During my brief absence – which I will not elaborate on – my iPod died. Two separate apple.com-recommended repair centers said so: “Sorry, the frowney face on your iPod screen means the hard drive is broken. Sadly, Apple stopped making replacements for it. There is nothing we can do.” Two years of taking runs with my iPod had finally taken its toll, or so they said.
It took all of the following week for me to realize that a decade of TV-parenting by MacGyver was not in vain. Like the girl who kicks the car tire to make the steam coming out of the hood stop, I decided to shift the casing around and hope for the best. It worked; he’s back.
At this point, a self-congratulatory diatribe would be both in order and to be expected but there is a bigger issue at hand: how am I to believe in any technician henceforth?
A brief analogy might help explain.
Imagine you take your six-year-old son, Crunk, to the hospital because he won’t wake up. The whiskey you gave him for his toothache put him into an alcohol-induced coma. Just play along.
He is pronounced dead on the spot. They don’t even check his pulse. Just dead. You take him for a second opinion. After all, he did have some of your Blue Label, the little ingrate better wake up to thank you.
The second opinion: “prognosis negative, Jerry.”
So you take him home. You spread the tragic news and you mourn in the silence of your home (and on the bus, and in the gym, and when pretending to listen to music even though it’s off to avoid conversation when you go with somebody else to the library). A week later, you decide if Doogie Houser can do it, it can’t be that hard. Keep in mind he was on after Family Matters and bad boy Steve Urkel. You do what Neil Patrick Harris would do: you ask for a few cc’s of something ending in –phine, crack a joke about being blackout drunk, and smack him upside the head like a tetherball.
He wakes up.
Now, he may not function as well during cardiovascular activities or perform at his best during cocktail parties, but at least he’s awake and will have to do until Steve Jobs holds the next product launch.
In other news, UCA journalism juniors are about as ready to perform professionally as Josh McRoberts. During my Taller de Revista class, we were budgeting stories for next month’s print issue of the school's magazine. A girl pitched a story on blood transfusions but refused to include the recent discrimination scandal at the blood bank because “I don’t like discussing homosexuality.” Really?
Listen, Cupcake, nobody cares if you’re homophobic or not. This isn’t dinner with the inlaws, you don’t avoid a topic because you find it controversial. Put down USWeekly and pick up something that doesn't kill neurons but you can handle– like a coloring book. Do kids in organic chemistry ask if heart atriums are like kidneys where you can donate one because you have a second?
Serenity now.
Play nice,
Gregorio.
I'm gonna act like I don't give a make love.
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mae sobre el casing del ipod... como lo mueve?? necesito abrir el mio para acomodarle el click wheel que esta un toque torcido para un lado y no me deja ni darle play a las canciones, solo forward...
ResponderEliminarmae en realidad solo lo empuje en toque. sonaba medio raro y agarre la parte de atras (la plateada) con una mano y la de adelante (la blanca) con la otra y las torci un toque. sola se prendio la luz. creo que nada mas tenia el disco duro desalieneado
ResponderEliminar