We sell lots of neat things in our store. Check it out! 
 
         

August: The Month of My Birth
by Brock LaBorde
August, 2004

     So last month, Chris Trew challenged me to respond to his editorial letter in a timely fashion. But what Chris doesn't realize is that I'm all grown up now. Yes, you read that right. I am an adult. And adults don't respond to petty taunts and silly challenges. However, what I will do is share with all of you how I came to be an adult in less than 31 days. It is for this reason that I'd like to subtitle this month's letter "One Man's Journey into Adulthood and Becoming a Man, Too."

     Not only will I document my entire journey here, but I will also do it in bold font that is sure to leave you breathless and asking for more. I've organized my steps to achieving manhood into a few easy-to-remember proverbs so that you too might one day follow in my incredibly huge footsteps and become a mature, responsible person. Let's begin, shall we, children?

#1. Adults care a lot about getting married.
An old priest I was mugging the other day told me that the greatest thing a man can ever do is fall in love and breed. It made me think about my own life and how I hadn't gotten married yet. So I thanked the priest for not screaming too loudly and also for carrying so much cash in his shoes and I immediately set out to attend as many weddings as possible. In the last month, I've attended over 102 weddings in over 32 states. I wasn't invited to any of them, but I still showed my support nonetheless. Along the way, I've learned a lot about what makes 2 fat people think that they love each other and I've also learned a lot about the penalties in various states for violating dress codes in wedding ceremonies. As it turns out, it is NEVER proper to show up at a wedding wearing only a baseball cap and sandals. Now I know and now you know, too.

#2. Adults know when and where to bury things.
Before I became an adult, any time I was slightly upset or mildly happy, I would bury something or someone. I'm handy with a shovel and I live in a large empty field, so you can understand how over the years I've managed to bury 6 television sets, 23 pairs of women's shoes, my good friend Derek, 8 toilet seats, a dozen shovels, a nice Mormon family from Ohio, and every ballpoint pen that I've ever come in contact with. But I recently found out that adults only bury things at funeral ceremonies. And it costs a lot of money and has all sorts of shitty paperwork involved. So now that I'm all grown up, I've been digging up everything I buried. Last week when I dug up my good friend Derek, I discovered that someone had stolen him and replaced him with a useless old skeleton. They even dressed the skeleton in my good friend Derek's clothes! Children, when will you learn? Hopefully right now.

#3. Adults drive nothing but the fanciest automobiles.
For the past 6 years, I have driven a 1973 Plymouth Duster that had no doors and a nest full of raccoons in the trunk. I finally noticed that I don't see any other adults driving a car like that. So I whipped out my chainsaw and chopped my car up into a few hundred smaller pieces and slyly deposited those pieces in the trashcans of several neighborhood department stores. No one knew it happened and I was able to dispose of the car in only 2 months! Of course, since I don't have a "job" that "earns money" (I visit various cafes and watch pigeons do it all day), I couldn't afford to buy a fancy car, so I had to steal one - a 2005 Lexus Luxurious 3200. But don't worry, I disabled the alarm BEFORE I stole the car, so my stupid next-door neighbor won't know that I'm the thief because he never heard the alarm go off. Boy, he's going to be so jealous when he sees me, but that's all part of being an adult, which brings me to the next point.

#4. Adults crave mountains of gold and jewels.
The average adult begrudgingly spends a majority of his or her time working at a place of business that promises to compensate the adult with a meager paycheck every couple of weeks. These miniscule earnings are then scraped together and fortified with high-interest credit cards so that the adult can purchase things like bricks of gold and fine silk tapestries. And no adult can be satisfied with just one brick or one tapestry. No, they want to own every ounce and mile of the planet Earth. I now know that my life will be incomplete unless I join these average adults in their endless quest to possess the entire world. I want diamond-studded clothes hangers, limited-edition brand name cereals, and lots of state-of-the-art gadgetry that allows me to grill salmon while giving my bikini area a close shave. And I will not stop my desires until I am either dead or the owner of everything. Or both.

#5. Adults hate children and sometimes eat them.
This lesson is fairly straight-forward. If you want to be a grown-up, you must learn to despise the memories of the child that you once were while learning to love the taste of the child that you once were. I recommend soy sauce for toddlers and something tangy like mango horseradish for anything close to a teenager.

#6. Adults initiate pointless wars.
I'll admit that this has been the hardest adult-like concept for me to master. But if you watch the squabbling leaders of the modern world, read books about the history of warfare, and  watch a lot of old-timey war-related movies, you'll notice one common trend flowing throughout each - wars are fun and necessary things. I have a lot of friends and I've asked all of them to join me in a deadly battle against another random group of people, but thus far none have heeded my call. I guess I have a lot of immature, childish friends, which is why I've begun to eat some of them.

#7. Adults are miserable creatures.
When you grow up, forsaking your childhood and all of the limitless fun and curiosity therein, you lose your ability to enjoy anything anymore. For instance, if a man were to loudly fart in my presence when I was 5 years old, I would have laughed until my underpants were thoroughly soaked with urine. Nowadays, in my adult stage of life, if a man farts in my presence, I scowl and throw heavy objects at his head. Such is the way of adult life. Goodbye, laughter. Goodbye, fun. Goodbye, adult life. Wait, no. Hello, adult life. Goodbye, something else.

     Can you believe that it only takes 7 easy steps to become a responsible American adult? I sure can't because I know that it takes more than just the above 7 things, but I didn't feel like writing out the other 249 steps to maturity. Maybe it's because I wrote them all out yesterday and my computer crashed before I could save the document. Maybe it's because I'm extremely lazy. Maybe it's because I was too busy writing the above 7 things to spend any time writing the other 249 things. And I managed to write all of this without once mentioning the DVD of our movie being on sale at FirstLookRentals.com, the ultra-hot debut comedy rap album from Studio 8 Records protégé Robulous, the upcoming DVD of our sketch comedy show Lost in the Woods, or that stupid Laser Monster (pictured to the right) that I vanquished 2 months ago.

     And hey, what do you know, Chris Trew, my esteemed co-worker and arch-nemesis, I even wrote this one day before the beginning of the month instead of at the end when the robot who updates our site deletes month-old material. We really need to do something about that robot, by the way. Lately, he's begun to think that he's in the year 2037 and everything I put up on the site gets immediately deleted. Does anybody out there know a good robot repairman? Hopefully one who works for free and doesn't mind that our robot is imaginary. Thanks and stay tuned, Studio 8 readers. There are cool things ahead.

Email this page to a friend!

Do the contents of this page make you horny? Talk about it in the Studio 8 Forums right now!

Back to Editor Main
 


Related Items:

- Gentleman Brock's Main Page

- Buy Gentleman Brock's Book!

 

 

 

     
 
Sponsors
Tickets - Cheap Concert Tickets - Flash Design
Lakers - Ticket Broker - Secured Homeowner Loans - Concert Tickets

Ads starting at $15
  Your Ad Here  
© Studio 8 Entertainment, LLC appreciates you visiting our website and being our friends.