Murder Most Fowl

As repeatedly promised, I’ve spent the last few weeks finishing up a new short story, which is posted below.  It’s probably not the greatest thing I’ve ever written — it’s probably not even the second greatest thing, if I’m being perfectly honest.  Well, if I’m being perfectly honest, it’s unreadable garbage, which doesn’t say a whole lot about its relative value compared to my other work.  But it is part of a larger collection of Dirk Danger stories that I began writing back in college (the first of which can be found here), which was the real reason that I resolved to write more this year.  As I’ve mentioned before, the real reason I’m even writing this blog is because I used to write terrible stories, and I missed doing it, so bear with me here as I pop out a new terrible story every few months.  I promise that next week I’ll get back to posting my stupid opinions on stupid things, which I’ll support stupidly.

In the meantime, please enjoy this story, which takes place during a lull in the investigation of the disappearance of flooring magnate Ed Heartwood; Dirk Danger has recently brought his childhood friend Sam O’Leary on board to aid in the investigation, and the pair are discovering that money’s as tight as the leads are scarce.  I don’t want to give too much away (God forbid, amiright), so without further ado, here’s the continuing story of …

Dirk Danger

in

Murder Most Fowl

At 11 on Thursday morning, Sam O’Leary sat in the altogether-too-spacious office adjoining Dirk’s, leaning forward in his leather chair with his forehead propped against his palms, his elbows on his mahogany desk, as he had been all week.  Through the frosted glass, he could see his boss’s outline, reclining in his own leather chair, and could envision his coat and hat sitting on the mahogany hat rack, as they had all week, and the half-smoked cigar sitting cold in the ashtray, as it had all week.  And the frosted glass door leading to their offices, bearing Dirk’s name in capital letters sitting unshadowed, as it had all week.

All-in-all, he reflected, it had not been an exciting week.

Nominally, the week had been spent on the Heartwood case, but they had run out of leads when the warehouse excursion turned out to be a dead end.  After that, Dirk had called up Detective McNally for further leads in the case, but the cops were busily looking into a string of recent robberies they were tying to an unknown perp (or perps) they were calling, somewhat over-dramatically, the “Cat Burglar,” due to the acrobatic nature of the crimes and the telltale image of Felix the Cat found at the various crime scenes.  Instead of making progress on the case, for the past three days the pair of private investigators been sitting in their offices, reading the paper and searching in vain for stories leading to the disappearance of the flooring magnate.  Each day O’Leary finished reading the paper by ten and would spend the rest of the day in the office thinking about whether they could charge their time to the case.  On the one hand, he was thinking about the case — or at least whether he could charge their time to it — but on the other hand it was a bit meta to charge Mrs. Heartwood for sitting in the office working out whether he could charge Mrs. Heartwood.  Too meta.  Granted, it was all moot anyway, since they weren’t going to solve the case, so they couldn’t charge her anything — the Dirk Danger guarantee stipulated that their services were free until the case was solved, but then Dirk had never failed to solve a case… yet.

Normally they’d have a few cases going that they could fall back on when one went cold, but the fee Dirk had extracted from Mrs. Heartwood when she’d come back that Monday, not to mention the absurd hourly rate they’d managed to negotiate, had been large enough — if solved — that he had decided to tie up his other cases as quickly as he could and even turned down a few new ones to clear time to devote to the disappearance of the flooring magnate.  Now it had been over a month since Ed Heartwood had last been seen, and word had gotten out that Dirk Danger wasn’t taking cases — or worse, that he was taking cases, but he couldn’t solve them.  What had seemed like a brilliant plan to clear their calendar, and therefore their heads, had backfired, and now O’Leary, in charge of the books, was staring down the rent on the office, his salary, and essentially no revenue.  They couldn’t even charge for incidentals related to the case (a.k.a., “lunch”), since they weren’t really working on it — it’d be like charging the Heartwood case for Dirk’s poor business acumen.  It wasn’t just the business, it was personal; O’Leary had just bought a place and was staring down a mortgage, and as far as he could tell Dirk was in the same boat — he was pretty sure he was getting paid in Dirk’s personal winnings from fluffy dog competitions.

Looking at the books, they were running out of cash, and fast.  O’Leary was thinking, for the third time that morning, about how they’d just spent the fee from the last case they’d wrapped up as part of their case close-out extravaganza — a hundred bucks from some poor kid trying to find out who ran over his bike, 3 weeks ago (spoiler alert: it was the mom) — to pay the stencil guy to stencil Sam’s name in capital letters onto the frosted glass window of the mahogany side door that led to his office (Why does everything have to be mahogany? It’s, like, the most expensive wood!) as the shadow beyond the door of his window, bearing his name in freshly-stenciled capital letters, stirred.

On the other side of the door, Dirk Danger had seen a shadow darkening his own window.  He pulled his feet off of his desk as the shadow grew, then knocked.

“One moment!” Dirk said in the slightly-too-loud, emotionless voice one reserves for speaking to people behind doors when it’s not clear how muffled the transmission will be.  He opened a drawer and pulled their most recent case file, then spread the contents across his empty desk — best to look busy.  He started to gather them back up from his desk before adding, “It’s unlocked, come in.”

The door opened, revealing a short, kindly-looking elderly woman with soft features and gray hair rolled into a loose bun on the top of her head.  She was wearing a white sweater and a high-wasted purple skirt that went down to the floor, with a locket about her neck and eyeglasses set low on her nose over which she peered with caring blue eyes.

“Excuse me,” she said in a soft, aged voice tinged with grandmotherly warmheartedness, “I’m looking for a Mr. Danger?”

Dirk was still busily gathering the files as he made his reply.  “What can I do for you, ma’am?  As you can see, I’m quite busy.”  He had brought the files into a big pile and was straightening them out on the desk when he realized which file he’d dumped out; the grisly pictures from the Voteri murder case were on top.  The old woman’s expression turned to one of kindly shock and he quickly put the files back into their folder.

“I can see that!  I didn’t mean to intrude.  It looks like you have far better things to do than to be caught up in the whims of a little old lady like myself,” she said, eyes twinkling.  “Have a wonderful day,” she finished, and with that she turned to let herself out.

Behind the side door, O’Leary experienced a wave of panic (oh God how could he turn her down) as he heard the conversation behind the door, but Dirk calmly reached into his pocket and pulled out his cell phone as she walked through the doorway.  He pressed 2 on speed dial and muted his cell phone as the office landline rang.

“One moment, ma’am, before you go — I’m expecting a break in this case and this might be it.”  She turned around as he answered the phone.  “Yes?”  Pause.  “Yes?”  Pause.  “Sam — that’s excellent!  It was the Cat Burglar all along? Great work!  Now that that’s wrapped up, we should have a bit more time for new cases.  Keep it up,” and he hung up the phone.  On his cell phone, the call ended.

To the elderly woman about to leave his office he said, “That was my assistant Sam O’Leary, he’s been working this case for me,” he waved the file fodler in his hand before dropping it back into his desk drawer.  “It looks like we’ve just about wrapped it up. I think we may have time to take on additional work.  Now, if you’ll just have a seat we can discuss what you came here to talk about.”

“Oh, how wonderful!” said the woman as she came back into the office, closing the door behind her.  “If you don’t mind, I’d like to keep this conversation behind closed doors — I don’t know who’s around, but this is quite sensitive business!”  Her eyes sparkled again as she said this, and she said it in the way that little old ladies say everything: slowly, endearingly, and with a bit of mischief, pausing after each word at the end of the sentence: quite. Sensitive. Business!

Dirk nodded and motioned to the seat across from his desk, as if to say, “Yes, yes, that’s fine, take a seat,” but what he actually said was “Just give me one moment to notify the proper authorities about that last case and we’ll be ready to go.”  He picked his cell phone up from the chair before sitting down and quickly shot off a text to Sam: Stay in office.  Make no sound.  If any little old ladies ask, you were wrapping up a very important case today — Cat Burglar.

“Now, that’s done,” he said, as he put his cell phone back into his pants pocket.  “I’m Dirk Danger.  Please, ma’am, what can we do for you?”

 —

An hour later, the pair of P.I.s were eating fish tacos at a picnic table next to the El Fishy Tacos food truck.  In between bites of hot, salty fried cod and cabbage, they were discussing the case the little old lady had presented.

“So, what you’re telling me is, this little old lady comes in, claiming she has a case that is, and I’m quoting, ‘quite serious.’  She then proceeds to tell you the cops won’t hear her case, and again I’m quoting, ‘probably because it is too dangerous to investigate,’ and that she’s willing to pay good money to anyone who will?  And this case, this ‘quite serious’ case that is ‘too dangerous to investigate’ is … her bird is missing?” O’Leary inquired skeptically.

 “First, she’s not some ‘little old lady,’ her name is Mrs. Webster and she seemed very nice.  Second, it’s not just a bird, it’s a canary.”  O’Leary was still pretty new to the job, and it was important for him to learn how to act professionally — including how to talk about clients.  It wasn’t the most important aspect of the job, but appearances mattered, even if you thought no one was watching.  “Also, she was quite sincere.  We’re going to help her out on this.”  He intended that to sound final.

O’Leary pressed the issue anyway.  “Fine, it’s not like we’re doing anything else, but what’s this gonna do for us in the long run?  This is no better than the kid with the bike — we’ll get another hundred bucks, and for what?  To find out that her bird flew out a window?  Then we’re back where we started.  We’ll barely cover these tacos and the gas we’ll use to drive out there.  We should be using this time to look for other work — whether that’s better cases or a new job entirely.”

“No, no, no, Sam, you’re missing the point.  ‘Canary,’ not ‘bird.’  And she was quite sincere.  Whether or not the cops tossed the case because it sounds ridiculous — which they did, I called Tyler, he apparently laughed her out of the station — she honestly believes something fishy-” Dirk looked at his taco and raised an eyebrow- “is going on.  And she is willing to pay good money — money you of all people know we need — to take the case.  Besides, you know that we can’t look for other cases; we might as well hang around our necks saying ‘Stumped by the Heartwood Case.’  Lady Heartwood will take her case, and her money, elsewhere.”

“Maybe she should.  We’re obviously getting nowhere on it,” O’Leary rebutted.

“She shouldn’t, and we can’t let her think she should.  We’re getting nowhere now, but I’ve never lost a case and I’m not going to fail on this one.  We’ll get there eventually.”

Sam rolled his eyes at this display of optimism.  “Yeah, but when? And what do we do in the meantime?”

As usual, Dirk seized the teaching moment.  “Exactly!  What we do in the meantime is take this case.  It was a misstep to clear our caseload; things have a way of tying together in ways you don’t expect, and staying busy stops you from getting caught thinking in a certain way for too long.  But if word gets out we’re taking cases again — not looking for them, just taking them — then we’ll start to see some more clients rolling in, and we can work on getting a break in the Heartwood case as we have time.  We won’t take a full caseload, but, hell, even this one case is enough to cover our bills through the end of the month.”

O’Leary was about to take another bite of his last fish taco, but at this he set it back down on his plate. “Wait, how much, exactly, is this little old — er, Mrs. Webster — how much is she paying us to find this … canary?”  Their bills for the month were considerable; after all, they had had to take out a loan for all the extra mahogany in O’Leary’s office.

“She’s agreed to pay five thousand for conclusive proof of how the canary got out, and double if we can locate it.  Regardless of our ultimate opinion as to the bird’s whereabouts, she’s agreed to incidentals for the duration of the case.”

Sam’s eyes lit up as he scarfed down the rest of his taco.  “This is gonna be the easiest money we’ve made,” he opined, his mouth full. He swallowed and finished, “We go in, point to an open window, and say ‘That’s how your bird escaped.’  We walk out with a brick of cash.  Worst case, she has a cat, and we have to figure out if the bird escaped or got eaten — but if it got eaten it’ll be a helluva lot easier to track down!  I’m gonna go grab a soda on this rich old lady’s dime.”

Dirk held up his hand to slow his partner down.  “Again, ‘canary,’ not ‘bird.’  And not exactly.  She confessed that what she really wants is proof that the canary was taken, rather than escaped.  I told her we’d arrive at an opinion based on the facts presented and the scene of the event, but we wouldn’t allow our judgment to be clouded by perverse incentives.”

At this fresh demonstration of professional integrity, Sam rolled his eyes, but Dirk continued.  “But what I really want to know is, why is the canary so important?  Who’s willing to pay thousands of dollars to prove that someone stole a canary — and for that matter, who steals a canary?  There has to be more to this than meets the eye, don’t you think?”  Dirk raised one eyebrow knowingly at his partner and finished his last taco.  “Maybe if we find it it’ll shed some light on the situation.”

“I don’t care, man, I’m just thinking about that cash.”  Ten large would go a long way.  “Maybe you do know what you’re doing, taking this case.”

“Of course I do. I was born for this.”  Dirk looked at his watch and wiped the last crumbs of fried breading from the corners of his mouth with a napkin.  “Now let’s go — I told her we’d be meet her at her apartment in half an hour to check out the scene.”

 —

Half an hour later, they pulled up to the address that Dirk had written on a slip of paper placed on the dashboard and parked out front next to a sign, which read “Palm Woods Apartments,” the letters in white raised off of a brown background and surrounded by two crudely-drawn cartoon palm trees.  The building didn’t look particularly nice from the outside, but was typical of many apartment complexes or condos in suburban Miami, with a central area dominated by a swimming pool, surrounded on three sides by three-story buildings arranged in a U, each with green-painted doors that opened to a concrete walkway with railings overlooking the pool area.  The roofs was covered in green, wavy terra-cotta tiles.  It wasn’t decrepit, nor did it seem particularly low-rent, but not even the most generous Brit would describe it as “posh.”  To its credit, the outside of the U had a number of shade trees ringing the property, and although Dirk knew nothing of civil codes, in places they seemed like they might be a bit too close to the building.  All-in-all, it looked like a nicer version of a Motel 6.

“I don’t see how anyone who lives here has ten thousand bucks to spare,” O’Leary offered, as he closed the door to Dirk’s brown 1986 Ford LTD Crown Vic.

Dirk shrugged and set off through the main gate, heading around the pool area.  “We’re looking for unit 2315 — looks like that one,” he said, pointing to the third floor of  the center building, which made the bottom crossbar on the U surrounding the pool.  “I know you think this whole thing is ridiculous, but let’s try to keep an open mind on this one, OK?”

They made their way up the concrete stairs to the third floor.  “I make no promises.”

“Yeah, and I can’t promise to pay you this month if this case doesn’t work out, so I guess we’re even,” Dirk replied as they reached the door to the unit, “2315” stuck onto the lime green door in separate stickers with black background and gold, serifed numerals.  He gave three solid knocks on the unit door.

The dim light of the peephole went dark for a second, then the door opened, revealing Mrs. Webster, who was wearing the same high-waisted skirt and white sweater she had been wearing in the office.  “Mr. Danger!  So kind of you to come here and entertain the flighty fantasies of an old lady!”

“Of course.  And this is my partner, Sam O’Leary, he’ll be helping me out here today,” Dirk said by way of introduction.

“Mr. O’Leary!  I hear you had a busy morning!  So glad to meet you!”  Her eyes sparkled with kindness over her glasses as she shook his hand.

“Yes, it was uh…” O’Leary gave an inquiring look at Dirk for a second, then continued, “the Cat Burglar all along?  It was a very important case.”  His statement lacked conviction.

“So exciting!”

The pair of detectives was still standing on the concrete walkway outside her door, wearing suits in the sweltering Miami heat.  “Oh, do come in!” she exclaimed delightedly, motioning them inside.  “But mind your shoes, please!  I do try to keep the place tidy.”

She did more than try; she succeeded.  Her apartment was small and sparsely furnished.  To the right as they walked in was a pink throw rug in front of a small gray sofa, more of a love seat, really, which was pushed back against the wall in the main room.  To the right of the sofa was a single end table, more a pedestal, upon which was perched a round brass birdcage, the kind with thin vertical bars that meet at the top, like a whisk turned upside down, with a closed door on the side and a small wooden perch hanging from the top like a trapeze in the center of the cage.  To the left was the kitchen, a simple U-shaped countertop with a sink against the left wall and a stove against the exterior wall.  Opposite the kitchen sat a small, round wooden table set with placemats and surrounded by 4 high-backed chairs; in the center of the table sat a half-eaten blueberry pie covered with a glass dome.  In the wall, in between the sofa and the kitchen, sat a single window looking out into a shade tree outside the apartment, and along the right-hand wall of the apartment was a closed door, presumably leading to the bedroom, and another door opening into an immaculate bathroom, tile gleaming in the natural light from the window.  In the entire apartment, not a single thing was out of place — the rug squared perfectly with the sofa, the kitchen counter free and clear of clutter, the hardwood floor sparkling and scratch-free, practically brand new.  Even the pie tin was devoid of crumbs — the pie just stopped halfway through, a perfect cross-section of pie, as though the other half had never even been there.  In fact, the only thing that didn’t seem exactly where it should be was the canary, the birdcage sitting empty on its pedestal.

The investigators were taking this in as they removed their shoes, placing them neatly by the front door, Dirk removing his hat and setting it on the table next to the half-eaten pie, as a muffled, other-worldly cry escaped the closed door.

“Mrrrrrooowwlll!”

O’Leary looked quizzically at Dirk, who forwarded on the emotion in the form of a question.  “I’m sorry, Mrs. Webster, but what, exactly, was that?”

Her eyes sparkled above her glasses as she clasped her hands in front of her waist.  “Oh, that’s just my little Sylvie.  He hears people and doesn’t like to be alone, but I wanted to keep him from untidying the place.  After all, you told me to keep the place exactly as I found it!”

“And Sylvie is…?” O’Leary prodded, uncertain whether to expect something sinister behind the closed door as the little old lady moved to open it.

“Why, my cat, of course!” she cooed, and with that she swung the door open, revealing a rather large tomcat with tuxedo coloring, mostly black, with white stretching from just underneath its eyes all the way through its underbelly.  Its paws were white, as was the tip to its long black tail. The only color on the cat, including its black eyes, was its nose, which was a dark pink bordering on red.  The cat looked up at Sam, standing behind Mrs. Webster, and gave a long hiss: “Hhhhhhttthhhhh!”  With that, it scampered back into the room and disappeared under Mrs. Webster’s impeccably-made bed.

“Sylvie!” admonished Mrs. Webster.  “Oh, he’s a sweetie underneath it all, he’s just upset I locked him in this room,” she said, apologizing to Sam and closing the door again.

O’Leary made a move to comment, but Dirk cut him off.  “Mrs. Webster, are you indicating that the cat was stuck in your room at the time of the incident?”

“Oh, no!  Sylvie was out and about all night last night.  I usually leave the window open for him to scamper about outside; there’s a tree branch just outside the window that’s perfect for him to climb out on.  He fancies himself a hunter, but he’s too big to really hide himself and most everything gets away.”

O’Leary continued the inquiry, “So you’re saying that the window, which is now closed, was open last night?”

“Oh, certainly!  I closed it this morning so the wind wouldn’t blow away any clues.”  The investigators gave each other a questioning look — yes, look at the footprints on your immaculate hardwood floor and the trail of breadcrumbs leading back to the canary that might have blown away had you not closed the window.  “I had left the pie on the windowsill last night to cool and Sylvie had gone out, so I couldn’t close the window and lock him out all night.  No, the window was certainly open overnight, and little Twitters was in her cage when I went to bed.  Then, when I woke up, she was gone!  I contacted the police, but of course they have more important things to think about than the kidnapping of some little old lady’s bird.  At least, I hope it was a kidnapping — it could have been worse…” her eyes sparkled mischievously.  “Perhaps it was murder!  Murder most foul!”

“Isn’t that what cats do?  Murder most fowl?” quipped O’Leary, under his breath.  Dirk shot him a cutting glare.  The junior investigator surveyed the room once more, with a look of mock focus, as though he was taking it all in and compiling it in his head.  “Boss,” he said, turning to Dirk, “I have a theory I’d like to run by you.”

Mrs. Webster’s eyes gleamed.  “Oooooh!” she squealed.

“Outside,” finished O’Leary, smiling in mock kindness at the grandmotherly figure bouncing in excitement.

The pair stepped back outside the unit, leaving Dirk’s hat and their shoes inside.  O’Leary spoke in a hushed voice, so that Mrs. Webster wouldn’t hear.

“This is the worst situation we could have hoped for — both a cat and an open window.  I’d love the extra money, but what say we just tell her it flew away and that’s that?  Then at least she doesn’t have to blame that enormous cat.  Although, hell, that cat practically burped up a big yellow feather when it hissed at me.  Speaking of which, was it just me, or did that cat have a lisp?”

“Can’t say I noticed, Sam.”

Dirk Danger’s mind was elsewhere.  Admittedly, a cursory glance suggested that the bird met its end in a conventional fashion, but something else was clearly going on here.  O’Leary had said it himself before — there was no way a little old lady living in this place had ten grand to spend on a wild goose chase like this (or a wild canary chase, as the case may be), especially not if the case was so open and shut.  She knew more than she was letting on.

“The birdcage,” started Dirk.  “Check it out — the latch on the birdcage was shut.  Find out if it was like that when she discovered the bird was missing.  Actually, find out everything — I want to know why this is so important to her.  Grab my shoes when you go back in, would you?  I have a theory — you may be on to something with that open window.”

Sam rolled his eyes and opened the apartment door to Mrs. Webster hopping up and down excitedly and clapping her hands.  “What do you gentlemen think?” she demanded expectantly.

“Unfortunately, ma’am, we’re not sure yet. I have a few more questions to ask you, while my partner canvasses the surrounding environs for clues.”  He was sure he had heard a TV detective say that.  As Dirk set off outside, O’Leary pulled out a small, top-bound spiral notepad and a pen from his jacket pocket and as she sat down on her sofa.

He began his line of inquiry with the birdcage, as the boss had suggested.  The cage had indeed been found latched in the morning — in fact, Mrs. Webster hadn’t touched it since the night prior, when she had fed the canary.  When pressed for details on what had happened, she had fed the canary as she did every night at 6 o’clock.  At 8 she had baked a pie, and by 9 set it on the ledge to cool while she knitted — of course she knitted — then at 10 she had retired for the night.  She woke up late this morning, since she was usually awakened by the canary singing, but this morning it was silent.  When she investigated, it was gone.

And what had she done for the rest of the day? She had called the police (“the non-emergency number, mind you!”), who had been unhelpful.  Then she had gone to the station to see if they wouldn’t help anyway, where she had been directed by one Officer McNally to Mr. Danger.

And what about the pie?  There was no way she had eaten half the pie herself.  It turned out that after Mr. Danger had agreed to help she had come back and sequestered Sylvie so as not to contaminate the scene of the “crime,” then gone to her weekly bridge club meeting, which was why she had baked the pie in the first place.

Maybe she could tell him a little bit about the canary?  This line of questioning was similarly unfruitful (“Twitters was small and yellow, with a  little band on one of her legs, I think carrying her registration.  I would feed her twice a day and occasionally, only when the window was closed and Sylvie was in my room, I would take her out of the cage and give her a few strokes on the head.”), until…

“And how old was Twitters?”

“Hmm, now that you mention it, I haven’t the foggiest!”

“OK, then how long have you had her?”

Her brows furrowed and she looked sideways toward the bird cage from where she was sitting on the love seat.  “Oh, she’s been with me for, for a little over a month now, almost a month and a half I’d say.”

Sam couldn’t help but notice that she seemed to be offering this information reluctantly.  She didn’t seem to be lying, but her mannerisms and her sudden uncertainty in something that had happened so recently tipped him off to press the issue.

“Where did you get her?”

“Oh, a friend of mine gave her to me.”  This she seemed much more certain of.  “Can I get you anything, dear?  Perhaps some iced tea, or a slice of pie,” she offered, rising from her seat.

She was obviously trying to change the subject — another sign to keep pressing.  “No thank you, I’m fine.  Which friend, ma’am?”

“Which friend, which?  I don’t follow.  Are you certain I can’t get you anything?  You look quite parched — and your partner, wearing that coat and hat out in all this heat!  Certainly he could use some of my homemade sweet tea?  Where did he get off to?”

“He’ll be fine.  Which friend gave you Twitters?”

“Oh, well, as it were, I’d … rather not say.  As I told your partner, this is quite sensitive business!”  quite.  Sensitive.  Business!

 —

As Sam was inside getting stonewalled by the very person who had hired them for the case, Dirk Danger stood outside the complex, examining the shade tree abutting the structure that Sylvie used to get in and out of the unit.  The tree was massive — towering above the building, but planted about 30 feet away, with thick hardwood branches that wound their way like oaken tendrils, just brushing against the building’s exterior, though in many places they appeared to have been cut back.  From its size, the tree must have predated the building by several years.  It looked to have done some damage to the building, including an area on the roof above and to the left of Mrs. Webster’s window, where the tiling was a slightly darker green, belying its youth compared to the surrounding tile, which had been bleached by the Miami sun.  The trunk of the tree was marked with scars, some deep cuts accumulated over the tree’s lifetime, others the result of day-to-day activities, acute and transient, perhaps the product of a squirrel’s or Sylvie’s climbing, that would heal within the week but be replaced hundreds of times over.

The lowest branch was a good ten feet off the ground, but there was what looked like the dried remains of a dead branch extending about eight inches out of the trunk some seven feet off the ground.  If someone was strong enough to pull themselves up and light enough that they didn’t break it, it might be possible to grab onto it and use it to get themselves up to the first living branch.  It would be difficult, but certainly not impossible.  Once they were into the branches, the climbing would be easy until they got near the building, where the branches got thinner, but here again, if a person was light enough they might be able to make it pretty close to the window.  After all, Sylvie walked right out onto the branch by the window, and the cat probably weighed 30 pounds.

No, someone small enough and nimble enough could definitely make their way up that tree and into one of the windows.  Probably not a child — a child wouldn’t be strong enough to pull themselves up — but who else would want to climb a tree and steal some lady’s pet canary?  O’Leary had a point, that pretty much had cat written all over it.  But then…

Dirk shook his head, turned back and headed toward the front of the building.  Before he knew it, he was opening the door on his exasperated-looking partner, who was holding a glass of iced tea in one hand and pinching the bridge of his nose in frustration with the other.  Mrs. Webster was sitting on the couch, blue eyes sparkling as ever, looking up at him over her glasses.

“All right boss, get this,” started O’Leary, as Dirk removed his shoes so as not to damage or dirty the spic-and-span flooring.  “I found out she got the bird a little over a month ago, from a friend.  She won’t tell me who gave it to her – ” he shot an exasperated look at her; her eyes sparkled mischievously – “and she don’t know a thing about what happened last night.  I got nothin’ out of her.”

“All right.  Mrs. Webster, if you don’t mind, I’d like to examine the cage,” said Dirk, who made his way to the pedestal next to the couch.  The latching mechanism on the cage door was fairly complex, with a pin that slid into a housing, not unlike a smaller version of the kind of latch you might find on a bathroom stall door.  There was no way that the cat or the canary had managed to get it open, much less shut again.

The bottom of the cage was lined with newspapers, which certainly hadn’t been changed since the discovery of the bird’s absence.  Although, looking closely, it appeared they had been moved — whether by the bird itself or something else was hard to say — but where two newspapers overlapped, the droppings had cracked rather than gluing the papers together.  Opening the cage and reaching in, careful to avoid the nastier sections of newspaper, like the Living section, Dirk lifted the papers up to peer at the bottom of the cage, where he was met with a tiny, minimalist cartoon caricature of none other than Felix the Cat.

Dirk replaced the papers and calmly closed the cage door, re-latching it.  O’Leary gave him a quizzical look as he purposefully made his way to the love seat and sat down gently next to the grandmotherly figure.

“Mrs. Webster,” he began softly, “Sam here has been asking you some questions, and I understand that you want to protect your privacy, and we respect that.  But right now, we need you to tell us exactly why the Cat Burglar would steal your pet canary.”

Mrs. Webster put on a playful smile.  “There’s more to people than meets the eye,” she began, eyes twinkling.  “Even little old ladies.”

O’Leary looked at her, incredulous.  “Who the hell gave you that bird!?”

“Watch your language, young man!” came the grandmotherly reprimand.  But then she softened, though her eyes continued their preternatural twinkling.

“Very well, I suppose there is some further information I could give,” she said, adjusting her position on the sofa to face Dirk, sitting beside her.  “Some time ago, probably two months, the ceiling in my apartment began to leak.  At first I thought it was a burst pipe, but on one of my daily walks outside I noticed that the tree outside the apartment was growing into the roof.  Now, I don’t need to tell you boys about civil codes,” she said knowingly, though being regular human people, neither knew the last thing about civil codes, “but it is certainly most illegal to have a tree branch in such close proximity to the building!  What if it fell down in a storm?  Imagine the damage it would cause!”

O’Leary gave Dirk an impatient look — where is this going? — but Dirk offered a patient, “Indeed.  Please, continue.”

“Well, I certainly didn’t want the apartment complex to be getting into trouble, and of course that tree is so old and beautiful, not to mention how convenient it is for little Sylvie.  But at the same time I had a problem!  I had a leak in my roof, and it looked so dreadful!  I do try to keep a clean home.”  Her eyes sparkled again.

“Well, I went into the office and told them that it would be fine, just fine, if they would go ahead and cut back that one branch and deal with the damage from the leak.  They dragged their feet and told me they’d do what they could, but they weren’t sure they could be held responsible for the leak — in fact, they implied it was my fault for not reporting the proximity of the tree branch, can you imagine!  So I told them that if my plan sounded disagreeable, I would feel compelled to take my business elsewhere, but, being old and frail, moving was simply not an option for me, so I would have no choice but to press charges for their blatant violation of civil codes.”  With this revelation came again the mischievous smile.

“Well, naturally they saw the error of their ways and promised to rectify the situation immediately; the branch was cut back, and the roofing redone.  They even repaired the ceiling damage and the damage to the walls, and they repainted the whole room to make sure the repairs matched the rest of the room.  They even paid for new flooring, since my carpet had gotten soaked and musty along the wall.  Since they were paying for the repairs anyway, I had them put in a nice new hardwood floor, which is so much easier to keep up than a messy carpet — much less vacuuming!  It looks quite nice, too, don’t you think?”

“It looks great, ma’am.”  Dirk liked where this was going.

“Well, the young man who put in my new floor — well, I say ‘young,’ but he was probably in his 40s, which I suppose to you must seem quite old — the man who put in my flooring seemed a nice fellow, and told me he was so thankful for the business — after seeing my floor, you see, the apartment decided to opt for hardwood in all third floor units — he was so happy that he would even compensate me for the referral.  However, he would require just one service of me; I’d have to take care of his pet canary for awhile.  If I took care of it while he was out of town over the next month or so, he’d give me twenty thousand dollars; all I had to do was keep it while he was away, and he would pay me when the canary had been collected upon his return.  That was a little over a month ago.”

O’Leary, still standing, stared down at her incredulously.  “Ma’am, a man offered to give you twenty thousand dollars” twenty. thousand. dollars. “to take care of a canary?  And you thought this seemed completely reasonable?”

Dirk egged her on.   “It does seem like something of a red flag.  Have you heard from him recently?”

“I’ll admit it,” she began, the twinkle fading from her eye, “I needed the money.  I’m getting older, and my late husband’s pension is running out, and here’s me trying to pay for my medicine and my rent with little to no income.  I assumed the man was up to something suspicious, although I really couldn’t tell what harm I ever thought would come from holding onto a canary; I’m still unsure, although with this Cat Burglar business I believe I may now be in over my head, so perhaps it is best to get it all out on the table.”

“So, ma’am, if you need the money, how are you going to pay for our services if we can’t locate the canary?” asked O’Leary bluntly.

“Well, that’s just the thing!  I received a wire transfer this morning for the full twenty thousand dollars.  I thought it would only be appropriate that I spend some of it trying to relocate Twitters, you know, paying it forward if you will; the very least I can do is try to help out after the grief that I’ve caused!  I thought that if I could prove that losing the bird wasn’t my fault, maybe I could at least keep some of the money.  You must admit I can’t be blamed for the Cat Burglar, but still, maybe I’d best do the right thing.  If the bird truly can’t be located, I’ll give back the money, but I attempted to contact the man today to let him know there had been a mistake, and he had wired the money too soon, but I couldn’t contact him.  The number he had given me had been disconnected, and his office says they haven’t seen hide nor hair of him since he left over a month ago.”

“I wouldn’t worry about trying to find him.  Who was this man, ma’am?” asked Dirk, though he already new the answer.

“Why, the very owner of the flooring company himself — again, it was so nice of him to come out to visit the worksite of a little old lady like myself.”  Her eyes sparkled.  “He said his name was Ed, Ed Heartwood.”

Dirk’s knowing look offset O’Leary’s astonished grin.  “I told you, Sam, I was born for this.”  Just like that, they were back in the game.

The End

DIRK DANGER WILL RETURN

IN

A Keen Sense of Destiny

What can I say?  Dialogue: it’s not my strong suit.  I promise the next DD story I publish will be both shorter and better (I wrote it in college, but I’ll publish it next month sometime).  In the meantime, please enjoy my continued ramblings on unimportant stuff, including the hipster garbage, the art of conversation (according to me), and the podcast review you didn’t know you needed, and while it turns out you were right, I’ll give it to you anyway.

Quick Update

This week’s post is going to be short and sweet, so I can spend a bit more of the long weekend sitting in my sweatpants and doing nothing at all.  No! I’m going to spend the time I would have spent writing something “witty” and “clever” here working on my next “witty” and “clever” short story, which I’ll post next week.  Or as soon as it’s done, whichever comes first (that’s right).

Over a month into the new year, here’s a quick update on how my New Year’s resolutions are going; I figure after spewing advice on the subject I should let everyone know that A) I practice what I preach and B) the gospel rings true (at least for me).  Below you’ll find a list of my resolutions, the grade I’m giving myself in each, and a blurb about how each one is going. … enjoy?

  • Work out 5x per week: A+. This afternoon I’ll have hit this milestone every week; I usually do Mon-Thurs at lunch and Saturday around 4.  Seems to be going pretty well, but hasn’t helped with…
  • 10% bodyfat by EOY: F.  This seems unlikely, but I’m blaming my scale.  Also, we’ll see how it goes when I give up drinking for Lent; I anticipate I’ll lose about 10-20 lb a week, which after 6 weeks should put me back below my birthweight.
  • Olympic triathlon: C. I went to a spin class this week.  It was hard.  My butt hurt afterward.  But once it’s not snowing 10-14″ every night, I’ll try to start biking into work.
  • Increase flexibility: F. I specifically pointed this out as a stupid goal, since it’s unquantifiable.  This continues to be a stupid goal.
  • 56 hours of sleep / week: F. This continues to elude me.  I will likely refocus my efforts here in March in an attempt to rededicate myself to it.  I have yet to hit this milestone.
  • Wake up earlier: A-. I’m batting about a weekly 50% on doing this 5 days per week, but the lowest I’ve hit is 4; I’m generally into the office by 8:00 or at least online and working in my apartment by 7:30 every morning.
  • 1 date per week: B. I touched on this last week, but I’m batting about 50% on this one too, currently at 4 dates.  That’s 4 more dates than I would have gone on otherwise!
  • Text / communicate with one long distance friend per day: A+. (There was a typo in the original post, I just noticed).  I’ve not missed a day!  It’s gotten easier as people have also started texting me out of the blue — it’s the gift that keeps on giving.
  • Take dance lessons: C. I’ve not signed up, but I’ve heard there’s possible dance lessons on a cruise I’m going on in May, which I would take advantage of.  Also, a friend has volunteered to go with me near home.
  • Write / blog on a weekly basis: A+. Obviously going well.  Readership has increased to the double digits (in that I’ve opened my blog 12 times now).  Also, I tweet now @Carscafmoo.  Followership there is also in the double digits, as I’ve created many fake accounts that follow that one.
  • Join / Form a band: C. Attempts to jam with friends have been stymied by time commitments.  Further action necessary, but first I need more practice…
  • Practice music 2 hours / week: A. This one is actually going really well.  I missed the first week, but I’ve been learning guitar ever since (huge shout out to justinguitar.com), and I can now play a few songs and I’m learning more chords and the like.  In a month it’s easily the most I’ve learned on probably any instrument.
  • 2 Coursera courses: B. I signed up for my first one last week (it starts in March) and I’m looking for others; possibly music related, possibly computer science, who knows?  I’ve also thought about signing up for the one taught by one of the dudes from my favorite podcast, Backstory, but it starts on Monday.  I’d need to check out the format before committing.
  • Survive: C.  Still tickin’!

So, of the 14 resolutions, I’m hitting 100% (A+) on 3, passing 9 others, and failing only 2. I’ll try to post another update in a couple of months (I know everyone’s dying to find out how this turns out…) ; hopefully we’ll see some of those F’s become at least D’s.  In the meantime, this initial report card seems pretty good, considering the ~10% average success rate we were looking at before.  And you doubted me — shame on you.

OK, Stupid

In the weeks running up to Valentine’s Day (or as I like to call it, “Single People Make You Aware of How Sad and Lonely They Are Buy Calling it ‘Single People’s Awareness Day’ Day”),  the marketing machine usually spins into high gear, shilling heart-shaped romantic nonsense and reminding everyone that a year’s worth of transgression and indiscretion can be cured with a sparkly gift, because women, like small mammals, have tiny brains and are easily distracted by shiny things.  For obvious reasons, we get reminded that “diamonds are forever,” “every kiss begins with Kay,” and “most of our products don’t fund terrorist activities or ongoing civil wars,” (™ Helzberg Diamonds) but we also get conversation hearts and heart-shaped donuts filled with pink creme; it’s even the one time of year when Hallmark is as relevant as when they were the only purveyors of Beanie Babies.  There’s chocolates, roses of all colors, and for those of us who are truly lonely, Valentine’s Day-themed pet clothing and accessories.  The combined spending for the day topped out last year at almost $20B (that’s B, with a “B”), putting it at #3 on the list of total spending per holiday, behind… Thanksgiving, for some reason?
The best beef may be grass-fed, but the tastiest turkeys are raised on consumer spending

This all just goes to say that Valentine’s Day is a lucrative business, and it makes sense for companies to advertise for it — it’s clearly working.  But this year, I haven’t seen a whole lot on that front.  Maybe it’s just that I don’t really watch TV or listen to the radio anymore (thanks, internet!), or maybe I’ve finally grown callous enough to completely ignore ads, but I can’t think of a single diamond commercial from this year, and the last time I went to the grocery store I didn’t see a huge display of chalk-flavored candy telling me to “b” its.  I haven’t heard people frantically discussing plans or worrying that they don’t have dates; the closest thing I’ve come across was my friend asking if I wanted to watch the NBA All-Star game and drink by ourselves that night.  It’s a time-honored tradition.  We’re very lonely.

Maybe I’m just running in different circles now that all of my friends are either married or cripplingly unloved, but the one thing I’ve noticed this year leading up to Valentine’s Day is a stark uptick in stories about online dating in the media.   Admittedly, looking at Google Trends, it’s more like a very slight uptick that is temporally correlated with, but does not necessarily imply causation by, Valentine’s Day, but as a member of the online dating community, I’m probably a bit more sensitive to it.  It’s kind of like all the happy people got together and decided that this year would be a charity case looking at those less fortunate than themselves.  To their credit, I have yet to hear a story that paints people who use online dating services in a negative light — it’s never about “look at this hilarious and sad person who is so inept at human contact they do their dating through a computer.”  Generally, the pieces I’ve seen have been interesting, if somewhat academic, looks into what they consider the world of modern dating.  Still, it can’t help but feel a bit… Band  Aid-y.

“Do they know it’s Valentine’s Day?”

As I literally just mentioned, I’m a (proud?) member of the online dating community — I’ve had an OkCupid account (more on that later) for well over a year at this point, but I only recently really started actively using it to fulfill a resolution to go on a date every week.  Since I’ve basically been advertising that goal (along with my other resolutions — come on, did you even read that post?) to anyone and everyone I meet, I naturally get the reaction, “That seems like a lot of dates!  How are you going to meet that many people?” so I end up having to tell people that I have an online dating profile.

The thing about telling people you’re doing online dating is that they immediately treat you like some sort of recently-persecuted minority.  At the advent of online dating, there was something of a stigma attached to it; it was new, and people didn’t understand it. I think it’s largely accepted now, but people still kind of acknowledge its stigma’d past.  People usually skip a beat while they decide to either totally ignore it or address the issue head-on in currently-acceptable terms (“Oh, I’ve heard that’s a great way to meet people, especially if you’re busy,” or “The internet is the single greatest human connectivity device ever created, why wouldn’t you use it to connect with people?”).  It’s like we reached that stage where people aren’t “retarded,” they’re just “mentally handicapped,” and everyone is trying to tiptoe around the issue without saying anything that’s politically incorrect.  It’s like when you meet the congenital amputee whose arms both stop at the elbow and you want to ask him how he does basic things like open doors or put on clothes but instead you stare straight at his face and talk about soccer or riding a bicycle, and you’re just thinking to yourself that if he had been born 50 years ago the Spartans would  have thrown him into the chasm of Mount Taygetus, but now even saying something like “You’re so brave!” would be a belittling acknowledgement that he’s something other than a normal human.  You just want to send all the signals that say, “Your people have a troubled history, but I’m past that — and so is the rest of the world.  You’re safe here!  I understand that people used to think that dating online meant you were socially inept and unfit to breed, but now I will tell you what you must be telling yourself to make it seem OK.”

Of course, in the online dating world it’s a different story — we’re still free to discuss the stigma.  I recently had a date who said something embarrassing about herself and then followed up with, “… and now you understand why I’m on OkCupid!” and we both had a hearty laugh.  And the truth of the matter is that, notwithstanding the fact that I’m batting about 50% for that resolution even with my OKC endeavors, I really wouldn’t be able to get a date without it, regardless of how busy I was.  This is partly because, as previously mentioned, I am an awful human being, and in person I would drive off any potential mate long before she accepted an invitation to be alone with me for any length of time suitable to drinks or dinner, whereas on my online profile I can fix that problem by just lying about myself.

My profile picture

It’s also because the world of online dating actually has a number of qualities that make it great, especially for someone like me.  The biggest problem that I face in the dating world is that I don’t know any eligible women, and I don’t have any friends who know any either.  Of the people in my generation  (or, from what I can tell, in my parent’s generation) who are married or in a committed relationship, almost every single couple met at work or in school.  I’m not in school, and I work at a firm that is 99.9% male (we employ 64 people, you do the math).  The rest met through friends of friends, but none of my friends know any attractive single women either, so that option is out.

This basically leaves the bar scene, and I have literally never heard a description of the bar scene that didn’t begin with “I’m so sick of…”   I have never been one to approach strangers (I wouldn’t order for myself in a restaurant until I was 12 because I was terrified of talking to the waitstaff), and I’ve certainly never been able to approach women I’ve never met and pretend to be interesting.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m fine talking to people — I have had several conversations with women at bars, but I’m also respectful of stranger’s privacy to a fault.  I don’t want to force myself on anyone, so I never make the first move for fear that it’s unwanted.  I don’t want to be that guy who hits on a girl who’s just there for a drink, so I end up just leaving everyone alone.  Plus, I’m terrified of failure — especially public failure.  The last thing I want is for people to find out my ladykillin’ rep is all a facade to hide my considerable insecurities.

That’s the brilliance of online dating — no one is just there for a drink.  Everyone is there for the same reason: they want to go on dates with strangers.  (When you say it like that it’s a pretty weird reason.)  For example, on OKC, right from the get-go, you’re asked about your sexual preferences and told explicitly it’s a dating site (not “a great way to meet people,” which is a somewhat ambiguous euphemism).

You’re cute — come here often?

But really, you never have to have that fear of “I wonder if I’m bothering this person,” because even if you are, even if they think you or your profile or your message is stupid, they don’t have to take the time to respond.  They’ve wasted, max, 30 seconds of their life reading your message and glancing at pictures of you, and then they can move on.  And, better, the online dating community accepts this as a social norm — nobody has to engage anyone.  You don’t have to send a “no thanks” message, you just don’t respond and the world moves on.  There’s no awkward “I have a boyfriend” moment, followed by rolled eyes and exasperated sighs from girlfriends.  Since nobody has to see you fail, it decreases the negative consequences from failure, which in turn encourages ongoing efforts — not hearing back from someone isn’t the end of the world, in fact it’s quite common.  And it could be for any number of reasons, none of which actually have to do with you (although let’s be honest, it’s probably because you’re lame).

At the same time, therein lies the issue — failure is incredibly common.  Of the messages I send, I probably get about a 10% hit rate on returns, which you could say is my fault for having a bad profile or writing boring messages, but it might even be above average.  Anecdotally, other men I know who are on OKC or similar sites suggest low response rates — I have yet to talk to a guy who does not refer to it as “a game of numbers,” or a girl who does not say that her guy friends refer to it as such.   The basic premise is that if you have low returns, your best bet is to blindly message hundreds of women, which leads to the problem of women on dating sites (especially free dating sites) getting tens or hundreds of messages that have no real content — just a “hey” or “sup” that might lead to a profile view.  I’ve been told this is really annoying for women, who basically get their inboxes flooded with inanity, and several profiles will say something to the effect of “Message me if: you have something to say other than ‘hey.'”

I refuse to send the blanket “hey” messages (and there are tons of tips out there advising against it).  Instead, I follow a general format of:

  • Joke about something in the profile (“‘Drinks: A lot’ — Love the honesty!”)
  • Honest question about something in the profile (“I see you’re a furry — what’s your costume?”)
  • Sign-off with a reference to something in their profile (“May the force be with you, “)

This (theoretically) shows that I’m fun, gives them an easy way to respond by answering the question or acknowledging my reference, and most importantly is 4 or 5 sentences max, so they don’t have to read a book report about their profile.  It also makes it seem less about me and more about her, because saying, “I’m also into gimp suits” makes it look like you’re talking about yourself.

The problem with these messages is that they take time to write — unless something immediately jumps out at me about their profile, I will spend about 20 minutes coming up with something witty to say or a question to ask.  Since I get a 10% return rate, and of those I probably get a 25% date rate, I end up writing about 40 messages per date that I go on.  At 20 minutes per message that’s 800 minutes (13+ hours) on OKC per date.  That’s an hour a night for 2 weeks to find the next person to go out with.  If that seems like an exaggeration, keep in mind I probably spend about an hour a day on the site, and I’ve been out with two people this year.

OK, 13 hours is about a half-day — maybe a half-day’s work isn’t so bad, if you’re going to find your soul mate.  After all, think of all the bars you’d probably have to go to, or the jobs you’d have to get or the school you’d have to attend to find someone compatible.  12 or 13 hours seems a pittance compared to that.  Of course, that assumes that you actually find your soul mate on the first date, so maybe it’s closer to 5 or 6 first dates, maybe 10?  That’s a week to find your match.  Still not bad!

The problem is, it’s not 10 first dates.  OKC and match.com (and presumably all the other major dating sites, too) have proprietary algorithms and questionnaires that allow them to generate a match probability, and they feed you people who have higher match probabilities, so you’d think these systems would be better than picking out at random from the general population.  Unfortunately, there’s two things that throw the system off-balance.  The first is that people lie — and not just posting profile pictures of supermodels, but in smaller ways that can throw a non-obvious wrench in the system.  For instance, I hedged my answers to make myself sound more interesting or more tolerant to the first 200 questions I responded to on OKC; when I looked at people who matched highly with me, they all liked to go clubbing and were super adventurous.  By trying to make myself more attractive to others, I had inadvertently made myself seem attracted to people I really wasn’t interested in.  Of course, those people were also matched with me, so if we assume that I had gone out with any of them, you can imagine they’d have been pretty disappointed — this happens too, where people create a profile that makes them seem a certain way that they perceive others to find attractive, it works, and then people have terrible dates when they find out you’re not into eating raw sea turtle from street vendors, or whatever the kids are doing these days.

The other thing that throws the system off is that it really only seems like you’re getting help from these matches.  I’m not saying the algorithms are wrong or that in the end there’s some human factor that trumps science — I love science, and if science had an online dating profile and we were both completely honest, it’d be a 100% match.  I’m just saying that they flood you with hundreds of people who are matches and it makes it seem like they weeded a bunch of people out for you and you’re connecting only with the top choices, when in reality we do this every day in our lives, and if we’re in an environment (for example, school) where we have the opportunity to meet hundreds or thousands of potential mates, we weed out the non-matches ourselves and gravitate toward those where there is mutual attraction, i.e., a higher match percentage.  The real service isn’t the weeding out (although without that component, the service would be unusable), it’s the introduction to an environment with hundreds or thousands of potential mates.

These two factors combine to mean that an online dating profile allows you to simulate an environment where you have hundreds or thousands of potential mates, but the weeding out process is warped.  You’re held captive to the persona that they put out without the ability to build up a backlog of human interaction, so you end up having to meet a whole bunch of people to weed out the people who should have been weeded out, but weren’t.

I’m not just complaining because neither of my first two dates ended in marriage — that media hype about online dating I mentioned earlier actually has some pretty interesting examples.  There’s a Cracked article about how OKC users ignore profiles and match percentages and message hot people no matter what, which would indicate that the weeding-out system is broken.  Then there’s the Freakonomics podcast “What You Don’t Know About Online Dating,” where they actually interview Alli Reed, who wrote that Cracked article.  I’m actually only about halfway through that one, but signs point to an economist telling someone how to make their profile better.

More telling is the intro to the recent Planet Money podcast “Dear Economist, I Need a Date,” which opens with a story about a producer’s experience with online dating.  The story begins with Lisa Chow deciding she’s going to “be more aggressive” about online dating; she actually describes herself through this process as being “efficient” and “focused.”  So, how long did it take efficient, focused Lisa to find a match (which I basically define as someone who precipitates an exit from the online dating market)?  It took her a year and a half, and she went on 50 first dates.  Ultimately, she met her husband, but in the meantime she had to create a spreadsheet to track her experiences so she could remember anything about the guys she had been on dates with.  Keep in mind, this is the efficient solution of a successful person who knows exactly what she is looking for.

Maybe more revealing is this story of how a math PhD at UCLA created an algorithm to determine not only the characteristics of women he was most attracted to but also how to create a profile that would make him more attractive to those groups.  He spent a couple of months setting up the profiles (including automating several accounts so he could pull data on the OKC users in the greater LA area), and then used those targeted profiles to try to find a mate.  This guy had already done months of work to target exactly the right group of women, and he had a profile that was specifically targeted to those women (i.e., it wasn’t a problem of getting dates), and it still took him 88 first dates to find a match.  It doesn’t say how long this took, but if we assume one date a day (again, let’s assume his profile made him utterly captivating), that’s still 3 months.  For a poor schmuck like me hoping for one date a week, that’s a year and a half; at 13 invested hours per date, for 88 dates, that’s 19 full days of OkCupid time.  

Again, this isn’t to say that I’m turned off from online dating or that that it can’t work — I really believe it can.  In both of the cases above, the people ultimately met a mate, and statistics show that online dating is become more acceptable, and marriages that began with online dating are on the rise, making up a growing portion of overall marriages.  I certainly am not about to quit OKC (again, it’s… basically my only option…), although maybe I’d switch to another site, if I could find any efficiency stats on online dating (seriously, I Googled for like an hour.  There is nothing).  But for something that’s billed as a way for busy folks to quickly meet new people, I’m hard-pressed to believe there’s not a more efficient solution.  It provides a great service of artificially creating a “target-rich environment,” as they say, but doesn’t substantially decrease the legwork — in the end, until the algorithms are refined or people stop lying about their preferences or they find some other way to capture that human factor, online dating will be less efficient and inferior option compared to meeting people in the real world.  Which, for me I think means… grad school, anyone?

PS Some other interesting stats or articles about online dating (OK, they’re not all interesting, but I skimmed most of them while writing this.)  Also, OKTrends is kinda cool sometimes.

PPS My “hilarious” pictures now all come with Alt text, which means one thing: more bad jokes.  Get excited!

Subtractvertising

Most people who know me know that I love going to the movies — not the movies themselves, mind you, but actually going to the movies.  It’s great to sit on your couch on the weekend and catch up on stuff you missed on Netflix or whatever, but in the end it’s not the same as being in the theater, which is why every weekend when the inevitable, “Anyone want to do anything?” group text comes out, I offer up “Sure — movie?”

No one ever takes me up on this because I’m awful to see movies with (seriously, I walked out at the end of both Gravity and Lincoln complaining), but also because we’ve recently been spoiled by the AMC Courthouse theater, which has assigned seating in reclining chairs.  I’m not making this up — if you want to see Harry Potter 8Deathly8Hallows in 3D at midnight on the night it comes out with 12 of your closest friends and all sit together, you can buy your tickets online and then waltz into the theater at 11:59 and not have to worry about getting stuck in the front row or splitting up the group.  Even if you bought tickets for the front row, you can recline, so it doesn’t matter.  There’s no bad seats in the house!  It is, without a doubt, the. single. greatest. development. in cinema history.

If you’re wondering if my glowing recommendation has monetary incentive, I would like to point out that my blog has literally ones of readers — you’d be surprised how little that kind of readership draws in the way of revenue (it’s even less than the $1.18 I have on my AMC card toward a free popcorn or cine-snack of my choice… which is my real monetary incentive).  However, I would also like to point out that the AMC Courthouse theater has the freshest popcorn, the friendliest staff, and showings starting as early as 9:30 AM on most weekends — tell ’em CCM sent you!

Anyway, the point is they only show half the movies that are out at a given time; the other half are shown by the competing Ballston Regal Cinemas, which I’m contractually obligated not to link to.  The problem is that it always seems like the Regal has the good showings, but it’s farther away, in literally the worst mall in America, and it doesn’t have reclining seats.  So if we want to go to a movie, we have to hope it shows up in Courthouse, otherwise we won’t end up seeing it.  This, in turn, means I don’t get to see movies that often, which means that when I do go to the movies, I want the whole experience — I like to get there a bit early for the pre-preview-previews (movie trivia’s the illest), the previews, the post-preview-pre-movie-announcements (otherwise how will I know where the exits are or whether my phone dreams?), and obviously the movie.  Then I stay until the end of the credits, because you never know what kind of post-credits-pre-rating-warning-(seriously, why do they end the movie by telling you what the movie you just saw was rated? Isn’t it a bit too late for that? “Oh I saw Saving Private Ryan with my 7-year old because I thought was the heartwarming tale of an integration-era Army basketball team learning to see past racial differences and triumph agains the all-white Navy squad, and now they tell me it’s an R-rated gore-fest!”)-teaser they’re going to show for the sequel to 12 Years a Slave (spoiler: it’s 13 Years a Slave, and it stars George Clooney, Matt Damon, Brad Pitt, and the rest of the gang!).

One thing I’ve noticed in my considerable time at the theater is that every winter, the good folks at Cougar Town buy out a bunch of pre-preview spots, ostensibly to convince people to watch their show.  I want to preface this by saying that I have heard great things about Cougar Town.  Abed from Community loves it (and has actually been on it), people I know who watch it say it’s either “hilarious” or “really not that bad? I guess?” and it’s by the same guys who did Scrubs, which is on the Official List of Best TV Shows of All Time*.  The largest criticism I’ve heard of it is basically that “it has, like, a really dumb name,” which is also true of such classics as Mork and Mindy and the zany hospital classic-mix-up sitcom, Er?.  Furthermore, it started on ABC, which is easily the least offensive of the major networks.  Compared to the doddering-old-man-trying-to-stay-hip-with-the-kids that is NBC (“kids these days hate 30 Rock.  Michael J. Fox is still relevant, right?  While we’re at it let’s move Scrubs to ABC and fire Conan!”), the laugh-track-laden CBS (“Let’s take the one original show we’ve had in years and drag it on for 14 seasons.  Maybe throw in a slap bet. Helloooooo, middle America!”), and Fox’s Animation Domination (I have nothing bad to say, I actually like Fox.  Plus Brooklyn 99 is easily the best new comedy on TV this season), stuff on ABC looks well-produced, well-written, and even if it’s generally vapid, at least it’s entertaining.  Now C Town is on TBS, which is the Superstation, so you know it’s … super…

My problem with Cougar Town is apparently that I’ve never watched it, and after being subjected to their ads, I don’t ever want to.  Check out this rad ad (r’ad), for season 4:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nEUEPmFhub0

The entire ad is just the cast (I’m assuming it’s the cast, it could be random people, since no one speaks)  being drenched in wine.  The promo for this season at least has cast members talking, but isn’t much better — I guess they like wine a lot? That’s probably a thing in the show?  Maybe these ads are hilarious to people who watch the show, but I can only guess, because I haven’t watched the show.  I don’t have to guess that they’re not hilarious to people who haven’t watched the show, because again, I have not watched the show, and the ads are not hilarious.  From what I can tell, the show is about A) people drinking wine, and B) there is no B, because that’s all I can tell.  For all I know, it’s a show about a bunch of recovering alcoholics and Courteney “I have too many e’s in my name and my last name is hilarious, here check it out:” Cox plays an evil villain whose life goal is to get her “friends” to relapse, either by setting full glasses of wine in front of them and then telling them not to drink with a wink and a nod or by literally throwing booze at them.  Major selling points of the show appear to be, “Oh I remember her she was the bitchy chick from [Scrubs | Freaks and Geeks],” and, “Hey look they have a George Constanza type!”

Screen Shot 2014-02-01 at 11.56.53 AM
Jason Alexander was originally offered the part, but they reneged after finding a younger, balder him.

 The videos I linked are TV spots, because I couldn’t find any of the ads that run pre-movie, but know that the ones that run in theaters are longer.  Imagine the one where Courteney “seriously… my name is” Cox throws wine at people, but for like… 5 minutes.  They ran one in 2013 that boiled down to the annoying voiceover guy whose words are echoed by a sign for some reason repeating, “This season: more wine!” until a good Samaritan went to the projection room and held a flame under the tape to save future generations from ever being subjected to such torture.  (Theater security showed up, but instead of escorting him out they gave him a high five.  He got a standing ovation upon returning to the theater, and the manager gave him free popcorn for life.)  Sitting through the ad was almost enough to make me wish I hadn’t gotten to the theater early, but then I wouldn’t have gotten a good seat (this was prior to the advent of assigned seating).

The point of the ads is presumably to get people to watch the show.  I would think that the people who already watch the show … already watch the show.  It should be sufficient to do a quick “Hey guys, still on!” ad — something that doesn’t actively turn people off from watching it.  You could even do something that makes people who haven’t watched the show want to watch it, by showing funny scenes that aren’t just inside jokes, or, worse, one inside joke repeatedly.  The advertising should be relevant to the target audience, and I don’t think it is (or maybe I’m just super not the target audience, which is unlikely, because of how much I like wine).  The only thing about the ads that could possibly draw me into the show is the idea that if I start watching it, the ads might become bearable.  But I’m not about to watch 5 seasons of Wine Wars to make 5 minutes of my life less awful every other month, so they can count me out.

Congratulations, Cougar Town.  Your advertising lost you a potential viewer.

* There is no link here because I could not find any such list, since none of the lists I checked actually mentioned it, and I have yet to publish such a list… until now…

  1. Some stuff
  2. Scrubs
  3. Some other stuff