Monday, February 24, 2020

GAME REVIEW: Space Invaders 2020


The official press release was like the answer to a prayer.



You loved it in the 1970s, and you asked us to bring it back. Finally your wish has been granted! Coleco International is happy to announce:

Space Invaders 2020



My hands shook as I read this. I have to admit, I loved Space Invaders. Though it looks painfully simple now, it was like magic back then. It was the first video game with a real competition, where there were good guys and bad guys and plenty of gunfire. (Some months earlier, Coleco released a non-violent version called Unresolved Space Disagreement that also had two sides but no gunfire. Its flaming commercial failure actually extinguished the entire genre. With no FIRE button, players found it tedious to repeatedly type things like, "I hear you, but we'll just have to agree to disagree".)

The indescribable detail in this new Space Invaders shows us the light years computer games have crossed. The little RGB 8x8-pixel creatures have been replaced by vector-drawn, motion-capture versions of a seething Andy Serkis. And remember the weaponry in the original iteration? You had exactly one choice: either fire or don't. This time around there's lots of new tech to play with, literally a space arsenal that can decimate everything from here to Alpha Centauri. Lucky players can now choose to wield:

The Fascia Incineration Ray: Vibrating beta waves loosen the delicate tissue beneath alien skin, causing the eyeballs to dislodge. It started off as kind of cool, though with time it turned a bit grotesque. Perhaps other players will appreciate the status bar updates like, "Somebody's gonna need an optometrist!"

The Groin Decimation Ray: I'm not sure how many times you need to see the sexual equipment of an invader incinerate like charcoal on a barbecue. The first time I was mesmerized as the game instantly flipped to slow-motion and I watched the alien’s face go ashy, its lip quavering slightly as the life-altering realization that they would never be able to reproduce again slowly moved across his face. The second time I literally yelled at the screen, "SPEED IT UP AGAIN, DICKLESS!"

In the face of all this advanced weaponry, you know something big has got to be motivating the alien army. Whereas with the old version we just assumed the invaders didn't like humans, this time around the conflict has been clearly spelled out: it's climate change. Now, apparently, the whole universe of alien civilizations is coming forward and saying, "THIS WILL NOT DO!"

An introductory video shows us the breaking point: aliens on an unnamed planet are watching macrotelescopic footage of a thoughtless teenager tossing an overloaded fast-food bag out of the window of a smoke-billowing Kia, hitting a Native American in the face. "Oh HELL no!" declares Commander Plinko from his chair at Mission Control, and then the fight is on.

However well-intentioned these politics are, I'm concerned that this scenario might quickly date. Even now I'm not so sure anyone will be scared by a Gollum-lookalike yelling, "THIS ONE IS FOR GRETA THUNBERG!" And while climate change is a serious problem, some of the examples the invaders cite can sound a little ... petty. It strikes us as almost comic when an invader shoots a barrage of alpha-rays at us while screaming, "You didn't cut up the plastic rings holding a six-pack together and now they're stuck on a dolphin's nose!" Though even a glancing blow by the Decimation Ray means painful death, it's hard to take it seriously when the attacker simultaneously hollers, "You tossed out a yogurt pot and now a hermit crab is living in it!"

I definitely didn't appreciate the new interfaces to apps, text messaging, and email. The first time I played I must have killed a really popular invader, because seconds later my cellphone exploded with Facebook notifications saying I'd been blocked by 87 residents of Planet Klorg. Days later I'd completely forgotten about the game when I got an email saying, "YOU HAVE DESTROYED OUR FAMILY! YOU MAY HAVE WON THE BATTLE BUT YOU HAVEN'T WON THE WAR!" I assumed it was from my Uncle Bill, and I nearly cancelled his National Geographic subscription. Then I noticed the return address was Planet Techron and the signee was Mistress Gloongba, widow of Commander Gloongba, and finally I pieced it all together.

New Modes are hit-and-miss. Realistic Mode was flat-out frustrating: I don't care if sound waves travel eight miles a second: when I kill an alien, I don't want to get a text sixteen minutes later saying, "OWWW!" I also didn't appreciate Inevitable Mode, where if your weapons narrowly miss a Space Invader, their good luck thwarts the natural order of the universe and their death will come soon by other means. It sounds interesting, though it strikes me as slightly underwhelming to get an email the next day saying the guy passed from undiagnosed heart disease.

STARS: 2 1/2 out of 4

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Fahrschule Niepel, Part Three

Previously when I said that people from 28 U. S. states could swap their American driver's licenses for German ones, and people from 11 other states don't have to take the driving test, it was to show how unfair the system was to, say, people from New York, where neither of these is true. These people will spend at least $1,600 and six months of their lives to study the laws and pass the tests. This time, though, I mention it to say that giving someone a German driver's license without any additional education is the FREAKIN' STUPIDEST THING I'VE EVER HEARD.

Driving in Germany is exponentially harder than in America. In America, the sun is shining, the cars are expensive, the roads are forty feet wide. Now imagine

-- every street is paved with cobblestones, and a tram zigzags down the middle;

-- poor people drive rust buckets, young people ride bicycles, and eccentric old men buzz around on modified vacuum cleaners;

-- some lanes are actually NARROWER THAN THE AVERAGE CAR, which means if another car passes you will both lose your rear-view mirrors, if not your lunch. Of course, there will be a sign at the side of the road to warn you, assuming that when you are in a life-threatening situation you are relaxed enough to check out the scene elsewhere; and

-- there are the occasional horse-drawn carriages, which could be particularly problematic except the official German position is, "Why should animals get special treatment just because they have primitive undersized brains, they can crush a human with a misplaced step, and they're barely controlled by skinny leather straps while pulling rickety carriages full of tourists?"

Even ignoring these obstacles, driving in America is easier. If you're supposed to stop, there's a red light or a STOP sign. In Germany, you know what means you might have to stop at an intersection? NOTHING. Here, unmarked intersections are governed by the "right before left" rule, which means if there's a car coming from the right, then you have to stop for them. When clueless Americans get German licenses, then, you can picture a conversation like this:

GERMAN CIVIL SERVANT: "So glad you moved here from Oklahoma! You know what a zebra crossing is? What a street sign with a red circle on it means? And you're totally clear on right-before-left?"

NEW AMERICAN TRANSPLANT: "No! Are they important?"

GERMAN CIVIL SERVANT: "Just life or death! Here's your license. Great photo! Have fun!"

And that's just one of a dozen weirdnesses here. I remember the first time I saw a traffic light with a STOP sign attached: I'm pretty sure that's how Spock got heads to explode in that early episode of Star Trek. Here's a commonsense rule about logical, practical Germany:

You know those bright-red signs with the giant letters on them spelling STOP? Eh, sometimes you can ignore them.

And then there's road construction, which is 24/7 on the autobahn, with completion projected for eight years after chickens colonize Mars. Lanes are diverted into completely different paths which are, naturally, demarcated by new lines. The road now looks like a Jackson Pollock painting, but you have to ignore the old white lines and follow the new yellow ones. It's vitally important to know this, or like the Arkansas driver before he was pushed off a cliff by a truck ferrying pigs from Poland, you too will be screaming, "WHAT THE FUCK IS UP WITH ALL THESE LINES?"

Germany is a beautiful green country crisscrossed by eisenbahnstrassen, or railroads, and famed for the particularly gorgeous Eisenbahn-Romantik. Now imagine you and your sweetie are driving through a 14-century town and you see a sign that says, "EINBAHNSTRASSE." Wouldn't that be a lovely detour? An old steam railway, still ferrying tourists up and down Alps, through vast forests, past castles and mirror lakes. Sounds like a don't-miss to me!

Wait. I think I got it wrong. Yup, that's a different word. "Einbahnstrasse" actually means "one-way street."

YOU: "Look, honey! This is a romantic railroad road! Get the camera ready! That reminds me, have I told you recently that I love you very, very -- AIEEEEEEEEEE!"

If your hands aren't already shaking when you're taking your driving test, here's another easy way to fail it. Let's say a road bends either right or left, and you're warned by a traffic sign with a curved arrow painted on it. The entire road turns. Both directions. All lanes. You will fail your driving test if you go around this curve WITHOUT USING YOUR TURN SIGNAL.

Why? Because Germans are logical. What if the guy in front of you sees the turn ahead, sees the sign, and thinks, "Fuck it! I'm fed up with this relentless government intrusion into my private life. For once I'm bucking the system and driving straight ahead"? Your concentration might be affected as you see his car fly off the road, plunge into the forest, and send the whole countryside up in flames. If everybody else uses their turn signal, then, you will get that vital three seconds of warning.

(Actually, I have no idea why this is required. My driving instructor might have had an explanation, but I tended not to ask him questions where the answer might be, "WHY IS IT SO DIFFICULT FOR YOU TO FOLLOW GERMAN RULES?")

My new instructor Q turned out to be a great guy. He was kind and patient and, when he realized my bill had passed the thousand-euro mark, let me ride around with other students for free. Unfortunately, my German isn't good and his English wasn't good, so I didn't understand much of what he said. Once when I pulled up next to a parked car, ready to back into a parking space, he pointed toward the other car and barked something at me.

"Am I too close?" I asked. "Or too far away?"

"Yes!" he agreed.

I took classes with him until my husband needed knee surgery and my driver's license became mandatory. Thoughtfully, Niepel understood and signed me up for a driving test. Q was in the front seat of the car, and the TUV guy in the back. Ten minutes in, the TUV guy directed me onto a road that was a nightmare. There were bikes and pedestrians and construction and signs on top of signs. There was everything short of unicyclists juggling flaming chihuahuas.

"Holy God," I thought, frantically snapping my head around, "I know I'm gonna miss something."

Q slammed on the brakes and tsk-tsked. I was right.

As I drove back to the TUV and four hundred more euros flew out the window, Q divulged my mistake. "You must stop at the STOP signs. You have to stop at the STOP signs. It is a violation not to stop at the STOP signs."

"I stop at STOP signs," I protested. "I'm American. There are STOP signs everywhere in America, and I always stop at them."

Q shook his head. "You have to stop at STOP signs," he repeated.

This was probably the last mistake I thought I'd make. STOP signs are pretty obvious, being big and red, and I'd never driven through any in America. But you know those "scientific" tv shows that demonstrate how weird the human brain is? In one I saw, the narrator said, "Watch this video, and concentrate on the two women sitting at the cafe table." I watched and concentrated and then the narrator came back. "Did you see the man in the giant chipmunk costume walk by?"

I thought, "What the fuck is he talking about?"

Then he said, "Let's replay the video, and this time watch all of the action." I did. And this time I saw a man in a giant chipmunk costume walking by. Concentrating on one thing, I totally missed something else.

All of this is to say, there was so much noise flying into my brain, I couldn't process it all. Could Germans really filter all this shit? I imagined they watched that "scientific" tv show, concentrated on the two women at the cafe table, and still, three seconds into the video, shouted, "WHY ARE THERE GIANT CHIPMUNKS WALKING AROUND AMERICA?"

But the testing guy confirmed it. "You have to stop for STOP signs," he said.

I didn't complain. Teenagers around me who'd failed their tests were crying, but I just said okay and walked home.

Over the next few weeks, my confidence evaporated. After the brake-slamming of my first instructor and then failing the test, I totally lost my nerve. Gone was the responsible guy who'd been driving since he was sixteen, who'd driven across America twice, who'd never gotten a ticket or caused an accident. I became fixated on my faults: I was a terrible driver, I had bad eyes, I couldn't be trusted, I'd never learn. I turned into an old lady, constantly wondering what was wrong with me and wondering if it would ever be safe for me to drive. I lay in bed second-guessing the possibilities:

1. There wasn't a STOP sign, and these two men were lying.

2. There was a STOP sign, I'd seen it, and I'd ignored it.

3. There was a STOP sign, and I hadn't seen it because I'm an incompetent driver who will very soon confuse the gas and the brake pedal and plow through the brick front of a nail salon, killing fourteen people whose gravestones will read things like, "JUST ONE MORE GODDAMN FINGERNAIL AND SHE WOULDA BEEN OUTSIDE!"

I'd pretty much decided (3) was true, but wanted to settle it once and for all. When I met Q for my next driving lesson, I said, "Can we drive to that crazy road where I failed the test?"

"Sure," he said. I drove and drove and drove, as Q repeated that in Germany you have to stop for STOP signs. Did I know that? You have to stop for STOP signs. And then the lesson was over and Q directed me back to the fahrschule. "Did we go to that street where I failed the test?" I asked.

"You never know what street the test will go to," he replied.


The second time I failed the test it was because I passed a bus. Whenever I mention this to a German, the conversation goes a little something like this:

THEM: "Were there flashing lights on the bus?"

ME: "No."

THEM: "Were the turn signals on?"

ME: "No."

THEM: "Were there any warning lights at all?"

ME: "No."

THEM: "Oh." [PAUSE] "You shouldn't pass a bus."

The bus had pulled over to a bus stop exactly where the road widened. In a skinny Volkswagen Golf, I thought there was enough room to drive by. The Land Rover behind me, and all the cars behind it, agreed, and they followed me. I was the only one directed back to the TUV. The tester and Q both said there wasn't room to pass the bus.

ME: "But all the other cars drove past the bus."

THEM: "If all the other cars were driving 70 kilometers per hour, would that make it okay?"

I realized my answer was, "Absolutely!" so I kept my mouth shut.


After this, I was a total wreck. My optimism at passing the tests had flipped around entirely: now I knew like Sisyphus that the task was impossible, and that I'd eternally fall prey to another nonsensical rule. Now I was just enduring the humiliation to see how many times I could completely fuck up. The more the merrier! I thought, because with each failure it showed how ridiculous the German rules were, how sadistic the system was, how incompetent the instruction was, and how stupid they were to hand over licenses to Americans who had no instruction at all.

I'd also gone from liking my instructor to absolutely despising him. Every few minutes while we were driving he'd flash back on my first failure and say, "Remember to stop at the STOP signs!" Over and over, "you have to stop at the STOP signs." At first I calmly replied that I knew that. The next time, I said he didn't have to keep repeating it. And the last time, I exploded.

"You know," I said, "I listened the first FOUR HUNDRED times you said it, but now it's just annoying, and I'm thinking maybe you should just SHUT THE HELL UP."

We sat silently for a second and I actually wondered if he'd terminate the lesson for abusiveness. It wasn't a lesson, though, so much as nonstop, undeserved humiliation, like if every time your high school teacher walked past your chair he said, "Remember not to poop your pants!" Even if, let's assume, at some point in time you had actually pooped your pants, I'm pretty sure you're not going to chirp, "Thanks for the hot tip, buddy!" for the rest of your life. At some point you are going to scream, "IT WAS TWENTY YEARS AGO AND I DIDN'T ACTUALLY POOP MY PANTS SO MAYBE IT'S TIME TO SHUT YOUR BITCH MOUTH?"

And so for the next few months, instead of sleeping, I wrestled with this conundrum at night. And finally, unexpectedly, like Sherlock Holmes, I had a blinding flash where suddenly appeared an explanation that made sense.

Q and I had a language problem. Could this be a symptom? Was he actually trying to tell me something more ... like, I didn't stop LONG ENOUGH at STOP signs?

I mimed the question at my next lesson and Q confirmed it. Americans stop at STOP signs for less than a second while Germans literally COUNT TO THREE. I'm not sure why, or what it accomplishes, but anything less and they will say you ran the STOP sign. I did this exaggerated stop at the next STOP sign and Q said, "Yes, that is good."

Was that it? I wondered. The entire problem?

I took the driving test a third time. The driving was a total asshole, barking instructions too fast, but when I politely advised him that my German was bad he replied something like, "So? What language am I supposed to speak?" I made mistakes, but this time he ignored them. He lectured me -- sternly, face to face -- but while I was giving him an "I am considering your words with the utmost gravity" look, I was thinking, "Why does he assume that I can suddenly understand him now?" Still, it was like he knew about my failing-forever plan and decided to nip it in the bud. I passed the test. A small part of me was happy, but the rest was fixated on a simple fact:

If either of my instructors had said, "You have to stop for three seconds at STOP signs," I'd have saved $800 and three months of my life.

Months later, I'd like to say I'm happily zipping around Europe. Instead, the fear still hasn't gone away. I'm hoping one of these days I will suddenly regain confidence and think, "Sure! I'll be fine in my giant, four-ton Mercedes maneuvering around bicyclists and trams and eccentric old men riding vacuum cleaners through cobblestone streets!" Every day I forget a little more about this whole debacle, and every day I get closer to picking up those keys.

If you're in Europe, then, maybe for the next few months, stay away from nail salons.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Fahrschule Niepel, Part Two

The next sign that I’d made a serious mistake came when I actually had to drive. The car was a Volkswagen Golf, and had to be fifteen years old. It made sense to use cheap cars since the students must have caused a few accidents, but in this case the 200 euros I'd paid them was probably close to what the car was worth. And then I got inside and discovered the manual transmission.

This illustrates the main problem with moving to a foreign country: to find out what your new life will be like, you have to ask questions. But how do you know what questions to ask? I hadn’t realized I should have asked, “Do the trainee cars have automatic transmission?“ You know, like I didn't think to ask, “While I’m driving, will somebody wallop me with a chicken?“

I’d driven cheap cars before -- did I ever mention I hung out with the stoners in college? -- so I got in and hoped for the best. The skill came back pretty quickly. Minutes later H and I were speeding around the German countryside. He talked excitedly. He must have recognized that I was a great driver and needed no instruction, so I heard a lot about his wife and life in Germany. Back at the driving school, though, he announced that I'd need more lessons. Because there was so much I needed to learn.

I tilted my head like your dog would if you asked him to mix you a martini. I thought, why didn’t you tell me some of that instead of, you know, intimate details about your wife -- 37-year-old, banjo-playing Hildegarde? (I actually don't remember what he said about her because I WAS TRYING TO DRIVE.)

I agreed to sign up for two more lessons at 70 euros each. I crossed my fingers and hoped one of them would be for my driving test. I couldn’t have been more wrong: at the next lesson, on a Monday morning, I discovered H had actually signed me up for a third lesson, making it three days in a row.

Suddenly it hit me: I wasn't some excellent-driving foreign guy who'd be taking the German driving test any time soon. No, for an undefined period I would be paying Niepel $58 per hour to teach me something I already knew.

As we were getting in the car again, H casually shared his vision for my future. The driving test required a pretty good knowledge of German, which I didn't have, so there was no way I'd pass. But look on the bright side! We'd have so much fun driving around together. You know what Hildegard did last night?

I heard my blood pounding in my ears. Americans from 38 states don't have to take the German driving test, but for me there's daily tutoring that costs more than a Gucci addiction. It was too much. "Instead of paying you to drive around with me," I snapped, "I'll go home and study German. Let's forget all about this lesson, and cancel the next ones too."

H smiled tightly but was already prepared with an answer. "You have to cancel 48 hours in advance."

I threw myself out of the car and stomped back to the office. I had a talk with J, during which he rarely stopped laughing. To his credit, he let me cancel the other lessons -- but he noted that I'd already paid for that day's lesson so I'd might as well drive with H. Reluctantly, I went back to the car.

H directed me into a parking lot and then slammed on the brakes. You know when you're on the main road in a parking lot, and there are all these little parking aisles to the side? Well, in Germany the cars in the aisles on the right have priority over the cars on the main road. It's part of the "right before left" rule that applies on all of Germany's roads. It's a very strange, completely non-intuitive rule apparently designed so the government can save a few bucks on STOP signs.

"YOU COULD HAVE GOTTEN US KILLED!" H screamed. Which would have been absolutely true if (1) there had been another moving car within half a mile, and (2) it had been pointed straight at us and driving 80 kilometers per hour.

After directing me out of the parking lot, H told me to drive straight ahead. I noticed a sign that seemed to say "no cars allowed," but I wasn't sure. You know the universally-understood red circle with the slash through it that means FORBIDDEN"? Like the one in the Ghostbusters logo that means "No ghosts allowed"? Germany doesn't use those. Instead, the color of the circle holds the entire meaning, making me imagine interactions like this:

ME (DRIVING AND SHIELDING EYES FROM THE SUN): "Is the circle red? IS IT RED???"

HUSBAND (ALSO SHIELDING EYES): "NO, I DON'T THINK SO! IS THERE AN OPTION FOR PUMPKIN ORANGE? AND WHAT WOULD WE DO FOR PUCE?"

"Do you want me to go straight ahead?" I asked H.

He didn't reply, so I proceeded cautiously ahead. Again he slammed on the brakes. "NO CARS ALLOWED!" he yelled, pointing at the sign. "YOU FAILED YOUR TEST AGAIN!"

"I asked you if I should go straight and you didn't say anything," I said. "'If I don't say anything, drive straight ahead,' you said."

"NOT IF IT ISN'T ALLOWED!" he barked.

Finally, H told me to make a u-turn. On a deserted street, I turned into a deserted alley for the first point of a three-point turn, and once again he slammed on the brakes.

Here's a drawing of the u-turn. I wanted to use a drawing program but they don't exist in Germany. Nobody draws here, including children. They write up a quick note of what they require -- a red house, a squiggly green tree, a yellow sun -- and have their secretaries draw it up.



From (1) I turned left, planning to stop at 2. Then I'd reverse into the street to 3, and then drive forward in the opposite direction. H slammed on the brakes at 2. "THAT'S NOT HOW YOU DO A U-TURN!" he yelled.

I stared at him, furious. With his third apparently lifesaving stop, I was utterly humiliated and more confused than ever. Is this the way Niepel teaches you to drive -- they don't say a word but just slam on the brakes whenever you do something wrong? I'd have whiplash before I got my license. And how else do you make a u-turn? I wondered. I calmly got out of the car and, in the last words I spoke to him, told him I was done and that he should drive us back.

While he drove, he narrated the ride with explanations of what he was doing. You know, things thirty-year veteran drivers need to know, like the fact that you have to stop at STOP signs, green lights mean GO, etc. I stared out the window and wondered where my life had gone so horribly wrong. Was there even another way of making a U-turn? I wondered. When I got home, I looked up it up in the 90-euro book.



My jaw dropped. Yes, surely this made more sense: backing around a corner -- which any driver knows is the stupidest thing you can do in a car, and I'm including driving Lindsay Lohan to a crackhouse among the options -- and then, when you are apparently in the right lane, you make a left turn.

Fine with me! I thought. I'd love to hear somebody's explanation about how this is superior to the American way, but I'll do whatever they say. The thing is, nowhere did it say the American way wasn't allowed.

Once again I pictured Germany standing next to Italy and Greece, saying, "Hey, at least we're not as dumb as THEM!" But the fact is, Germany -- yes, yes, you are. I say that on behalf of people with brains who find this preposterous. I say this on behalf of the Americans who live in one of the 28 U.S. states where you can literally just exchange your U.S. driver's licenses for a German one with no instruction whatsoever -- to be killed the first time they go to the mall, or get caught in a particularly colorful sunset. And I say this on behalf of poor people who will never get a driver's license because they don't have $1,600 -- which is what I end up spending with Fahrschule Niepel.

Back at the office, J let me switch over to another instructor. His English wasn't very good, J warned, but what could possibly go wrong?

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Random Thoughts

Hi. I collect TV commercials for women's swimsuits where a guy cannonballs into a pool and a woman sunbathing nearby gets lightly splashed and giggles seductively. Do you know where I can find a computer hard drive that holds more than five hundred million terabytes?

________________________

We ate haggis on the Blarney Stone til dawn,
Then we looked for shamrocks with a leprechaun.

-- Lost verse from Ed Sheeran's "Galway Girl"

________________________

I would seriously save about two hours a day if I’d done my Apple TouchID with a wet fingertip.

________________________

If Africa is the Mother Country, America is the Daughter In Law Who Collects Owls Country

________________________

I’m not saying German words are overly long but their record for the fastest game of Hangman was 42 days 17 hours.

________________________

A German drives into the desert. Days pass since the last time he’s seen another soul. Then far off in the distance, on a barren expanse of land extending into the horizon, he sees a dark speck. It’s moving. It’s a car, he realizes.

“Now it will be difficult to find parking,” he says.

________________________

You know those books where there are clues in the words and illustrations that can lead you to, like, a million-dollar gold-and-diamond butterfly brooch? You’ll have an easier time finding that butterfly than something in a German grocery store labeled “low sodium.”

________________________

Re: Your Note Inquiring As To The Best Way To Show Me The Proper Respect When I Get Home

I have enumerated some suggestions for you. I hope they prove helpful.

1. Sock it to me
2. Sock it to me
3. Sock it to me
4. Sock it to me
5. Sock it to me
6. Sock it to me
7. Sock it to me

________________________

Playing "Happy" at a wedding is like playing "Let's Get It Started" at a funeral.

------------------------

People who say, "You get what you pay for" have never ordered tacos in New York.

________________________

I had to walk a friend's Maltese once. Sweetest dog in the world when it was indoors, but outside it was like, "I'M SMELLING THIS POOP AND YOUR TIRED OLD ASS AIN'T GONNA STOP ME!!!"

________________________

HELP! I heard an amazing song on the radio but I don't know the name. The part I heard has these lyrics:

Purple rain, purple rain.
Purple rain, purple rain.
Purple rain, purple rain.
Purple rain, purple rain.
Purple rain, purple rain.
Purple rain, purple rain.
Purple rain, purple rain.

________________________

WHAT PARENTS SAY: "It's a good thing you aren't a mouse, because you'd be dead right now. You'd be sitting in a field playing your mouse video games & you wouldn't even notice the giant hawk swoop down & grab you & tear you apart."

WHAT KIDS THINK: "There are mouse video games?"

________________________

WORLD: "Trimming your pubes makes your dick look bigger."

MY BOYFRIEND: "We're gonna need a bigger razor."

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

CORRECTION

Yesterday we wrote here that the president spent the day playing golf. We have subsequently learned that this isn’t true. In fact, President Trump went to a golf course with golf clubs and three rich white Republican men he ordinarily plays golf with, but on arrival he probably had a conversation like this:

RESPONSIBLE PERSON: “I’m sorry, sir, but we canceled your game today. Rioting at the American Embassy in Iraq has resulted in one death and dozens of injuries. It's almost exactly like Benghazi, which prompted over thirty Republican investigations of Democratic leadership, with Republicans ultimately holding Hillary Clinton responsible after questioning her eighteen times."

PRESIDENT TRUMP: "Oh MAN! OH MAN! OH MAN OH MAN OH MAN! THAT REALLY SUCKS! I want to play golf! I HAVE to play golf! I was just getting really good! If I take a day off now, I'm probably going to be lousy tomorrow!"

PRESIDENT TRUMP (cont'd): "And how am I supposed to be a good president if I can't golf every day? How am I supposed to be a good husband? 'Melania, you look like a cheap tart, not America's First Lady.' 'You stupid orange butthole, how the hell can you say that to me? That's it: I'm leaving you and the kids and that goddamn Einstein visa you bought for me and going back to where I belong, being passed around like cheese dip between Romanian billionaires.' 'Aw, I'm sorry, sweetie. I'm just tense because they wouldn't let me play golf today.' SEE? You want to be responsible for THAT? I'M PLAYING GOLF! I'M PLAYING GOLF! I'M PLAYING GOLF!"

RESPONSIBLE PERSON: “Sir, CNN and MSNBC are on the course with cameras."

PRESIDENT TRUMP: [PAUSE] "As president I now command that we return to the White House so I can deal with this important issue at this delicate time."

We apologize for the error.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Fahrschule Niepel, Part One

Everybody in Germany thinks that fahrschules — driving schools — are a scam. Unlike America, here you have to sign up with one if you want to get a driver's license. They give you the classroom education and the driving lessons. They decide when you're ready for the official written test, and they decide when you're ready for the official driving test.

If they don't think you're ready, they'll make you keep taking lessons for $58 an hour.

Notice a problem here?

In America you decide when you take the two tests, and you make the appointments yourself. If you get 83% of the questions right on the written test, you qualify for the driving test. You get a friend with a good car to drive you to the DMV, drive somebody around for twenty minutes, and if you do okay then you pass.

In Germany, the written test has thirty questions, and you fail if you get two wrong. That's a slightly-daunting 93%. If you pass, the fahrschule gives you driving lessons at a cost of 35 euros for 40 minutes. For the next few months, basically, you throw money at them whenever they request it. Every once in a while you'll say, “Hey, can I take the driving test now?“ and as they're counting your cash they'll reply, “No, it’ll just be a few more years.“

They might decide you need fifty lessons, which with classroom fees, signup fees and testing fees means you can easily pass $2,200.

In America you spent $33, plus the cost of your photo. You could hire Annie Lebovitz to take that and still not hit the German cost.

Germany’s Trump-like smug/stupid dichotomy is obvious here. Yes, Germany has fewer auto accidents than America. If you want, you can pretend it's this stringent system. Me, I'm wondering if maybe it has something to do with the people who make less than $80,000 per year and don't have $2,200 to blow.

Germany pretends the fahrschules can’t cheat you, because the fees are regulated -- but is $143 a reasonable price for the instructor who has to be there for your forty-minute driving test? Is it still reasonable if you fail within the first ten minutes and he effectively earns $858 an hour?

Have you figured out why there are fahrschules all over Germany now?

I should have known H would be a terrible driving teacher. People who are good at their professions don’t have time to casually mention their availability online. Tony Hawk isn’t going to staple ads to telephone poles asking, “Who wants to take skateboard lessons?“ But Google gave me just one other English-language possibility in the small town of Hannover, where I'm living now. A driving school advertised international clientele and foreign languages, but when I went there the staff looked like contestants in a Kim Kardashian lookalike contest. I asked if they spoke English and ten sharpened eyebrows went up. Someone replied, confused and haltingly, “Why would we speak English?“

I had no choice. I had to go with H, so I went to the driving school where he worked, Fahrschule Niepel, to sign up.

The owner, J, was a friendly man who laughed constantly. His English was as bad as my German so neither of us understood the other, but his laughter was so effervescent it won me over all the way to the $223.45 bill. The few written words on the bill were undecipherable except for one: I was apparently paying fifty euros for an app. It had an English option, J insisted. I'd study, then come in and take the practice test. After I passed that, we'd start with the driving part.

I went home, downloaded the app, and set the “English“ option, but it didn't actually change to English. I emailed J and never got a reply. I called the support number and they kept up the pretense, though they couldn’t actually point me toward any English instruction. I’m not sure why anyone pretended otherwise: I mean, let’s say you film a video in German, and upload it to YouTube. Now say someone in China watches it. Though their computer is set to Chinese and their YouTube profile is set to Chinese, it shouldn’t come as a shock that your video will not be magically subtitled. Similarly, if someone in England watches your video, the main character will not suddenly be dubbed by Helen Mirren.

With the language difficulties it was impossible to be sure, but it looked like I paid fifty euros for a largely-useless app: "Fahren Lernen," from fahren-lernen.de. This did not make me think well of Germany: in America you can download Angry Birds for ninety-nine cents, and it probably has more English-language driving instruction. Suddenly I understood why J was always laughing: you would too if just sat in an office and took 200 euros from random people with so little obvious return.

The one part of the app that changed to English was the quiz. Unfortunately, it had been translated into British English, and the first question was something like, “From whence must you halt whilst approaching a sunken kerbstone?“ I didn't have the faintest clue. The multiple-choice answers were all numbers, whereas my gut reaction was Spain.

Over the next few weeks I answered probably two hundred questions, and got at least half of them wrong. There had to be fifty about driving trucks, thirty about pulling trailers, twenty about children’s car seats, and five about horse-drawn carriages. “Why do I need to know all this bullshit?“ I asked a German friend.

His answer tells you everything you need to know about Germany, a perfect example of their “Plan for everything!“ style. “But you MIGHT want to drive a truck, or pull a trailer, or drive a horse-drawn carriage,“ he said. “The license gives you that right.“

“I’m NOT going to do any of those things,“ I protested. “Why doesn’t it quiz me about coffee beans and also license me to work at Starbucks?“

I remembered J had mentioned a book that had been translated to English that I could buy for 90 euros more. It was also in British English. I read it four times before I could make sense of it and learn how fast I could drive a 7.5-ton truck outside built-up areas, though it never explained what those were. I went back to Niepel and told J I was ready for the practice exam.

J walked over to a computer with a blank display. He hit a few buttons and it still had a blank display. Out of the German words that followed, I concluded that (1) this was the computer for the English-language practice test, and (2) it didn't work. J shrugged and made an appointment for me to take the real test. "You've definitely earned that $223 now," I thought.

I passed the written test and thought the worst was over. By a reciprocal agreement residents of 27 U.S. states can literally swap their driver's licenses for German ones. Residents of 11 other states don't have to take the driving test. Unfortunately I'd lived in New York, one of the remaining 12 states. But they were so carefree with most Americans, and I'd driven in America for thirty years without a ticket or accident, so this would be easy, right?

To the contrary, my nightmare had just begun.

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Random Thoughts

I may be American, but I'm not an Ugly American. I try to be pleasant to everyone I encounter in my travels, whether it's a pretentious Italian mom or a filthy Spanish backpacker. Whenever somebody sitting near me tries to strike up a conversation, I take the time to reply, "Sorry, I don't speak whatever the hell that is."



Americans differ sharply by region. Their distinct personalities are hinted at by the answers they gave to a simple question from a TV journalist.

Q: Would you rather listen to Peter Gabriel or Phil Collins?

L.A. RESIDENT: Peter Gabriel, I think.

MID-AMERICA RESIDENT: Definitely Phil Collins.

N.Y. RESIDENT: Well, it depends. Do I want to be entertained or vomit?



ME: I am making a movie about skinny people who live in a lighthouse pushing logs off the world's highest waterfall.

IMOVIE: Make sure you turn your camera HORIZONTAL to film it!



When you are buying something and want to pay with exact change, don't ask me if I have a penny, nickel, dime or quarter, because I will lose more than that fishing all the crap out of my pocket.



Why I Like Sheep Better Than People

When you shave sheep all over you get sweaters. When you shave people all over you get New Jersey.



FIRST YEAR OF MARRIAGE
WIFE: I sure do like that necklace.
HUSBAND: Do you? Let me buy it for you, my dear.

SECOND YEAR OF MARRIAGE
WIFE: I sure do like that necklace.
HUSBAND: It is nice, isn’t it?

THIRD YEAR OF MARRIAGE
WIFE: I sure do like that necklace.
HUSBAND: Yeah, well, you like a lot of stuff.



Two men — one American and one German — are driving through Manhattan when an asteroid hits the car, crushing the American, setting his clothes on fire and vaporizing his hair.

AMERICAN: I ... I think I need a hospital.

GERMAN: Put it on the list for the next time we are here.



Hamburg is a fun little coastal town with a lot of tourist attractions, so I visit at least once or twice a year. There are several fun hipster neighborhoods, the Elbphilharmonie is wonderful, there's a world-class attraction in the rooms full of tiny, dazzling scenes at Miniatur Wunderland, and all along the short coast are excellent fish restaurants mixed with stylish modern buildings that will appeal to any architecture fan.

The Reeperbahn has to be Germany's best adult neighborhood, with blocks and blocks of every sort of entertainment from restaurants to nightclubs to drag bars to just flat-out sex clubs of every persuasion.


Nearby Herbertstraße is so crowded with prostitutes that female tourists are warned against visiting for fear of starting a "turf war."

My husband Dieter, our friend Evelyn and I drove up one Friday last July to weekend at the Arcotel Rubin Hamburg. It's an okay hotel a few blocks from St. Georg, the city's rather small gay neighborhood. The first words the desk clerk said to us were, "We're sorry, but the air conditioning doesn't work."

Instantly my mood flipped from carefree tourist to cross-examining inquisitor. It was ninety-five degrees outside. Why would they wait until check-in to tell us this? Were they afraid -- rightly -- that if we'd been warned, we'd have stayed somewhere else? My blood pressure skyrocketed while my two German companions decided to share their thoughts.

Evelyn is a tall, ice-cold blonde with aquiline features. "That is fine," she snapped. "We are strong German stock."

Dieter is six foot nine and about a yard across. "That is not a problem," he agreed. "Germans are used to hardship."

I stared at them in disbelief before turning to the clerk. "I'm American," I said. "I need to speak to the manager."

Monday, October 7, 2019

Are some people thinking this could be, like, a diet cookie? Because I've got it narrowed down to either a tapeworm or strychnine.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

If there was one thing wrong with Audrey Hepburn it's that she didn't, know where to, put commas.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Here in Germany they sell peppermint schnappes in mouthwash bottles. It’s such a great idea! This way when people see you drinking it they’ll say, “Good for you!” instead of, “Hey, you know it’s eight in the morning, right?”


Monday, September 16, 2019

It is literally impossible for an American to get a German driver's license. Oh, they'll let you sign up with a driving school and download the app and buy the book and study for months and take the test, but there's no way in hell you'll pass. The test is thirty questions selected from a pool of one thousand, and while they will happily give you all one thousand questions in advance, even with months of deliberation and conceptualization and rationalization you'll never make sense out of them.

One problem is that the "English translation" of the book you've bought is into Great British. Trailers are "caravans," people have "behaviour," and your car has "tyres" and does "manoeuvres." Sentences actually start, "You must reckon with....", which sounds like something Marshall Dillon would say to Billy the Kid. I want to answer, "Do I, pardner?"


I like this passage because it's so totally true. Is "muzziness" a word? Nowhere in the world. But I like picturing a German motor vehicle official sitting back and imagining, "So, when I take an Ambien, how do I feel? Tired? Relaxed? No.... Muzzy! That's it! Medications can cause muzziness."


Even ignoring the odd comma here doesn't help, since "reeve" means "the chief magistrate of a town or district in Anglo-Saxon England."

Google doesn't even help with words it agrees are real. For weeks I read about the proper behaviour in regards to "walking paths" and "footpaths." Don't park on them. Don't drive across them. I kept picturing Mercedeses zipping through forests when it hit me: they meant those cement walking footpaths we have in America. You know, we call them "sidewalks."

"Sunken kerbstones" also baffled me. I wondered about a country whose driving rules so heavily featured flooding. Don't give priority to cars at sunken kerbstones. Ignore cars at sunken kerbstones. Weeks dragged by before it hit me:

Driveway. Don't stop for cars coming out of driveways.

Every day I'd study more, and fume more about it. In America I'd regarded Germany as Valhalla, where everybody was smart and logical. And then I came here and realized the reason Germany was so highly regarded was because it was being graded on an EU curve. Not a genius? Less than brilliant? No problem. Just go stand next to Slovakia and Greece.

My irritation magnified over months of study, as examples of their idiocy piled up. I spent a few weeks puzzled by something called "dipped headlights." References were everywhere. In a tunnel, you must dip your headlights. When you see a deer by the road, dip your headlights. I started to think, are German headlights controlled by a joystick or something? And I'm a smart guy! An idiot would have assumed there was onion soup mix and sour cream involved.

I still don't understand the reasoning but I can repeat the facts: their "dipped" headlights are what Americans call "headlights," and their "main beams" are our brights. Dipping your headlights bizarrely means just turning them on.

Here's a life-or-death instruction about markings on the road:


I can't even understand who this is talking to. Will British people read this and think, "Righty-O, Guv'nah!"? Because Americans look it and go, "Whaaa?"

Americans might also take exception to the word "recommends." We'd be tempted to stop in the middle of the intersection, and when a policeman pulls up we'll say, "Well, the book RECOMMENDS stopping back there, but I decided against it. You know, it's like ordering the fish after the waiter recommends the veal."

Of course, if getting a driver's license is torture here, I'm pretty sure going to jail is worse.

The stakes get higher when buses are involved, so it's important to memorize this:


Makes perfect sense, doesn't it? And then you come to this:


I was pretty sure I was missing something here. "Don't ever pass a bus flashing their hazards while approaching a bus stop. Wait until it's parked and children are exiting before you do." But then I noticed they use two distinct words: "overtaking" and "passing." According to people online, Americans think they're the same thing but Australians think they're different. I couldn't imagine defending that to a traffic policeman:

ME: "Officer, I'm from Cincinnati. I didn't dangerously overtake that bus, but actually carefully passed it."

OFFICER: "Oh, then that's cool. Have a great day!"

Similarly confusing is where you can park your car:


You can't stop "up to 10 meters" of a St. Andrew's Cross. Now turn the page.




Yes, you got it. In a "built-up area" -- you know, what humans call a "city" -- you can park five meters in front of a diagonal cross. But don't even think about stopping there.

The book also declares, "Parking is not allowed on a priority road outside built-up areas." In human-speak, this means "Don't park on the road in the country." I memorized this, and then I took a sample test which asked, "Are you allowed to park at the side of a priority road outside built-up areas?" My answer: absolutely not! The correct answer: of course!

It sent me running back to the text. Apparently when they say "Don't park on the road in the country" they mean "Don't park IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ROAD in the country." What, did you assume they meant on the side?

I sat there staring at the book, struggling to process what I was reading. I'd spent six months deciphering their pronouncements only to discover they were facts any idiot knows. It's weird: everybody in Berlin speaks perfect English. I get two German words out of my mouth and they say, "Look, buddy, let's make this easy. Let's go for English, okay?" But then I decide I want to get a driver's license and suddenly they're all, "You want go putt-putt in motorcar?"

Whether they're incompetent and don't care or they're actively trying to keep Americans off their roads, the end result is that it's impossible for us to pass the driving test. It's a Catch-22: if you're stupid, you'll never figure out what they're talking about. But if you're smart, you could waste months trying to unravel things that are obvious to idiots.

One last example bolsters the incompetence explanation. Let's start with a paragraph from the official book.


And here's a question from the official quiz.


As you can see, I got it wrong. Apparently you need to "reckon" with taxis and beware of taxis and watch out for taxis and keep away from taxis but you don't need to show them "particular care." Like don't send them flowers or chocolate? Think twice about that shoulder massage?

Anyway, I hope you learned something. You can pass someone without overtaking them, you can park in some locations without stopping, and you can totally ignore people that you need to pay very serious attention to. It makes me think of relativity, and that Einstein himself would probably fail this test.

I'd like to say that frustration makes me more determined, but in truth I gave up. I stop trying to understand it and instead just memorized the one thousand mostly-useless questions and their corresponding nonsensical answers. And I passed the test. Now I just have to pass the driving test and I get to drive all over Europe.

I've got to say, I'm feeling seriously muzzy now.

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Insider Secrets to the Top Amusement Parks

You spent eight hundred dollars on plane fare, hotels and admission tickets, and finally the day is here. How are you going to maximize the fun you get for all that amusement park cash? I'm a veteran of some of the most exciting theme parks in the world and I'm going to share with you some of my secret tips.

1. Wait for lousy weather

Let's face it: nobody likes bad weather, especially when they're visiting a theme park. I hate getting my hair mussed and PeePaw doesn't like how the wind blows his fat around. For whatever reason, bad weather means no crowds, which means extra fun for you. Just make sure you're prepared: bring a poncho and a sturdy umbrella -- and maybe stop at the barbershop on Main Street to get a sensible hairdo.

2. Go during an unpopular time of year

Everybody knows that theme parks are mobbed over Spring Break, Easter, or Christmastime. The smart mom, then, books the family trip when they know kids won't be there: like, right before exams. Since there's no chance Wally-Bob and Florabelle are getting into good schools, I figured we'd might as well enjoy ourselves.

Another secret is that most parks have gay nights, which aren't hugely popular in red states like mine. Evangelicals make up a large part of the theme park crowd, and needless to say they don't like rubbing against hunky, shirtless men -- at least when their spouses are around! Take advantage of their absence: tie a rainbow bandana around your neck and you'll blend right in with the crowd.

We had terrible weather during Gay Night this year, which means the place was deserted and extra fun. The 'Allo Guvnor! Alfred the Butler's Spinning Derbies ride was transformed into a disco, and I must have danced with Doreen, a single woman from Maine, for three hours while PeePaw napped on a bench shaped like a library book and two sweet guys named Nate and Andy watched the kids.

3. Avoid overpriced costumed-character meals

Every theme park has some elaborate party banquet where all the costumed characters show up, and all the kids go nuts. Count me out! I do not need some zit-faced high-schooler dressed as Ariel squeaking to me about undersea life when there's a table full of generic Chicken McNuggets nearby.

Sure, maybe the kids will whine, but tell them you're preparing them for real life. Every girl dreams of marrying that prince, but we all grow up to make pudding from a box for husky guys in backward baseball caps. Sure, that harsh reality might scare them, but if it means dodging a meal that costs more than their education, it's definitely worthwhile.

You’d be surprised how much time you can save by eating somewhere unpopular. In fact, it's the worse the better for me! Is it sizzling hot outside? See if the park has somewhere that serves fish. Has their taco truck been shut down for food poisoning? Three bean burritos, please! Or better yet — here's a real expert tip — go on TripAdvisor, search for your theme park, and sort the listing so the worst appears on top. There’s your place! Maybe the sensible folks steer clear of Grandma's Sweet N' Savory Snack Shack but with nobody else in the building PeePaw and I enjoyed a relaxed meal with Doreen. We were in line for Super Space Wahoo! while all the "cool kids" were still going, "Are you weally Ariel? Weally? [PAUSE] I wuv you."

(Doreen was such a sweet girl. She loved my short hair and didn't believe I had a mullet just six hours earlier. As a joke she started calling me "Butch," and she let PeePaw finish her Peaches N' Cream Chicken Wings.)

4. Go on the rides nobody likes

Everybody knows the cliche: go early and stay late. The problem is, everybody knows this and everybody DOES this. Unless you're Tom Cruise, by the time you scurry your fat ass over to Harry Potter's Oh Look Ta-Dah! ride the line will be so long you can use your $80 wand to wave goodbye to the rest of your day.

Instead -- insider tip alert! -- go to the attractions nobody likes. Maybe rides sponsored by chemical companies aren't quite as much fun as flying elephants and fairies, but when there's no line you take what you can get. And how else will you learn how weed killer is made? I personally didn't find it interesting but it got Wally-Bob to stop drinking it.

You'll also be surprised how much you enjoy a country dance jamboree led by muskrats who look like the Jonas Brothers. PeePaw loved it when Doreen and I danced together. And sure, the Half-Baked Hotel isn't anybody's all-time favorite attraction, but my kids really liked trying to get all that luggage up the circular stairs.

So, do your homework. Is there a roller coaster that couldn't scare a cat? Maybe a boring old carousel? They can be surprisingly fun, though my kids could have died every time PeePaw yelled, "Look, Doreen, I'm riding on an ostrich!" Is there a slow boat ride that goes past portable toilets? Head for that. The line is probably short, and it can come in handy when your stomach finally decides what to do with that Mango Maple Churro.

You’ll also win bragging rights: really, your neighbor only went on four rides? You went on fourteen, and you got a coupon for fifty cents off weed killer.

5. Go to a cheaper park and lie about it

Knott's Berry Farm is -- let's face it -- a dismal turd of an afternoon, but it’s half the price of Disneyland so that was our next theme park trip. The kids' downturned faces perked up after Doreen told them it was actually Harry Potter World, but Voldemort had magically changed all the signs and then turned Harry into a chicken!

Of course, nobody could have guessed that Wally-Bob would catch a chicken and then try to make it change back. PeePaw and I could barely hide our guffaws! I swear, we had the best time ever until some mean stranger spilled the beans. Our beer breakfast came to an end pretty much when the chicken did.

Anyway, I hope these tips help you. it's almost bedtime so I've got to go. Doreen and PeePaw say they want to ask me something, and then Florabelle needs my help. I told her if she said, "God bless Nate and Andy" just one more time in her bedtime prayers, I'd make her go live with them. Now I've got to make her unpack.

Monday, August 19, 2019

A German driver's license is fiendishly difficult to get. People study for years and still fail to pass the tests. Having to use the English translation of the official government app renders it nearly impossible, as you can see from my difficulty here. See if you agree with the correct answers (the checkmarks on the left) or my "incorrect" choices (on the right).



"Be aware ... that you only detect oncoming vehicles after it is too late." It's a real danger! I didn't even notice that giant white splash of headlights pointed straight at us.



Never assume a bus will pull away from a bus stop! This is Germany, so there's paperwork to fill out first.



This makes sense. If you see a blind guy, don't toot your horn. He's got to learn about electric cars somehow.



I'm not sure why, after a long drive, I'm too close to the vehicle in front. Do Germans usually have snacks or a bathroom?



I don't know why I got this wrong, since it seems straightforward. When you see this sign and then notice cars careening towards you, you should be, like, "No, you go first."



Got it: don't use the merging procedure when merging. Just randomly, out of the blue, have you guys ever won a war?



I don't know why I got the last one wrong. In Germany everybody's like "Fuck my rear-view mirrors."



This makes perfect sense. Feel free to drive in the bike lane BUT NOT IF YOU'RE TRYING TO PARK.



How do I determine my car's maximum speed? Accelerate until it disintegrates and then subtract two?



Quick question about option #1. Aren't I the traffic turning left?



Just slide right into him and he'll get the hint.



Those special bus lanes? They ain't that special.



If the cyclist stays parked there for over an hour, can I leave my car to get snacks?



Once you're across the road, though, fuck those weather conditions.



Because in Germany trucks are like sharks: if they stop they will die.



Don't drive to the right to let people pass! That's admitting you are weak. Instead, drive slowly in the goddamn center of the road while repeating, "I AM somebody."



Also when you're on a two-lane road and there aren't any vehicles within miles, be aware that botulism kills 18 people per year.



So, drive faster than you can see, and remember there's no stopping! If your car catches fire, put on oven mitts and push it towards the next exit.



"The rear parcel shelf"? Is this a Mercedes or a UPS truck? Do we have to make things look like parcels if we want to leave them on the rear parcel shelf? Can we put a sweater on it if we wrap it in brown paper and tie in with string?



Fuck those taxi drivers.



Got that? Don't bother your mechanic, just hit the road with fingers crossed.



This makes a little more sense in English: "When you start your car, keep your foot on the brake."



A cul-de-sac! Not a road closed to traffic. Got it! My mistake.






Those "special areas" in #1? They ain't that special.



Okay, I will definitely not overtake the moped before the rail crossing.

Quick question: If I ask, "What rail crossing?" can I get a driver's license anyway?



I don't know why I got this wrong. I just assumed the right answer for "What is a towed load?" wouldn't be, "You know, it's that load you're towing."



Fuck the flowing traffic on the road.



I heard Einstein once took this test, and after he read this question he threw himself off a bridge.



If I promise not to say anything bad about currywurst can I go back to America now?

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