28.11.10

Cranberry Banana Bread

I've recently come to realize that in the same way that photography is the perfect mix of science, math and art, so is baking. It's so cool to mix things together and have them turn into something new. In a weird way I feel like a mad scientist in a lab. Sometimes things work out, sometimes don't, but it's always fun and I always learn a whole bunch.

It's also a really easy way to do something nice for someone. For a few bucks you can make a whole bunch of people happy. Nowadays I think it's easy to get lost in the gadgets and wrapping paper and all of that kinda stuff. Coordinating the whole holiday thing has never been easy for me either, and timing it so everyone's presents arrive when they need to is ridiculously confusing (my brain just doesn't work i this way). Anyway, making cookies or a cake for someone isn't just giving them something delicious, it's giving them the gift of your time and that's a pretty special thing.

Here's an easy banana bread recipe that's really good. It's perfect for "simple" [a.k.a. cranially challenged] people like me who don't have any fancy equipment or lots of time to sift things or be picky. It also has fresh cranberries so it's great for all my New England friends who can get cranberries inexpensively now. You can basically just dump everything in a bowl, mix it up, stick it in an oven and an hour later have something super good to give to someone or enjoy yourself.

Hope everyone had a Happy Thanksgiving. You are all awesome.


(image from edibleportland.com)


(adapted from simply recipes)
Cranberry Banana Bread

3 or 4 super-ripe bananas, mashed up
1/3 cup butter (melted [microwave for 25 or 30 seconds])
3/4 cup plus a few tablepoons brown sugar
1 egg
2.5 tsp vanilla (homemade if you have it [if not I can give you some!!!!])
1 tbsp good, solid bourbon (you can really use any kind of liquor you want though, just make sure it's not cheap tasting. it'll make the whole thing taste weird.)
1 tsp baking soda
a little salt (whatever you can lift between your pointer and your thumb)
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg
a little bit of ground cloves
a little bit of ground allspice
1.5 cups of flour
1 cup fresh cranberries (make sure to pick deep red ones with no stems and ones that aren't nasty or mushy)
Raw sugar for sprinkling on top (optional)

(you can use about 2tsp of pumpkin pie spice instead of the cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves and allspice if you want. it's a cheap and easy way of getting the same taste out of one jar of stuff).



(a) Preheat the oven to 350°F. Put the rack right smack in the middle of the oven. 
(b) Mix the butter with the bananas. It's cool if there's some lumps of banana. It all works out in the end.
(c) Stir in everything but the flour and cranberries. (make sure all of the spices get mixed in evenly, there's nothing crappier than hitting a big lump of spices in a cake. ugh.) 
(d) Mix the flour in until everything is smooth. Then mix in the cranberries.
(e) Butter a 8x4 loaf pan (if you're giving this away, they sell really good, cheap disposable ones in the supermarket that work really well with this recipe) and dump your batter in there. Sprinkle a little raw sugar on top if you want. 
(f) Bake for an hour (check between 50-55 minutes depending on your oven, mine's kinda wonky and needs some babysitting. A thin knife or toothpick should come out clean). 
(g) Let it cool (I use a kitchen towel on a cutting board but you can use a rack if you're all fancy and stuff) for like an hour or so? This bread's better eaten at room temperature, so letting it cool completely is the way to go. 
(h) Pull it out of the pan (run a knife around it if it's being tricky) and enjoy the numminess 

(this bread is also super good toasted for breakfast!!!)

28.10.10

ROBO HORSE

After watching this 40 times and a good night's rest, I have decided that this is the best thing that has ever been put on the internet, ever.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMenQ7PJJVY

30.5.10

Magic Man - Real Life Color

This album is SO GOOD. These two guys are from Boston, they produced by sending things back and forth on the internet, AND THEY HAVE A SONG CALLED POLYGONS. Truly awesome and so worth downloading.



I am going to give them some money for this once I figure out how to use the internet and do so. You should too if you're into it. These guys obviously put a lot of hard work and time into this album and it definitely should be rewarded.

Free download here.

In other awesome news, my iPhone got fried somehow and I got my SECOND replacement iPhone this week (they replaced the first one because I beat it up so much that they said it was embarrassing to the company for me to be carrying a product that looked like mine did. SCORE).

Benefits of getting your messed up iPhone replaced:

(1) It works again.
(b) You can do stuff with it.
(4) It's not broken anymore.

Drawbacks of getting your messed up iPhone replaced:

(a) You have to start all over on Angry Birds.
(b) I guess that's about it.
(3) Yeah.

As you can see, getting your iPhone replaced sucks and I don't recommend it. 

I am also doing an unofficial study of roses on the street. I have a theory that the ugly roses smell better than the pretty ones. So far the only official thing I have figured out is that grabbing a rose stem or sticking your face in a bush will horribly scratch your face and arms. But when I figure out more I will post a colorful chart or graph.

25.5.10

Torani Cupcake Syrup

It is amazing that this exists.


18.5.10

5.5.10

Oobleck

So today I got to spend 4 hours figuring out how to make 2 tons of corn starch goo turn the same color as a swimming pool. Life is so good. But it got me thinking about this Oobleck stuff, which oddly enough I had to make in huge quantities when I was working as a counselor in the Nature Shack at Coleman Country Day Camp like 10-12 years ago, between cleaning up goat crap and pulling kids out of the pond when they fell in. I suppose the fact that I'm doing this for a TV show now should be some kind of full circle moment or something. But I'm not cognitively developed enough to make that connection; all I can focus on is huge quantities of awesome colorful goo.

This is Lori. And a pig. This picture is like 10 years old. 
I worked in this pen every summer for 5 years. It smelled like shit.

Oobleck is basically a corn starch and water mixture that, when combined in a specific ratio, creates something called a non-Newtonian fluid. This basically means that the viscosity of the fluid is not directly proportional to the amount of stress applied to it. Usually there's a direct relationship (i.e. a constant coefficient) between stress and viscosity; the cool thing about non-Newtonian fluids is that they can function much like a solid under certain conditions.

This little girl scares me

If you want to make your own, take two parts cornstarch and one part water, and mix them together in a bowl. It will be difficult, and more like kneading. You might need to add more water or corn starch depending on how humid it is, and it varies a bit from batch to batch. Add a few drops of food coloring to your liking and mix until the color is even.


If you haven't made this before you definitely should. It doesn't matter if you're an adult, you'll have fun. And the materials are cheap enough that it's worth it. I'm going to make some this week. It's awesome if you're having a bad day too. It's like a stress ball only more awesome.

I will try to take pictures in a few weeks of the 2,000+ pounds of this stuff that's going to be made. I think it's gonna be pretty cool.

17.4.10

Discovery.


The Americas, 1836.

Look at North America on this map. Considering this was made 175 years ago and that the world is 6 billion years old, it's obvious that the velocity of progress seen on Earth is staggering. Even more amazing: someone sat down and compiled data and firmly believed when they were creating this map that what they were drawing was fact. And even more people at the time looked at this and functioned as if it was, too.

I do love old maps like these because looking at them is a reminder that even when you think you know something enough to commit to it and present it as fact, you always have to be open to learn and stand corrected when faced with new information.

I must say I'm into the pretty funky shape of North America on that map above.

15.4.10

This end of the color spectrum.


More pics of this Chilean condominium complex here.

11.4.10

Jabuticaba!

The Jabuticaba tree grows fruit directly from it's trunk and branches. This is some freaky, alien looking shit, but it's so awesome! Brazilians eat them like grapes and sometimes they're mashed up and made into juice or jelly.



The Jabuticaba is native to South America. Which really sucks because North America needs more creepy, weird, freaky stuff. It's 2010, we're supposed to have flying cars, talking dogs and robots that make us dinner. Since that whole thing went down the drain, can't we at least have some freaky alien grape trees? Ugh.



Because they are so awesome, bonsai people have been training and growing them for a long time. Perhaps this is a somewhat reasonable solution to introducing some alien freakiness into our lives. Bonsai maintenance is A LOT of work though. I know someone who has a bunch of bonsai trees and it's basically like a full time job that requires a ton of patience and discipline.



If I ever get to Brazil, the first thing I am doing is finding a Jabuticaba tree, transplanting it into a HUGE pot, putting it on a freighter and bringing it back to my neighborhood. Christopher Columbus was to noodles what Zach Vitale will be to Jabuticaba.

4.4.10

Michael Wolf's The Transparent City



I love this series by Michael Wolf. My friend Bob told me about it a while ago and while walking to a job downtown the other day it was on the mind as I was looking up at the skyline. I really like how these aesthetically pleasing images flirt with being creepy and voyeuristic and at the same time provide a window (whether we choose to open it or leave it closed) into the type of society we've built and where we're headed.



The awesome thing about these is the sheer sense of scale and enormity of our surroundings that you get from the images. Everything about them is larger than life and then you see a tiny person in one of the windows, and it reinforces the fact that we're all tiny fish in a huge glass fishbowl. It also makes one consider what they want seen by others, what one wants to keep hidden, and how private our private lives actually are.



Besides the conceptual side of these I think they're really stunning architectural photographs that are worth checking out for their technical merit alone. There's something about straight lines, order, and the precision it takes to create a building that's so appealing and satisfying when rendered visually, and I think these pictures do it really well.



For more awesome pictures, visit Michael Wolf's website.

Chesterfield Cigarette Gloves

 
(via Found in Mom's Basement)

30.3.10

I made some mustard.

So a few weeks ago I posted about Monastery Mustard and how awesome the Sisters at St. Angel are. I guess this kind of planted the seed (no pun intended) and I finally made mustard this weekend. It was pretty great.



Now I don't even really like mustard, but making it was awesome. It totally fried my food processor but it was so worth it. I highly recommend that everyone try making it at least once. Or, if you don't like mustard, think of something you normally buy, that you'd never think of making, and make it yourself. It's strangely empowering and it feels good to take back some of the dependence we have on others. Plus it probably tastes better.



I don't know what to do next, I'm thinking about marmalade, lemon curd, pickled ginger, hot sauce and brining my own olives. If you've got any ideas for random fun projects that are kind of sciency and fun which result in me being able to give things to nice people, then let me know!!!!

Crafty sign making, Neon Orange Poster Board, & Cheap haircuts.


I saw this sign a few months ago downtown. And I walked by a few days ago and it was gone. It's weird taking pictures of things and having them not be there at another time. It's a somewhat difficult thing for me to grasp that life doesn't freeze and stay still whenever I leave a room or hop on the T. Coming back to a place and having it be different is always a strange experience and one I don't think I'll ever get used to.

Anyway, this sign is awesome for many reasons. First of all, it's about cheap haircuts, which I am ALL ABOUT. Second of all, it's on discount brand neon orange colored poster board. Anything on this medium (I call it a medium because everything created on it is a work of art) is fantastic and should be framed, like the example above. Finally, they obviously ran out of Cs and needed to cut a few O's or use parentheses to finish their sign. This is crafty and badass. When faced with a challenge, this men's hair cuttery rises to the occasion and makes it work. This is pure American ingenuity at work.

I was looking for a picture of a guy giving a thumbs up, and happened to find this picture of a guy dressed up as Uncle Sam giving two thumbs up on a beach. It's funny that I found this NOW, because a few weeks ago I really needed a picture of a guy dressed up as Uncle Sam giving two thumbs up on a beach but couldn't find one. I guess I should've searched harder on Punchstock, the internet's number one source for pictures of guys dressed up as Uncle Sam giving two thumbs up on a beach.

27.3.10

Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution

This show is pretty awesome. I've watched Jamie Oliver's shows on the Food Network a few times because I think they're shot really beautifully (his show and the Barefoot Contessa are styled and shot impeccably) and he seems like a normal dude.

Jamie Oliver and family. Forget about the baby. That sweater is so mathy and cool.

The premise of the show is that Jamie goes to America's unhealthiest city and attempts to change the way the population thinks about food and nutrition. The food part of the show, honestly, doesn't really interest me. I suppose I initially watched this because I was interested in the normal melodramatic angry confrontations I love in Kitchen Nightmares.

Gordon Ramsay yelling at a dude for not being as good as him.

But this dude seems to actually care about people, and that is refreshing. It could all be an act. It's hard to tell when people are doing the right thing for the right reasons or because it sells whatever product they're pushing. But I'd like to think that Jamie Oliver could be in it to win it for the benefit of the little kids and adults who this program might ultimately influence. And that's something that should be praised and supported.

It's worth watching and you should check it out if you've got a chance. Link below takes you through time and space at warp speed to Hulu, where you can watch episodes for free if you're willing to watch 3 minutes of Yaz commercials (which are pretty fucking funny).

Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution

25.3.10

Are you there, God? It's me, Zach.

 Paging Dr. Rogaine, we have an emergency in the Zach ward.

So I was thinking about shaving my beard today. And I'd been thinking about it for weeks now. It's kinda annoying and getting to be a pain. But today I was gonna shave it for the wrong reason.

I guess somewhere deep in my brain there was some correlation between professionalism and a shaved (or at least kempt) facial hair. Truth be told, this is not completely unfounded. The picture below calls Joaquin Phoenix's situation a "crazy, homeless guy beard". Personally I don't feel like outward appearance (or more specifically facial hair) is any indication of self-respect, but I suppose I get why some people do.


I know I sort of look like a caveman lately. It's totally cool and I'm down with it, and luckily most of the work I do involves darkrooms, basements, bad lighting, or solitary computer work where I don't regularly have to explain why I look like a Cro-Magnon. I hate shaving because I ALWAYS cut myself, and I hate trimming my beard because it requires a firm commitment to keeping it up that I can't really make. So letting it grow out became an obvious and easy solution.

But I think I had a moment this afternoon where I thought for a second that being me wasn't good enough. And despite having felt that many times in the past it's really not a good thing to think at all. If someone's going to judge you based on something stupid like a big crazy beard then they're really not someone you want to be around anyway.

Here I am moving a bunch of rocks and looking for a Gigabit switch last week. I hate networking.

I'll shave it eventually. It is getting kinda annoying and random shit (food [every day], toothpaste [three or four times a week], feathers [once, that i know of, but only because someone told me, so probably more than once]) keeps getting stuck in it. It also has gotten bushy and tangly enough to officially support the weight of a thin stainless steel fork as of Tuesday. Or maybe I just got lucky and stuck it in a good spot on Tuesday. I've been trying for a few weeks now. For some reason that's a milestone to me. Now I'm waiting for it to grow long enough that I can tie a hair in a knot and support the weight of a 4oz lead teardrop sinker. I don't know if I'll make it that long but it would be pretty cool.



Anyway... maybe I'm just growing up but I guess it's important to embrace the elements of ourselves that we sometimes question or attempt to change. It's cool to not be perfect and it's okay to make mistakes as long as you learn from them. And if you're comfortable with yourself, other people will be comfortable with you too. I feel like I'm 90% there. I'm still pretty embarrassed that I can't tie my shoes, laugh out loud when people say "butt", and that I have to watch a youtube instructional video in slow motion when I need to tie a half-windsor. But eventually I guess I'll grow into this just like the beard grew into my face. And it'll probably get on my nerves before I appreciate it.


So as scratchy and fluffy and big and crazy as it is, it's on my face and I guess it's there to stay a little while longer. And I'm pretty okay with this. Beards are, indeed awesome. And I feel slightly more awesome today too. Hooray.

21.3.10

John Candy

So I was walking home from work and this beat-up Chevy Cutlass pulled up to a house about 200 feet from where I was and backfired. It was alarming. But it was pretty awesome. Which made me remember Uncle Buck, who had a car that always backfired. And that got me thinking about how fucking awesome John Candy was in the late 80's. Dude was in Home Alone, The Rescuers Down Under AND Uncle Buck in a SINGLE YEAR.



Take a step back and think about what you did this last year. Here's what I did: Based on statistics I crapped around 1,200 times, I know I lost my wallet twice, I definitely fell down the stairs once, and can sure as hell remember cutting my face due to sneezing while shaving 4 times ([all in the fall; I have a drafty bathroom and my sneezes come without warning, don't judge).



In the same amount of time that I took a lot of dumps and involuntarily hurt myself, John Candy made movie history. He got to work with Macaulay Culkin TWICE when he was still awesome (I know it's not fair to expect child stars to never grow up, but seriously, someone should have stunted his growth or thrown him in some kind of cryo-chamber or something. They'd be up to Home Alone 38 by now and I'd own every single one)



He also got to work with Tia, the admittedly bitchy shitty daughter in Uncle Buck, but I had (and still kind of have?) a huge crush on her. (I just googled "Uncle Buck Tia" to find a picture of Tia, which led me to find her name, Jean Louisa Kelly, which I googled and then found this:



CELEBRITYBAREFEET.COM????  WHAT THE HELL?)

Anyway... it's a real shame he died so young (and also totally nuts that it happened 16 years ago... I remember watching Cool Runnings (on VHS) with my brother the day he died. It was snowing. We were sad). Thinking about all of the incredible movies he was in, it's scary to think of what else he would have done if he was still around.



But you know what? He made some incredible movies and as trite as it sounds, his legacy lives on forever. He was a part of some of the greatest movies ever made (Blues Brothers, Caddyshack, Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Little Shop of Horrors, Uncle Buck, Home Alone, Summer Rental [note to self: where the hell did you put your Blues Brothers DVD?]). He makes me smile whenever I watch one of his movies and that is pretty freaking cool... and something we can all kinda aspire to in a weird way (I know he had problems but still. His life's work was dedicated to making people laugh and that's both difficult and admirable).



John Candy, you are awesome. Job well done.

Spring Plaid

I am excited about the warmer weather because that means I get to wear my spring plaid shirts, which have a noticeably more subtle color palette and are fun in their own unique way. Just in the last few days there have been a lot more people out and about in the city wearing some awesome plaid shirts and it is a wonderful sight. It's kind of hard to have a bad day when you're wearing an awesome shirt that makes everyone smile. If you haven't tried it yet, I highly recommend it.



I am majorly on the hunt for more awesome short sleeve plaid button-ups, so if you see good ones, let me know. And if you're looking for some good ones, let me know and maybe we can trade our info and sources on awesome plaid.

16.3.10

Photovoltaic Cell Awesomeness


This is real. And it's going to revolutionize solar energy production. And it's also awesome looking.

15.3.10

Fork Splitting

So i was reading about English Muffins (more specifically fork splitting the English Muffin and the effect it has on the muffin as opposed to splitting it with a knife [there is a whole back-and-forth conversation here that was interesting for like 30 seconds but then got boring as all hell) and I was going to post a picture of a fork, but when I googled Fork I found this:


What the fuck.

Anyway, apparently splitting things with forks creates nooks and crannies. This is kind of awesome. So to see if I could create nooks and crannies on other things, I began to experiment (mind you everything I'm sharing has happened within the last 15 minutes and is unscientific at best). I tried to make nooks and crannies on a block of jalapeno white cheddar cheese. This did not work. Then I tried to make nooks and crannies on a cookie. This also did not work. Finally, I tried to make nooks and crannies on some wonder bread. And guess what happened? It didn't work.

The end result is that I've got a fucked up block of cheese, a bunch of cookie crumbs, some ratty looking white bread, and no nooks and crannies.

Such a typical Monday. Ugh.

13.3.10

Shaving babies

Babies and a good razor are kind of like spaghetti and meatballs. Both awesome on their own, but they are elevated to a whole new level of awesome when they join forces. 

If you've seen my face over the past 10 years, you know that I'm not a huge fan of shaving, but I never thought a picture of a baby shaving would make me laugh as much as this did. Definitely frame-worthy and definitely awesome.

 

(Thanks Steph)

P.S. Brian: Make sure Conor uses a safety blade. Or even better let him grow a beard out. Babies & Beards > Babies & Razors.

11.3.10

People getting punched in the face in slow motion. And a baby.

I never really thought about it until I watched this video, but I guess getting punched in the face kind of sucks. It also looks really weird in slow motion. Really weird, but really awesome. I think I could watch people getting hurt all day if it was as fun as this. I'd also let someone punch me in the face if i could watch it back in slow motion. I wonder what my beard would do.

Here's a video of a bunch of folks from a post-production studio in Texas getting punched in the face. In badass slow motion. Maybe everyone's seen this already but it's new to me and it's pretty freaking great.

People getting punched in the face in slow motion



Seeing people get punched in the face reminds me of this 5 second clip that I have been OBSESSED with for a pretty long time now. It has over 4 million views. 3,750,000, give or take a few thousand, are me. Sometimes I feel bad about liking this video but then I watch it again and start laughing and all of the guilt melts away. Any time you're having a bad day, just think about this lady and it kind of puts things in perspective.

Best Video Ever

On a COMPLETELY UNRELATED note, my friends Brian and Mary had a baby this morning. His name is Conor and I am pretty freaking excited for them. They're great, great people and are going to make the most incredible parents.

Photo of Conor, taken by his Dad.

Welcome to the world, Conor. You just made it a whole lot more awesome. :-)

10.3.10

Monastery Mustard

Despite my extreme aversion to and disgust for large quantities of homogenous edible things, this story on a group of Benedictine Sisters is pretty wonderful. These ladies had a recipe for mustard and decided that it was so good that they could turn it into a business and use the proceeds to help out their community. It goes to show you that a simple idea founded on generosity and a strong work ethic can lead to wonderful, cool and inspiring things.

I've been thinking a lot lately about my ability to make a difference in people's lives and my place in the world. And there have been a lot of stories like this coming out lately about ordinary people with big hearts who focus their energy on something they're good at, market themselves well, and either give back to or promote causes that are close to them. I don't think I'm all that good at anything but if these badass Sisters can run an awesome business and help people in need, it's only a matter of time before I figure out what to do. Plus, I guess you don't need to invent something crazy or become President to make other people's lives better. You can do it with something as simple as mustard. So I guess if you've ever wanted to make big changes in the world and didn't think you could, you should watch this. Because we all can, and it made me feel a lot better too.

Monastery Mustard

On a nerdy/weird/stupid note, I never knew that you used a blowtorch to shrink wrap the plastic seals on jarred products. I was so excited to see the nun with the blow torch. If I were on the Mustard assembly line, this would be my job. And I would love it. Fire rules.

9.3.10

Tetris Tiles

Tetris Tiles are amazing.


If my bathroom were covered in these, I'd want to crap all day.


This is the best color scheme. I just love these so much. Life is so fun and tiles should be too.

For more awesomeness, visit www.tetris-tiles.com.

8.3.10

Jessica Fletcher, my hero.

When I was little we used to climb up on my parent's bed and watch Murder, She Wrote on Sunday nights. My dad was already asleep by then (which was and still is weird since it was 8:00) but my mom and I were really into it. I guess it's kind of strange that I was allowed to watch people get shot, hit in the head with wrenches, burned alive, stabbed, pushed off balconies, poisoned, and have their brakes cut when I was 5, but I think it's probably what's made me so well-rounded and mature for my age (stop thinking what you're thinking right now).

Jessica Fletcher is my hero. She embodies everything that I want to be in life. She is the eternal optimist, has an undying need to help others, and puts the needs of her friends before her own. If she was a real person, I would intern for her or something. That said, developing any kind of relationship with her is a certain invitation to be thrown into a brutal murder mystery, whether I'd be the victim or the innocent but questionable suspect with the odds stacked against me. So maybe I would have done some kind of telecommuting internship. Or we could have conference called or something. They didn't have that in 1987 but Jessica and I would have figured something out (and it would have been none of your business).


Jessica generously lends her time in an effort to get to the bottom of who victimized this woman with self-tanner.

At the beginning of every episode, Jessica is usually dealing with some kind of work-related issue, like travelling somewhere to research a new book, or fucking with her broken typewriter because she's got a deadline to submit her draft in New York City. She's a busy lady and I give her credit for choosing a slower, quieter life in Cabot Cove, as opposed to moving to Manhattan (where she actually taught for a whole season [the murders and storylines in this season, in case you were wondering, were totally sub-par]). She is modest and confident, a star in her field, and well-respected in her community, where she shops locally, gets around town on bicycle (she was green before green was popular) and singlehandedly solves more murders per year than all of the detectives in most major police departments do combined.

 

Sometimes you have to break and enter to get to the bottom of things. Jessica isn't just above the law, she IS the law.

Every episode of Murder, She Wrote presents a challenge for Jessica. Sometimes, a friend she hasn't heard from in a long time is murdered. Then there are cases where her second cousin gets accused of murder, or there's a witch at the Cabot Cove church who pushes someone off the steeple.  These things happen, people. This is real life. Jessica speaks my language and I can relate to her hardships. 

Her true heroism comes at the end of every episode where, despite all of these terrible things happening around her, she triumphs. Jessica uses her stealthy investigation skills to get to the bottom of the mystery and figure out who the real culprit is, stumping the criminal and stymieing the village Sheriff, Mort, who I have no respect for whatsoever. Your hard-earned taxpayer dollars are paying for this guy to fumble around town like a douche all day and take backseat to a retired 60-something mystery writer who has no business being on a crime scene. At least Jessica represents the people of Cabot Cove in the House of Representatives, and can do something about this.




The woman in the background knows she's going to die in 5 minutes and does NOT look happy about it.

Jessica ends each episode with a smile, putting the brutality and injustice of the last 45 minutes behind her, while embracing her inner-strength, steadfast resolve for righting wrongs, and sometimes Tom Selleck.


I don't know why Jessica and Magnum teamed up on this episode. It was terrible. You can tell from this picture that Jessica is so over it.

There are few people in my life that I would give a kidney for. If I ever get slashed, killed in a ritual voodoo ceremony, blown up on a boat, or electrocuted with a hairdryer in a bathtub, I hope that you barge onto the scene uninvited and show those good-for-nothing Bumblefuck PD officers who's boss. You may be fictional, but you are real to me, now and forever.

I raise my glass this evening to you, Jessica Fletcher, my hero.

 

Jessica raising her glass back at me. Jealous, much?