A real prank

November 13, 2009

mcguffey12I never went to college — but I do know a thing or two about good pranks.  Probably the best was when I was writing features for this bush-league bi-weekly outside of Houston.  One night, an hour before deadline, my editor, a big-boned rodeo cow-girl, threatened to spike my story unless I revised the final paragraph, which she considered verbose:  ”It’s jus’ too word-y — yeeknow?”

She was wrong, and I calmly explained that to her.  But, of course, she didn’t understand.  It was just the two of us in the office that night, arguing and arguing away valuable hours we could have been using to suck back a few at the tavern.

Did I get mad?  Yes.  Did I acquiesce?  Hell no.

Instead of revising, I waited until she went to the bathroom and then quickly pushed a file cabinet against the door, trapping her inside long enough for my story to get printed, unfettered by my cow-wrangling editor, who, as it were, dislocated her shoulder trying to escape.

What a lark!  That, kids, is a grade A, big-dick prank.  If only the Houston Police Department had thought the same.


The benefits of having an alias

October 16, 2009

mcguffey1Any day you don’t get fired for moonlighting at another college is a good day.

When I signed my contract this fall, they mentioned how I could not teach anywhere else, which I duly noted and filed under ignore.  My expertise, it appears, was supposed to be limited to five square miles inside Farmville.

Higher education, I believe, is everyone’s God-given right.  Besides, I need my spending money.

I have a friend in AA, we’ll call him Dave, who has administrative responsibilities at Piedmont Virginia Community College.  He asked me, one evening in September, if I could take over a night class.  Dave knew that I was teaching at Longwood, and from our weekly discussions he knew all about my career.

That he asked me, a fellow alcoholic whose many terrible deeds he had heard confessed on a weekly basis, should illustrate how desperate he was for a replacement:  the previous hack they had teaching Journalism 101 fled without warning.

So for the past month I’ve been teaching a roomful of Charlottesville townies the same class I teach at Longwood.  The only difference is that the students at Piedmont know me as Mr. O’Neil.

By my best estimate, I’ve had at least twelve different aliases and pen names.  During my career as a hack, anytime I changed newspapers, I would change the name on my diploma and act like a fresh J School graduate, a career-switcher ready to get his feet wet in journalism.  A few hundred dollars at the court house, and I’m officially a new person.  This was done mostly in effort to prevent a neat little trail for that nebbish FBI agent trying to put me in bracelets for fraud.  Also, I’m hoping that if they do ever catch and convict me, the trail of names will be so confusing that Hardcopy andDateline won’t run with the story.  To be caught would be understandable; to be profiled by those preening fuckers would be humiliating.

Anyway, a week ago I left class my 11:00 class in a hurry.  I took their revised papers out of my backpack, placed them on an empty desk, and told them to sort it out amongst themselves.    Easy enough.

Four hours later, it seemed the whole campus had heard that I gave my class a stack of papers that were written by students at Piedmont Virginia Community College.  I was called to the dean’s office.

What saved the day was the alias.  If it had said Prof. McGuffey on those papers, well, that would have been it.  All they could do, however, was ask what the hell was going on.  Who was O’Neil?  Was I teaching at Piedmont?

In these situations, always get indignant and make counter accusations.   How could I have time to teach another class, after sweating blood for Longwood?  Did they think I really had that energy? Or that I would so blatantly breach my contract? It worked.  Harpo McGuffey still has a job at Longwood — much to my student’s chagrin, I’m sure.

And I now have color-coded folders for each different class and college.  With great breaches of contract comes great responsibility!


How I will deal with the cheaters

October 8, 2009

mcguffey1I’m starting to get a kick out of teaching; it makes me feel like a patriarch.  Ninety-plus needy children, some of them looking to me for guidance, some of them seeking to rebel.  All dependent on my benevolence.

As any patriarch knows, ninety-plus kids are comparable to a barrel of apples.  In my case, I have veritable orchard of strange, sometimes dangerous apples.  There, shivering in the front of the class, wall-eyed, is the obsessive compulsive who makes sure all the assignments he turns in have three overlapping folds in the corner of each page.  He’ll go far in life.  There, looking normal in the middle of the row, is the manic-depressive who went all manic on me during class last week when I asked him how he was doing.  There, doodling on her notebook, big ‘ol head laying on her arm, is the girl who won’t let me complete a sentence before asking another fucking question.

I have no qualm with any of these apple students.  I would — to continue the metaphor to its logical conclusion – peel each of them and bake them into a pie, and it would be delicious!

I have a problem with the bad apples.  The plagiarists.  More specifically, the sloppy plagiarists.  Don’t get me wrong — if I actually went to J-school, I’m sure I would have bullshitted through an assignment or two.  But never in my career have I fabricated a source…and got caught.

Because that’s what at issue here:  when you turn in something you ripped from the Internet, or when you make up sources, you’re insulting my intelligence.  In reality, effective plagarism requires so much work that in most cases you might as well just do the fucking assignment.  Because I will extract you, the bad apple, from the barrel, and proceed to grind you into a fine, dry powder.

Sitting on my desk are five research papers.  Four of them, a quick Google search will reveal, were not composed by anyone in my class.  One Mongoloid turned in a paper I think he forced his girlfriend to write.  There’s a line in the paper that makes me think this.  It goes:  ”Please, whoever is reading this, I’m being forced to write this paper.  I’m his girlfriend.  Please help me.  He won’t let me leave.  I have other homework to do.”

That one is being sent to the police, after I finish recording the grade.  As for the other four, I’m calling up the scholarly authors after class, after I have passed out all the other papers, and explaining how much I enjoyed reading their papers.  I’ll look them in the eye, tear up slightly, and tell them how the quality of the research, the insight and analysis, it makes me feel like my life actually has purpose.  I believe God put me here, at Longwood University, so that I could lead you to write these stellar papers.  They’re so good, I’m going to tell them that I’ve submitted them to be published by the Columbia Journalism Review — the journal from where two of them have been stolen.

I’ll then explain how I think this augers the beginning of a scholarly Renaissance at Longwood, how each of these students will have their own Wikipedia page, have their face painted in the Rotunda’s dome, and will subsequently embark in a lucrative career in journalism.

At that point, I will be so overcome with emotion that I will drop the four papers on the floor, hug each of the students, and flee from the classroom.

I’ll try to look through the window to see their faces, to how they react when they pick their papers from the floor and see a big goose egg, followed by a terse notification of their impending date with the Judicial Board.  There will also be a frowny face, :  (  , to make sure the illiterate fucks understand.  Suck it, bad apples.  Get that shit outa my proverbial house!

Verily, teaching is the profession of the mighty.


The Deadline: Tips from Harpo McGuffey

September 25, 2009

mcguffeyBoy, did my Journalism 101 classes ever grouse and groan over the paper I assigned them.  You would have thought I was asking for an entire treatise on ethics in contemporary journalism, instead of just twenty-five pages.  That’s right, only twenty-five pages.  I had a cousin who was sort of slow — for fun, he would type with both his elbows and laugh in this hysteric high-pitched cackle at the randomness it produced on the page.  I guarantee he’d give me better researched work than the dreck I have to grade this weekend.

In any event, my cousin, unlink the majority of my students, would also make deadline.   Now, I know I’m not perfect.  God knows I missed my fair share of deadlines.  But that was in the beginning.  After a month of writing and being screamed at by editors, I developed habits to ensure a timely product.  I guess that’s why people pay hundred thousand dollars to go to J school, to learn those lessons.  In any event, it’s been almost a month since we started school.  It’s time to stop turning shit in late.  Let uncle Harpo share his tips:

1. Handcuff yourself to a table in a quiet part of the library: Make sure you’ve got all your books and have gone to the bathroom before you begin.  And make sure you have the correct key.  There’s nothing more embarrassing than the librarian telling you they’re closing up and having to say “Uhhh, sorry, but I’m handcuffed to the fucking table.  I’m really stupid.  Dehhhhhhh…”

2. Pretend like you’re a famous journalist: I have this one kid in my class who’s so fat he could be Woodward and Bernstein.

3.  Jog a few miles before you write your paper: I had a friend who swore by this method.  I did it once, and I spent the rest of the night feeling my heart tremor like a broken washing machine.  So instead, I would always smoke a pack of cigarettes before beginning.  That will give you the same manic jolt to the brain, essentially.

4.  Make sure everyone is rooting for your failure: This one is a beauty.  People are capable of amazing shit when they know their colleagues are hoping to see them go down in flames.  I was, at least.  So, a week before the paper is to be turned in, I recommend telling everyone in class that you are going to get the best grade, not because you’re a genius, but because you’re simply not an ignorant fucktard.  Proceed to kick someone in the balls.  Presto!  You’re working your ass off trying to make sure you turn in that paper.  And the bonus part?  There’s no distraction from friends in the class who want to talk to you.

5. Bang your head against the wall really hard: Might make you smarter.  For some of my students, it couldn’t make them any dumber.


Today’s post brought to you by a new ajunct professor

September 2, 2009

My name is Harpo McGuffey.  I’m the new adjunct professor of journalism at Longwood.

McGuffey

Now I’ll bet you’re  expecting the inevitable six-thousand word shriek-fest about the death of print journalism and the loss of all of its august standards.  That’s not what I’m about; I don’t really care about the death of print journalism.  I’m not the type who spends the night huddled in bed with one arm around a bottle of Jim Bean and the other cradling my framed diploma from Colombia J-School.  First of all, I haven’t had a drink for ten years now — and second, my J-School diploma, from NYU, is forged.

But that’s neither here nor there, as I didn’t really get hired to teach an entry-level class about becoming a newspaper reporter.  Do you think a state-funded school cares about a profession that’s deader than vaudeville?  No, they hired me because of a little embellishment in the Special Skills section of my resume, a bit about how I helped suppress the Ebola epidemic while reporting in Zaire, Africa.  Pretty much the first thing they asked about in my interview was my “germ-fighting experience.”  I had to nod and smile, nod and smile, and give a condescending chuckle to help buy time until I figured out what the fuck they were referring to.

I didn’t really help to suppress the Ebola virus, per say.  I did go to Zaire, but it was only to report on how the disease had affected the oil trade in the Zaire region, and how this would affect American gas prices.  I didn’t even make the deadline for that story; it was all around the time my alcoholism was about to reach its big, black nadir.

Thus, I feel responsible to tell you, the students, that I don’t the first fucking thing about combating an epidemic, much less a pandemic.  I’m researching it all as fast as I can, but remember that I’ve got three sections of my class to teach, and I also have a long commute from Charlottesville.  An adjunct teacher’s life is not easy!

The important thing right now is that everyone stay healthy, avoid physical contact as much as possible, and tell your parents to stop calling the campus health chief, at least for a few months.  We got a deal?  You scratch my back, and I’ll scratch yours — and by scratch yours I mean put on a kick-ass end of the semester keg party to celebrate how we avoided the pandemic and I still have a paying job! Seriously, if I get through this, I deserve a drink or two.


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