February is already a short month, so
since I didn't want to cheat my February Pen of the Month, the Pentel
Energel 0.5 needlepoint, of a whole week of use while I was on a
cruise, I made sure to pack it, along with a few other trusty pens
for good measure.
The highlight of my Energel's cruise was when it got to meet John Hodgman. As I stood behind some friends who were speaking to Jonathan Coulton's lovely wife at a ship bar, a guy walked up to Hodgman, also sitting at the bar, and asked if he would sign something. Hodgman agreed, but the guy asked "Do you have something to sign with?" Hodgman calmly replied, "No." A girl nearby said she thought she did and began rummaging around in her bag. After a minute with no pen produced, I helpfully unclipped my Energel from my lanyard and extended it into the group. Hodgman accepted the proffered pen and showed it to the autograph-seeking gentleman: "Oh, I was thinking like a Sharpie." As Hodgman handed the rejected pen back to me, the girl finally produced a marker and I hear Hodgman ask what the guy would like signed. "I'm a cross dresser," the autograph-seeker explained, "So I was hoping you'd sign my silicone breast insert." Hodgman obliged, and I had to laugh when I considered the extreme unsuitability of the Pentel Energel needlepoint to autograph a silicone breast.
The highlight of my Energel's cruise was when it got to meet John Hodgman. As I stood behind some friends who were speaking to Jonathan Coulton's lovely wife at a ship bar, a guy walked up to Hodgman, also sitting at the bar, and asked if he would sign something. Hodgman agreed, but the guy asked "Do you have something to sign with?" Hodgman calmly replied, "No." A girl nearby said she thought she did and began rummaging around in her bag. After a minute with no pen produced, I helpfully unclipped my Energel from my lanyard and extended it into the group. Hodgman accepted the proffered pen and showed it to the autograph-seeking gentleman: "Oh, I was thinking like a Sharpie." As Hodgman handed the rejected pen back to me, the girl finally produced a marker and I hear Hodgman ask what the guy would like signed. "I'm a cross dresser," the autograph-seeker explained, "So I was hoping you'd sign my silicone breast insert." Hodgman obliged, and I had to laugh when I considered the extreme unsuitability of the Pentel Energel needlepoint to autograph a silicone breast.
I, myself, didn't seek out any
autographs on the cruise, despite being amongst many of my favorite
minor celebrities. But if I had, I wonder what lucky pen I would have
chosen from my arsenal to place into the hands of Jonathan Coulton or Randall Munroe? Should I have chosen pens on a
per-celebrity basis, or picked the best overall signature-signing
option? This is exactly the kind of over-thinking that prevents me
from even considering asking for an autograph! That, and the
weirdness of asking another human being for proof of our meeting.
And this is why it takes me so long to
write anything! I didn't mean to go off on a tangent, pondering the
purpose of autographs and people's fascination with them. I didn't
intend to read Wikipedia
for ten minutes and learn about which presidents have used autopens
and when. I didn't need to
begin cataloging which pen I suspect each celebrity would like best
(John Roderick
strikes me as an inky pen kind of guy, so I'd probably say a Pilot G2).
I just wanted to tell you a little story about John Hodgman and my
Energel.
At least I can take comfort in that my
over-thinking and slowness prevented me from doing anything like
pulling a receipt from the garbage and asking John Hodgman to sign it. Or a fake boob, for that matter.
3 comments:
I like your writing! -- Andy Arenson
Hah! I'm marker girl in this story, and my friend Mike is the cross-dresser wanting an autograph. Awesome to see it from another angle!
Ah, tangents... Those sound actually quite interesting. Have you hear the Nerdist podcast? They have turned that process inside-out and use tangents as 95+% of their actual content!
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