Thursday, May 20, 2010

Top 10 Ways To...

Not Be the Only Single Loser in the World. No, really.
Take Our Advice, It is Priceless, As We Are Completely Learned in the
Acquisition of Attractive Men.

Or, Why "Top 10 Places to Meet Single, Attractive Men" Suck.

Once in a good while, maybe once a week, some free lance idiot plops out a witty how-to for meeting the perfect single man to satisfy your desperate cat-lady needs. This is MNOP's time to shine, baby. Not only will we provide you with the list that some other broad(s) "originally" birthed, but we'll tell you why the list is terrible and what we think are some better options for meeting some sort of approximation of a "man":

1. Eat Out.
(Aubri can't read this heading without breaking into a fit a of giggles.)

Theory: Single Men don't cook, because that's a woman's job and they don't have one. (A woman). Q.E.D. Single Men frequent chain restaurants where they can essentially hire a woman to provide this service (legally).

Real-Life Experience: We went to Chili's for lunch the other day. We were fully ready to meet some day-drinking business men and found exactly what we were looking for: a quasi-nerdy pair of reasonably attractive men with no rings on the left hand. Problem? They barely talked to each other between stuffing their faces with quesadilla and chips and salsa. Much less to us.

Better Theory: 1am at a bar is probably the best place to meet your man. There is rarely food to distract you or your intended future-husband from gratuitous flirtation. Alcohol provides the perfect amount of social lubricant to make you not care that he's wearing copious amounts of Ed Hardy and make him not care that your hair isn't as perfectly Snooki'd as it was at the beginning of the night. Last call's not just for alcohol anymore.

2. Join a Gym.

Theory: Super-sexy health freaks spend relaxation time pumping iron. If they look good at the gym, they must look good in actual clothes!

Conflict: We're comfortably fat and moderately sedentary and we don't want to hold our men to any standards that we don't uphold for ourselves. Plus, it's no secret that MNOPers prefer their men with a little fluff and a healthy comic book habit.

Better Theory: 1am at a bar, but a divey-er one. Again. Best place to meet your future husband. This time, we're at a divey bar with a slightly more eclectic clientele. The guy with the nerdy tshirt will appreciate your appreciation for classic rock. The displaced cubicle dweller will appreciate your appreciation for the slightly pricier vodka...if the bartender has even has anything better than Absolut.


Now, now. Don't think you're not going to have to work for #3-10! You'll have to click that link again next week! We can only string so many words together at a time to create complete thoughts as brilliant as these!



Obligatory Author Bio: Kristen & Aubri are slackers and hopeless cynics. They work mindless jobs at drone factories and write a bitterly sarcastic blog on the side. They have lived in such cultural Meccas as West Virginia, Connecticut, Florida and Pennsylvania. The pair currently call Jersey home and are always bitching about something. They can usually be found in dive bars or diner booths drinking or eating heavily, which is definitely their favorite hobby. The rest of their time is spent rollerskating, pole dancing, driving long distances for food, not working hard on their blog, and shopping for mail-order husbands online. And shoes.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Untitled Making No One Proud Marriage Project (2010) (pre-production)

Kristen has a serious problem. She suffers from what she refers to as "Indiana Jones Syndrome", a disorder that causes major crushes on academic types that spend more time abseiling down mountainous cliffs, fighting Nazis, spelunking through flooded caves, and riding into the sunset on Arabian horses. Josh Gates fits a majority of these categories and probably wishes he could fit into the rest.

Scifi*'s Destination Truth is a full hour of anthropological, cryptozoological, and parapsychological investigative television on par with 60 Minutes and 20/20. Hosted by the charming Mr. Gates and rounded out by a rag-tag bunch of misfit crew members, DT attempts to answer the hard-hitting questions surrounding the world's most mysterious legends. Josh and team travel the globe searching for the bipedal hominids (Yeti, Tokoloshe, etc.) and Jurassic-style beasts (Ropen, Burrunjor, et al.) that terrorize seemingly every small town but your own.

Josh is also (thankfully) a member of the Explorer's Club, which makes him eligible to marry our dear Kristen as this is one of the qualifications on her 68-point list of requirements for a perfect man. Dream big, non-Explorer Club losers! Dream big!

*Note from the authors: We refuse to substitute "y"s where other letters belong.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Ye Olde Snacking Tyme

It's a hangover kind of morning. The same kind of morning you teeter on baby deer legs into the bathroom, and emerge with a pad stuck to you pajama bottoms, only halfway sure you didn't just pee in the linen closet.

The only thing Aubri wanted more than sleep on this morning, was food because:
1. She always wants food. And
B. Nothing is worse than vomiting when the only thing you've consumed in the past 16 hours are vodka and cranberry juice.

Using all her motivation and strength Aubri works her way into the kitchen with dreams of pancakes and potatoes. What she finds is the cold, harsh reality that everything edible requires at least heating if not mixing.

Near tears (seriously), Aubri mentally commits to starting a business with the sole purpose of picking up and delivering McDonald's breakfast for drunks like herself who can't wake up before the entirely too early 10 AM deadline for those incredible greasy hash browns.
Or at least, she'll find someone who she can pay to start and run the company.

As if the fates were guiding her, Aubri happens upon the remnants of the party she hosted just a week before: A bag of potato chips, a tub of pretzels, and dip (insert soundbite of a choir of angels here).

The problem: the chips are just the last bits of crumbles much too small for holding let alone scooping dip.

The solution:



Pour the chip remnants onto a paper plate, stick the pretzel rods into the dip, then using the onion-y adhesive, gather the salty chip goodness for a near perfect snack.

And yes. The picture was taken, and the food consumed, in bed.


Bonus mini Playlist:
(In the tradition of Dork)

Martini's: Right Behind You

Magnetic Fields: The Desperate Things You Make Me Do
Lincoln: Unhappy
Frank Black: Six Legged Man
Julie Doiron: Consolation Prize

Monday, May 3, 2010

The Cold Clammy Hand of Reality



-OR- What's With the Infrequency, Kenneth?


You may have noticed our blog posts don't follow a reliable schedule of installments. Instead of stepping up our game (really not our style) we have decided to give our readership an exclusive behind the scenes look at what goes into the making of Making No One Proud.

MNOP is a collaboration of efforts between Kristen and Aubri; two friends who (luckily) have a similar voice. In order to keep continuity, we will nary use an "I". This means the adventures and opinions will be expressed through the powerful "we". Or the third person use of names. Which also means there are times we write about ourselves in the third person. This seems to be leading to the development of several social and mental dysfunctions.

We also try to write, or "work", together as much as possible. This usually goes down one of two ways:

Scenario 1: In private.

Most frequently we work at Aubri's apartment. This sometimes proves problematic for Kristen since Aubri doesn't believe in wearing pants when at home, regardless of company. Often, Kristen has to text from the next town over to make sure that Aubri has ample time to put on clothes. Kristen also refuses to "just come on in" without knocking several times.


Once set up in her bedroom (where all the magic, and sometimes impromptu photo sessions occur), Kristen will open five pages on the web browser so she can type up the brilliance, "research", and watch youtube videos simultaneously.


Aubri lays on her bed with her feet in the air and says random things until one catches on. She also dissolves into hysterical laughter at her own jokes.


The process is interrupted every fifteen minutes with a trip to the kitchen for a snack, or the suggestion that they go get cake. After which one will say "Ok. We work for twenty minutes. Then take a break. We have a deadline of midnight."


Midnight will come and go. There will be two, possibly three, more sentences added, a few words deleted, and the promise made that next time we will finish and post.



Scenario 2: In Public.


We meet after work at Inkwell, or a diner...it is New Jersey, with our trusty notebooks in hand. First, of course, we order. French fries with Mozzarella cheese and tomato sauce for Aubri, something equally healthy for Kristen.

Note: Inkwell is just about the only place we don't order the exact same thing.

Until the food comes we comment on the other patrons. Loud enough for them to hear, but not so loud they can be sure we're talking about them.

When the food arrives we start to eat, and pull out our notebooks while we discuss buying new laptops. Aubri will then spill something on her notebook, which is okay because all she'll have done is doodled pictures of things, attempted to start a game of MASH, and mapped out genetically why incest is wrong (see: left).



However, we feel more productive at Inkwell because working there we get our name out. In the form of graffiti in the bathroom (totally encouraged).


The more important part of the process is the doing. Which takes time, a lot of time. For instance, we quickly discovered that a single practice or pole dancing class does not equal a post. Or, at least, not an interesting post. And guess what? After awhile all the bruises start to look the same. So it may take a few weeks to have enough to share.

But we are constantly developing ideas, and researching adventure. Once we have our hearts set on something, we share our intentions with our friends and family who always ask the same question:

Don't you have anything better to do?

No. No, we do not.