The Week in Dating
Time for another Carnivalesque post…
I have to lead with my account of a singles event I went to two weeks ago. (Nepotism? Egomania? Sure. Isn’t that why you come here?)
Last Thursday night, I went on a cruise along the Hudson River with about three hundred Jewish singles. I would have called it a Jews Booze Cruise, but it was a cash bar (the bastards). Here are some random thoughts I scribbled down at the night’s end: Trapped on a boat with Jewish singles and a cash bar may be worse than going down on the Titanic. Like the old joke, but with no end: iceberg, Goldberg, Rosenberg…what’s the difference? I would really like it if people stopped referring to Titanic and Gilligan’s Island whenever the boat hit a choppy patch of Hudson. Why are there choppy patches on the Hudson, anyway? Is it high tide in the big city, or did Vinnie from Brooklyn just drop a coupla hundred bodies into the river? I’m calling that guy over there Bruce Jenner. Why? Because he’s wearing a shirt the color of a Wheaties box, and because when I make eye contact with him, he does the Cross-Boat-30-Yard Sprint in the opposite direction.
Plus, is improv comedy like dating? I think so:
To so many, comedy equals standup  a solo performer on a stage, asking an audience if they ever noticed how funny-sounding the word “kumquat†is. But improv is something else entirely  an unscripted, spontaneous creation of character, relationship, environment, conflict and resolution, conducted between two (or more) people. Kind of like dating.
(Read the rest of my latest Jewish Week column here.)
P-Life contemplates getting back on the ole dating horse shortly after a breakup.
Hilary at Superjux (or as I shall be calling her shortly, the Hotel Hilary) has some dating-related Thursday Things.
Annabel Lee ponders a fortune of cookie origin and copes with an overly precocious niece.
And because I’m off on an adventure, that’s all’s I got for ya right now. More to come next week…
Be excellent to each other, okay, kids?
I think you’re right. A relationship can be defined by the kind of jokes the two people tell each other. If they love each other they go with “A” material and try and make each other laugh. When the bloom is off the rose, that’s when they trot out the rotten tomato “take my wife, please” dreck. Simcha
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A Hebrew school teacher asked her little children, as they were on the way to the synagogue service, “And why is it necessary to be quiet in the synagogue?”
One bright little girl replied, “Because people are sleeping.”