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Wrong, right, redux

    SMART GUY 1: The thing that the modern-day pundits fail to realize is that all the socioeconomic and psychological problems inherent in modern society can be solved by the judicious…

    SMART GUY 1: The thing that the modern-day pundits fail to realize is that all the socioeconomic and psychological problems inherent in modern society can be solved by the judicious application of way too much beer.
    BUFFY: My mother always said beer is evil.
    SMART GUY 1: Evil, good — these are moral absolutes that predate the fermentation of malt and fine hops.

        — Buffy the Vampire Slayer, “Beer Bad”

Monday night was, as I noted earlier this morning, the special Magic Kingdom Guest Night for Gartner attendees. At 7:45 p.m. we all boarded busses and rode off to the Magic Kingdom, like herds of elephants crossing the veldt, converging on the watering hole.

Now, the entire park wasn’t open. But all the E-ticket rides were (for those who recall what an E-ticket ride was). And the crowds were minimal, so you could ride eides as fast as you could walk to them and through the queue guides. Plus live entertainment here and there. The local equivalent of the Electrial Parade. A number of restaurants were open, and there were also buffet tables all over the place. Oh, and ice cream carts. Oh, and beer and wine carts.

In other words, the perfect, decadent Disney experience. We had much fun, even though the 3-4 hours we had were not nearly enough.

Having grown up in Southern California, Disneyland’s Magic Kingdom is the “One, True Magic Kingdom of which all others are but Shadow.” Being well familiar with the Anaheim park, visiting WDW’s Magic Kingdom is like visiting some strange parallel world. The biggest difference is just that — bigness. Anaheim real estate, even in 1960 or so, was still valuable (and Disney was working on a relative shoestring). Florida real estate was — well, anyone interested in buying some swampland? So in the space that you can fit the entire park in Anaheim, WDW fits Fantasy Land alone. There are gaps between the lands, gaps between the rides, a ton of landscaping (with the prospects of fill-in expansion).

Plus oddities like “Liberty Square.” Lesser versions of “The Haunted Mansion” and “Pirates of the Caribbean” and “It’s a Small World.” Alternative but analogous versions of “Space Mountain” and “Big Thunder Mountain.” An arguably superior version of “Splash Mountain.”

Other things here and not in Anaheim:

  • Buzz Lightyear – Mr. Toad meets Laser Tag. More geeky fun than you can imagine, especially on a Guest Night for Geeks.
  • Aladdin’s Magic Carpets – Dumbo redux.

  • Winnie the Pooh – Decently charming kiddie ride, making up for the ones (Mr. Toad, Cinderella, etc.) the park lacks.

  • The ExtraTERRORestrial Alien Encounter – Disney does a real haunted house. About as scary as you’d want from Disney, and impeccably done misdirection and suggestion to make a hair-pricklingly fine adventure.

Of course, they don’t have a “Matterhorn” here. Or an “Indiana Jones.” YMMV.

There’s something so wrong, and yet so right

There’s nothing quite like riding the Jungle Cruise at the Magic Kingdom with a plastic cup of cabernet in your hand, and at least one more in your stomach. “Grad…

There’s nothing quite like riding the Jungle Cruise at the Magic Kingdom with a plastic cup of cabernet in your hand, and at least one more in your stomach.

“Grad Night. With Beer.” That’s how Margie described the “Magic Kingdom Special Event” for Gartner attendees. We sprang for Margie’s admission, plus a sitter, and had Much Fun.

I’m way behind in recording experiences here, but it’s difficult to explain how difficult it is to blog whilst in a hotel room with a cranky toddler and a wife who has been taking care of same all day. Not to mention “lights off” at 7 p.m. in the hope that said toddler will go to sleep.

So … expect more when you see it. I’m typing this from one of the complementary Internet-connected PCs here at Garter (woo-woo). But since I have probably at least a few hours to transcribe — don’t expect it just yet.

And the morning and the evening …

I’m going to stop tonight’s efforts by closing up that long first evening. There’s not much else to write about. We arrived in Orlando around 1 a.m., long after everything…

I’m going to stop tonight’s efforts by closing up that long first evening. There’s not much else to write about.

We arrived in Orlando around 1 a.m., long after everything had closed, and trekked a long, long way to baggage claim. Margie went off to find the shuttle folks, Mears, she’d contacted by phone, only to find out that they had closed down long beforehand, the scum. She did find some different folks, Transtar, who were quick to offer their service, and for cheaper. Since Mears seems to do 90% of the WDW business, I find myself obligated to suggest the good folks at Transtar. They did right by us.

The trip away from Orlando International — which Florida conveniently built as a tollway — passes you by an endless array of very elaborate billboards, all pointing to various amusement parks and resorts. Sea World. Universal Studios. Busch Gardens. And, of course, the grand-daddy of them all, Walt Disney World.

Oh, yeah. We also drove past this huge, rather ugly/modernistic church along I-4. The sign said it was the home to the Mary, Queen of the Universe Shrine. The Catholics like doing things in a big way.

The shuttle driver indicated that last week had been really dead, but things were beginning to pick up some.

We arrived at the resort — the Port Orleans Riverport (Formerly Dixie Landings) at 2 a.m. Only to discover that (a) the area of the resort we had been ostensibly booked into, we weren’t, and, more importantly, (b) they had no cribs available. Given that Squiggy was screaming her lungs out at this point (she’s sacked out on the plane, and we’d carried her off in her car seat, still asleep, all the way to the shuttle. She woke up en route, and finally decided she’d had about enough of this), Margie expressed her displeasure with the turn of events.

The bell hop took us and our ton o’ luggage off to our room on a long, golf-cart-like shuttle. It did the job quite nicely, and he described a bit about the resort, which I will do later on, too.

We got into our room. Quaint. Nice. Clean. Vaguely Southern, I suppose. Aside from no crib, the biggest problem is that there’s no desk, and the only table is across the room from the one phone (which is also the one place that has a data port — a/k/a second line — to plug into).

We’re busy unpacking, when the door knocks. Voila, someone’s found a crib. Margie’s magic works again.

We eventually get ready for bed, set Squiggy down in the crib, where she starts to scream bloody murder. Ah, but unlike our church retreat the previous weekend (which I never got ’round to blogging), we’re in a hotel room. Which means her noise is not very audible beyond these four walls. Aha. We feign sleep, just as we would at home where she wouldn’t see us. She can still see us, but it is 3 in the morning, and she’s pretty tired, too. After about 10 nerve-wracking minutes, she eventually quiets down and goes to sleep.

As do we.

More on the morrow on the morrow.

Deep in the Heart

I really dislike Dallas-Fort Worth International. Whenever I end up laying over in DFW, I am inevitably doing an OJ Simpson through one entire concourse, in order to then make…

I really dislike Dallas-Fort Worth International. Whenever I end up laying over in DFW, I am inevitably doing an OJ Simpson through one entire concourse, in order to then make the 1200m dash through another concourse to make my connection in 15 minutes … which then, inevitably, ends up being delayed three hours as I arrive, my body giving out beneath me.

While I didn’t have to dash much this time, my opinion of DFW was not improved.

The Delta concourse is designed with the baggage claim areas paralleling the councourse the entire length. So every thirty yards or so, there’s another gate. Which means another X-ray machine. Which means another pair of soldierly types with their slung M16. Eep. Security nightmare. The soldiers are supported by at least two other law enforcement agencies (couldn’t tell what, but one wore navy blue police type uniforms, the other wore dark leather jackets), but it was still goofy. Why they didn’t close half of them to incoming traffic I do not know.

To make a long story from before short, Margie also wangled us Good Seats on the new flight. Though she paid for it, karmically, by initially standing in line at the gate for about fifteen minutes before they announced they were not actually dealing with the flight we were on yet, but the one going out before it.

See, our flight was delayed. An hour. And, later, another 25 minutes beyond that. And when you’re getting in late in the first place, that’s all not a good thing.

Mercifully, there was a Haagen-Dasz store right near where we were. I wrote in my Palm blog journal, “Rum Raisin is da bomb.” And then, “Can I say that in an airport?”

But it’s true. HD Rum Raisin ice cream is nectar and ambrosia. The gods themselves eat of it. It is the most wonderful thing in the world.

There, now you know.

Unfortunately, it does not make a dinner, at least not in conventional servings. Margie found a good little Chinese place and brought me back some, while I watched Squiggy. We took turns doing that, and, mercifully, she found some other kids to play with (plenty of kids traveling with their parents to Orlando, no great surprise), which let her burn off lots of energy.

I noted in my blog journal, “It’s a bad sign when CNN begins to repeat. Again.”

There were plastic knives in service there, too.

I noted with some irony that Margie’s boarding pass noted, “Infant in arms.” Mine noted, “Bags = 04.”

After complaining mentally once again that the airlines all decided to stop offering early boarding for families with children and infants just at the point where we had one, Delta did so. So we did. Middle three seats on a 767. Not bad. We were pretty tired and frazzled by that point, but at least we were on our way once more.

They played a free movie for us, since we’d been delayed. Cats & Dogs. I’d have rather seen the other choice, Tomb Raider, but Katherine enjoyed the 15 minutes she was awake for.

A Vacationer’s Progress

We left about on-time. 11:30 a.m., for a 3:20 p.m. flight, with the airport but half an hour away. Life in the New America. Of course, we still had to…

We left about on-time. 11:30 a.m., for a 3:20 p.m. flight, with the airport but half an hour away. Life in the New America.

Of course, we still had to make a stop at the post office to pick up postcard stamps and mail off something I’d sold through Amazon.com. And stop by the ATM to pick up some folding money. Still, as it worked out, we got there in plenty of time.

There is now a cursory vehicle search at DIA before you get to the parking structure (it appeared to be only for vehicles going into the parking structure, not those going to the outer lots). A couple of questions, a quick look in the back of the van. Of course, Margie, Katherine and I don’t exactly fit the profile for suicide bombers, but, still …

The lines at the ticket counter were pretty normal. The lines at the security checkpoints were, alas, not. In the past, the lines usually went about five or six deep — ten to twenty deep during really busy periods. For those familiar with DIA, these lines ran back to the ATM/payphone structure, and beyond, through some corded switchbacks, back and forth. We heard later it ran about 40 minutes to get through.

Later, you ask? Well, thereby hangs a tale.

Margie is the politest, friendliest, nicest person in the world. That is axiomatic. She is also cut-throat at cutting corners, getting away with things, and being an all-around effective dealer with life’s more interesting situations.

So we’re off on this flight on a companion fare. Dr. J. is paying my way, since I’m ostensibly here to go to the Gartner Group shindig. Margie’s folks found out about this special deal through her mom’s bank, or through some agency, or through American Express, or some such thing (and my very lack of knowledge in this is evidence enough that Margie deserves all the credit) that basically gave us free companion fares if we booked through some particular agency. Cool. So Margie’s down here free.

Ah, but what of the third member of our trio. Well, had it been me making the reservations, we’d have been out Katherine’s ticket, too. Not Margie. She notes that flights are often not full, and usually a duo is on an aisle-and-window, with the middle seat vacant. So we go on that assumption, carrying the car seat, as though we’re going to sit Katherine there. If it turns out there’s no room, we check the seat at the Jetway, and Katherine sits in our laps. If there is room, we’re in Fat City.

So we head for the back of the long, switchbacky security line. And the very nice US Marshall (based on her jacket) says, “Oh, with a seat, go ahead and step through the line there.” Ah. The car seat is too big to go through the normal scanner, so it has to be screened separately. Some of the other Marshalls we meet (who are all quick to notice we’re going the wrong way) are not so sure, but they accept the other Marshall’s judgment.

We end up bypassing the entire line. Once the security guard is done with the wheelchair bound lady ahead of us, we hand off the car seat to her, and then step back into the line at the front. Wa-hoo!

Of course, I end up having to go through twice. Because, in the New New World Order, my notebook has to be taken out of its briefcase and run through separately. Ditto my Palm and my cell phone. And my wallet, but I ignore that one and nobody catches me at it. No more handing things past the personal X-ray. If it causes a beep, it should be put in one of the buckets and sent through the conveyor belt. Wow.

There are certainly more security types at the checkpoint than before. As well, there are Marshalls, various other uniformed police types, and two gents in fatigues with M16 rifles slung over their backs. They are having a fun time, so I don’t feel particularly intimidated, but, then, I’m not the guilty man fleeing where no man pursueth, either.

They do not check our boarding passes at the security checkpoint. On the other hand, Aunt Louise and Uncle Frim aren’t going to stand in a 40 minute line to go meet the kids arriving.

So we find our way to the gate at 1:05 p.m., over two hours before flight time. For those who make use of DIA, it sounds like the way to go (if you don’t have a car seat) is to take the bridge from the terminal to Concourse A (95% of the folks at the airport are not aware of this bridge) and go through the checkpoint there. Five minutes, from what we heard. Then elevator down to the train and pick it up to Concourses B or C, if you’re not flying out of A. Much easier.

Now for the real sweats.

So, as I mentioned, Margie had only booked two tickets. Well, when we checked in, we didn’t have assigned seats. So we ended up in Way-Hell-And-Gone F and Different-Row-Still-Further-Back D. Bad news, folks. Not only did we not have a third seat between us, we weren’t even seated together. So the 40 minutes we saved at Security might have turned into an hour and a half of one-of-is-stuck-with-the-kid-on-our-lap Hell.

And we were in the same boat on the second leg, from Dallas to Orlando. Yeesh.

Did I mention above how Margie is the Nicest Person in the World. And how she can also be the Most Cut-throat Person in the World? Combine those two features. Send her up to the gate counter with Katherine in her arms. Is the plane really that full? Is there anywhere we could at least be seated together? Eyelashes bat. Baby smiles. Gate attendant smiles back, finds us a pair of seats with an empty one in-between.

And Margie wonders why I ask her to make phone calls to vendors and the like. She is a goddess, that’s all there is to it.

She also notices that there are plastic knives still being offered at the Mexican restaurant there on Concourse C.

We board on time, and take off without any sort of heart-rending speech by the pilot. The plane is fairly full, but we have the car seat, Squiggy in it, and seats of our own, and, aside from a bottle of laudanum for the Kitten, we are off.

Fly the Friendly Skies … if you can get to them

Fly the Friendly Skies … if you can get to them The Rocky Mountain News has an article this morning about life at Denver International. Four hours. That’s how long…

Fly the Friendly Skies … if you can get to them

The Rocky Mountain News has an article this morning about life at Denver International.

Four hours. That’s how long in advance they suggest people arrive.

Urg.

Of course, a lot of this is while new processes are getting shaken out with both the security staff and the passengers. Still …

Naturally, some people are bitching. One person lined up notes, “This is not how you stimulate the economy, having all the salesmen in the country waiting in line, not making deals. There is probably not a person here who wouldn’t have paid an extra $40 to not have this line. They tell us to get back to normal, come out and fly. I’m stuck here for four hours. Tell them to get back to normal.”

Now, this is a guy is a VP from Merrill Lynch. Merrill Lynch. Didn’t they have a bunch of people killed in the WTC attack? Sheesh.

And what’s with the “$40”? Security through folding money? “Hey, you don’t need to see my driver’s license, but I have here are a couple of photo IDs of Andy Jackson, if you know what I mean?” Sheesh.

Driving home this morning, someone on the radio was saying that they’re setting up an “express lane” for those people not carrying on any baggage (though, oddly, it’s not clear how a “purse” differs from a “carry-on”), and this seems to be speeding up things for folks who can do that.

Still … I’ve got two business trips coming up in the next few weeks. Know what? I’m not worried about flaming death and destruction in the air. I’m worried about being able to carry enough books with me to make it through the line.

Riding the rails

Denver has light rail. There are a lot of people who pooh-pooh this. Some of them think we should expand our bus fleet. Others think rapid transit is a goofy…

Denver has light rail.

There are a lot of people who pooh-pooh this. Some of them think we should expand our bus fleet. Others think rapid transit is a goofy idea, and that we should just expand our freeways to LA-size megaways (since that has, clearly, made LA traffic so much better).

I, frankly, think light rail is keen. I dearly wish it traveled somewhere along my commute, because I would ride it (as I rode the bus downtown when that was where my job was). The critics would note that it does not do so, and so condemn light rail as a profligate waste, a boondoggle, a passle of porkbarrel.

But there is value in symbols, and light rail, even though it does not solve all our ongoing transit problems (though the Southwest corridor has turned out to be far more successful than anyone thought, and I predict similar success for the Southeast corridor), is a symbol. It is a sign that we can at least give lip service to solving regional problems. It’s a sign that we are looking for alternatives to simply paving more roads to accomodate more cars and more people.

And you know what? People do ride the light rail. And when petrol prices climb even higher, more will ride it. And folks will bitch about short-sighted politicos who can’t wave their hands and make more light rail magically appear.

Such is progress.

Night owl

I am really a night owl. It always comes back to haunt me when I’m on business, because I stay up way too late, reading, video gaming, watching movies, without…

I am really a night owl. It always comes back to haunt me when I’m on business, because I stay up way too late, reading, video gaming, watching movies, without the restraining arm of Margie (bless her) making sure I don’t, well, stay up way too late. Given my druthers, though, I’d live 10a-2a, rather than 5a-10p.

Anyway, it will be nice to be back home tonight. Back to Katherine, and, of course, Margie. [Cue romantic sigh with little hearts floating around Dave’s head.]