Saturday, February 23, 2008

Life Takes Visa?

Continuing the theme from earlier today, Dauber's World continues to
be confused by the wearing of tshirts by service personnel with credit
card companies on them when the establishment they work in doesn't
accept credit cards!

Dauber's World is blogging from a Samba Bar in Rio right now (in a
part of town called Lapa). Everyone that works here has a shirt with a
Visa logo embroidered on the sleave. Of course upon entering the bar
Dauber's World was told that this is a cash only establishment.

For the first time in a very long time Dauber's World is at a loss for words.

--
Sent from Gmail for mobile | mobile.google.com

For Everything Else There's Mastercard?

Dauber's World has discovered another interesting phenomena while
traveling in Rio: a number of service workers here wear MasterCard
shirts. That does not mean, however that their business accepts
MasterCard or any credit card for that matter.

For instance Dauber's World and official former roommate Eric took a
cab from a tourist attraction back to the hotel. Despite the fact that
the driver wore a MasterCard tshirt he only accepted cash.

In fact Eric noticed that virtually every wait staff here wears the
same colared shirt with the MasterCard logo (with the words
"MasterCard" written on the short sleve). However that isn't an
indication that the restaurant will accept MasterCard.

This is a truly bizarre occurence in the opinion of Dauber's World.
Either MasterCard has an odd sponsorship program or there was a huge
sale on these white MasterCard shirts that half of the service
industry in Rio purchased.

--
Sent from Gmail for mobile | mobile.google.com

Half a World Away (Part 2)

Dauber's World continues his expose on Rio de Janeiro. After being
here a week a few more observations are worth noting:

-This city has more taxis per capita than any in the world. You never
have to wait for a taxi. There's always one available. Anytime of day.
Dauber's World wonders how there's enough business to sustain all of
these taxi drivers.
-If you're a woman you basically have to wear a bikini. Really doesn't
matter if you want to wear them. It would appear that you can't even
purchase a non-bikini based bath suit for a woman.
-Speaking of bathing suits, many men here never got the memo that
speedos are only needed for racing -- NOT for hang at the beach.
Dauber's World expects older generations to not know this, but far too
mant men Dauber's World's age are offenders too.
-On the topic of bathing suits it's worth noting that the beaches here
are sort of segregated informally. They're numbered and different
types of people hang out at different numbers. For instance it is
apparently well-know that the attractive, young single women hang out
by #9. If only the rest of life followed this simple principle.

Overall Dauber's World is a big fan of Rio. The only complaint (which
will surprise none of you who know Dauber's World) is the food. The
food is nothing special. Dauber's World has eaten the traditional
Brazillian dish of rice, black beans and meat a number of times and
that's pretty good. But there's a limit to how many beans you can eat
before the smell even bothers you. There's a strong Italian food
influence here and that's pretty good. It seems silly to fly all the
way here and eat Italian food, but that's what many of the restaurants
are.

Then of course there's McDonalds. Dauber's World conducted his test
and has now had a McDonalds hamburger on five continents! Only
Australia remains (unless Antartica becomes a prime location as well).
Again what's remarkable about McDonalds is that their hamburgers are
the same everywhere. This isn't to say they're good. Just about every
fast foot chain has a better burger than McDonalds, but the quality
control is impressive.

--
Sent from Gmail for mobile | mobile.google.com

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Half A World Away

Dauber's World is in Rio de Janeiro with former official roommate "Eric" exploring what this great city has to offer (post-Carnival).  Having been here almost two full days Dauber's World would like to jump to some conclusions (oh, ok, give some early impressions) of this city.

-Unclear if the Coriolis effect is true – the toilets here all flush to quickly to accurately determine whether the water truly is going clockwise (the water is sucked out of the bowl, it doesn't really swirl).
-The rest room situation has been quite pleasant so far – almost every toilet is equipped with toilet seat covers.
-It is yet-to-be determined if McDonald's is able to serve the same hamburger in Rio that it serves in China, Africa, Europe and the US (but Dauber's World is committed to finding out).
-Diner isn't consumed after 9pm here.  Easy to get in to restaurants before that.
-Hotels here are in the "Europe class".  Despite the fact that Brazil is home to many a tall individual the showers/beds do not accommodate anyone over 6 feet tall in any remotely comfortable fashion. 
-TV stations in the hotels have plenty of American movies with Portuguese subtitles, which partially makes up for the small beds.
-Air conditions is in every taxi and every restaurant which is important considering the humidity/temperature.
-Everyone here is really good at soccer.  Dauber's World saw four guys playing volleyball, but without their hands!  Dauber's World feared that even if he and Eric had full use of their hands they would still lose. 

Easily the most bizarre and annoying thing about Rio is the head that every bartender/waiter insists on putting in beer.  At first Dauber's World thought that perhaps this was merely an accident based on too small a sample size.  However after sitting at a microbrew for 30 minutes Dauber's World realized that this was in fact being done on purpose!  Why someone would want lots of head in the beer is inexplicable.  Luckily, despite virtually no language skills to speak of Dauber's World was able to order a beer head-free. 

Overall Rio is a very pretty city with abrupt rock formations throughout resulting in some gorgeous views of the city.  The locals have been extremely friendly despite the language gap (which certainly isn't their fault) and at no point have Dauber's World or "Eric" felt that they were in any danger whatsoever.  Dauber's World will continue to give updates as the week progresses.  Stay tuned…






Friday, February 15, 2008

Dauber's World is Lazy

Ok, this shouldn't really count as a post, but Dauber's World thought it was pretty funny. Who ever thought this up as an idea for an article?

The Cut-and-Paste Personality
Lacking inspiration and a moral compass, some online daters
are borrowing other people's witty Web profiles.
By JENNIFER SARANOW
February 15, 2008; Page W1

These identity thieves don't want your money. They want your quirky sense of humor and your cool taste in music.

Among the 125 million people in the U.S. who visit online dating and social-networking sites are a growing number of dullards who steal personal profiles, life philosophies, even signature poems. "Dude u like copied my whole myspace," posts one aggrieved victim.

Copycats use the real-life wit of others to create cut-and-paste personas, hoping to land dates or just look clever.
[cheater]
Hugh Gallagher wrote a high school essay two decades ago that's been resurrected online by daters seeking clever Web profiles.

Hugh Gallagher, a 36-year-old writer in New York, is one of the copied. Match.com has more than 50 profiles with parts of Mr. Gallagher's college entrance essay, which he penned nearly two decades ago and later appeared in Harper's Magazine. "I translate ethnic slurs for Cuban refugees" and "I write award-winning operas" are among Mr. Gallagher's most popular lines.

They worked well enough for Jim Carey, a 38-year-old pharmaceutical salesman in Bothell, Wash. He says he wanted women to know he was funny but was too lazy to think up anything. So he copied Mr. Gallagher's essay for his online profile. A year ago, he arranged to meet a woman for drinks. She asked about his operas. He confessed. "I felt like a balloon deflating," he says.

Original souls who discover they have been replicated say it's unethical and creepy. "I came across a guy who completely STOLE my profile message," posts one woman in Michigan. "I mean he had to have copied and pasted the whole thing and then just changed gender specific things to fit his own!!"

Online daters feel pressure to stand out and believe they must sell themselves like a product, say researchers at Georgetown, Rutgers and Michigan State universities who are conducting a joint study of them. "You are not making money off of somebody else's work; you're just trying to market yourself," says self-confessed copier Jeff Picazio, a 40-year-old computer-systems manager in Boynton Beach, Fla. After hunting for some copy-and-paste help -- including borrowing the line "you will soon learn that I'm a raging egomaniac" -- Mr. Picazio says he's gotten 20 dates.
Hugh Gallagher's college admission essay has become one of the most-copied documents in the online dating scene. WSJ's Jennifer Saranow speaks to Mr. Gallagher about the use of his essay.

A search on MySpace.com brought up more than 700 recent comments that accuse others of stealing headlines, user names, songs, background designs and entire profiles. In a recent survey of more than 400 online daters commissioned by Engage.com, 9% of respondents said they copied from another person's profile; 15% suspect their own words were stolen.

A Match.com profile of a man in Redmond, Wash., includes this postscript: "Shame on the woman who plagiarized my narrative and stole it for her profile!" And a 34-year-old woman in Basking Ridge, N.J., tacked this P.S. to her Plentyoffish.com profile: "To the girl who copied my profile -- and denies it...you s-!"

The quest for originality has spawned the services of online-dating coaches and profile writers. Some of them are victims, too. Dave Mizrachi, 34, of Miami sells an "Insider Internet Dating" course for $97. Mr. Mizrachi includes his own dating profile, advising men to use it as a guide. But at least 25 people on Match.com have stolen his lines, including: "I get a lot of women emailing me, (which is great for an ego boost)." One man uses Mr. Mizrachi's photo.

A recent search on Match.com brought up more than 90 profiles with such lines as: "I want an opposite. A yin to my yang," or "You know that woman who is the first person on the dance floor at every party? That's me." They weren't even from real people. They were cribbed from sample profiles posted online at E-Cyrano.com by dating coach and profile writer Evan Marc Katz. "It just seems so short-sighted," says Mr. Katz, of Los Angeles. "Everybody steals the same lines so they are not original anymore."

The Internet makes plagiarism anonymous and easy. Nearly half of high-school students and nearly 40% of college undergrads confess they copy online sources, according to surveys conducted by Donald McCabe, a founder of the Center for Academic Integrity at Clemson University in South Carolina. Stealing for appearance's sake is a new twist. "People are still trying to develop a sense of how to present themselves online," says Joseph Walther, a communication professor at Michigan State University.

The book "Online Dating for Dummies" tells readers not to fret about copying. TheProfileCoach.com, meanwhile, offers 12 "proven" profiles for $4. Sample: "There is a shallowness, a fakeness to much of the 'singles scene.'" A number of blogs offer free headlines for social-networking profiles, including, "Ernie's train of thought has derailed." For $50, weeklyscore.com offers 20 personal essays and 100 headlines, all updated weekly.
[Cheaters]

Thierry Khalfa says he had a good excuse to copy: His English isn't so good. The 44-year-old Frenchman first cobbled a ho-hum profile that said he liked to cook and enjoyed walks on the beach. Then he stumbled across the profile of Mike Matteo, 47, a screenwriter in Tampa, Fla. Mr. Matteo's profile had such nuggets as, "I have a sweet tooth, love my strawberry twizzlers and cheesecake jelly beans."

Without thinking twice, Mr. Khalfa says, he copied Mr. Matteo's prose because it also fit him to a tee. "That guy should be proud," says Mr. Khalfa, of Largo, Fla., who runs an auto-glass business. "In France, in the fashion business, when you see something that looks good, you take it and you copy it."

Mr. Khalfa caught the eye of preschool teacher Marjorie Coon, 48. They exchanged emails, and Ms. Coon wanted to meet Mr. Khalfa in person. Then she discovered he had copied the profile of Mr. Matteo, by coincidence her friend. She let Mr. Khalfa know she knew and dumped him. "I felt he was less than honest, a manipulator and downright stupid," says Ms. Coon, of Largo, Fla. Mr. Matteo wasn't too happy, either. "I'm not Cyrano de Bergerac," he says, referring to the 19th-century play about a man penning love letters for a rival.

Some copiers are harder to figure out. Cambria Lovelady, a 31-year-old editor in Austin, Texas, went on two dull dates with a man and afterward reread his online profile. He had copied her entire "About Me" paragraph including, "I'm afraid of heights and large birds." And Dale Sherstobitoff, 42, of British Columbia copied this from someone else on Plentyoffish.com: "I am the type of person that likes to think of my glass as half full."

Tracing authorship can be complicated. Chele Frizell, a 34-year-old nurse in Dayton, Ohio, swiped a MySpace.com headline from a friend: "Those who believe in telekinesis, raise my hand." She confessed her theft in a missive to the MySpace page of Holly Payne, 34, of Hollywood: "I totally copied your headline, but in Spanish. Does that still count?" Not really. Ms. Payne stole it from the late Kurt Vonnegut.

Chris Garansi, an electrician in Rock Hill, S.C., says he has received about 10 emails asking permission to copy his dating profile, which is headlined, "Wanted outlaw princess." Said princess is someone who "while climbing a tree can be all woman, while letting you know she can climb higher than you would ever dare." Among Mr. Garansi's requirements: "Chunky is fine but lumpy is how I like my mashed potatoes, and rolls are only good when served with dinner." He says he refuses people who ask to copy his work. "Either they lack imagination, or they just don't know who they are," says Mr. Garansi, 43.
[Cheater]

Online administrators say complaints of copied profiles are rare. If a profile is sufficiently creative, its author could theoretically sue a copier under copyright law. But lawyers say it would be expensive. "As a practical matter, what you would probably try to do is try to get the site to take the copier's profile down," says Jeffrey Neuburger, of law firm Thelen Reid Brown Raysman & Steiner LLP. Some sites say they do that.

Last year, JDate.com released online dating tips, including the importance of a strong "About Me" paragraph. "So make it count. How? Look at what everyone else is saying and then SAY SOMETHING DIFFERENT," advises the site.

Yahoo Personals provides two examples with the plea, "Don't copy these profiles exactly." But a quick search shows plenty have. A favorite among women: "If you love mushroom ravioli, romantic nights by a fire, and spring camping trips, please reply!" And for men: "I guarantee I can change the oil in your car in 10 minutes flat."

Laurie Crane says three men copied her profile, apparently thinking it would spark her interest. One wrote, "We have a lot in common." The 43-year-old art director in Chicago didn't date any of them. "Who knows what these guys are thinking," she says.

Finding her profile stolen angered Lavonna Short, of Sitka, Alaska. It also gave her pause. The 47-year-old mental-health professional says the thief used every qualification she'd written about her perfect mate: financially secure, able to take care of himself, not looking for a mother. It read like a shopping list, she says: "When I saw myself through someone else's eyes, I didn't like it." She rewrote her profile -- more mystery, less rigidity -- and found her mate.

Sunday, February 03, 2008

A Date That Will Live in Infamy



Most people over the age of 18 in the United States hate April 15th -- tax day. April 15th is the day where many of us realize that we owe EVEN MORE money to the Federal Government and probably more to the government of whatever state you live in. Dauber's World has always thought that voter turnout in elections would be much higher if elections were held on April 16th rather than the first Tuesday in November. Something about paying taxes makes fiscal policy that much more relevant for some reason.

So why is Dauber's World blogging about Taxes on February 3rd? Because today is the 95th anniversary of the ratification of the 16th Amendment to the Constitution:

"The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."

Dauber's World liked the Constitution better before this Amendment. For the record it's worth noting that Dauber's World home state of Virginia never ratified the 16th Amendment. Another reason to be proud of Virginia's heritage (except for that whole Slavery issue, but Virginia prefers to gloss over that). Interestingly enough the 15th Amendment (Blacks getting the right to vote) was also ratified on February 3rd (43 years earlier). And in case you were wondering Virginia did ratify that one.

Church on Sunday?



If you are a New York Giants fan then no doubt you are quite happy after watching your team beat one of the most heavily favored teams in Super Bowl history. Of course you are now in the same boat that the rest of the NFL fans have been in for some time -- what to do on Sundays? From the second weekend in September until the first weekend in February Pro Football gives avid football fans such as Dauber's World a sanctuary every Sunday morning (afternoon if you're an East Coaster). Super Bowl Sunday has always been a bitter sweet day for Dauber's World. It's the crown jewel in the football season. It has all the best TV ads and usually has some decent football teams playing as well. Unfortunately it's also the last football game for almost seven months. Sure there's the NFL Draft as well as unrestricted free agency. There's also the pre-season, but pretty much this is it for a while. No longer can you rely on football to keep your Sundays busy. You may be forced to do something outdoors, or potentially even more horrifying you may have to interact with other human beings (and if you do interact with them you can't talk about football -- nothing has happened!). Good thing Dauber's World lives in sunny, beautiful California where there are things to do outdoors. Are you listening weather? Dauber's World said, "Sunny AND beautiful." This rain thing is getting really old. If people wanted that they wouldn't live here!

Side note on the Super Bowl. Dauber's World doesn't like to be too main stream, but there are a few comments that must be made with respect to the ads this season. Specifically the ads for Sales Genie. Dauber's World saw two ads from these guys that were unbelievable (you can see every ad from the Super Bowl here). They're both cartoons in which a person starts out as a poor sales person prior to using Sales Genie and getting much better. What was remarkable was the depiction of the sales people. The first is an Indian (with a stereotypical accent) and the other was someone who was Chinese (again with the stereotypical accent). Dauber's World is not one who is often offended, but the generic accents seemed borderline offensive here. They added nothing to the ads and seemed to mock the individuals as much as anything else. What's more they were totally unnecessary and just detracted from Sales Genie's overall message (that inexplicably they can help your sales regardless of industry). The only time Dauber's World can remember accents being more unnecessarily offensive was the Star Wars prequels with the trade union aliens who spoke with an Asian (either Chinese or Japanese) accent for absolutely no reason.