You’ve been bitten by a venomous centipede. Now what?

For some reason, I never thought I’d have to Google “what to do for venomous centipede bites.” Unfortunately, when you’re living in southern China, you end up searching for a lot of unusual requests online.

Also unfortunately, a lot of information on these enormous centipedes – scolopendra subspinipes or any of its Southeast Asian variants, including the Chinese red-headed centipede – is not available in English. Thus I found myself in something of a quandary last summer, one evening around midnight, when after dinner out (read: a meal consisting more of báijiǔ than actual shíwù) I felt a pair of tiny forcipules sink deep into my left foot.

A relative of the Chinese Red-Head, the Vietnamese Centipede. Frankly, I'd rather not have either one anywhere near me. (Image courtesy of http://animal-world.com.)

A relative of the Chinese Red-Head, the Vietnamese Centipede. Frankly, I’d rather not have either one anywhere near me. (Image courtesy of http://animal-world.com.)

Though I won’t repeat on here what was yelled loudly and emphatically at the time, I’d had previous encounters with the Chinese red-head (Scolopendra subspinipes mutilans). Living on the ground floor of the school’s dorms, the bottoms of our doors were katy-barred with small planks of wood so as to keep out large centipedes, insects, assorted beasties, and what-have-you. Earlier that summer, we’d even seen one of the seven-inch centipedes in question – trapped by some quick-thinking cafeteria workers down the row in an emptied jug of cheap Chinese booze.

(At the time, I felt sorry for the poor bottled creature, and had attempted to let it free. I was subsequently snapped at for letting a poisonous insect back into the school grounds. Where I come from, insects are not inherently life-threatening.)

Following a little online research borne out of curiosity, I learned that bites from these giant scolopendridae could be devastatingly painful – and occasionally deadly, should one be so unfortunate as to get envenomed on the head.

OH GOD! OH WHY! Here it comes, full-speed. Not only are they fast, they're hyper-perceptive of their surroundings. (Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/XrtyWQ.)

OH GOD! OH WHY! Here it comes, full-speed. Not only are they fast, they’re hyper-perceptive of their surroundings. (Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/XrtyWQ.)

“Shit! These things are running around the dorms,” I remember thinking at the time, still luxuriating in the myriad of large, varied, and exotic insects China had to offer, “and I tried to free one.” I felt horribly guilty, having potentially put a fellow Yongzhou No. 4 High School worker at harm.

But karma works in weird ways. Sitting at my computer that fateful eve, blasting music (as per usual), my involuntary pet centipede decided that hiding under my computer desk no longer constituted acceptable lodging. Chomping into my left metatarsals, my ill-fated, six-inch, hundred-legged friend made a break for it…and I went straight into Full-On Panic Mode, watching a terrified, writhing creature detach itself from my skin and run for the proverbial hills.

Let’s pause here to really drink in that image.

Fellow expats can attest that there’s a moment – in a country where you can’t speak the language, read the signs, or recognize the venomous prehistoric bugs – that you reach something of an enlightened Zen state when worst comes to worst. As venom coursed through my panicked, Western-medicined veins, I entertained the thought that maybe it wouldn’t be that bad.

Yet as the pain set in, I was out for blood (or whatever fluids circulate in the “centipedoidal anatomy”). Because HOLY CHRIST DOES THAT SMART. I found the little fucker making his way underneath my unused fridge, and spent the next 20 minutes smashing it into bite-size, normal-leg-numbered segments. It really did take 20 minutes, as the mutilans subspecies seems to have a unique ability to zombify/Lazarus itself.

This person is a dumb-ass. Case closed. Do not consider anything with fangs your "friend." (Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/YKwX40.)

This person is a dumb-ass. Case closed. Do not consider anything with fangs your “friend,” even as a baby. (Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/YKwX40.)

While our school’s Foreign Affairs Officer called an ambulance at the ripe hour of 1 a.m., I hobbled the half mile to the front gate and waited with immense trepidation. (“You need an ambulance!” said the FAO, over the phone. “I can’t speak Chinese,” I replied, rolling my eyes inaudibly. “Oh. Maybe I will call for you.” Wait, maybe?!)

When the good folks online say the bite may incur:

  • “‘Rippling pain” (mine lasted throughout the left leg for some 18 hours, though some say it may take 2-3 days for the pain to fade);
  • “Redness” (oh, and will it be beet-red);
  • “Focalized inflammation” (roughly a week after the initial bite, the numerous muscles in my foot became infected and swelled it to the size of a pomelo, requiring additional Traditional Chinese Medicine [TCM] snake-bite pills to reduce the inflammation and necrotized tissue);
  • “Abnormal skin tingling, tickling, itching, or burning sensations” (okay, mostly just a lot of itcthing);
  • “Acute itching” (but seriously, the itchiness); and,
  • “A non-amplifying localized death of living cells” (spoiler alert: the top of my left foot turned black for about a week)

…they aren’t kidding. About a month after the whole ordeal of bite, followed by inflammation, followed by awkward daily outpatient treatment for post-bite inflammation, followed by PTSD-esque nightmares involving squiggly creatures, I came to understand quite well why the cafeteria ladies down the row had entrapped their snaky intruder as they did.

The victorious centipede of comic lore, the losing gladiator, and my very red foot, post-fanging.

The Crimson Centipede of comic lore, the losing gladiator, and my very red foot, post-fanging. I keep hoping for a Spiderman-like transformation.

The incident also helped me realize, though, the role Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) still plays in modern-day China, and why Western medicine will never fully monopolize the vast Chinese pharmaceuticals market. After all, if it weren’t for the magical snake-bite pills the doctor in Yongzhou prescribed me, I may well have left China without a left foot. A mere “10 pills, three times a day,”and I was bouncing back.

(That’s not to say the green, globulous TCM mass they spread on my back to “reduce fever” is as effective as, say, taking a bunch of Tylenol. It has its time and place. As do centipede bites.)

And yet, a few months later, I never thought I’d have to Google “what to do for appendicitis.” But when you’re living in southern China, you end up searching for a lot of unusual requests online. In the age of a fast-developing Middle Kingdom, though, where East increasingly meets West, you end up with a lot of interesting stories to tell later on.

Asia out-meme-ing, out-viral-ing America; winning 2013

The viral meme. An awesome amalgamation of poorly-drawn, staged, or Photoshopped images; blunt sentencing (or none at all); generally horrible spelling; and – more often than not – a sentence voicing an opinion shared by hundreds of thousands across borders and languages. The success of the meme largely lies in its variability: All play off a common theme, but can be twisted visually or linguistically to reflect entirely different emotions (see: Socially Awkward Penguin/Awesome Penguin).

But memes and other things that “go viral in the night” have been a distinctly American Internet phenomenon – until now. With the Japanese innovation of “Hadokening” (thank you, Buzzfeed, for wrongly attributing this to DragonBall Z, when it’s really of Street Fighter 2 origin)…

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(“Hadokening” done right, courtesy of Buzzfeed and i.imgur.com.)

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(Who DIDN’T always choose Ryu?! Image courtesy of Buzzfeed and i.imgur.com.)

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Convenient they’ve all left their seemingly gravity-bound belongings in a small pile. (Image courtesy of ABC News and i.imgur.com.)

…and pan-Asian “Potato Parties“…

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A group of teens in Seoul, South Korea, started the “potato party” trend by ordering a butt-ton of fries at McDonald’s. (Image courtesy of Global Post, Twitter.)

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…When you have nothing better to do than order 60 “large fries” at once. Who’s hungry?! (Image courtesy of japandailypress.com.)

…not to mention, the awesome power of the written Chinese language’s tendency toward Internet-related funny homophones, and China’s willingness to take on government corruption via meme…

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Chinese officials help “regulate” soccer match. The “cluster of three” has recently become a popular, corruption-related meme. (Courtesy of i2.kym-cdm.com.)

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Recently appointed minister of Chinese railways, Sheng Guangzu, had an unfortunate episode with Rolex watches. Maybe he’ll learn better next time. (Image courtesy of telegraph.co.uk/worldnews/asia/china.)

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Don’t you hate waiting that extra 10 minutes for the Internet to be your “friend” again? (Image courtesy of memejelly.com.)

…it would appear that Asia as a whole is winning 2013. Time to go watch more videos about a Japanese cat figuring out cardboard boxes and a traditional Beijing opera “female impersonator” get his transsexual rock-opera on. Not exactly memes, but maybe some day they’ll go viral in America, too.

Long of peace, short of breath

This panorama, an amalgamation of photos of Beijing’s “atmosphere” during the once-a-decade meetings of the National People’s Congress and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference from March 4 – 17, shows the state of environmental affairs along Chang’an Jie (“Long Peace Street”) and Tian’anmen Square. As this panoramic combo makes its way around the Internet, coupled with last week’s news of almost 6,000 dead pigs clogging Shanghai’s waterways, expect environmental news to take front-and-center this week in Chinese news and on QQ/Sina Weibo.

Three sunny, blue-sky days out of 14 in Beijing? The visiting politicians must have brought good luck with them.

Fear and clothing in Des Moines

Fear and clothing in Des Moines

A few days ago, I waxed poetic on the fine art of “Iowa-bashing.” Lo and behold, a new example has been churned out, much to the delight/chagrin of Iowans. (“They name-dropped us!” we say excitedly, as every native Iowan links to it on Facebook. “BUT THEY DID IT TO HATE ON US!” we realize, dejectedly.)

Coming from the Onion, it’s hard to take it too seriously. And let’s be honest: Iowa, much less Des Moines, will never be a bastion of fashion. (That’s your cue, Iowa State Fair attendees.) But the story could have “taken place” just as easily in Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma…maybe we Midwest states aren’t so alone after all. “No Coast” states, it’s your time to shine. On the catwalk.

Iowa legislators to pray extra-hard on Tuesdays

“This is for those who want to come together in prayer. Those who are Christians are certainly welcome.”

If this statement had been made about a brand-spankin’ new Bible study group, I would have no problem with it. If it had been said at an AA meeting, an interfaith group, or even a funeral, I’d have no problem with it. When it is said – non-ironically, I might add – by a state senator about a weekly function held in the Iowa Capitol building, I have a problem with it.

The speaker in question, Sen. Joni Ernst, a Republican representing Red Oak, IA, was quoted in the Des Moines Register on Tuesday; she is one of three state legislators chairing a “bipartisan prayer caucus” held each week in the statehouse. Not only is this a genuinely legitimate endeavor, take into consideration that:

“Both the Iowa House and Senate traditionally begin each day’s floor session with a prayer offered by a clergy member who is a guest of the legislator, followed by the Pledge of Allegiance.”

MIND BLOWN. In the bad way. Top three reasons why this is a phenomenally bad judgment call on behalf of the three legislators in question and the state legislature on the whole:

1). That “wall of separation between Church and State” that ballin’ wig-wearer and notorious slave owner (and third president) Thomas Jefferson was so entranced with? That applies just as equally here as it does to freedom to practice one’s religion, whatever it may be. Why the flying fuck are people praying – to a Christian god, specifically – in the Iowa Capitol every morning? And where’s the legislators’ freedom to abstain?

2). Why does the Pledge of Allegiance follow the morning prayer? Does this imply that state legislators should be beholden to their god before their constituents, or their country? When Jesus starts paying state income tax, I might be willing to let this slide. (What’s that? Churches don’t pay any taxes?! FML.)

And 3). Getting back to the issue at hand here, if there’s already a daily morning (presumably non-voluntary) Christian prayer, why exactly do we need to take an hour every Tuesday “worshipping for loved ones or constituents and seeking guidance?” And why are lawmakers inviting the public into these sessions, yet not into the chamber sessions that actually have some impact on Iowans’ lives?

I think it’s wonderful that Sen. Ernst, Rep. Phyllis Thede (D-Bettendorf), and Rep. Joel Fry (R-Osceola) have found a religion that brings them hope, joy, and peace of mind. I really do. It’s when this kinda crap becomes mandatory and then spills into designated “No Trespassing” zones that I take issue with personal religious zealotry evangelizing.

Just for one day, let’s commence the congressional sessions with only the Pledge of Allegiance, skip the “bipartisan prayer caucus” over lunch, and top it all off with an evening visit to the church, synagogue, mosque, temple, or non-religious establishment of our choice on our own time. Your constituents will thank you for it (and Jesus could use a break).

The People's Air!

A popularly circulated image on Sina Weibo (prior to its “harmonizing“) and the Shanghaiist, Beijing’s iconic Mao Zedong portrait contends with the capital city’s continuing air pollution epidemic. Be it sandstorms, factories, construction, or meteorological misfortune, Weibo user @yanyutong’s tongue-in-cheek-in-mask reference is apparently too controversial for Beijing’s choking victims residents.

(It’s not that bad. So long as you don’t mind blowing your nose and seeing black.)

Shanghai’s “pork soup” problem

“Officials say the water quality has not been affected and they are investigating where the pigs came from.”

For those wondering, no: This is not a story about piping-hot 馄饨汤 (pork dumpling soup). It is about a river. And the pigs in question? Long past their expiration date.

On Friday evening, reports of 900 1,200 pig carcasses dumped in the Songjiang section of the Huangpu River (just outside Shanghai) made the news, shocking residents of China’s second-largest city. According to Beijing Cream, city health officials determined “the pigs do not pose a health hazard, and the risk of E. coli is not much higher than normal.” The thought of ingesting bloated, fermenting swine is one thing – though Cthulu help the 22 million residents actually drinking or using tap water in Shanghai.

(The fact that this situation has heightened the E. coli risk to “not much higher than normal” is another matter all together.)

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Retrieval and disposal of the more than 1,000 pig carcasses continues. (Image courtesy of CRJ Online and ministryoftofu.com)

Reports also indicate that officials “are investigating where the pigs came from,” as noted in the Independent (U.K.). Don’t you hate when 900 1,200 porcine bacon-makers mysteriously appear and suddenly die in your city’s major waterway? But thanks to coverage from the Ministry of Tofu, there’s no need to sugar-coat this sweet-and-(mostly)-sour pork:

“It is reported that since January, over 20,000 pigs have died in the neighboring rural villages. The mass death events have overwhelmed pig farmers as well as villages living in the area.”

Of the 50 million tons (110,231,000,000 lbs.) of pork produced in China each year, one must factor in a number of animals who just won’t make it, due to biological or disease-related reasons. In its reporting, the Ministry also noted that “Jiaxing Daily, a state-run newspaper circulated in Zhejiang province, disclosed Saturday…that 10,078 pigs died in January and 8,325 in February.” Just this month, “an average number of 300 pigs are killed each day.”

(While it’s unknown how many are slaughtered for meat and how many are “put out of their misery,” it’s safe to say that the recent conflagration in the Huangpu is probably not the best way to deal with an excess of unpalatable swine carcasses.)

Schneider said. “It was so limited before. Now it’s like: ‘Look at this progress, we can eat as much meat as we want.'”

Apparently that means breeding, growing, and slaughtering enough pork to satisfy one-fifth of the world’s population. (Not that Americans are any more meat-conscious: The average American eats 276 lbs. of pork per year, compared to 132 lbs. by the average Chinese person.) If anything, this incident should bring to light the unsustainable nature of pork production and/or drinking water treatments in China’s cities.

But then again, who in Shanghai would turn down a nice hot bowl of 馄饨汤, straight from the faucet?

Iowa Legislature “funnels” 2013 bills

Members of the Iowa legislature hard at work. (Image courtesy of watchdog.org)

Members of the Iowa legislature hard at work. (Image courtesy of watchdog.org)

Bills regulating bullying control, strip clubs, and Alzheimer’s disease were among the select few to pass the Iowa Legislature’s first “funnel” of the 2013 session. The Des Moines Register reported Saturday on 25 bills that made it past the initial hurdle (and 10 that didn’t), further informing Iowa’s residents what their representatives are backing on their behalf.

While most of the proposed laws seem relatively innocuous – who could argue against increased transparency from the state Board of Regents, an optional 4.5 percent flat income tax, or making “reasonable accommodations” for pregnant workers? – there are a few that Iowans might find less candid and clear-cut.

Here is just a small sampling of what’s up at bat for the state legislature this session:

A nonprofessional "permit to carry" gun license for the state of Iowa. (Image courtesy of usacarry.org)

A nonprofessional “permit to carry” gun license for the state of Iowa. (Image courtesy of usacarry.org)

  • H.F. 81: Confidential permit information of weapon carriers and purchasers. According to this bill, the state commissioner of public safety must “maintain a permanent record of all valid permits to carry weapons and of current permit revocations,” and heretofore “keep confidential the names and addresses of holders of nonprofessional permits to carry weapons and permits to acquire pistols or revolvers.” Looks like a few Iowa House members got rubbed the wrong way by the University of Iowa and Johnson County’s recent information-sharing non-scandal. However, it would seem that if one is opting to own a gun – for personal safety or hunting reasons – one should be more than willing to admit to owning a lethal weapon, right?
  • S.F. 298: Official definition of a “sex act.” For god knows what reason, the state’s classification of a sexual deed apparently needs to include “ejaculation onto the person of another,” the only addition to this already standing (and surprisingly thorough) legislation. The Register reports that “the Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault and the Family Planning Council of Iowa support the bill.” (However, neither provide abortions should one be accidentally ejaculated into.)
  • H.F. 186: Optional straight-ticket voting. This law would ensure that ballots “[b]e so constructed or designed as to permit voting for candidates for nomination or election of at least seven different political parties or organizations,” and would remove straight-ticket voting boxes for either Republican or Democratic nominees. I have to side with the Iowa House majority on this one; requiring voters to physically fill in their votes for each office would likely encourage more informed (and potentially varied) votes for state officials. The downside? Taking 10 more seconds to fill in a ballot.
  • H.F. 485: Photo ID required to vote. This House bill, unlike the one above, is hard to swallow (possibly because it’s chock full o’ ALEC groupthink). According to the proposed legislation, “[a] precinct election official shall require the voter to present for inspection proof of identification before being allowed to vote,” proof being a document – with photograph – provided by the United States government or the state of Iowa, a higher education or secondary school in Iowa, or a “political subdivision of the state of Iowa.” (Or – and I shit you not – you may have a relative come along to swear an oath on your identity!) And should one refuse to show identification, under this proposed bill? No ID, no vote. Thankfully the Iowa House has taken up this pressing matter, as voter fraud in Iowa/America has clearly decreased the number of “real” votes in this country. (#sarcasm)
  • S.S.B. 1163: Transparency from the state Board of Regents. As reported by the Register, “[m]ore transparency would be required of the Iowa Board of Regents, although a provision banning political activity by the Regents has been stripped from the legislation.” While it’s unfortunate that said “political activity ban” has been cut (*cough*Bruce Rastetter*cough*), requiring Regents to hold public input forums in different areas of the state and respond to constituents’ questions would be a step in the right direction.
  • H.S.B. 196: School anti-harassment and anti-bullying policies. Changes to this bill would allow Iowa school supervisors to “discipline students for bullying and harassment wherever the actions take place – including online and on social media sites – and whether under school supervision or not,” according to the Register. The state House of Representatives should be lauded for taking on this issue, as it’s not an easy one to regulate. Whispered insults in the hallway and derogatory Facebook comments can be equally damaging to a student, yet only one occurs on school grounds. Should school officials have the authority to punish students for both forms of harassment? Or is it too easy to go overboard, as with disciplining students for pretend guns?
Is bullying outside school within the jurisdiction of school officials? The Iowa House will decide. (Image courtesy of bullyingpreventionnow.com)

Is bullying outside school within the jurisdiction of school officials? The Iowa House will decide. (Image courtesy of bullyingpreventionnow.com)

What are your thoughts on these proposed bills? Which deserve to be passed, and which are better left for the crows?

No one wants to “Learn from Lei Feng”

On March 5, I wrote about “Learn from Lei Feng Day,” in which we the People were instructed to take note of Mr. Lei’s selfless altruism, patriotism, and loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party (even in death). No qualms, as the dude was basically a nationalistic – if not fabricated – bad-ass. (With a ballin’ hat to boot.)

But apparently Chinese audiences weren’t in the mood for a hearty helping of party propaganda on this glorious holiday. According to the Hollywood Reporter:

“Screenings of ‘Young Lei Feng,’ a biopic about a revolutionary long immortalized in Chinese official discourse for his reportedly selfless contributions to the Communist Party, were called off at cinemas in the cities of Nanjing and Xi’an because no tickets were sold. Ironically, the cancellation came on the very day the government designated as ‘Lei Feng Day.’ “

Still from "Young Lei Feng," which coincidentally flopped on "Learn from Lei Feng Day." (Image courtesy of weibo.com/cajing)

Still from “Young Lei Feng,” which coincidentally flopped on “Learn from Lei Feng Day.” (Image courtesy of weibo.com/cajing)

To add insult to injury, writes the Reporter, propaganda-esque films “have always been a hard-sell, and [film venue managers] expected the film to be taken off screens soon as a raft of more entertaining and profitable releases…are released towards the end of the week.” What would you rather spend a week’s worth of income ( usually ¥60 RMB, or $9.50) on: “Young Lei Feng,” or the current Hollywood blockbuster?

“With the advent of the Internet and the emergence of a very sophisticated and commercialized entertainment industry…Chinese audiences have long distanced themselves from propaganda fare which previous generations might have embraced out of either genuine affection or a lack of choice.”

Welcome to visual-stimulation-hungry and free-market-competitive China: Where (increasingly) disposable income meets modern capitalistic consumer desires. (In all honesty, though, I probably would have paid to see Lei’s film. For the lulz.)

In the meantime, perhaps the CCP’s art directors can “Learn from ‘Lost in Thailand,’ ” China’s largest-grossing domestic film ever, before March 5, 2014 rolls around. For a movie not actually about China, it was a smash hit (never mind that it was basically “The Hangover 2” in Mandarin Chinese).

“Iowa-bashing:” Because…Iowa.

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Iowa: It’s exactly what you were expecting, right?

Today’s public service announcement comes to you straight from the heart of Des Moines, Iowa – a smallish, quaint, quiet and mostly dilapidated circa-1970’s hovel in the middle of a cornfield. With one “skyscraper.” And good God-fearing, gun-toting farming folk. Pronounced “dez MOY-nz.” Right?

Apparently that’s what the reporters over at FishbowlNY have determined about our inconsequential little flyover state, as talks of a merger between Time Inc. and the Meredith Corporation (the latter based here in Dez Moynz) finally sputtered to a halt Thursday. Why would two highly successful publishing houses have difficulty conglomerating into one giant, amoebic media mass, you ask?

According to FishbowlNY, because…Iowa. (And also possibly that “Time Inc. and Meredith can’t decide what to do with Time, Fortune, Money and Sports Illustrated.”) Writes Fishbowl’s Chris O’Shea:

“If the talks fall through, blame Iowa. In almost every report about the media combo, there has been a mention about how people think Iowa (where Meredith is headquartered) sucks.”

One of those “it’s funny because it’s true” jokes, right? O’Shea also kindly informs us that it’s unfair to judge preemptively, as Iowa has exactly three (THREE!) redeeming factors: Adventureland amusement park (yes, really), The Bridges of Madison County, and the same native tongue as New York.

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See? Raygun’s t-shirts get to make fun of Iowa, because they’re made IN Iowa!

(Clearly this man hasn’t done his homework, as there are none of the usual mentions: Capt. James T. Kirk of the starship Enterprise, our UNESCO City of Literature and the world-renowned International Writer’s Program, the first state to caucus for presidential election candidates every four years, our Olympics gold-winning gymnastics training centers, home of the World Food Prize, birthplace of professional ass-hat Ashton Kutcher and indie flickster/”Frodo” portrayer Elijah Wood – the list goes on.)

But still…Iowa, right? No number of laudable places, people, or accomplishments seem to un-tarnish our outdated national reputation. It’s no wonder Time Inc. employees were fearful of a potential relocation. From Christine Haughney of the New York Times:

“As bankers and media executives work out the details of creating a new publicly traded company to house the magazine titles of the Meredith Corporation and the lifestyle titles of Time Inc., employees at both companies have been wondering how executives will take on the harder task of merging two very different corporate cultures.

Meredith’s headquarters in Des Moines have an open floor plan; the executives have their offices on the first floor and favor early-morning meetings. A recent lunch at one of Meredith’s magazines featured kale salad and rosemary-infused cucumber lemonade. Time Inc. executives tend toward lunches at Michael’s, where the dry-aged steak is a highlight, and after-work cocktails at the Lamb’s Club.”

Good god, not kale and open spaces! Can you imagine the clash of cultures that would ensue if these media behemoths actually had conglomerated? Who would be so heartless as to send an ambitious young upstart in the Big Apple to Forbes’ running “Best City for Young Professionals,” Des Moines? (I hear they only have one “skyscraper!”)

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Unending miles of corn fields. Look how they sparkle in the glow of the harvest moon. (Image courtesy of picturesofiowa.com)

The jokey, negative stereotyping surrounding this potential merger is just the latest in a long string of what I like to (not very creatively) call “Iowa-bashing.” And why not? No one is actually from there. Just a bunch of potatoes and Cleveland, right? Because…Iowa, right?

Wrong. As with so many things, consistently using the state as the butt of a national joke “is only okay if you’re from there.” (And it’s pronounced* “dee MOY-n,” for god’s sake. Where do you see a “Z” in Des Moines?!) I’ve been from Beijing to Chicago, Paris to Phnom Penh, Jakarta to New York City itself – and not one of these cities has the same feel of promise, the small-city charm, the modern “je ne sais quoi” with hipster neighborhoods and farmers markets and eclectic nightlife and legalized gay marriage as Des Moines.

So Time Inc. employees, my condolences on your recent failed merger – guess you’ll never get to see what you’re missing here. (Rosemary-infused cucumber lemonade, anyone?)

* – Technically, it’s pronounced “dey mwah’n,” French for “the monks,” referring to the groups who first** inhabited the area.

** – Technically, the first inhabitants were members of the Ioway tribe. Who were probably not monks.

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