I even have a student in my 5th grade class who draws like this. The ability to draw these intricate little worlds with immense detail and funky doodles…it almost seems too perfect. Everything is placed in a specific place. And, everything is drawn in a certain way. Alright, I admit it…I am downright jealous.