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B.S. & Utah

The Long Island Iced Tea - A Tribute

Today is the last day, in the great state of Utah, where a person may order a Long Island Iced Tea. As of tomorrow, May 5th, yet another of Utah's totally non-quirky liquor laws will become a reality.

As we bid adieu to the dash of cola, 1 oz. lemon juice, 1 oz. rum, 1 oz. tequila, 1 oz. gin, and 1 oz. vodka concoction of wonder and mirth (shake and add lemon wedge) - a concoction which has caused many a person to make many a drunken phone call - may we bow our heads in silence at the passing of such a great friend.

A somber time such as this calls to mind the following immortal poem:

First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out - because I was not a Socialist.

Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out - because i was not a Trade Unionist.

Then the Utah lawmakers came for the Long Island Iced Tea, and I did not speak out - because I was not a Long Island Iced Tea.

Then they came for me - and there was no one left to speak for me.

May liquor-fearing Republican Utah lawmakers be cursed in your named, Long Island Iced Tea. Utah will miss you.

Amen.

A_dear_friend_2

Google Searches that Led You to Bullshattuck, March & April 2008

Happy Hairstylist Appreciation Day! For those of you not in the know (i.e. everybody alive), today is officially Hairstylist Appreciation Day! I know, right? I didn't know it was Hairstylist Appreciation Day either, until I found out it was! So go get your haircut! Go appreciate your hairstylist! After all... Hairstylist Appreciation Day only comes around once a year, unlike some of the Jewish holidays.

Seriously, aren't Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah like seven times a year?

Today is also the last day of April. Where did the month go? I'm guessing it probably went with months January, February, and March, although let's not be all scientific about it. The point is, time mostly moves forward, and tomorrow most likely is May. Therefore, it's time to present:

GOOGLE SEARCHES THAT LED YOU TO BULLSHATTUCK IN MARCH & APRIL 2008

Because I didn't post the "Google Searches that Led You to Bullshattuck" list in March, I'll make sure that April is a double edition! That's twice as much!

  • ryan shattuck bull shattuck (this seems pretty obvious)
  • horseshoing joke (I don't know how the joke goes, but I'm sure it's inappropriate)
  • 2008 oscars movie tribute
  • oscars, reviews, 2008
  • republicans in hollywood video (#1 hit!)
  • clinton shattuck (apparently I married Bill, but kept my maiden name)
  • Gay Mormon (this isn't the first search to bring visitors to my site - weird)
  • "repairyourbadcredit.com" rip off (using Google in Russian, no less)
  • Gay Mormon
  • what does the talisman monkey and bull mean in spiritualism (#1 hit!)
  • "he's so old" jokes
  • "ryan shattuck" (knowing that people google me makes me kind of nervous)
  • pennies attak by girls
  • Do gay guys go to heaven (if you have to ask, you don't need to know - and no, they don't)
  • what do you get a 45 year old man for his birthday (I repeat: if you have to ask, you don't need to know)
  • Andy Warhol asexual
  • salt lake city ryan blog cher
  • i received your message on my birthday (using Google in Filipino)
  • Chris Buttars Utah
  • hillary clinton's lucky charms
  • example of my speech for my birthday (using Google in Hawaiian - how multicultural of me)
  • marie osmond
  • rmwarnick profile
  • "Eating Out 2" (I hate this movie, so I'm mad a Google search leads people to my site)
  • Chris Butters utah controversy (seriously, people are still looking this up?)
  • regal seagull
  • bullshattuck (again, this seems obvious)
  • announcing a new brand

Announcing the Launch of Utah's Brand New #1 News Source

Regal_seagull_logo

Dear friends, family, visitors to Bullshattuck, and whomever doesn't fit in that category (like my acupuncturist):

If you live in Utah, you know that your news choices consist of Something Tribune, and Deseret Something. Don't you deserve more? Should there not be more, and better, choices for news? Why can't there exist a news source which just so happens to be written by a team of 10 humor writers, a.k.a. respectable journalists? And what exactly is this project that Ryan's been working on these past few months? As some of you know:

*I almost got a job writing for The Onion. But didn't.
*I almost got a job writing for the Associated Press. But didn't.
*I almost had a publisher give me the green light for my book. But didn't.

What do I do when life hands me "no" and "we're not interested?" Simple - I make lemonade. Rejection makes me kind of thirsty.

Therefore, it gives me great pleasure to announce the launch of my newest lemonade... The Regal Seagull: Utah's Brand New #1 News Source. You're welcome.

A team of 10 humor writers, a.k.a. respectable journalists, plumb the depths of the Utah news world in order to bring you the news that actually matters. Consider the following stories, which appear in our first issue:

*"Idaho can't find identity, petitions federal government to become 'North Utah'"
*"Las Vegas loses title of 'Sin City' to West Jordan"
*"Utah to build giant fence to end illegal bird migration"
*"Guy in Ogden disappointed he never auditioned for Everwood"
*...and other hard hitting news stories

Do you think these important stories would ever appear in the Salt Lake Tribune or the Deseret Whatever It's Called? Absolutely not. They may have clout and self-respect, but we have determination and moxie.

So go ahead, visit The Regal Seagull. Link to The Regal Seagull. Tell people about The Regal Seagull. Become part of the 60 million Utah residents who have learned to trust The Regal Seagull for all their newsy needs.

Someone needs to plumb the Utah news world. Let The Regal Seagull be your news plumber.

Thank you, friends and family. And my acupuncturist.


regally seagully yours,
RYAN SHATTUCK

Regal_seagull_header

Provo Supports Alan Keyes for President?

Who knew Provo was such a hotbed for presidential campaigns?

1.) So I come across this article on Radar, with the non-attention grabbing headline of Alan Keyes Humiliates Barack Yet Again. I click.

2.) The website references Alan Keyes' website. I click.

3.) Apparently Alan Keyes has been running for president since September 2007, a secret being kept from his wife, as well as all of America. I'm curious.

4.) I go to Alan Keyes' contact page, keeping in mind that he lives in Maryland.

And where - joining the ranks of other winning presidential candidates such as Mitt Romney - is his campaign based?

Provo_loves_presidents_2

My 15 Minutes of Fame on Google?

(This article was published in the
March 3rd, 2008 issue of the The Daily Utah Chronicle)



Andy Warhol once said, "In the future, everyone will be famous for 15 minutes. This will mostly be accomplished by Google Maps' Street View option."

Many people want to be famous, whether it be the hordes of people auditioning for "American Idol," or simply Cher, whose desperate attempts at clinging to fame are marked by the fact that she's had more farewell tours than most people have teeth. Even I have to admit that while I happen to be more comfortable writing than I am in front of a camera, I probably wouldn't have too much of a problem if "Fame" were to show up at my door with a bouquet of balloons screaming "Congratulations Ryan, I'm here to make you famous!"

Of course by "Fame," I mean the abstract notion of being known or talked about by many people. If "Fame," the 1982 television show, were to show up at my door, I'd probably call the police.

As anyone who's ever become famous will agree, the quid pro quo for fame is privacy. Those who seek out fame understand that an erosion of privacy will occur. The starlet whose every rehab-ilicious mistake is splashed across the tabloids accepts her life, for thus is the price of repute. The housewife whose life may be uneventful but filled with fulfilling relationships and a fulfilling career accepts her life, for thus is the price of privacy. Famous people generally choose to be famous, private people generally choose to be private and life overall is pretty good.

Then Google stepped in and changed the rules.

Not too long ago, a person could become famous by doing absolutely nothing -- then upload that nothing to YouTube. Now all that one needs to do in order to become famous is to continue doing absolutely nothing -- while being outside. Google Maps, one of the leading online map websites, made headlines last May when they released a new and innovative way to view maps with Street View. Google drives up and down the streets of a particular city in an unmarked van and uses a panoramic camera to take 360-degree pictures of the actual street. The Street View option then presents a visitor to Google Maps with a 360-degree view of the street as if they were actually visiting that particular city.

Street_view

Soon after introducing this Street View, Google began to attract a small but surprising amount of controversy. A number of people became frustrated at being caught on camera by the unmarked Google van, thus inciting the claim that Street View infringed on the privacy of average citizens. When I first learned of this controversy last summer, I assumed that these people were simply being paranoid. Only five cities originally had this Street View option available -- San Francisco, New York, Las Vegas, Denver and Miami -- and it didn't really concern me.


Then I learned that as of Feb. 12, Salt Lake City had been added to the Street View option on Google Maps.

Then I learned that my apartment is visible on the Street View option on Google Maps.

Then I saw myself on the Street View option on Google Maps.

I never thought my 15 minutes of fame would be this blurry.

I emailed Google's press department concerning the recent addition of Salt Lake City and received a response from Elaine Filadelfo with Google, Inc. According to Ms. Fildelfo, "the imagery [of Salt Lake City] is typically between a couple of months and a year old at the time of the launch." She also wrote that "our users have told us this ability to view a location as if they were actually there helps them understand and find information about the places they live and visit."

While it was definitely unsettling to see my apartment -- and my blurry self -- on Google Maps, I personally don't have that much of an issue with this invasion of privacy. It does raise some interesting questions however, concerning where one draws this line. On one hand, it is an astounding breakthrough that allows anyone to view 360-degree images of nearly 30 cities. On the other hand, it creates a precedent for unsolicited pictures of average citizens to be uploaded online for millions to see. On the third hand, most people lead such innocuous lives that they aren't that concerned whether a Google van catches them taking out the trash or picking their nose. On the fourth hand, it puts the anonymity of those who simply wish to lead private lives at risk. What can we make from this, aside from the fact that I clearly have four hands?

Most people don't live in Salt Lake City because they want to be famous -- they want to lead regular, private lives. It may be easier for those who desire fame to find it because of this increasingly connected world in which we find ourselves, but conversely, it is much more difficult for those who wish to remain private to do so. Cell phone cameras, Facebook, blogs, YouTube and Google Maps' Street View play only a small part in this. Andy Warhol most likely didn't anticipate the digital age when he conceived his 1968 hypothesis regarding fame. Nevertheless, I truly believe that everyone will have their 15 minutes of fame.

Whether they like it or not.

Throw Your Vote Away on Bullshattuck.com and Nader, Please

Don't be mad. But I've decided to pull a Ralph Nader and enter a contest which has already been going on for some time, and whose prize I don't deserve. Unlike Nader however, you don't owe your seatbelt to me.

Oh, and I'm not asexual.

City_weekly_3_2

I've decided to enter my blog, Bullshattuck.com, in Salt Lake City Weekly's Best of Utah 2008. Last year I somehow won second place for "Utah's best blog," and after a lot of sleepless nights in deciding whether to enter again this year, I came to two conclusions. One, I WILL enter again this year after all. Two, I need to buy more Ambien.

Thus I am officially kicking off my campaign for Salt Lake City Weekly's Best of Utah 2008. I realize that you may ask yourself "But isn't it 'wrong' or 'cheating like' to campaign for a contest which is simply meant to judge excellence in the state of Utah?" You would be correct. But that is also why you and I are no longer dating - because you never learned to keep your damn mouth shut. So yes, I'm campaigning. And if this feeling I feel right now is guilt, then I don't ever want to be right. Or innocent. I suppose I'm saying I'd rather be wrong and guilty. Which doesn't really make sense.

I realize that there are many MANY blogs in Utah that are much better than mine. Let's not delude oursevles into thinking that life is fair, or that Bullshattuck.com is even that great. If the 2000 presidential election taught us anything though, it's that the best person in a contest usually doesn't win. They do however usually end up winning an Oscar, and maybe even a Nobel Peace Prize. So cheer up, SLCSpin.com. Take heart, The World, According To Me. Maybe you won't win first place - but someone has to make An Inconvenient Truth, Part II.

Now don't get me wrong - I don't want to win first place. I repeat: I don't want to win first place. Rather, I am actively campaigning for second place. Because I won second place last year, I believe that I am in an even better position to win second place again this year. Seriously - why improve year over year, when it is SO much easier to simply maintain mediocrity?

So sally forth, dear Bullshattuck faithful! With your help, we can receive second place in the Salt Lake City Weekly's Best of Utah 2008! And by "we," I mean "me."

Because let's be honest: "second place goes to Bullshattuck.com and his readers" just sounds ridiculous.

HOW TO VOTE FOR BULLSHATTUCK.COM IN 10 EASY STEPS:

City_weekly_5

1.) Go to www.slweekly.com right now. Say that Bullshattuck sent you. Maybe you'll even get a sarsaparilla on the house.

2.) If you're not already registered, then register.

3.) Scroll down until you see "Best Local Blogger," underneath the "Media & Politics" section

4.) Enter in bullshattuck.com for "Best Local Blogger." Or don't.

5.) You can also enter "Ryan Shattuck" for "Best Tax Dollars in Action," because that's kind of funny.

5.) Be sure to fill out a minimum of 10 other entries.

6.) Submit your ballot. Obviously.

7.) VOTE BY MARCH 10TH!

8.) VOTE BY MARCH 10TH!

9.) VOTE BY MARCH 10TH!

10.) Go take a nap. Really, you've been looking kind of pale and Amy Winehouse-ish lately.

That's it! Thank you for your support! Together, yes we can!

How You Found Bullshattuck, February 2008

I'll admit that this isn't necessarily the most original idea, having copied this idea from Drew's Back of the Cereal Box blog, as well as everyone else's blog.

As today is March 1st, I thought I would share the words people googled during the month of February which lead visitors to Bullshattuck. If this proves to be successful, I'll make this a regular, month-end ritual. Keep in mind however, that I have no way of actually gauging 'success' - therefore any success will gauged by the fact that no one emails me and tells me eat poison and die. Which wouldn't be the first time.

That having been said, here - with my favorites in red - are the:

The Words People Googled Which Lead Them to Bullshattuck During February 2008
(Sponsored By Hepatitis™:
"That's What You Get For Spending Your Spring Break In Mexico
")

*"ryan shattuck" "eric snider"
*famous gay mormons
*never get married
*kevin beacon
*2008 oscars review
*"secretary's day information"
*"michael tielborg"
*chris buttars contact information
*email address lds leaders
*Kevin Bacon as a child molester
*christina aguilera voting
*"chris buttars" find of the day
*+CHRIS +BUTTARS +COMMENT
*buttars controversy -racist -baby
*"Senator Chris Buttars"
*Dane Cook homosexuality
*framed quote
*2008 Secretary Day
*2008 presidential candidate slogans
*Chris buttars
*kevin bacon myspace
*CHRIS BUTTARS EMAIL ADDRESS
*christina aguilera voting
*toupee carson daly
*"gay mormon"
*Gay quotes from Chris Buttars
*chris butters images
*Chris Buttars
*+Christina +Aguilera +voting
*how do gay people luck
*chris buttars quotes
*MIKA utah concert
*nick and ryan february 2008
*Christina Aguilera voting
*picture chris buttars
*email senator chris buttars
*christina aguilera voting
*bullshattuck
*is dane cook mormon
*Christina Aguilera voting
*what to wear at a mika concert
*christina aguilera voting
*Mika Boston pictures
*mika concert utah
*"National Poetry Foundation"
*Mika

According to this list, the things people primarily had on their mind during the month of February were Christina Aguilera, Mika, and Chris Buttars - three people I would love to see in a room together.

I'm not joking. I would actually kill a girl scout if it meant I get to see Christina Aguilera, Mika, and Chris Buttars in a room at the same time.

Happy March!

Salt Lake Tribune LOVES Birthdays!

Leap_day_is_newsworthy_2

The Salt Lake Tribune has a story today about a father and his daughter who both share the same leap day birthday.

THE SAME LEAP DAY BIRTHDAY?!?! WhAt ArE tHe OdDs?!?! HoW pOsItVeLy WaCkY!!!!! aNd NeWsWoRtHy!!!! If I dIdNt KnOw AnY bEtTeR, i WoUlD sAy ItS a SlOw NeWs DaY!!!!

I just looooove stories about birthdays! LOLOLOLOLOL!

I can't wait until the Salt Lake Tribune writes a story about MY birthday! As they undoubtedly will!

White Men Can't Get a Break (Nor Can They Jump, But That's Another Story)

White_people_suck_2

I just hate being a white male. I can't ever seem to catch a break. Like, ever. For example, check out this totally not hilarious blog that's been popping up a lot lately, Stuff White People Like. Don't go visit it. Right now.

I sure am glad that people, such as Sen. Margaret Dayton of Orem, are speaking out in the defense of white males everywhere:

"It seems like the white male is such a burden or frustration to society . . . I really have angst with the growing discrimination towards the white male family-oriented Christian male. I'm just really frustrated with that."

Let's look past the fact that she says "white male family-oriented Christian male," clearly indicating that her frustration doesn't apply to women. Male. Stop saying male. Male. Male. I understand her frustration, because what frustrates me is when people write sarcastic letters to the editor attacking white-defending Sen. Dayton, like this guy for example (male):

The angst of Republican Sen. Margaret Dayton of Orem regarding "the growing discrimination towards the white male family-oriented Christian male" really hit home ("Buttars trying to get back to work," Tribune, Feb. 21). Being a white male myself, I wonder when, or even if, I'll ever get to see one of my own in a position of power. I mean, look at our congressional delegation - only five white men. And there are hardly any males of northern European descent in the Utah Legislature, and some of them are not "family-oriented." You have to look pretty dang hard to find any ecclesiastical leaders who are both white and male in Utah. It's sad, but Dayton is right. We just can't catch a break.

Michael Tielborg
Salt Lake City

I sure wish our Utah representatives would pass legislation in defense of the Defenseless White Man. African-American people have Black Heritage Month and Martin Luther King Day - can't the poor white male family-oriented Christian male ever get our own month? Or even our own day?

You know, aside from every single day of the year throughout history?

(p.s. That picture of a white family up there? It's totally not the cast of Roseanne. Male.)

What a Lovely Inversion

(This article was published in the
February 22nd, 2008 issue of the The Daily Utah Chronicle)



“In the future, the air will become so polluted, that no one will be able to exercise outside, and old people and babies will be warned to not even go outside at all, out of fear that they may turn into a pillar of dust and/or Joan Rivers.” says the Soothsayer.

“But creepy Uncle Soothsayer,” say the children, “we don’t plan on living in Los Angeles when we’re older. We’re going to live in Salt Lake City.”

“Good luck.” says the Soothsayer.

Happy Winter! Dress warm, so that you don’t freeze. Wash your hands, so that you don’t get the flu. Don’t go outside, so that you don’t develop respiratory problems. For those of you who don’t have the privilege of living in the Bowl Of Pea Soup that we call the Salt Lake Valley, every winter the valley develops an ‘inversion,’ in which air particles from factory emissions, car exhaust, pollutants, family style buffet restaurants, and just smog in general get trapped between the mountains that make up the valley. Last year’s inversion was one of the worst we’ve had in quite some time, and this year doesn’t promise to be any better. Why does it appear as though the inversion becomes increasingly worse every year? There are always a couple of theories:

Is it because of global warming?
Is it because of the wrath of God?
Is it because of the over-industrialization of modern society and increase in automobiles on the road?

It could be a combination of all three. It could be none of the above. I don’t entirely know, as my background in science consists of mixing baking soda, vinegar, and still not entirely understanding where babies come from. If I were a scientist and the fate of the Salt Lake Valley somehow rested on my shoulders, our most advanced tools would be sticks and we would groom each other’s hair for breakfast. Despite my lack of scientific knowledge, I couldn’t help but feel apprehensive when I read of the ‘red alert’ in the Salt Lake Tribune a few days ago, which warns of the following:

“The Utah Department of Air Quality today issued a “Red” air action alert for the Wasatch and the Cache Valley, thanks to a buildup of high pressure over Utah . . . Under such advisories, sensitive people, particularly children and the elderly, should reduce prolonged or heavy exertion outdoors. And all wood burning is prohibited”

I suppose my annual ‘Adopt a Grandparent From a Retirement Home and Take Them to a Bonfire’ Day will have to be canceled.

Inversion is funny! No, not entirely. It’s genuinely something to beware of, and it’s rather sad that we now live in a time in which, for several days every winter, we’re actually told to not go outside. We don’t stay indoors when it rains. We don’t stay indoors when it snows. We are told however, to limit being outside during the inversion. We are now managed by what days the government tells us are ‘red’ days and ‘inversion’ days and ‘unsafe’ days and ‘you may as well take up smoking’ days.

Sure, Salt Lake City may not have reached Los Angeles-esque levels yet, and we certainly haven’t had anything similar to The Great Smog that killed several thousands of people in London in 1952. Nevertheless, it’s a terrifying thing to think that these comparisons are even being used at all. The comparison alone is lethal.

Granted, temperature inversion is something that already exists in the natural world. It’s a phenomenon that appears in valleys untouched by humans all over the world. Regardless, I don’t think that Mother Nature intended for pea soup fog to have a crunchy, brown topping. Being a non-scientist, I’d like to assume that the recent levels of inversion are something that doesn’t occur naturally. This is rather aggravating, for the inversion often affects those who don’t play as big of a part in actually causing the inversion. It’s ironic that on severe inversion days, it is requested by the public that they take public transportation instead of driving. While this would be good advice before the inversion occurs, who’s willing to wait outside for a public bus or wait outside for a public train?

Oh I’m sorry, have you already died? Let me go ahead and treat that bullet wound you were complaining about.

Until winter is over, I suppose I’ll just put up with the inversion and risk foul smelling air and poor health. I’ll continue to hold my breath while waiting for TRAX. And while jogging outside. And while developing a fungus along the inner dining room of my lungs. Either that, or move from the mountain skies to a city that has cleaner air.

I hear that downtown Los Angeles is nice.