Tuesday, March 1, 2011

5 Mistakes to Avoid When Going Home for Spring Break

The following are some guidelines to insure that you spend your collegiate Spring Break at home well.  There's nothing worse than already feeling bad about going to boring ol' home, than adding familial pressures and easily avoidable errors.

So, without further ado:


The 5 Mistakes To Avoid When Going Home For Spring Break:

  1. Do not revisit old flames.  Freshman, you’re in your second semester of college; this isn’t Thanksgiving or Christmas.  You need to leave those bitties and bros in 2010 with High School.  Everyone else, you should know this by now.  There’s a temptation because some summer lovin’ might be around the corner, but resist.  Only pain shall follow.
  2. Tell your parents where you’re going.  You’re not in college anymore and parents happen to give a flying fruit bat about where you are when you’re back under their roof.  Just because you’re a college kid on Spring Break doesn’t give you the license to be a turd.
  3. Do not stay home the whole time. Take a couple days to visit a friend at another school, go to the beach, or somewhere else that has a modicum of fun energy.  Know what happens?  People get absolutely sick of you.  At Thanksgiving they’re happy to see you for the brief long weekend.  At Christmas they’re over the moon to have you for 3 weeks, but it kind of grates on everyone towards the end.  By Spring Break, they want to be reminded in person that you exist for all of 4 days, and then you’re a burden.  Take a break at some point – for everyone’s sanity, because the summer is going to hurt like a mother.
  4. Do not be depressed.  Guess what?  Not everyone has $1000 to spend on a week in the sun.  We’re not all Charlie Sheen.  Get over yourself and have some fun at home.  Enjoy your family, hang with some friends, and maybe get a lick of schoolwork done.
  5. Home is not Cancun.  This may seem obvious, but do not treat your poor small hometown like a resort community.  Do not “Wooooo!” at your local bar, do not fist pump while blasting mad beats in your bedroom while getting ready, and do not hit up some Late Night Mom’s Kitchen while hammered.  Realize you’re in a place where people know you and care about the not-soiled-on-ness of the surroundings.  Don’t embarrass yourself.  You’re not Charlie Sheen.

Blood Drive Posters

When I worked for an ad agency in Boston in 2009, my fellow creative intern and I were tasked with creating an original poster for the company's annual blood drive.  We developed the following designs.  I wrote the copy, she designed the art, and we both collaborated on the overall idea.  I think they came out quite nicely.  The "Clients" idea was never produced because it was deemed "risky" in case clients happened to be in the halls and found it offensive.  Enjoy:

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Page Two Valentines

Here are some poems I wrote for the Valentine's Day edition of The Tower.
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Love Sonnet for Page Two

Oh Page Two, how you make me laugh and smile-
Your creativity and humor shine,
With word after word penned with perfect style-
For, Friday at noon, your company I pine.

Like a beacon of light in the darkness,
Amongst reports and opinions you lay.
With articles of depth and cleverness,
I cannot believe not a dime I pay.

So, come away with me Page Two, my love.
I know you're inanimate and paper,
But with origami you'll be a dove-
Please, carefully, consider your answer.

Until I hear back, oh agent of wit-
I guess I'll just have to read the Quor... damnit.

and....

A Peace, Love, and Quiet Poem - from Your RA

I plan great events and free stuff I give
But alas, you party to a volume most offensive

We only ask for some quiet and respect
But your drinking and trash are pains in my neck

Do not fret I understand, a student once myself
But lets get along, and once put the booze on the shelf

I like you, sometimes, and want you to have fun
But I have to knock when I hear "SHOTS 'O' RUM!"

So let's keep it down or take it off campus
And always be safe, especially when you Spring Break Dance!

The Observation of CUA Peers Exhibiting Unorthodox Behavior on Campus: A Derivation of “People Watching” in Three Parts

Here's another article I wrote for The Tower.  It is a poignant piece concerning the campus and world wide phenomenon of People Watching.

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Part I

Allow me to clarify something early on: I’m not a monster.  Those of you who bailed on this article after the title are either far more virtuous than me (for which I sincerely applaud) or hypocritical.  Those that continue to read and know my jumpers can judge for themselves.  Back to me being normal and not evil. What I’m saying is approach this subject with an open mind and a sense of humor.  You might find yourself laughing at someone new, someone old, a friend, or (like me on that day I tried to wear that “European” bathing suit) yourself.  Now let’s begin:  It’s a dark and stormy night and you’re alone in Caldwell when… Just kidding.  Ok, go ahead and read.

“He’s on the grass.  He’s on the grass.  He’s walking across the grass!”  I can’t help but scream in my head at the jolly ignoramus as he trudges his troglodyte limbs across the lawn in front of the Pryz.  It’s a crime against courtesy, an affront to etiquette and I won’t stand for it.  I sit idly everyday from my Pryz table perch observing the fauna of our campus and have developed some opinions.  I’m told their not facts because they can’t be incontrovertibly proven, but it’s not my fault I’m ahead of my time…and science.  He belongs to a special brand of people that attract such opinion-facts and inhabit every corner of this great planet: those that flout convention, skip to an alternative beat, and wear wool hats in the summer.  Yes, rule breaker is the easy answer, but more importantly he’s a player in the greatest game of all: people watching. 

Now, stay with me, it’s about to get interesting.  I’m also going to reiterate how this article is not mean.  You know, they say to err is to be human, well I say to compare is to be human.  When I see another person I immediately look at our similarities and differences.  We’re all people and awesome, and that’s even more awesome.  Yet, some of us are darker than others (both literally and emotionally) and that’s equally as awesome, too.  First impressions are made, opinions are formed, and (assuming that he/she has seen me too) the knowledge that we’ve both participated in this most human activity is noted.  Everyone people watches; it’s not a matter of whether you participate or not, but how aware you are of what your doing.  It’s not cruel.  It’s not unusual.  It’s ingrained in our being: human.  Now that I’ve (possibly inappropriately) elevated people watching to a civil rights level, let’s move onto the really juicy, trivial stuff of which giggle fits, Juicy Campus’s, and painfully arched eyebrows are made.

Specifically, the aforementioned lawn walker is a member of the opposition, those being watched.  We shall call these people-watchees Pee-Wees, or just the Wees.  The Wees sit across the aisle from those that do the watching, which we will call the Pee-Wings, or simply the Wings.  The Wees inspire curiosity, annoyance, uncontrollable fits of laughter, awe, reverence, and/or stupefying bafflement.  The Wings are merely those that observe the Wees.  Truthfully, anyone can be a Wing with the right perspective and everyone is a Wee with the wrong choices.

Tune in next time for the continuation of my series on people watching.

Faithfully judging,

Chris
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Part II

Anyway (and continuing our conversation from last week), I’m a Wing by trade and name.  Fortunately, for many of our insatiable people watching needs, our Pryzbla center is a hotbed for such activity and many of you know it.  While beautiful and blessed specimens of God’s creation and true Americanism populate our campus, the area immediately surrounding the Pryz can look like a Carnival sideshow that the Carnie Union is protesting.  The gentleman and his contemporaries that have sneaker allergies to concrete paths are not the only offenders amongst us.  And not all of them are breaking any cardinal rule that I hold dear to my heart, like walking on the grass when there are perfectly good walkways EVERYWHERE!  I mean, maybe you should budget your time better and not ruin the manicured lawn and look like a doofus.  Or maybe you just don’t care and think the laws of the quad don’t apply to you.  Uh, sorry, I got off track.  I usually enjoy people watching, but those that just stroll across the lawn abuse my love for oddity.  Anyhow, what I’m saying is observing the bustling campus community from a Starbucks chair, a picnic table, or that awkward smokers’ bench in front of the Pryz is like watching the untamed Serengeti or any other wild habitat.  There are natural ebbs and flows, but what I’m interested in, amused by, and occasionally appalled by are the platypuses in the Arctic, the Komodo dragon in Rock Creek Park, and the penguin hopping across the Tuscan countryside: the general/hilarious anomalies, a.k.a. Wees.

I inform you now of this glorious spectacle because I think it’s gone too long without a public proclamation of this most “Fun-gerous Game”.  Therefore, I will now give you a crash course, those that are still with me in this art, nay, philosophy of people watching.  Before you go down this path, be prepared to have fun.  I warn you because the urge to feel guilty will swell and you must squelch it like a sadistically smiling gofer springing up from some horrible “dinging” machine.  Your peers are unique, hilarious, deserving of your respect, and incredibly goofy.  Laugh at them, but know they’ve laughed at you, so it’s kind of like laughing with them.  At least that’s the logic I use to sleep at night.  Wonderful.  Now that you have the lingo and the ideology, I’ll give you the practice.

First, find a perfect point of view.  Corners are particularly good, especially ones with an angle on increased movement.  I suggest any of the Pryz picnic tables, especially those benches facing Hannon, and the tables outside of Starbucks.  Now your time as a Wing will proceed in two directions: are you alone or with a group?  If you’re alone, I hope you have something to do.  If not, you’re just a creeper sitting alone watching people or a creep who’s taking up valuable real estate for no purpose.  A book to read, actual homework, or your laptop is always an excellent companion to winging.  It should also be noted that people watching is almost always a supplement to lunchtime, dinnertime, homework, or general hanging out.  People watching really should be done with friends.  Some experts consider people watching alone or setting out to only people watch rather rude and vain, and certainly not in the spirit of any modern definition of humanity.  Don’t worry, if you sat down to take a breather on your way from Pangborn to O’Boyle and you decided to take in a show, you can consider yourself safe.  However, if you had to sit your heifer self down during a between-class-walk, you are prime for Wee status.

Now that you’ve learned how to sit and open your eyes, you’re ready for step two.  So, tune in next week to find out what comes next in the final installment of my exposé on People Watching.  Until then, try craning your neck, averting your eyes, and darting your glance away from your friend’s ugly mug (you know you hate it when he eats and talks) a couple of times during social gatherings in the right area and observe, absorb, and judge with my words in mind.

Best sarcastic wishes,

Chris

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Part III

Welcome back, yo!  Let’s dive back into our discussion of how to people watch in a group setting.

The second direction is the aforementioned group watching.  Get your group together for lunch, let’s say, and position yourself with ample perspective.  Let’s use an example to demonstrate the proper technique.  It’s a beautiful day and you’re having lunch out in front of the Pryz with five of your friends.  You’re chatting, munching, laughing, and constantly keeping some faction of your senses vigilant for little nuggets of CUA gold.  Suddenly around the corner of the Pryz comes a real gem, probably an architecture student, let’s be honest.  They look like they combined all of the outfits needed for a realistic edition of the “Evolution of Dance” video, but imported none of the coordination.  They’re in full sprint, always a good sign.  On a side note, everywhere on campus is within ten minutes of everywhere and running is unnecessary.  And, if you are going to be a little bit late to class: it’s ok.  It’s better to look calm than seem crazed.  Now, back to our vision in green plaid.  His jacket is flapping in his self-made breeze.  His 80’s era British punk boots are so precariously untied he might launch himself across the pavement.  His majestic sight inspires a nudge to your buddy, and you both marvel in the sheer outlandishness of the spectacle.  You can appreciate the day he must be having, but it doesn’t stop you from chuckling at your fellow student.  This is no time for lollygagging; you need a witty and quick comment to send your table into the throws of mellifluous laughter.  For example, this scene would warrant, “It’s nice to see someone so committed to the Chaos Theory”, “Clean up on aisle Pryz”, “It’s never easy being late for your destiny”, or “I bet if he runs fast enough, he travels back to whatever weird German decade he came from”.  You get the idea.

Finally, I’d like to clue you into the three general types of people participating in the CUA Wee program.  These are those exhibiting hourly, daily, monthly, or life long symptoms of invention of, reinvention of, or forfeiture to life.  I mean the Lady Gaga’s, Madonna’s, and Courtney Love’s of our CUA community, respectively.  Anyone appearing inspired by one of these ladies is ripe for Wee consideration.  That is to say anyone with that many indescribable or indecipherable outfits, anyone with an equal number of outfits and a little worse for the wear (i.e. crazy lasagna arms), or anyone with caked on makeup and so little self-awareness (and/or surrounded by murder conspiracy) could be subject to queries and careful eyeing from Wings.  What this means is over half of my examples have made incredible contributions to their respective worlds and are far more worthy of praise and admiration than myself, but there is that 33% that has lost all control, bit the bullet with no teeth, and gone off the deep-deep-deep end (and maybe killed a guy). 

Therefore, to bring the point home, laugh all you want at the Wees you Wings, but remember that everyone is the same. This game falls within the parameters of the real world: one third of all people are ridiculous and unnecessary.  Go ahead and snicker at that gentleman with the shoulder bag that definitely came from a women’s store, but sleep well knowing he laughed at you, pretty lady, for your ill-advised decision to go the Pryz after a particularly (and unflattering) trip to the gym.  So, CUA and America, let’s come together by laughing at each other.  Because, by laughing at our differences we, really, are just laughing with each other.  And isn’t that what we all really want?

Just kidding, did you just see that guy trip outside McMahon trying to eat his frozen yogurt? Classic!

I definitely just made fun of you as you walked by me,

Chris

If CUA was Hogwarts


HARRY POTTER: Casting by CUA’s Campus

I present to you the playbill for our campus’s upcoming fictional rendition of the Harry Potter saga. There were some obvious choices and some real surprise casting decisions that will make for a wonderful show.

So, without further ado, I present to you the main cast of Harry Potter and the Legend of the Exorcism Book:

Albus Dumbledore (the venerable and wise leader)… Pres. John Garvey
Harry Potter (the handsome and fearless protagonist)… Yours Truly (duh)
Hermione Granger (the smart heroine)… Christina Wolfgram
Ron Weasley (the honorable sidekick)… Any of the dozens of campus redheads
Minerva McGonagall (the other awesome professor)… Dean Bergkamp
Rubeus Hagrid (the sage shepherd)… Father Jude
Severus Snape (the sometimes scary student advisor)… David Best
Sybil Trelawney (the loveable fortune teller)… Miss Loretta
Mad-Eye Moody (the fair and burly disciplinarian)… Omar Torres
Bellatrix Lestrange (the wicked witch)… Susan Sarandon
Rita Skeeter (the intrepid reporter)… Liz Grden
Draco Malfoy (the sneaky and underhanded)… Joe St. George
Argus Filch and Mrs. Norris (the friendly and watchful community walkers)… RA Staff
Sirius Black (the godfather)… Father Andy

Now for some miscellaneous choices:

The Dementors… the roving gangs of Brookland that don’t actually exist
Crabbe and Goyle… DPS
The Moving Staircases… the Mullen Stacks’ elevator
Scabbers (Ron’s rat, who’s actually Peter Pettigrew)… The White Squirrel
Ollivander’s Wand Shop… The Bookstore
Minister of Magic Cornelius Fudge… Cardinal-designate Donald W. Wuerl
The Dursleys… First Years’ parents
Nearly Headless Nick… any one of the marauding and singing Music students
Moaning Myrtle… that creature that lives beneath the vents behind McMahon Hall
Platform 9 ¾… Red Line Brookland/CUA
Three Broomsticks… My Brother’s Place

And, now for the one you’ve all been waiting for…

Lord Voldemort (the evil and unmentionable)… Academy Award winner, and He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named, Mr. Jon Voight

I hope you enjoy the show!  Your Campus Casting Director,

Chris Cummings

Cheers and Jeers of 2011

Super behind the times, but it needs to be published irrefutably as mine.

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My Top 10 Cheers and Jeers of 2011

Cheers:
1.     New Year’s Resolutions: Aren’t these just the best.  It’s almost like the entirety of 2010 gets wiped away and we commit ourselves to a whole year of prudency and good will.  This might be the most positive thinking anyone does all year!  Hooray!!
2.     New Classes: Learning new things and meeting new people gets exciting with the promise of new classes.  Perhaps Chaucer will be awesome.  I’m so excited to be introduced to the Old Testament alongside new peers!
3.     Weeks 1- 4 of Pryz food:  New students are here, parents have visited perhaps, and that fresh food gets laid out to display Aramark’s culinary prowess.  Who loves chicken tenders?  I love chicken tenders!
4.     The Inauguration of President Garvey:  The campus is going to be swarmed by VIPs and every corner is brimming with excitement as the ceremony marks a new chapter for CUA in the New Year.  Also, I hear that Beyonce and Jay-Z will be performing!
5.     Spring Break:  I know I’m jumping the gun a bit on getting excited for Spring Break, but it’s the freakin’ mother of all culminations as far as regular semester breaks go!  Travel and fun are had by all, and stories are collected that routinely get exaggerated more than fish stories: “I swear she was this hot!” and “How much you wanna bet I killed a shark with a Captain Morgan’s bottle!”

Jeers:
1.     Syllabus Week Inconsistencies: You go to English and the professor let’s you out after 15 minutes of reading the syllabus and assigning homework.  Awesome!  Then you go to religion class and the professor keeps you half the time because she makes you introduce yourselves.  Ok, passable.  But then, there’s that philosophy class that runs one minute over the time limit because the professor posits for 45 minutes on how The Philosophy of Eggplants will open your world to a new way of experiencing every breath.  Bollocks!
2.     People in New Classes:  These are the jokers who answer really inane introductory questions in the first set of classes.  Professor: “Welcome to English 101.  Does everyone know what plot is?”  Chump: (with lightning fast hand) “It’s the action of the story and combined with characters and setting, yada yada yada…” Oh, shut up! Shut up, shut up, shut up!  The question was rhetorical, they’re all rhetorical.  These are the same people that check things they already know with the professor to look smarter in front of everyone.  They are the worst.
3.     Sarah Palin:  I don’t have anything elaborate to say here, except that she’s nuts.  Right?  I know she’s been around, but I feel her really ramping up this year.  I can’t believe people support her.  And that Glenn Beck guy, too.  It’s not because they’re conservative.  I mean you should live what you feel, let your freak flag fly.  But that woman is Grade A Bonkers.  Just like Jets fans.
4.     People Getting Sentimental About Graduation:  We’ve had four years together, Facebook exists, and so do phones.  For crying out loud graduation is awesome!  We’re moving on, so stop the drama.  Let me tell you something: If you don’t talk to someone at least once every week while living on the same campus as him or her, then guess what?  You’re not really going to care when you don’t see him or her anymore.  So make graduation a cheer.  End of story.
5.     And my final jeer for 2011 is… Verizon Users Becoming iPhone Users:  People on Verizon are already so pompous about their coverage and it being the most popular provider.  At least with AT&T people they had terrible service, so they kept it down with their iPhone-than-thou-ness.  But now, these new Viphoners (pronounced vie-fone-ers) will have a decent signal and the hippest cell phone.  They will be unrelenting in their hubris, obnoxious in their coolness, sickening in their use of the word iPhone, and purely and supremely spectacular in their awful my-cell-easily-represents-the-closest-our-generations-will-come-to-seeing-the-second-coming-ness. 


Four Loko Letter

Again, I apologize for this dated post.  It's still kind of funny.

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From the Desk of Mr. Elvis Four Loko, Esquire

I formally request to you, the college students of the world and more specifically CUA, to stay as far the hell away from me as physically possible.  I am a simple man from plain roots.  I’m just a guy merely trying to make a living as a niche soft drink.  Albeit a soft drink that has the capacity to induce sweat, heart attacks, courageously inebriated attempts to overthrow local governments, and a litany of just outrageously serious hospital visits.  I just wanted to be sold and treated with an ounce of respect.  I want to be left alone and not abused by university students attempting drunken immortality.

Why do you guys have to get so crazy with me?  I was on track to join the Irish Car, Sake, and Jäger-bombs of lore.  Now, now I’m on track to join nuclear weapons, the KFC Double-Down, and Bratz Dolls; i.e. things not allowed near the public.  I was fine with being just plain bad for the public.  For crying out loud donuts, cigarettes, regular alcohol, and the Tea Party get away with that.  But, no!  You people had to go and get all crazy!

Let me ask you something:  What in the bloody hell did you think would happen when you drank 24 oz. of rhino-grade tranquilizer and enough uppers to make a man Hulk out?  Not only do you actually turn green and get animated bulb arms like Popeye, but you turn into a raving lunatic worthy of the scariest zombie flicks.  You’ve seen your friends and you’ve experienced it yourselves; you become a maniac.  If you were the only one in a small town with access to me the townspeople would have to werewolf you or storm your castle ala the Frankenstein monster.

You know what?  I’ll admit it: I am incredibly and undeniably bad for you.  I am a combustible amphetamine-narcotic mix that conjures in people the notions of anarchy without any of the methodology and the strength of an ox with all of the intelligence.  I just wanted to be enjoyed lightly and occasionally to get people through a night of fun partying.  As of the end of 2010 I’ll be put up on shelves next to mustard gas like some weapon of college-student-genocide, along with whipped cream cans and airplane glue. 

I guess it’s goodbye to all of you, then.  I take full blame for thinking that I was a marketable, safe, and intelligent product.  However, I cannot help thinking that the droves of you (college students, brosephs, bitties, and DJ Kid-Krazzies the like) are not a tad responsible.

Therefore, I say, in closing: Please don’t buy me, call me, text me, or tweet about me ever again, for both our sakes.  And try thinking once in a while.  Or just once.  You’d be really surprised how helpful that small process, regardless of how difficult it can be for many of you, can be.

Loko out!