Friday, September 22, 2006

Dead Cablevision Exec Treated Better Than Living Cablevision Customers

We charge you a fee for the plug on your cable box!
And so it appears that the Dolan Family Monolopy has awarded backdated stock options to nonemployees, including a no-longer-living former vice chairman of the company.

It's been learned that Cablevision has also awarded options to the following:

1. Former President Warren G. Harding (1865–1923)
2. Anyone who buys an album by Jim Dolan's band
3. Several trees in Charles Dolan's yard
4. Seven of the nine Jim Dolan clones (still in progress at an undisclosed location)

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Good Thing He Didn't Work at the Elephant Exhibit

Some dude in Coram got back at the contracting company that fired him by stealing one of its payloaders and joyriding through town. As Cindy Adams would say, Only in Coram, kids. Only in Coram.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Nelson Ravings Summary: September 14, 2006

In which we plow through the weekly Long Island Press column so you don't have to.

Title: Downtown
Word count: 1313
"I" usage: 41 "I"; 5 "I'm"; 0 "I'd"; 4 "I've"
Four-word summary: "I had to pee."

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Note to Self: Get Savings Account at JPMorgan Chase



A Syosset businessman and "life coach" was the recent lucky recipient of a $70,000 windfall transferred directly to his Chase savings account. The problem is, the money transfer was a banking error, the guy has withdrawn $58,000 of it already, and now the bank wants its dough back. Of course, the dude's lawyer is saying it was an honest error, that his client doesn't keep track of the large amounts of money filtering back and forth into the account, and that his refusal to return any of the bank's calls or letters does not mean he is guilty of any wrongdoing.

Sounds reasonable. Shit happens. But it's hard to give the guy the benefit of the doubt when you read a little further into the article and discover that this modern-day Matt Foley honed his motivational speaking skills and the life lessons he taps into in his coaching sessions IN JAIL while serving time for conspiracy to commit securities fraud. Sigh....

Child, Thy Name Is Lard Ass:
The Roslyn Cluster-Fuck, Er, Cluster-Stop Conundrum

We know their backpacks are super-heavy. We're well-aware that they may need to conserve their energy for after-school PlayStation marathons. But the schoolchildren of Roslyn surely have the stamina and athletic ability to make it to and from the corner for their daily busride -- don't they? Not if you ask their outraged parents, who are up in arms over a recent change in the district's schoolbus pickup/dropoff itinerary. Now, in an effort to save money in the beleaguered district, each child will no longer be picked up directly in front of his or her McMansion; instead, the nonperambulating mouthbreathers will be forced to walk to -- GASP! -- a nearby corner to nab a ride on Big Yellow.

C'mon, people, gas prices are at an all-time low, so if you've got a problem with your progeny having to venture past the end of your driveway, fire up the H3, postpone your manicure till after lunch, and drive them to school yourselves.

Besides, what's the worst that can happen? If you're lucky, your exhausted cherubs will be so pooped from their eighth-of-a-mile exodus that they'll fall asleep on the bus and go missing.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Next Stop: Go Screw Yourself

A recent epidemic of school bus drivers misplacing children has been plaguing Long Island. Newsday’s been on top of it. But the real problem is not the bus drivers, but the kids falling asleep on the bus.

Who falls asleep on the bus? When we were kids, we had to stay awake to fend off the pack of bullies who tortured us. Who can sleep when you’re sitting on a slippery green vinyl seat (with the occasional duct tape to provide some friction) on a rumbling diesel vehicle that shakes more than Muhammad Ali off-roading in a SUV with stop sign-shaped tires? And why hasn’t Newsday mentioned these other incidents:

  • On November 22, 2005, a Long Island Rail Road train leaving Huntington for Penn Station ended up on the observation deck of the Empire State Building. When asked why the train went off course, the conductor replied, "I always wanted to go to the Empire State Building."

  • During an Islanders game in 2003, an elevator full of fans at Nassau Coliseum was stuck between floors for the entire second period. Passengers said staring at the closed doors turned out to be more entertaining than the home team flailing on the ice.

  • In late 2000, a Southwest Airlines flight coming from Fort Lauderdale was about to land at MacArthur Airport when it turned around and returned to Florida because a co-pilot “left a pen at the Cheeburger Cheeburger stand.”

  • On a humid August day in 1996, the Hampton Jitney ended up in Hampton, a small village along the New York-Vermont border, some 300 miles away from the closest Long Island-based Hampton. The bus driver was like, “Hampton, East Hampton, West Hampton, what’s the difference?”

  • On October 3, 1905, a carriage hired from the Sayville Livery Concern en route to the Blue Point General Store was rerouted through Browns River in Bayport when the horse pulling the carriage got thirsty.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Seller's Desperation

Newsday has recently revamped its real estate section to include a one-page feature entitled Why You Should Buy My House in [Your Town]. Here you'll find a last-ditch effort by the highlighted homeowners to dump their overpriced, overtaxed money pits (STAR deduction notwithstanding) on a new flock of suckers (Long Island Nation staff included) who would rather survive paycheck-to-paycheck in a Port Washington split than live the high life in a custom-built, center-foyer Colonial in Buttfuck, Pennsylvania (those Poconos pipe dreams are mostly scams, by the way).

The article usually features the home's basic specs (asking price, taxes, what other homes in the area have recently sold for, and the amount of time it's been on the market), as well as a litany of often-poignant tales of how many children were sired in the amorous abode, immaculate images of the interior and exterior, and a stiff, posed shot of the homeowners themselves sporting pleading, pained expressions that seem to emote, "Please take this financial drain off our hands so we can retire to Miami Beach."

Today's "Why You Should Buy My House" showcases a plea to purchase a pleasant-enough-looking dwelling in Commack, which immediately raised our ire, since the writers of this particular item also have a home in Commack that we'd be willing to part with for the right amount of wampum. And we think they could have listed some better reasons for buying in Commack than a house that boasts a fieldstone fireplace and banquet-sized dining room.


Why You Should Buy OUR House in Commack

  1. Beautiful harvest-gold kitchen circa 1973 (perfect decor for the upcoming autumnal equinox!

  2. Large, crabgrass-ridden 0.33-acre lot that takes hours to mow

  3. Ultra-sexy location right down the road from the Commack Motor Inn.

  4. Proximity to not one, but TWO Targets, two Home Depots, and the verdant Hoyt Farm, which is within walking distance but to which we're denied access because we're Town of Huntington residents, not Town of Smithtown residents.

  5. Forget about through-the-roof SAT scores and Regents scholarships: Commack High School (SD 10) claims both Rosie O'Donnell and Bob Costas among its esteemed alumni.

Nelson Ravings Summary

In which we plow through the weekly Long Island Press column so you don't have to.

Title: Fashion and Fame
Word count: 1308
"I" usage: 53 "I"; 2 "I'm"; 4 "I'd"; 1 "I've"
Four-word summary: "I like Project Runway."

Thursday, September 07, 2006

LaGuardia's Looking Better All the Time

Fly This!To the surprise of no one, MacArthur Airport is experiencing more trouble. This time, Southwest Airlines' second concourse has been delayed indefinitely because of fire and other safety deficiencies.

Further investigation by longislandnation.com has discovered the following additional problems at the airport:
  1. Airport wasn't actually named after General Douglas MacArthur, but rather the treacly tune "MacArthur Park" (the Richard Harris version).

  2. T.G.I. Fridays serves potato skins that actually came from Bennigan's!

  3. Bumps on the runways caused by the burial of bribe money to disgraced former Islip boss Peter J. "Baby Face" McGowan.

  4. Major delays caused by rerouting planes to the LIE.

  5. Hard to find pilots willing to work so close to Selden

  6. Many Southwest flights go to Florida. How is that "southwest"? Like, did anyone pass a geography course?

  7. "Lost" luggage showing up on eBay from a seller named ISPbagz

  8. In-flight movie is United 93 (but only after people revolted against Herbie: Fully Loaded).

  9. Rumors of a new carrier: Buttafuoco Air.

  10. Airport screeners asking passengers to "remove all metal items, take off your shoes, and show us your tits."

  11. Southwest's male flight attendants might…be…gay.

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