Category: snooki

  • The red fern grew in Japan, which is not really in China.

    When I arrived home from my around-the-world adventure last year, I felt like I knew what to do with my life. I’d been ashamed in Cambodia that I knew little about the holocaust there even though it happened in my very lifetime. Assuming other Americans my age were in a similar boat, I felt like my life’s purpose should be to write, the goal being to use humor to tell the world about the world.

    And then I started writing about Snooki and poo instead.

    But I am again renewed in my passion after seeing this gem from Lamebook:

    I’d like to first comment about how someone put a lot of time and thought into a Facebook app that tells you what kind of Asian you are. Umm…. actually, I’d like to not comment because I immediately imagine it asks racist questions like, ‘Do your parents own a convenience store, nail salon, or nothing because the Communist government won’t let them?’ Sorry. I know. Horrible. But, come on! What kind of app is that?

    Anyway, the more pressing issue is the chick who thinks that Japanese people are from China.
    The world needs help, my friends. Lots of help.

    But based on this guy’s Facebook profile,

    it seems that those who don’t read are kind of proud of it. If the only book I’d ever read was on the required list in junior high, I probably wouldn’t tell anybody. (But I’d also give books another chance. I mean… Where the Red Fern Grows? The only book? I can see why you may have been turned off, my friend, but at least try another. Read Maus if you have to. Geesh. [that’s a comic book- get it?])

    Now I’ve concluded that if I try to write more about the world, the people who need to read it won’t. Therefore, back to Snooki. I kind of miss her these days. And, OMG, let’s all plan a trip to China for sushi and kimonos.

  • Thank you, Snooki. Thank you.


    I love The Jersey Shore. LOVE it. I’m not appalled by the fact that these people exist. I’m actually relieved that everyone else now knows that these people exist.

    The Jersey Shore is like watching home movies. That was ME.

    YES, I used to wear fake nails and flirt with Guidos and get in fights with bitches. ME!

    My Chicago suburb of Addison bares more resemblances to Jersey than I’d like to admit. But the Jersey Shore has a shore, and heading there for the summer used to be our goal in life. Well, one of our goals. Others included:

    Tans – I was already tanning in high school. Burning, actually. We’d hit up the tanning beds, butt naked with only a little Playboy bunny sticker on our groin, stuck in the same spot each time so we could tell how tan we were. I think seeing the tan line gave us a sense of accomplishment. Yes, you read that right: Seeing a tan line from a tanning bed is what gave me a sense of accomplishment in high school.

    Long, square nails. Fake ones. – The white “French” variety were ever popular because they looked best with a tan. We could never open our own cans of pop or button our own shirts. A few would always rip off, which I HATED because a chipped nail made me feel so trashy. Ha!

    Silver chains – Had to have shiny silver. I always bought my boyfriends thick chains or ID bracelets from the silver kiosk in Stratford Square mall. They deserved the best.

    Being Italian, Greek, or Anyone with lots of hair – When looking for hook-ups, the first question in Addison is still: “What are you?” Now, when home for the holidays, I usually wish I were Black or Asian just so people won’t ask me. But in high school, I would proudly reply that I was 25% Italian, completely ignoring my other 75% or the mere fact that I’m actually just American.

    Going out – we had to wear the tightest skimpiest clothing to the exclusive 18 & over club, Zero Gravity. My favorite was a skin-tight polyester catsuit, which was the only black thing I owned and therefore the only thing I had to wear to my dad’s funeral. Yep, I wore a tight polyester catsuit to pay respect to the man who formed my zygote. Oh, Addison.

    I always had a feeling that something better might exist, but moving to California was a big shock. I revolted against the word ‘soda,’ the way people pronounced the word ‘mom,’ and those weird shoes they called flip flops. I felt like nobody could understand me like ‘my people’ could. And when Californians asked me what the hell I meant by ‘my people,’ I couldn’t explain. But now I can thanks to The Jersey Shore. The Situation would get me. Well, he would have in 1998.
    Thankfully, I have changed a wee bit in that time.

    But it’s been fucking hard. Hard, I say. When you spend your formative years chasing around tan boys who wear tight T-shirts, bottles of gel, and douse themselves in John Paul Gautier, it’s a challenge to think anything else is cute. I still have the reverse racist problem of thinking certain men are too white. I think very deep deep deep down inside my subconscious, I still want to marry a Guido. Help! It’s what I know, all right. You grow up with a tanning bed and a boyfriend whose mother makes you eat mozzarella balls and 8-finger Cavatelli, and see what kind of guys you end up lusting after.

    Case in point: Phil from high school who is now a bartender.


    Or Addison’s junior mob, who might be full of shit but still pay for everything and make you feel as safe as a Mafia wife (notice how they make the lighter guys stand in back).


    I couldn’t figure out how to wrap up this post. I thought about stealing more pictures of orange tans off the websites of our two town bars. But then this gem landed in my inbox. Vinny is coming to Addison to judge a Fist Pump competition. Yes, you read that right: Vinny is coming to Addison to judge a Fist Pump competition. You can win a tan! No further commentary necessary.