Friday, June 27, 2008

Fun in 14B

Fun in 14B

If you’ve traveled for business as much as I have, (which is way too much) you’ve probably noticed a very particular thing about airline magazines. No, I’m not talking about the Mensa test that everyone’s afraid to take because they’ll flunk it and realize they’re not as smart as they thought they were, it’s the ads.

Ads in airline magazines share two properties – they’re the same no matter what airline you’re on, and they’re fucking weird. Brazilian Steakhouses. I love Brazilian style steakhouses, you know, those places where waiters bring huge hunks of charred meat skewered on swords to your table and serve it to you by carving a slice right onto your plate. (Hot tip – wave off the first few skewers because those are the cheap cuts). But for some reason, every airline magazine has five or six ads for Brazilian Steakhouses in different cities in them. Why the emphasis on Brazilian Steakhouses? Why not Sushi, or BBQ? Did the Brazilian Steakhouse consortium get some kind of deal on bulk advertising, or is there something about being cramped on an airplane for three to six hours that makes you crave charred meat?

Then there’s the executive dating services. Women join for free, of course. These agencies are always run by some hot-looking babe in her early 40’s who promises her clients she’ll find them love and happiness, or at least a willing trophy wife, whichever they prefer. I’m not going to use the phrase “high end prostitution” but I won’t deny it’s crossed my mind from time to time.

Things get really strange with the Human Growth Hormone ads. They’re not as omnipresent as the Brazilian steakhouses, but they crop up once in a while and they’re fucking bug-ass crazy. They tell you that by using HGH you can reclaim your youth and basically reverse the aging process. Does anyone from the FDA ever travel on airplanes? Or all they all smart enough to bring a book?

One of these features this doctor who’s in his sixties. He’s an advocate of HGH and uses himself as an example of how great it works. There’s a picture of him standing there, shirtless. It’s creepy – Twilight Zone creepy. This dude is in his late 60s, but has the physique of Arnold Schwarzenegger, even though his head and face are those of your dead old grandpa. A grandpa who could kick your ass before breakfast then come back for seconds after lunch. The ad claims the photo was not “digitally retouched” which make me speculate that perhaps they used old-fashion air brushing. (After all, retouching photos was high art long before the digital age, as anyone who’s ever read the Weekly World News in it’s early 1980s hey-day can attest.)

For me, the best ad is the ROM machine. It’s this exercise machine that claims you can get a complete physical workout in only 4 minutes a day by using the Range Of Motion machine. (Which they refer to as “the excellent Range of Motion Machine” which is such strange syntax is makes me think this might be part of an alien plot against us.) The machine looks like some kind of Rube Goldberg contraption - with curved tubes, pipes, handles, and belts going every which way. They make these incredible claims that using the machine for only 4 minutes a day, will change your life, basically turn you into a pinnacle of physical perfection. Okay, I’m game, would love to try the damn thing except the “excellent Range of Motion Machine” comes with a price tag of over $14,000. Thus, it is unlikely I’m going to try one soon. Still, I’m fascinated by it. What in hell do you do on it? From the looks of it, you lay on your back on it and use your extremities to move all these rods and levers, but who knows. According to the ads, Anthony Robbins has three of them, one he keeps at home, one he keep sin his vacation home, and one he travels with., And hey, Anthony Robbins wouldn’t lie. Can you really get a full workout in 4 minutes a day? Will it really give you more energy, solve back and join problems, and make your dick bigger (okay, they don’t really claim it will make your dick bigger, but with all else they’re claiming they might as well.)

They have a website, but I’m afraid to go to it. If I become any more fascinated by the machine I’m going to have to explain to my wife what that $15,000 charge on our Mastercard is for. Of course, maybe someone from ROM will see this blog and send me one for free, you know, to try out.

So once I’ve popped some HGH, stuffed myself silly at the nearest Brazilian Steakhouse, then worked off the meal on my ROM machine, maybe I’ll finally have the balls to take that goddamn Mensa test.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

FIVE SECONDS IN HELL

1.25 million people have been shot with a Taser. I’m one of them. This is how it happens.

I’m shooting for National Geographic Channel’s show Who Knew with Marshall Brain. The show profiles how things are made, and for this particular episode, we’re in Arizona shooting at a tennis ball factory and the Taser factory.

When the team arrives at Taser, we are a mess. The first day of our two-day shoot was at Penn Tennis Balls. We spent 17 hours on the factory floor shooting hand-held with the Sony F-900/3, one of the heaviest video cameras currently available.

So we’re in pain. I’ve got a splitting headache from not drinking enough water the day before. Add in that one of the key features of the Taser factory is an ultrasonic welder, a machine that joins plastic parts by vibrating them so fast they fuse together. As it performs this particular trick, it emits a high-pitched squeal that makes your teeth vibrate. My headache gets worse until I’m pretty sure my skull is going to crack in two.

We suffer through the day to the part we’ve all been waiting for – the product demo. Our intrepid host, Marshall Brain, has agreed to be tased on camera. And if Marshall’s getting tased, hell man, I’m getting tased too.

The Taser guys tells us they’ll just tape the Taser probes to us, but Marshall is insistent. He wants to get shot with the damn thing. And if he’s getting shot, I’m getting shot. Our producer jump on board as well, and so does the PA. We all want to “take the hit” as they say in Taser parlance.

We set up downstairs in a conference room. My headache is really getting bad now. I’ve taken Advil, to no avail. I am seriously hurting.

Marshall gets tased first. Two guys stand on either side, ready to grab him when he drops. A trainer stands behind with the Taser. (They shoot you in the back for safety reasons.) We roll cameras.

The trainer yells. “Taser, Taser, Taser,” and shoots Marshall. Marshall goes stiff as a board as the taser hits, his eyes roll up and he gives a little “ohhhhwwwwwww” as he is gently lowered to the floor by the men by his side. He is absolutely incapacitated, unable to do anything for those five seconds.

When the tasing ends, he looks up at the camera and gives a very concise report on the experience.

Then it’s my turn. For the fun of it, we’re going to be filming me getting tased as well.

I take my place on the mat. Terrified I might embarrass myself, I’ve invoked the “long car trip” rule and made sure to go to the bathroom before getting tased.

I can’t see the trainer with the taser, but I feel him behind me. I feel the goddamn thing pointing at me. My headache worsens, my brain boiling inside my skull.

Let me explain, up to this point, I thought the idea of getting tased was pretty cool. Even after watching Marshall suffer through it, I still thought was cool. When people later ask me why I did it, I answer honestly: it seemed like a good idea at the time.

Now, with two people holding me, a guy pointing a Taser at my back, three freaking cameras rolling, and the whole room watching, I realize it was maybe not such an good idea after all.

But when the trainer asks “Are you ready?” What am I going to say? “Forget it, I don’t want to do it?” Like I’ll ever live that down. So I suck it up. “Ready,” I yell, and what the hell, my voice barely quavers.

Then ring the bells of doom. “Taser. Taser, Taser!” The trainer yells.

I hear the thing fire, a flat pop. I can hear the darts coming at me, actually hear them zinging through the air, hear the tiny little wires paying out behind them, angry wasps seeking tender flesh.

A momentary digression on how the Taser works. The Taser cartridge contains two barbed darts - think straightened fishing hooks - attached by very thin wires to a handgrip where the battery is. The probes sink into your flesh, and the wires carry an electrical charge into your body. The waveform of the electrical charge is designed to make every muscle in your body seize up. I have to tell you, before taking the hit, the thing I was most worried about was how they get those barbed probes out of your back. That, I figure, is going to hurt.

That bit of nastiness is forgotten as the probes hit. The entry of these things feels like a double bee sting, only these are bee stings delivered on the end of a well-swung baseball bat. One hits me in the lower back, the other goes right through my belt and stabs me just above the right butt-cheek. The probes are maybe 15 inches apart.

I have only a moment to comprehend that violation when the charge hits and my descent into hell begins.

The first thing you feel is actually nothing. You have no idea what in hell is going on and have no way to process it. That lasts for maybe a tenth of a second. Then you notice your entire body has gone stiff. I’m suddenly standing on tiptoes, every muscle straining. I can feel the current going from probe to probe with the muscles of my back between them.

I now fully comprehend how magnificently awful an idea this was. Imagine ten million electric hyenas set loose in your body. Each of them has a muscle fiber in its slavering jaws and all of them are tugging and ripping in different directions at once.

Now add in some intense heat. The spots where the probes hit turn painfully hot.

I can hear the Taser clicking away. It makes this weird noise, like a grandfather clock ticking away a supersonic speeds. That’s got something to do with the way the charge switches between the two probes.

It hurts like hell, and I am maybe a second into the experience when all this comes clear to me. Four long seconds stretch out before me. A single thought runs through my mind: “I volunteered for this why?”

Unlike Marshall, who went down with nothing more than a long moan, I manage to get a few words out. They are, of course, all curse words. “Fuck!” I say through gritted teeth. “Motherfuck! Goddamn it this really hurts!” I’m saying this as the guys lower me to the mat. I have no idea I’m being lowered to the mat. All I know is that one second I’m standing, the next I’m flat on my belly.

The pain goes on. It’s bad, but there’s something worse, a sense of wrongness that makes the experience truly awful. It is such an unnatural, terrible sensation, as if some horrible alien living inside you was now making a bid for freedom.

Finally, the clicking stops. Five seconds are up and the Taser shuts down. The pain ends with the finality of a slamming door.

I feel insanely relieved. So relieved I just shout “wow, wow, wow” several times before my brain realizes I’m repeating myself. I look into one of the cameras taping me and explain the experience. The phrase “that fucking sucked” comes up a lot.

Now the probes have to come out, the part I feared the most. But after getting tased, they can rip barbed needles out of me all day, I don’t give a rat’s ass.

With the probes out, and band aids in place, I stand up to get ready to film the next victim, our producer, as she takes the hit. As I move behind the camera I realize something wonderful.

My headache is gone.










The Taser cartridge I was shot with.










Pointy, nasty things.