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Page 7A • Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Me and Dan Brown
BY DAN BROWN
I
want to lodge a complaint.
This is getting ridiculous.
I was in Atlanta last week,
doing some Christmas shopping at Books A Million and it
happened again. I had been
perusing the new release table
when I heard this hot, sultry
voice from behind.
“I’m looking for Dan
Brown.”
I immediately perked up, and
thought, “Dang. I’ve only been
in town for six hours and they
already know I’m here.”
I then heard a Books A
Million associate reply, “Oh,
he’s right over there.”
And I thought again, “Wow
… one of my tens upon tens of
Fanfare fans.”
So I turned, and smiled at the
tall, leggy brunette sashaying
my way, and my brain flew off
on this wildly ridiculous tangent that says I’m a legend in
my own mind. I said, “Hi
there,” in what I call my Radio
Voice and flashed a big smile.
She looked at me like I was
something she just stepped in
and said, “Excuse me but
would you please move? I
want Dan Brown’s new book
and you’re in my way.”
Oh. You want … him. The little fantasy I’d suddenly conjured burst like an over-inflated balloon.
“But my name really is Dan
Brown.”
She gave me this look like I
just belched up lunch and said,
“Sure it is. Now please move
or else I get out the pepper
spray.”
It’s not easy being Dan
Brown, and yes, I know. This is
an exercise in total narcissism.
Writing a column about being
me.
Not quite though, but you get
my point.
I was once told I was a totally self-absorbed and self-centered individual. Everything is
always all about me. To which
I reply, “and your point is
what?”
This is all about me, on being
Dan Brown. And I singularly
blame him for this.
Growing up I thought my
name was dull. There’s not
much you can do with Dan
Brown. It has no rhythm. No
flow. It just sits there, ordinary
and un-inspiring.
I wanted something dashing
like “Rex Steele,” but had to
settle for plain-Jane Dan
Brown. Then someone who
has your name writes a controversial mega-best seller
and suddenly everybody
wants a piece of you.
Dan Brown becomes the
most talked about man on the
planet. Millions of churchgoers reviled him, but they all
bought his book, and Dan
Brown laughed all the way to
the bank.
Too bad that wasn’t me.
Sure, money can’t buy happiness, but it
m a k e s
being miserable a lot
more fun.
One of
my favorite
narcissistic
pastimes
on trips to
Books A
Million is to peruse the fiction
aisle and see whose name
jumps off the shelf at me, giving a slight pause at the slot
on the shelf where my eventual best seller would reside.
That’s when I see it, and one
of the top items on my Life’s
Bucket List, right next to “Fly
Like Superman” and “Win the
Heart of a Really Hot
Looking Super Model” – to
see my name on a book sitting
on a shelf in Books A Million
– had been unceremoniously
stolen from me.
The Da Vinci Code, the new
best seller from Dan Brown.
I uttered a few choice colorful adjectives.
Everywhere I go I’d get the
same thing, “So how does it
feel to write all those books?”
I even had a woman pass me
on the street one day who did
the whole “snake fangs” thing
at me with her fingers. Then
she hissed and said, “Be thee
gone from me Satan.”
Even the Pope wants a piece
of me.
I was watching the news one
night and as Peter Jennings is
about to go to commercial, he
throws out a little teaser about
the next news story.
“When we come back. The
Pope speaks out against Dan
Brown.”
Dang, I thought, he’s good.
How did the Pope know I
skipped church last Sunday?
So from one Dan Brown to
another I say, Thank you.
Because now, if I ever do
write that best selling novel, I
have to pick another name.
Hmm.
How about, “Ride the Wild
Wind” by Rex Steele?
Letters I’ll never send … 2
BY JULIE R. SMITH
E
ven my dearest friends say I’m not
real quick on the draw. I never
think of a comeback during any
encounter, whether it leaves me sputtering, laughing or crying.
Instead, I think it over for awhile and
then write letters in my head. Thus today
we have… More Letters I’ll Never Send:
Dear Neighbor: How nice of you to
ask four people if I left my husband.
Actually, the luggage, clothes and ugly
bedspreads you saw me loading in my
car Tuesday went to Goodwill. But really, thanks for the rumor.
Dear Church Lady: You’re always
there in the pew ahead, beautifully
dressed, a kind word for everyone, the
perfect lady. No one would ever know
the pain you’ve endured. I really, sincerely admire you. (And from the back, your
hair looks terrific!)
Dear Mother: It was wonderful talking with you today, like old times. You
even knew who I was.
Dear Charlie Sheen: This is a family
newspaper, so instead of using ugly
words, I’ll substitute a smiley face, like
this :].
Here’s the :] gist, Lover Boy. You bring
your :] game to South
Carolina, and the :] jig
is up.
Maybe in California
you :] get away with
beating
women,
cheating on your
wives, whooping it up
with call girls, boozing, drugging, shooting Kelly Preston in the leg, leaving
rehab and pulling a :] knife on the wife
who had your babies five months ago.
Please come down here and try that :],
PLEASE! One of three things will happen: The woman involved will beat your
:] in the middle of the road, or her brother will beat your :] in the middle of the
road, or her daddy will do the honors. If
all else fails, Jenny Sanford will drive in
from Sullivan’s Island and beat your :] in
the middle of the road. P.S. Used to like
your TV show, but now I think it’s :].
Dear Tyler Perry: I love you. Would
Madea adopt me?
Dear Any American in the Armed
Services: Thank you.
Dear Cesar Milan, aka the Dog
Whisperer: If more owners realized the
way to cure Killer’s bad habits involves a
simple rolled-up newspaper, boy, would
you be out of a job.
Dear anyone who asks my opinion on
the schism in the Episcopal Church: A)
I’m not educated enough to have one,
and B) Can’t we all just get along?
Dear Target: I found the brocade pillows you overpriced at $18 each at for 3
bucks at Goodwill… and they look
BRAND NEW!! Hahahaha! But I still
love your shoes.
Dear T-Bob: You really don’t have to
put the kids on the phone every time I
call. Really.
Dear David Pickles: Remember in the
eighth grade when I wouldn’t let you
copy off my English test and you called
me a dog? I forgive you. But it took 36
years.
Dear Mr. Po-Po: First of all, I totally
respect you and your job. Secondly,
would you mind not pulling people over
in my driveway every night? The neighbors are starting to talk.
Dear Convenience Store Clerk: I realize your computerized cash register died,
but shouldn’t you be able to make change
for a dollar in your head?
Julie R. Smith, who may one day actually mail these letters, can be reached at
[email protected].
Of moose and men…
BY JIM TATUM
S
o I read where a New York
woman is suing a bar she was in
because a stuffed moose head fell
on her. She says she has suffered
injuries and lost wages because of the
nose-dive ol’ Bullwinkle took after
happy hour.
Sounds ridiculous, eh? Yet another
reason why we need tort reform in this
country, right?
Well, maybe, and then again, maybe
not.
I’ve always been of the opinion that
people are largely responsible for their
actions. That includes where they park
their carcasses to pound a brewski or
two. On the other hand, Bullwinkle
weighed more than 150 pounds and had
a rack about three feet wide. Add all that
with a dose of gravity, and you have a
pretty powerful headache.
Call it what you will, but someone
needs to be held responsible.
Talk of tort reform is scary to me. I
don’t ever want to get on the business
end of a lawsuit, frivolous or not, but I
also don’t want the powerful to feel free
to practice the hideous, Deliverancetype behavior on we the people with far
more latitude than they currently enjoy.
Whether we like it or not, about the only
thing that keeps these greedy clowns
from doing whatever
they feel like is the
very real fear of a
visit from a fast-talking character from
the offices of Dewey,
Cheatham & Howe.
A few years ago, I
wrote a column that
absolutely infuriated
my brother, who I love dearly and
respect exponentially. He’s a lawyer, a
very capable and impeccably honest
one, and his objection was not necessarily my stance on tort reform at the time,
but the nature of the information upon
which I based my objections.
Like so much of what’s wrong with
the world today, it, too, came from the
Internet. Email. Something called the
Stella Awards, a dubious honor
bestowed upon “the most ridiculous
lawsuits in America,” named for the
woman who sued McDonald’s after she
burned herself with a cup of hot coffee.
The problem, he pointed out, is that
the cases cited are either blown exponentially out of proportion or simply
never happened.
The fact is, there are plenty of
unscrupulous, blowhard lawyers out
there, classic ambulance chasers looking for a fast buck. They all ought to be
castrated and sent to Pakistan wearing,
“My Kid can Beat Up your Mullah” Tshirts.
There are also a lot of unscrupulous,
blowhard pundits and spin-doctors out
there inundating the public with all
manner of carefully constructed fiction.
They all ought to be castrated and sent
to Pakistan wearing, “My Kid can Beat
Up Your Mullah,” T-shirts.
There are also a lot of idiots in the
public repeating all this truthless dreck
as Gospel, thus perpetuating the cycle of
fear and ignorance. They all ought to be
– okay, okay, you get the idea.
Actually, reform starts at home. It’s
probably too much to ask the Bar
Association to be a little more willing to
barbecue those creeps that clog up the
system and waste everyone’s time and
money, but one can hope.
It’s probably too much to ask judges to
be quicker to censure, suspend, even
disbar some of their own rather than
politely ask them not to engage in practices that bring them wealth and television commercials, but one can hope.
It’s probably too much to ask corporations, political parties, special interest
groups, and other occasionally necessary
evils to put a little fact in their folderol,
but one can hope.
It’s probably too much to ask the public to be a little more discerning, but one
can – okay, okay, you get the idea.
School district making strides
323-B East Main Street, P.O. Box 427, Moncks Corner, SC 29461
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The Berkeley Independent was established October 21, 1987. The Berkeley
Democrat was established May 17, 1918. The Berkeley Democrat was purchased
December 29, 1989 by The Berkeley Independent.
Subscriptions inside Berkeley County cost $22 for one year or $32 for two
years. Due to the cost of postage, outside of county and state subscriptions are
higher.
The Berkeley Independent is published every Wednesday by Berkeley
Independent Publishing Company, Inc. at 320 E. Main St, Moncks Corner, SC,
29461. Second Class Postage (USPS-000-2-246) paid at Moncks Corner, South
Carolina, 29461.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Berkeley Independent, PO Box 427,
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Opinions expressed in this newspaper may or may not reflect the opinion
of the staff of The Berkeley Independent.
CYAN-AOOO
MAGENTA-OAOO
YELLOW-OOAO
BLACK 01/29/08
BY TERRY HARDESTY
All too often, we are reading stories that
do not put our local school districts in a
good light. Negative news seems to always
get ahead of anything positive and I guess
that’s a product of consumer demand.
Our public schools do, however, have
numerous success stories both as a region
and certainly in Berkeley County.
The recent Education Foundation Annual
Business Education Summit announced the
wonderful news that this region has been
accepted into Ford Motor Company Fund’s
“Next Generation Learning Communities.”
I’m extremely proud as a member of the
summit planning committee of the effort
made by the many business and school district leaders that volunteered their efforts to
make the summit a success.
This is just one example of the numerous
groups and organizations that give generously of both time and treasure to our
school systems. Surely businesses such as
Boeing would not be locating here without
a good educational system from which to
develop a workforce.
In Berkeley County we accomplished a
lot in very short period of time.
We have moved the district in a positive
direction despite $3 million in revenue cuts
this year. By reducing
central office staff,
streamlining our business practices and eliminating obsolete programs, the budget cuts
did not impact classrooms.We are already
preparing for another
expected round of funding cuts.
In March, the Berkeley County School
Board and Superintendant Dr. Anthony
Parker spent three days crafting a strategic
plan for improvement.
The board set the goals and Dr. Parker and
his staff immediately proceeded to further
develop the specific action items and measurable objectives to meet the goals. You can
see the plan on the district’s website and it is
also displayed throughout the schools.
I am extremely pleased to say that considerable progress is being made on accomplishing the objectives.
We have constructed a new Principal
Accountably Model, revised and added specific job descriptions for all staff, created a
Comprehensive Communication Plan, and
most importantly we are striving for continuous improvement using Baldrige
Principles. Dr. Parker has been highly visi-
ble in the community and is setting the standard for effective collaboration between all
stakeholders both within our district and
within our region.
Our new Chief Operations Officer is overseeing a comprehensive review of facilities.
This includes a land use study that looks at
specific schools and their true capacity, current use, and future growth potential based
on real data including birth rates and
planned subdivisions. Growth may have
slowed at the present, but we know it can
return at a pace that can rapidly overcrowd
our schools before we can react.
We are planning ahead now to be able to
avoid the negative impact. We are also
evaluating our construction model for new
schools with the goal of significant cost
reduction from recent projects.
This will include substantial input from
the community through a County Facility
Design Committee.
As I sit and reflect during the holiday season, I am blessed to be part of the leadership
team for Berkeley County Schools, thankful
for our new direction toward excellence,
and proud of the entire staff of Berkeley
County School System.
Mr. Hardesty is a Berkeley County School
Board Member (District 6).
The Independent encourages readers to write to The Forum. Letters must be signed and have a daytime phone number for
verification. Please limit letters to 400 words or less. Letters may be edited for length and content if necessary. Letters should
be addresed to: The Editor, The Berkeley Independent, P.O. Box 427, Moncks Corner, SC 29461.