Annoying Things

Anything about life in America you find annoying? Here’s a partial list I spent all afternoon organizing. Small, un-backlit keyboards are so annoying.

Why would anyone care what Brigitte Bardot looks like, now? Or the cast of Happy Days? Or a breathy headline: “Where are they now?” about the Monkees? A new rule: if you give us these updates after a certain length of time, you–whoever you are—should update your article on a regular basis. Tell us about the cast of All in The Family every 5 years, or until you, the writer, pass away. And if you’re going to show us what Brigitte looks like now, make sure you put a “before” picture alongside the Now.

So many on-line news articles are about what somebody said about someone else. Example from today, March 31, 2026, from InStyle magazine: “Prince Charles Asked a Friend This Heartbreaking Question Before He Married Princess Diana.” Let’s not talk about how old this subject is, and let’s not talk about who the pronoun (He) is referring to, (see next paragraph), but let’s try and assume the target audience of this article. Or, let’s not and just agree it wasn’t me. So why did it come across my AOL news screen?

America has a problem with pronouns and preceding nouns. First, we’re lucky, these days, if there even IS a preceding noun. “He went out the door” without context might mean God went out the door, for example. A pronoun takes the place of a preceding person, place, or thing that has already been mentioned. And to avoid confusion, we should endeavor* to keep our pronouns and their partner preceding nouns as close as possible. Our choices in the headline above are Prince Charles or The Friend. Those of you with knowledge of Diana’s wedding can extrapolate* the correct noun, but those of us who don’t care are entirely within our rights to blame The Friend, especially just before The Friend married Charles and Diana.

Puzzles. Who needs them? Actually, brain teasers are the real problem. What’s black and white and red (read?) all over? See the problem? What makes it worse is the breathy headline: “You’re a genius if you can solve this problem,” printed next to a picture of a wild-haired Einstein.

There is an educational quality to a good puzzle however, which makes my confession annoying. Get this one: Can you draw a square with three straight lines? This oxymoronic brain buster reveals an important glitch in our lives. If you get the answer, you are in the top 1% of Americans, even though the answer was on the national news this week. Ai it for some fun.

Old Man’s Memory is annoying as hell. It took me 10 minutes to remember Einstein’s first name. No, I did not look it up. Memory is a waiting game, now. Things I knew yesterday I may not know today, but they may come to me tomorrow. Older friends tell me I’m lucky they come back at all. And there is that European Study about memories not being accurate, just gangs of electrical impulses…

Forgot where this was headed, but The Matrix concept is being revisited if I could remember where I saw the article.

Feck it. I got my blinds fixed today. Hallelujah!

*What a great, big word!

Notable News, and Not All About Trump…But Some

The recent—March 2026–war in Iran is becoming an hot-button, circle-the-wagons political issue, so Vice President JD Vance announced there is a new “Whole of Government Crackdown” on fraud in the “benefits system.” No other quotes, just wonder…are they bringing back DOGE? Is Elon returning? What happened to all the FWA* (Fraud Waste and Abuse) they found in 2025? Did they miss some?

And will they focus on the billions of dollars of abuse in defense contracting and political consulting, or just the millions in Benefit Fraud?

Unrelated(?), there is an unverified report online detailing how much it costs when the President goes golfing. I ignored it and have no idea if it is about Biden, Obama, Bush, Clinton, or Trump. You’ve got a brain; you decide who the article is about. No, golf is not FWA. Why do you ask?

A 2024 study recently reviewed and updated in the journal “Nature”, reports sea level rise has been miscalculated: “99% of coastal sea level studies over the last two decades…have effectively missed about 10 inches of actual ocean height.” The lengthy report will put any non-scientist to sleep, but its main conclusion is we have never found a good way to estimate and then track actual sea level rise. Uh-oh. Buy any beach property lately? No? Then fugeddahabout it. But note how science works: it watches over and corrects itself, especially as we learn new ways to see and do things.

Tiger Woods did something. I didn’t bother to read that article, either,  but the headline was interesting. Hey, it’s Tiger. For God’s sake. It’s not like some scientist found a cure for cancer.

After years of internet news aggregator reads, I’ve found myself automatically avoiding news from certain sources and even looking for news specifically from other sources. My age gives it way but I look for a byline from sources like Time, Newsweek, Popular Mechanics, NBC, CBS, ABC, PBS, even Fox. You CAN trust legacy media to NOT report on and circulate non-news, and misinformation.** Yes, there will be a slant, spin, or bias, in their reporting but there will also be a grain of truth. Try it. So many of the “feeds” picked up by our news aggregators are from podcasts, lone wolves, and personalities. Sort them out and ignore them or read them with an eye to clicks instead of news. As if, right? Love those kitty videos.

Baseball is here. The Yankees. And some other teams. There is (famously) no crying in baseball but let’s see how long that holds true. There will be bleating, bellowing, moaning, yelling, excoriating, insulting, screaming…and lost sleep.

But no crying. Ah, summer in upstate NY.

Wonder how the Mets will do this year.

Buffalo Bills? Were you thinking of the Bills? Too soon. Don’t jinx them.

And no, no update on the Blinds. May start a GoFundMe page so stay tuned.

*per AI: “in the world of compliance and government oversight, ‘Fraud, Waste, and Abuse’ is a catch-all term to describe the various ways resources—most often taxpayer dollars or healthcare funds—are misused.

**They can get sued for it. Right, Fox? And maybe CBS? Jimmy Kimmel?