Documenting

Good morning. Gigi the parti poodle here to welcome you to another installment of my blog. As you know, I am continuing to take a break from my little stories I tell here while I continue to practice my writing and assist my novelist in penning her newest novel. This week, as is tradition, my novelist and I sat down and watched The Oscars. We have seen many of this year’s nominated films but not all and we are continuing to review them. This week we watched a couple of nominated documentaries together. I have come to find out that these are not comedies. I find myself rather disturbed after viewing them. Last night, for instance, I could not settle down to sleep. I had to shove and push my blanky in many directions. Nothing was comfortable. I also tried walking on my novelist. This did not help. She did not like it. I was finally able to settle down and listen to gentle music while I attempted to meditate and try and forget that the world is for lack of a better word, terrible. Which reminds me, I had a bath this week. I detest baths and yet I keep getting them. Perhaps I will film a documentary on that horror. Until next week, I bid you adieu.

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: FLOW (2024) HBO MAX

Hands down the best Oscar award of the night this past Sunday went to this absolute must see masterpiece. This was a tremendous year for animation with three powerhouse films, The Wild Robot, Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl and Flow all competing for the prize. Honestly, all of them deserved the Oscar and if I had it my way it would have been a three-way tie with each of them taking home a statue. But if we were splitting hairs, Flow would have been my choice for the win. This visually stunning brilliantly told story became the first Oscar for the country of Latvia and a huge congratulations to them. If you see no other film this year, see this one.

Telling its tale with absolutely no dialogue at all, we find out that humans are gone. Empty houses, empty broken boats. Nothing. Animals, however, have survived. And one of them is a little charcoal cat with big bright gold eyes. The cat is suddenly startled by animals all running away in herds and it realizes something terrifying is coming. The cat runs into a friendly golden retriever who takes a shine to it, but the cat wants nothing to do with the dog. Especially since the dog appears to have other canine friends. The cat heads to its home, a beautiful place with cat statues all over the yard and a just finished sketch of it lies on a desk upstairs with no artist in sight. As the cat looks out the window, it finds the water is rising. Fast. It finds it must leave the house and climb up to the top of a gigantic stone cat structure much like climbing to the top of a large building. And yet the water continues to rise.

Much to the cat’s luck, a sailboat appears on the horizon. The cat struggles to swim to it and when it gets on board, it finds out it is inhabited…by a capybara. Turns out the capybara is kind as well as bright and resourceful. As they sail for awhile the golden retriever catches up to them as well as a meerkat obsessed with shiny things. The four begin to work together as they take a harrowing aquatic journey in search of food and dry land.

Happy Oscar Weekend!

Good morning. It is I Gigi the parti poodle here to tell you yesterday was most horrifying. I was lying on my pillow in the office around nine-thirty in the morning when my novelist suddenly snatched me up and whisked me off into the car. Mind you, I had a comfortable blanket to lay on but that didn’t prepare me for one of my most strenuous mornings of this year. I was driven directly to the vet for a checkup. A checkup! I could not believe it. I thought my professional toothbrushing last summer was enough. But no. Apparently, I was due for my rabies shot. And another horrific shot. And then a blood-draw. At first, I thought all I had to do was look cute and stand on the scale. But the doctor came in and checked my heart which was beating like a mad drum. My novelist just stood there and let them paw me. I mean the nerve! Afterwards I was taken to the dreaded back room where the real horror befell me. There was no use in screaming for help. I was trapped. After the nightmarish ordeal I was whisked home as if the whole thing was perfectly normal. I am sore and traumatized and tired. It took everything I had just to get out of bed this morning. I am not speaking to my novelist right now. What happened yesterday was the most unforgivable affair. I shall have to spend the entire rest of the week and all weekend trying to recover. Until next Thursday, I bid you a most nerve-jangling adieu. And Happy Oscar Day on Sunday!   

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: THE WILD ROBOT (2024)-PEACOCK

One of the strongest Oscar categories this year, if not the strongest, is Best Animated Film, and this week’s pick is one of the finest of the five. Not only is this movie stunningly beautiful but the story is top notch as well. In addition to Best Animated Film, the movie is also nominated for Best Sound and Best Original Score for Kris Bowers.

Based on the beloved children’s book of the same name by Peter Brown who co-wrote the script this marvelous tale written and directed by Chris Sanders starts with a shipwreck. A humanoid style robot ROZZUM Unit 7134 or Roz for short (beautifully voiced by Lupita Amondi Nyong’o), wakes up and finds herself alone in the wilderness. She is factory programed to be a helper to her owner. She tries to assist the woodland creatures on the otherwise uninhabited island but finds them to be less than welcoming and injures herself in the process. Shortly after, she is chased by a grizzly bear named Thorn (Mark Hamill) and accidentally falls onto a goose nest crushing both parents and all but one of the eggs.

Determined to protect the one remaining egg she carries it with her but runs into an opportunist fox named Fink (Pedro Pascal) who tries to steal it from her. But Roz succeeds and the egg hatches. Roz suddenly finds herself a mother to a Canadian Goose and names it Brightbill (Kit Conner). Brightbill turns out to be the runt. But Roz is determined to make it a proud member of the island’s gaggle of geese.  

Roadblocks

Good afternoon. Gigi the parti poodle here and I am delighted to announce most of our snow has melted and I am again going for walks. My novelist has been feverishly working on her novel which concerns me. As many of you writers out there know it is difficult to firstly choose a subject to write about and secondly after you’ve chosen one how to handle the many roadblocks which will inevitably arise. My novelist detests roadblocks. They keep her up at night, often trying to figure out every misstep she might have made. I try to convince her that all writers make mistakes and to “carry on” as our wise neighbors across the pond would say. And she does, but still, she remains concerned. She is a writer who embraces research as well. Even if it is research which may be a bit futuristic where you must follow the logical chain of science beyond what has already been discovered to where the trajectory of that discovery leads. Before she began writing her present novel, she had written a science fiction book which required her to do so and was debating on writing another one and the one she chose. She has confided in me it may have been easier to write the science fiction book. Pragmatism and logic come to her more readily than, dare I say, feelings. She is more comfortable writing a hero’s journey than a heroine’s. Solitude is her weapon as it were, not her enemy. But I have faith she will find her way to the end of the story. She has with all but one of the others. I, in the meantime, shall scribble away at my short stories and see what I can concoct. Until next week, I bid you a happy adieu.

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: CONCLAVE (2024)-PEACOCK

Winner of the Golden Globe for Best Screenplay for its writer Peter Straughan and nominated for eight Academy Awards, this taut thriller based on the 2016 novel by Robert Harris takes a unique twist on the mystery/thriller genre. Set in the Vatican where the Pope (Bruno Novelli) has just passed away from a heart attack, Cardinal Thomas Lawrence (brilliantly played by Oscar Nominee Ralph Fiennes) finds himself tasked with the daunting job of leading a conclave to elect a new pope.

Lawrence is conflicted about the job as he is struggling with his faith, mostly with praying. And it doesn’t help as he tries to figure out which candidates are worthy of the position, and which are not. Cardinal Bellini (Stanley Tucci) from the United States is a favorite liberal candidate who believes if Cardinal Tedesco (Sergio Castellitto) a favorite conservative candidate from Italy is elected he could put the Church back decades. Cardinal Joshua Adeyemi of Nigeria (Lucian Msamati), a social conservative candidate is also a favorite. Cardinal Tremblay (John Lithgow), a moderate from Canada, another popular candidate, was the last person to speak to the Pope before he died. According to Janusz Woźniak (Jacek Koman) the prefecture of the papal household claims that on the night the Pope died of a heart attack, the Pope demanded Tremblay’s resignation all which Cardinal Tremblay denies. And then there is the mysterious last-minute arrival of Archbishop Vincent Benitez (Carlos Diehz) of Kabul, who after some investigation turns out to be a cardinal in pectore a position the deceased Pope secretly bestowed upon him one year prior.

Happy New Year 2025!

Good afternoon. It is I Gigi the parti poodle here hoping you are having a Happy New Year. Right after Christmas my novelist called the groomers, and found they are on holiday until the beginning of the year…which is now. Dear me. That means she will be contacting them soon. Seemingly, my holiday is quickly coming to an end. I know I will feel better after the whole grooming ordeal, but it is after all a whole grooming ordeal.

I suppose I should be coming up with a New Year’s resolution, but all I can think about is to aspire to be even more fantastic than I already am and that is a tall order. However, after having tea with Bernard D. Bunny and his little sister Belle yesterday, they beg to differ. They believe I need to be less arrogant. Less arrogant indeed. I asked them what their New Year’s resolutions were. They said to build a better home in the woods. And they call me arrogant. See if I bring Harney’s raspberry tea for them again. And with that thought, here is my novelist.   

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: ONLY MURDERS IN THE BUILDING SEASON FOUR (2024)- HULU

For one more holiday season binge-watching selection we are suggesting the fourth season of this fun and witty show. We have had Only Murders in the Building as our Stream of the Week before, but Gigi and I were so impressed with their fourth season we thought we would suggest it again, especially since the Golden Globes are coming up and we think it is almost as good as the first season. This time the murder is personal, and the cast is a little tighter which we think worked well. We do miss Theo Dimas, the deaf tenant, who is played by James Caverly this season as we think he is one of the most intriguing and complex characters on the show. But that said the question of who killed Charles-Haden Savage’s stunt double Sazz Pataki, makes for a thrilling and whimsical storyline. We do recommend you view the other three seasons first if you have never seen the show. But if you finished the third season, we strongly recommend watching the fourth.

The series takes place in an opulent apartment building in New York City called The Arconia which is a real Italian Renaissance building in New York City called The Belnord. Three of the residents of the building are former crime and action television star Charles-Haden Savage (Steve Martin), his buddy Broadway play director Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) and millennial Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez) who temporarily acquired her residence there by remodeling her aunt’s apartment. Unfortunately, after she finished remodeling it, she had to move out and is presently squatting in apartment 12E in The Arconia. The three of them do a podcast based on crimes, usually murders, that occur inside the building.

The fourth season starts where season three left off with Charle’s beloved stunt double Sazz Pataki (Jane Lynch) who worked with him on his show Brazzos, getting shot with a sniper rifle through Charle’s apartment window when she goes to retrieve wine for the cast party for Oliver’s play Death Rattle. At first Charles, Oliver and Mabel think she is just missing as the crime scene is cleaned up after they return to Charles’s apartment. But when Oliver gets a call from Hollywood producer Bev Melon (Molly Shannon) that she wants to make a movie of their podcast, the plucky trio heads to California to find out about the film and begin their search for the missing Sazz. Look for a number of famous guest stars who come in on various episodes to help move the plot along.

Happy Boxing Day

Good afternoon. Gigi the parti poodle here to wish you a joyful Boxing Day. The day after Christmas is always a challenging one. It is the day one wakes up and realizes Halloween is over, Thanksgiving is over, and Christmas is over. What lies ahead is New Years, Valentine’s Day and Easter. But the magic of the holiday season is quickly ending and there is nothing anyone can do about it. Not to mention I received a fluffy chewing toy but not a diamond studded collar as requested. There must be a way to get Santa to put one on his sleigh next year.

Today is also the day my novelist purchases Christmas wrapping paper for next year. She detests purchasing anything at full price. As she says, everything is prettier when it’s on sale. And so, she takes her annual voyage to The Container Store and procures paper there and goes online and procures other holiday wrapping items from Hallmark as well. Then she goes about putting them all away until next year.

I have become a bit shaggy and will need a trim soon. This, of course, is most distressing. My novelist will probably call tomorrow to get me an appointment. Dreadful. And with that thought here is my novelist’s stream of the week. Bonne fête d’Après-Noël!

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: JUST FRIENDS (2005)-HULU

This week’s movie is not a deep and profound story. It will not change your life or make you into the person you’ve always wanted to be. But it is a holiday movie that’s a lot of fun and the story strangely holds up over time, especially having been made nineteen years ago. And since you are probably drained out and exhausted after the Christmas rush, it’s something to kick back and enjoy. The only characters in the film I don’t understand are the lead character’s two best friends. I believe you could tell the story without them. But that said there are plenty of characters to love. And unlike most romantic comedies the lead is a male instead of a female (like in The Forty-Year-Old Virgin)which gives it a fun twist

The story is simple. A tenderhearted and likeable overweight teen named Chris Brander (gleefully played by Ryan Reynolds) wants to be more than friends with his best friend the lovely Jamie Palomino (Amy Smart). One night at a party during their Senior year of high school Chris sets out to do just that and writes a well-penned letter expressing his feelings. Said letter, however, falls into the hands of the high school bully, Tim (Ty Olsson) who reads it to the party goers. Utterly embarrassed, Chris vows to make a name for himself and leave this town of losers behind.

Chris makes good on his promise and becomes a successful music producer as well as a ladies’ man. When his boss KC (Stephen Root) tells him he needs to babysit his pop music sensation the mentally unstable Samantha James (Anna Faris) who happens to be one of Chris’s ex-girlfriends and fly with her to Paris, Chris reluctantly agrees. But when their plane ends up in New Jersey near his hometown, Chris takes a chance at finally trying to ask Jamie out on a date while asking his younger brother Mike (Christopher Rodriguez Marquette) to babysit Samantha whom Mike has an obsessive crush on. But Chris finds his plan is not as easy as he realized when he realizes he has a rival in his fellow ex-nerd classmate sensitive guitar playing EMT Dusty Dinkleman (Chris Klein). Julie Haggarty rounds out the cast as Chris and Mike’s mother.

Gigi’s Holiday Shopping

Good evening. Gigi the parti poodle here to wish you Happy Holidays and discuss the Christmas shopping season. I have wanted to address my adoring fans by taking a trip to the mall and allowing them to fawn over my beauty and occasionally even shake paws with them. But my dreams have been dashed as…Him does not like malls. I do not understand why…Him prefers shopping online when there are fans out there for me to meet and greet. My novelist falls somewhere in between. She likes to do some holiday shopping online and some out at the stores which she did this season. So, I was briefly adored by fans who were constantly asking me for my pawprint for which I gladly took out my portable ink pad and provided them with.

But alas, my moments of adoration were brief and I long to bask in the spotlight. Not to mention how much I love being out and about. I relish looking at the decorations and the store windows and gazing at my spectacular reflection. I love hopping up in Santa’s lap and providing him with a more efficient way to deliver presents as an elf takes our photo for posterity. I love getting free treats at the boutique pet store and being told how adorable I am because I am adorable. Hopefully I will be able to get out more and receive the admiration I so vehemetly deserve this time of year. Until next week I hope you enjoy this most magical season.

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: WOMAN OF THE HOUR (2024)-NETFLIX

One of the best movies I’ve seen this year so far is this film directed by Anna Kendrick who also stars in the lead role. And she does a terrific job in both. When I prepared to write one of my novels which I have finished but not yet published, I had to do research on psychopaths. I read several books, watched a lot of documentaries, and studied many research papers. Some of the books were difficult to get my hands on at the time as they were out of print or hard to find. One of the more obscure ones was The Rapist File: Interviews with Convicted Rapists by Les Sussman, Sally Bordwell and Ellen Frankfort. It is an interesting collection of interviews done by Sussman and Bordwell who spoke with a variety of incarcerated rapists. They went into prisons and talked to these criminals, recorded the conversations and printed what they said. And what most of these men loved to do was plan their hunt, stalk their game, bag their kill, and perfect their skills.

I remember being at one of the zoos here in the Pacific Northwest and watching this leopard pace back and forth in its cage, its eyes never leaving the children standing outside. Open that cage and see what happens. The leopard’s not so alluring anymore, is it? When interviewers ask actors how they find humanity in a character like Rodney, I roll my eyes. The answer is simple: they are playing a predatory animal. A predatory animal has no humanity.

Half of repeat or recidivist rapists are psychopaths. 20-25% of prisoners are psychopaths. And approximately 15-25% of serial killers are psychopaths. They may look like a person, talk like a person, and appear to act like a person. But are they human? Do they even have emotions past anger and irritation?

The word “psychopath” essentially means “suffering soul”. Psychopaths are missing 21% grey matter in their prefrontal lobe and 5-10% grey matter in their paralimbic system. And psychopathy is genetic. In fact, a psychopath has a 50/50 chance of siring or giving birth to another psychopath. A psychopath has four to six of the following genetic alleles:

AKK1

DRD2

DRD4

MAOA

COMT

5-HTTLPR

These alleles cause them to have the following traits:

Heavy and/or pronounced Eyebrows

Heightened reactivity involving the forehead and eye socket muscles when criticized (an angry stare)

Wide faces

Disfluencies in speech (um, uh, etc.)

Doubled words in speech (the-the, he-he, she-she, etc.)

Abnormal White Matter Integrity

Use an excessive of subordinate conjunctions (because, so that, therefore, etc.)

Tend to whistle or make repetitive noise

Talk incessantly about sex, money and/or food

Dislike pets and may have killed one or more

Drink black coffee

Drink gin and tonics

Likes to eat bitter foods like radishes

Are nomadic

Enjoy listening to rap music such as “Lose Yourself”

Do not like music with changes in tempo like “My Sharona” and “Titanium”

Were a chronic bed wetter late into youth

Has Grandiose/Extreme Narcissism

May have been misdiagnosed with ADD

Have physical ticks

Appear charming

Quick to anger and irritation

Are a pathological liar

Are always an extroverted personality type and often test as an ENTP (mad scientist), ESTP (con artist) or ENTJ (evil overlord)

Sport a quasi-smile

Are highly manipulative

Will copy body language during conversation

They gravitate towards occupations like CEO, Lawyer, Media, Sales, Surgeon, Journalist, Police Officer, Clergy, Chef, Public Servant (usually involving government positions like politicians). One might note all ten of these occupations often require working strange hours.

Dr. Robert Hare created the Psychopathy checklist (PCL-R) which is considered the gold standard. He created a list of twenty items which can only be administered by a professional. Each question is worth either 0, 1 or 2 points which simply translates to does not apply, partial match or mixed information, or a reasonably good match to the offender. In America, if you score a 30 or higher on this checklist, you are a psychopath. In the United Kingdom 25 or higher indicates a psychopath. If you score above 34…well, then you’re Rodney Alcala. Or Jeffrey Dahmer. Or Ted Bundy. Essentially what is known as a Super Psychopath.

It is important to note most psychopaths are male. In fact, a man is ten times more likely to be psychopath than a woman. 1 in 150 men is a psychopath. 1 in 1050 women is a psychopath meaning that testosterone plays a large part in psychopathy. And so those books like Gone, Girl, are a little misleading. Female psychopaths exist, of course. They’re just rare. Presently, FMRI tests (MRI tests done with FMRI software which allow the doctors to see movement in the brain when introduced to stimuli) can determine a psychopath. Eventually, as science advances, I imagine this will be done with a blood test due to the genetic nature of the condition. Which leads us to this week’s film:

Rodney Alcala (Daniel Zovatto) uses an unusual weapon: a camera. He wields it to manipulate the vanity of his prey. And it works. He finds people, often young women, who interest him and tells them he is an award-winning photographer, drives them off into an isolated area, takes their pictures, strangles them, revives them, rapes them, and kills them. And he does it a lot.

Meanwhile, Cheryl Bradshaw (Anna Kendrick), a graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of The Arts has moved out to Hollywood and is scrambling to get jobs. She has a would-be friend and fellow neighbor in her apartment building named Terry (Pete Holms), who makes the appearance of wanting to help her but ultimately is somewhat parasitic and is not above using vague psychological warfare to try and win her affections. Cheryl gets a call from her agent one day who tells her she has booked her on The Dating Game. Cheryl realizes it’s just a one-day gig and she really isn’t all that interested, but she agrees anyway and goes on the show where she encounters subtle hints of sexism which make her uncomfortable. But nothing makes her more uncomfortable than meeting Bachelor Number Three who turns out to be Rodney Alcala.

Certified Sadistic Accountant Chapter Twelve

Good afternoon. It is I Gigi the parti poodle here to introduce chapter twelve of my story Certified Sadistic Accountant. This week was the announcement of this year’s Academy Award nominations. These are what we think are the most deserving nods from the films we have seen so far:

The Holdovers for Best picture, Best actor in a leading role (Paul Giamatti) Best actress in a supporting role (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), Best original screenplay, and Best editing

Oppenheimer for Best Picture, Best Actor in a Leading Role (Cillian Murphy), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Robert Downey Jr.) Best Director (Christopher Nolen), Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, B est Editing, Best Sound, and Best Production Design.

Barbie for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Ryan Gossling), Best Original Song (“I’m Just Ken”), Best Costume Design, and Best Production Design.

Killers of the Flower Moon for Best Actress in a Leading Role (Lily Gladstone), Best Cinematography, Best Original Score

The Boy and the Heron for Best animated feature film

We look forward to viewing more Oscar nominated films and finding out how they compare to what we have seen so far. And with that note, here is chapter twelve of Certified Sadistic Accountant. Enjoy.

Certified Sadistic Accountant

by

Gigi the parti poodle

Chapter Twelve

Thursday. Twelve-twenty-five in the afternoon. Fia met Curtis in the parking lot of the Dupree Tax Agency.

“What do you think is a good place to start looking?” Curtis asked her as she stepped up to his Honda.

“I thought about that last night,” Fia said, “and my dad really likes baseball memorabilia. So, I thought we could stop at that store at the mall.”

“Sounds good. Hop in.” They both climbed into Curtis’s Honda. He turned to her and asked, “Got your seatbelt on?”

“Yes.”

“Good. I don’t want to put you in harm’s way.”

Fia giggled nervously. Something seemed off but she didn’t know what. Curtis drove out of the parking lot on route to the mall.

“Mr. Dupree said you finishing a degree in Performance Art and got a scholarship for grad school.”

“Yes,” Fia said. “I was originally inspired by watching an off-Broadway play where a woman made a cake backwards onstage. It was extraordinary. I saw it when I was in early middle school when I’d gone back to New York with my parents and little brother. It was the single most inspiring day of my life.”

“I’ve never been inspired by anything. I just always knew I was good at math and numbers so that’s the path I took.”

“It’s the same path my dad took.”

“And not a very exciting one.”

“Math is a talent. It takes talent to do people’s taxes. Especially some of these farmers with all their land and business. That gets crazy. And that Barton guy who owns a small chain of restaurants and a racehorse.”

“Yeah, I started handling Barton’s taxes last year.”

“I know. Daddy told me. He says he wanted you working for Barton because you’re his best accountant.”

“Really,” Curtis said surprised. “I…thank you. Thank you for telling me.”

“Of course.”

“So, sports memorabilia, huh?”

“Especially baseball. My dad loves statistics.”

“So, do I. I used to score baseball games when I was I kid, but I lost interest.”

“Why?”

“So, if your dad thinks I’m the best accountant, why did Lance and Makenna each win the award the past two years?”

Fia bit her lip. “I don’t know. You’d have to ask my dad.”

They didn’t say anything to each other until they drove over the bridge and pulled into the mall parking lot.

“Which part of the mall is the sports collectible store on?” Curtis asked.

“It’s right beside the department store.”

“Oh, okay. I’ll park over here.”

He drove to the south end of the parking lot. They disembarked his Honda and headed for the entrance. Fia caught the faintest whiff of the cherry blossom trees placed strategically around the property.

“I wish I had cherry blossom fragrance oil,” she said. “They sell it at this soap store near my university. Don’t they smell incredible?”

Curtis who hadn’t noticed the smell of the blossoming trees said, “Yeah, pleasant.”

As they arrived at the entrance, Curtis opened the door for her.

“Thank you,” she said surprised. “It’s so rare to find a gentleman these days.”

“Opening doors for people is just something my father instilled in me. There’s no glory in being a gentleman.”

“That’s not true. I think there’s a reward in being a gentleman. There’s just so few around.”

“Small wonder.”

“We should take a right here and head for cosmetics. The entrance is by the cosmetics counter.”

Curtis rarely went to the mall except to see a film at the movie theatre. He was more than happy to follow Fia. Department stores were always labyrinths designed to trap you. Fia was more than an adept guide and got them to the cosmetic counter in no time.

“See,” she said as they stepped out into the mall. “There’s the sports store.” Curtis followed Fia’s finger to the left where he saw a small store designed in dark colors. It looked like an oasis in the enclosed shopping nightmare. The two stepped up to the window where there was a display of baseball memorabilia. “See that baseball in the plexiglass cube there?”

“The signed one?” Curtis asked.

“My dad would love that. It’s signed by his favorite player.”

“How much do you think it is?”

“I’d say around five hundred, more or less.”

“Five hundred dollars? I was thinking of something less than that.”

“You can just put it on your credit card.”

“Yeah, well I have a credit score of 805. And it won’t be a score of 805 if I buy that thing.”

“You could get my dad a signed photo of his favorite baseball player.”

“How much will that set me back?”

“About two hundred dollars.”

“Two hundred dollars? Look, I can’t afford that kind of gift. How about something around fifty dollars?”

“Fifty?”

“Or less if possible.”

“Less? Let me think if there’s something he’d like in the fifty-dollar range.”

Fia wrang her hands, her eyes scanning the display window. “I suppose you could get him a metal or a metal and leather keychain. They have some that run around forty-nine dollars. Or maybe you could get him a crystal mug with the team logo etched on it.”

“Those sound nice.” Curtis could tell Fia was disappointed. Either she was delusional or so spoiled she was oblivious to financial reality.

“You know,” she said, “now that I think about it, he might really like a crystal mug.”

“Great. Let’s go inside and look at mugs.”

They entered the store where they saw a display of glassware over to the left. Curtis stepped up to the table, picked up one of the crystal mugs, and checked the price.

“Forty bucks,” he said.

“They can personalize it.”

“What does it cost to do the etching?”

“Ten dollars.”

“I could spring for that. You think they’d gift wrap it.”

“Yes, they gift wrap.”

“Good.”

They took the mug up to the counter where a tall guy was standing. He looked like he played a lot of sports.

“Hi,” Curtis said to the guy.

“How’s it going?” the guy said.

“I was wondering if I could get this mug personalized.”

“Yeah, sure. But it’ll be about thirty days.”

“Thirty days?” Curtis said surprised.

“We’ve had a lot of requests for personalization lately. Especially etching.”

“Seriously? It’s not even Christmas season.”

“Yeah, I don’t know what it is, but we have a backlog.”

“Thing is it’s a birthday gift for my boss. I was hoping to get him something around fifty dollars.”

“Fifty bucks, huh? Your boss have a desk job?”

Curtis didn’t like the way the guy said desk job. “Yes, he does.”

“We just got some crystal paperweights in over there,” he said pointing. “Run you about forty-five dollars.”

Curtis and Fia turned to see the display. They looked at each other and then headed over to the paperweights. They were round and smooth with a slanted top. Inside was and etched image of the logo of Mr. Dupree’s favorite baseball team.

“How much are they?” Curtis asked.

“Sixty.”

“Uh, huh,” he said begrudgingly. “Can you box it up? Giftwrap it and such?”

“Yes.”

“Sold.”

“Cool.”

“Fia, would you pick one out?”

Fia perused the table and picked the one she thought looked the most pristine. They headed back to the counter and the guy rang up the sale. The guy handed Curtis the receipt before heading into the back to wrap the gift.

“My dad will really appreciate this, Curtis,” Fia said.

“Thanks,” Curtis replied. “I wouldn’t have thought to get him sports memorabilia. I didn’t even know he was into baseball.”

“I suppose he doesn’t talk much about himself at work.”

“No. But it’s probably wise to keep oneself…mysterious.”

“Yeah, but my dad does mysterious to a fault.”

“Here you go,” the guy said returning.

He set the paperweight on the counter which was boxed and wrapped in a dark grey wrapping paper tied with a bright blue satin ribbon.

“That looks beautiful,” Fia said. “Thank you.”

“Welcome.”

Fia picked up the gift and Curtis followed her out of the store and back through the department store’s maze until they arrived at the parking lot exit. Curtis pushed the door open and held it for Fia.

“You have such good manners, Curtis.”

“Thank you.”

They stepped outside and headed towards Curtis’s Honda. When they reached the car Curtis popped open the trunk and Fia set the box inside. He unlocked the passenger side door and held it for her as she climbed inside, a gesture which also seemed to delight her. Then he jogged around to the driver’s side.

“I guess we’d better get back to the office,” Fia said after Curtis shut the door.

“Yep,” Curtis said and pulled out and headed for the exit where he clicked on his left blinker and checked for traffic.

“The office is back that way, Curtis,” Fia said and pointed right.

“I know. But I need to run and errand first.”

“Do we have time?”

Curtis made the turn and started heading north.

“What kind of errand?”

“I promised my dad I’d pick up something.”

“Oh.” Fia thought that sounded a little strange, but she had come along for the ride so why not.

Curtis drove straight down the main arterial until he reached the turnoff where he turned right and headed for the lake.

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: THELMA AND LOUISE (1990)-PLUTO TV & THE ROKU CHANNEL

I should have known when I sat down to watch the film Barbie, the script penned by Noah Bombach and Greta Gerwig was going to be an exercise in mediocrity. Especially looking at the track record of both writers who have cranked out film after film which fail to reach greatness whether it be the narcissistic The Squid and the Whale or the uninspired Lady Bird. The only thing worse about Barbie other than its script is the song What Was I Made For, yet another dud penned by the brother and sister team of Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell, the Salieri’s of modern music.

When Alfred Hitchcock was looking for a screenwriter for The Birds, he originally hired James Kennaway to adapt Daphne DuMauier’s short story. Kennaway had found success adapting his own novel Tunes of Glory. After working on how he would do the adaptation, Kennaway approached Hitchcock and said that everything about the birds would be seen through the eyes of the characters and that the audience would never see a single bird but only hear and feel their presence. Hitchcock sighed and said, “Ah! Well, thank you very much, Mr. Kennaway, for your efforts. There will be a check in the mail.” Hitchcock ultimately hired Even Hunter to pen the script for this terrifying classic which contains a fair number of birds.  

I am, of course, amongst other things, referring to the monologue in Barbie delivered by the character Gloria which comes off more as a social media rant than a logical argument. The writers and director chose to tell and not show, taking the already vapid script (save bright spots with Ken) to sink further into the quagmire.

Which brings me to my stream of the week, one of the best American films about feminism ever made. Callie Khouri’s brilliant script is not just a great story but with Sir Ridley Scott’s extraordinary direction, landmark performances by Susan Sarandon and Gina Davis, Adiran Bridal’s gorgeous cinematography and Hans Zimmer’s haunting score it is also an extraordinary exercise in symbolism. Every step of the way, all the meticulous details, from how the leads pack the car to looking in mirrors to trading jewelry for necessities to the dialogue like in this brilliant scene between the two leads and its unforgettable finale, it gets the points across clearly, subtly and intelligently. It doesn’t require either of the women to step up on a pedestal and give some half-cocked speech on the downfalls of being female. Monologues have their place in films like Gordon Gecko’s speech in Wall Street, but they need to effectively argue, or counter argue the premise of the film.

The story starts out in Arkansas with young housewife Louise (Geena Davis) and waitress Thelma (Susan Sarandon) preparing to go for a weekend at a cabin Thelma’s boss owns that he is losing in a divorce. Louise attempts to ask her narcissistic carpet salesman husband Daryll (Christopher McDonald who is also great here) if she can go. Knowing he’ll never say yes Louise agrees to take off with Thelma and the two overpack Thelma’s turquoise Thunderbird check their makeup, take a picture and leave. But on the way they stop at a roadhouse bar where a scumbag named Harlan Puckett (Timothy Carhart) schmoozes naive Louise and the two drink and dance together. This flirtation leads to an unexpected altercation in the parking lot which ultimately changes the two women’s lives.

Rounding out the cast are Harvey Keitel as Investigator Hal Slocumb, Michael Madson as Jimmy, and a young Brad Pitt as J.D., the role that put him on the map.

Certified Sadistic Accountant Chapter Ten

Good afternoon. Gigi the parti poodle here to introduce chapter ten of my story Certified Sadistic Accountant. We are expecting a cold snap this weekend. I for one do not like the cold. I prefer warm weather with a soft comfortable blanket encircled around me. An adjacent heat vent is also preferred and if there is winter sun shining through a nearby window that is also a plus. I sometimes question why I live where I do. A warm sunny desert often sounds so appealing. But then there would be snakes and tarantulas. Last night I dreamed a large green hairless tarantula bit my leg. I woke up with a start. I was able to fall back to sleep but then dreamed of my twin brother whom I only knew as a puppy. He was talking to me politely about something, but I didn’t trust him. I don’t remember him being untrustworthy, but I felt he was up to something. I also fear a bath is in my near future. Maybe that looming event is the root of my nightmares. And with that thought here is chapter ten of Certified Sadistic Accountant. Enjoy.  

Certified Sadistic Accountant

by

Gigi the Parti Poodle

Chapter Ten

Curtis studied the surveillance video, but he still couldn’t determine why the criminals looked familiar.

“I’ve called the police,” Ray said, “and they have a couple of officers who should be at your place in a couple of minutes, so we’d better drive back to meet them.”

“Alright. Let’s go.”

Ray and Curtis drove back to the duplex and pulled their vehicles into the driveway just as the patrol car eased up to the curb. A male officer and a female officer disembarked the car.

“Hello, officers,” Ray said climbing down from his truck.

“We got a call about a break in,” the female officer said.

“Yep. We got the crime recorded on my surveillance tape.”

“They take anything?”

“Well, they got my tenant’s dog killed.”

“Really? How?”

“They left the door ajar when they broke in and the dog ran out into the street and got hit by a delivery truck.”

“Sorry to hear that. Well, let’s look at what we have here.”

“Did it look like a forced entry?” the male officer asked.

“No,” Curtis said siding up to Ray. “The video showed they picked the lock.”

“Hmm. Maybe what we have is a couple of professional thieves.”

“Maybe.”

The two officers stepped up to Curtis’s door and studied it. “Yeah, the lock looks to be intact,” the male officer said. “Doesn’t appear to be a forced entry. In fact, they locked the door when they left. Have you been in the apartment since the break in?”

“No,” Curtis said. “No one has.”

“That’s good. Then it should be as these criminals left it. Go ahead and open the door.”

Curtis unlocked the door and the four of them stepped inside. The two officers noted how immaculate the place looked.

“You keep a clean house,” the female officer said. “Why don’t you look around to see if anything is missing.”

Curtis carefully searched through his kitchen and around his breakfast nook. Nothing seemed to be out of place. He glanced up at the corner where he’d hidden the surveillance camera, and it looked like someone had spraypainted the lens.

“Nothing seems to be missing,” he said. “I’ll go check my bedroom.”

Curtis headed into the bedroom and noticed immediately his comforter was askew. He usually made the bed neatly before heading to work and Haven had always kept it that way. But the plain white comforter seemed to have been tousled. Maybe the location of a scuffle.

He checked his closet, dresser drawers, computer desk, and under his bed. Everything seemed to be in order. He checked his hidden strongbox where he kept a stash of cash. All the money was there.

“The only thing out of place,” he said returning to the living room, “is my bed looks disheveled. I always make my bed up before I go to work, and Haven never messes it up.”

The two officers marched through the bedroom door and studied the bed.

“We’d better get the blacklight,” the male officer said.

“Blacklight? Do you think they came in here and hooked up?”

“Never hurts to look,” the female officer said.

After the officers left and Ray drove home, Curtis sat down on his couch with a cup of green tea and reviewed his own surveillance video. He scanned to the part where the two intruders entered his home. He leaned in and studied them carefully. They were obviously looking for something. He watched one of the hooded creeps head into his bedroom and the other survey the kitchen and living room. The crook looked up into the surveillance camera. He hopped up on the breakfast nook and proceeded to spray paint the lens.

Curtis quickly rewound the video to take another look at the guy. He did a freeze frame just as the creep’s face came into view. Then Curtis felt all the hairs on the back of his neck stand up. There was no doubt about it. It was Lance. That rat bastard had broken into his house and killed his dog!

Curtis stood up and roared. He grabbed the sides of his face and stamped his feet on the ground. Those creeps he worked with had taken their pranks beyond the pale. He marched out into the kitchen, yanked open his utensil drawer and began hurling silverware against the wall. It took a couple of minutes before he realized someone was knocking on his front door.

“Who is it?” he said.

“It’s Earl,” Earl said. “Are you okay in there?”

“Oh…yes. I’m just…putting some things away.”

“Sounded like that Zuul guy from Ghostbusters came over for a visit or something.”

“No. No Zuul in here. I was just…putting some things away.”

“Really? I’ve never heard you put things away that loudly before.”

“Yeah, well, I felt like being…loud.”

“Okay, man. I’m sorry about Haven.”

“Thank you. I appreciate you taking her to the animal hospital.”

“Absolutely, man. I hope they catch the guys who did it.”

“Yeah. I hope they do something like that.”

“What?”

“Thanks, Earl.”

Curtis listened as Earl headed back to his apartment. Then he looked around at the mess he’d made. He sighed and left the strewn silverware everywhere and went back to his couch, plopped down and continued watching his surveillance tape. He rewound it and watched it again from where the two scumbags entered his home. He focused on the one who wasn’t Lance. It had to be either Grady or Irving.

And then he realized it was a woman. How had he not figured that out before? Makenna. Of course, Makenna. She’d picked the lock. She’d probably concocted the sick plan, the rotten little slut!

Curtis jumped up and paced around stepping on table knives, spoons, and forks as he went. He couldn’t take this lying down. He had to act. But how? The more he thought the more he believed Grady and Irwin were in on the whole rotten scheme too. All of them had set out to kill Haven. They probably planned it at The Steamed Bean drinking those overpriced coffees while he stayed in the office. He was going to tear them to pieces. He was going to get revenge.  

MY BOOKS

You can check out my books Chicane and all five installments of the Musicology book series Musicology: Volume One, Baby!Musicology: Volume Two, Kid!Musicology: Volume Three, Twist!Musicology: Volume Four, Sweetie! and Musicology: The Epiquad on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback editions. You can also check out Musicology’s web site at www.musicologyrocks.com and vote for who you think will win Musicology!

STREAM OF THE WEEK: THE HOLDOVERS (2023)-PEACOCK

American movies have been going downhill in recent years but occasionally there is a bright shiny star amongst the rubble. This week two of this film’s lead actors rightly took home Golden Globes and I was overjoyed. I only have three complaints: Dominic Sessa should have also had a nomination; Alexander Payne should have had a nomination and most perplexing of all why in the world didn’t this fantastic original script by David Hemingson get a nomination? It’s easily one of the best screenplays of the 2020’s original or otherwise and I hope the Oscars recognize its brilliance and give it a nod.

Alexander Payne has a stellar list of credits to his name, and this film is amongst his best. Set over a two-week period during Christmas vacation at a prestigious boy’s New England boarding school we meet history teacher and longtime curmudgeon Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti in a career best Golden Globe winning performance), a brilliant single alcoholic intellectual who has absolutely no patients with his spoiled lazy wealthy students. In fact, he fails most of them on their final test. One of the students Teddy Kountze (Brady Hepner) manages to argue for a makeup test which Hunham agrees to give immediately. However, Angus Tully (Dominic Sessa) who has a rivalry with Kountze argues it isn’t the right time for a makeup test with Christmas break starting that afternoon and could they take it when they come back. After listening to Tully’s argument Hunham rescinds the offer, leaving the boys to face their parents with their horrific grades.

Worse still, during a last-minute phone call with his mother Judy (Gillian Vigman) Angus finds out he cannot go home for the holiday and is stuck at the school with the other “holdovers” which includes Kountze, two younger boys Jim Kaplan (Ye-Joon Park) and Ian Dolley (Alex Ollerman) and fellow classmate, cool and hip Jason Smith (Michael Provost). Mary Lamb (Da’Vine Joy Randolph in a much-deserved Golden Globe winning performance) the head chef at the school is also staying over to cook meals for the left-behind boys. Mary has gone through a horrific recent tragedy and bravely struggles to maintain a strong front. Paul Hunham has been chosen by the rest of the staff, who dislike him almost as much as his students to be the boy’s guardian until classes recommence.

But as luck would have it Jason’s father decides to call a truce with his son who refuses to cut his long flowing blonde locks. Jason invites the boys to accompany his father and him to a ski resort, provided they are granted permission from their parents. Paul contacts and gets permission from all the parents…except for Angus’s mother which leaves a modified Angus alone at the school for two weeks with Paul and Mary.