Baby Daddy

Boring Squared

    Okay, this is gonna be a little rough. As some of you may know, Jane over at Baby Squared wrote a post about our recent play date. Apparently, she didn’t have a very good time and decided the best way to go about venting would be on her blog. A class act.
    I don’t want to do a long rehash of everything she wrote, but I guess she found Josie a little hard to handle, and she wasn’t too crazy about me, either. It’s true that Josie is an energetic kid, and she did sort of dominate Jane’s twins, Clia and Elso. It’s also true that I’m obnoxiously fawning as a dad. I guess some of my “humor” didn’t quite go over with Jane.
    But if I can offer a word in Josie’s defense: I think she was just bored, and I can’t exactly blame her. I mean, I’m sure that Jane’s relatives are fascinated by her Power Point presentation on Trends in Early Socialization of Twins. And I’m sure they love her It’s a Twin Thang t-shirt and her Make Mine a Double tea cozy. Just like they probably can’t get enough of her twin scrapbooks, her twin memory boxes, her twin placential burial plot, and the thirteen home videos – yeah, I counted, it was the only way to stay awake – I was shown of her twins, most of which consisted of the girls staring blankly into the camera, while Jane screamed helpful stage directions such as “Clita! Wake up, Clita! Give mama a big twinsy smiley-wily! Hey, Oslo! Look over here. Over here!”
    See, the thing is, Jane’s daughters are going to be famous. As she informed me on four separate occasions, they’ve already been “recruited” by a major infant modeling firm. In fact, Jane has a giant stack of 8x10 headshots of the girls in various “theatrical” getups (the girls as Tarzan and Jane, the girls as Britney and Lindsay, the girls as Dog the Bounty Hunter), several of which she pressed on me, with explicit directions to “pass them along to any casting agents you might know.”
    Jane herself – and I know this may come as a shock – was a child actress. She starred in some play as a high school freshman, that was later released on video, though apparently only in the Beta format. I myself was forced to watch a portion of this production (“The Princess and Her Cheese”) in her scarily large home theater setup, which includes an ancient VCR that plays Beta videos.
    As for her children’s prospects, they do have one major thing going for them: they know how to sit still. Really really well. Occasionally, Oswalda would flop over on her side and start to cry. But Clisa was basically catatonic for the duration of our visit. The thing that’s so especially sad is that Jane truly believes her girls are destined for Broadway. She referred to her blog as her “golden ticket,” and explained how she was going to parley it into a development deal “the way the Geico cavemen did.” It was all so Gloria Swanson.
    So, yeah, I can see why Jane had a tough time with Josie. When you’re that pathetically invested in your “little starlets” (her words, not mine) it must be unbearable to encounter a kid with actual charisma.

    P.S. – A quick word on the note-taking thing. Jane has apparently forgotten why I asked her for a pen – to write down the name of a dermatologist friend of mine, who I thought might be able to help her with a painful rash, the location and texture of which you really don't want to know.


+ DIGG + DEL.ICIO.US

Comments

 

BetteJo said:

I have never read Baby Squared before today, and honestly I don't know whether to hope you are both being funny with your venom or whether to hope the delicious slings and arrows are genuine.

I'd hate to think that parents with babies would trash each other on the internet but much worse has happened other places.  On the other hand - oh the drama!  You could swim in it - it is so deep and luscious!

I guess I will just have to stay tuned.

January 1, 2008 11:01 PM
 

Sammy said:

I've enjoyed both blogs for some time now, but this is a first time to comment on either.  The impetus?  I must say that in the second photo on Jane's entry, BabyMama has a killer manicure.

Also, I bought my father 'Candyfreak' for the holidays, and it was a massive hit!

January 2, 2008 12:28 AM
 

Wobbling Weeble said:

Looks like the parents are bigger brats in the sandbox than the kids. Really, this is just beneath you, Steve. Isn't it?

January 2, 2008 12:29 AM
 

anon said:

Making fun of those children's names?  Really?  How old are you?  I won't be back to your 'blog'.

January 2, 2008 1:05 AM
 

anon said:

Well, Jane's children are "special."  Or last they look that way.

January 2, 2008 1:28 AM
 

sumoo said:

I really wish you hadn't responded.  You both should have been adult enough to keep the babies out of it.

January 2, 2008 1:57 AM
 

BetteJo said:

To be fair, if this back and forth exchange is genuine - she started it.  

My question to Baby Daddy would be - were you going to say anything if she hadn't?  Because honestly, if someone snarks at you AND YOUR BABY, it would be pretty hard not to bite back.  

But if you both were equally unhappy with the playdate, being quiet would have been the classier thing to do.  She didn't have to throw out the first pitch.

Just sayin'.

January 2, 2008 2:18 AM
 

Karen said:

so it's true that americans don't get irony?

January 2, 2008 5:48 AM
 

Allie said:

I cant tell how much of this is tongue in cheek and not, I read both, "she started it" and I would be hard pressed not to respond either.  I've met Josie...she's a normal active toddler, no diva, no brat....and having 2 kids the same age over might have been much, and they get territorial at that age...ok, I'm babbling, but you catch my drift.  Methinks other blog lady has insecurities of some sort.

January 2, 2008 6:47 AM
 

FJC said:

It's called humor people.

January 2, 2008 8:13 AM
 

lex said:

I left this comment on Jane's blog, too.  Just have to say I'm disappointed that people can't take a joke.  I'm finding that once people become parents, many of them lose their sense of humor.  Lighten up, folks!  

Steve, you and Jane are hilarious.  Thanks for the chuckle.

January 2, 2008 8:21 AM
 

Really said:

Really how dumb are you people? Both entries are tongue and cheek. I'm sure BD and Jane are dying laughing at these ridiculous comments. Give me a break.

January 2, 2008 8:34 AM
 

Allie said:

Thank you, Really, for your clarity.  Really.

January 2, 2008 9:30 AM
 

Bad Writing Starts Here said:

We get it that it's a joke, it's just not funny.  

January 2, 2008 9:36 AM
 

um, loser! said:

I get that it's a joke. I do.

You just went about it all wrong. You're officially an idiot.

If you're here to make fun of Jane, make fun of Jane, not her kids. The refrences she made to Josie were about YOU. Your references to Clio and Elsa were aimed at them.

Grow up.

January 2, 2008 10:31 AM
 

kendra! said:

You clearly had an opportunity to rise above.  But you didn't.  I shan't be back here.

January 2, 2008 10:44 AM
 

rgr said:

Well, it made me laugh! Please ignore the humor-impaired -- or better yet, make fun of them in your next post.

January 2, 2008 10:47 AM
 

cece said:

wow. making fun of jane's two darlings. jut when i thought u couldn't stoop any lower. (and oh yes, i get that it was a joke, but really? it wasn't very funny.) jane's however, was hilarious b/c she is making fun of what everyone thinks about you, but doesn't say. next time: lay off with the "jokes" about the kids and stick with writing about candy.

January 2, 2008 11:05 AM
 

Katie from UMF said:

Well done. WELL DONE. I cracked up, on both pages.

January 2, 2008 11:38 AM
 

Ironic said:

No wonder sit-coms aren't funny anymore - no one can take (or perhaps even discern) a joke.

The entries were obviously for kicks. I'm pretty sure whoever runs the site would be just a tad upset otherwise.

January 2, 2008 12:09 PM
 

addknitter said:

Ok, so I am so glad that I am not the only one that immediately zeroed in on Babymama's KILLER manicure. What is that, OPI 'Quarter-of-a-centcherry'? (Don't act like you don't know what I'm talking about, sister!)

January 2, 2008 12:40 PM
 

Not The Place said:

This would have been funny if it were an email exchange between you and Jane.  This isn't writing, or even blogging, and that's what is pissing people off.

January 2, 2008 2:26 PM
 

EdgyMama said:

Aren't comment threads fun, fun, fun?

My spouse keeps trying to set up a mud wrestling match between me and the "other" Mom columnist in town. He thinks the resultant YouTube vid would propel us both to stardom. Maybe you and Jane??

January 2, 2008 2:33 PM
 

bob said:

not writing? not blogging? huh??

January 2, 2008 2:36 PM
 

rrr said:

writing (def.) 2: something written

from www.m-w.com/.../writing

blogging (def.) 1: a Web site that contains an online personal journal with reflections, comments, and often hyperlinks provided by the writer

from www.m-w.com/.../blogging

January 2, 2008 3:18 PM
 

BBBGMOM said:

You people taking this seriously are seriously insane.  lighten up - my god!  Funny or not funny - are you that earnest and/or insecure that you can't see the tongue in cheek?  Jeez.  And the screwing up of baby names - um, anyone remember David Letterman with his Uma/Oprah shtick?  Fell flat for many, but I'm assuming that's the cultural reference point.

January 2, 2008 3:27 PM
 

Amy said:

It doesn't work as a joke. It's just mean. And really not well-written, either. Babble continues to disappoint me, lately ...

January 2, 2008 5:51 PM
 

SussLW said:

These two posts are the best, most entertaining things I've read all day. THIS is why I check these blogs.

January 2, 2008 6:06 PM
 

BetteJo said:

My last comment on the subject - I honestly did not know whether this was a joke, or not.  I actually DO have a sense of humor, it's quite good actually. Not always recognizing that you're getting your leg pulled doesn't mean you don't have a sense of humor.  To me though, that isn't the point.  Both writers knew that some people would fall for it - and did not care if they made them feel stupid or ridiculous. I don't care if anyone else thinks I am a moron for not totally catching on - that doesn't matter to me.  That's what practical jokes are all about.  I've had them played on me before, I've played them on other people. I'm just not fond of being caught totally unawares at a place where I had no reason to think the joke might be on me, or any of us who defended one side or another.  That's all.

To be honest I feel a bit betrayed here.

January 2, 2008 7:35 PM
 

Roper said:

BetteJo, I'm so sorry you felt that way. It really wasn't our intent to pull one over on anyone or make anyone feel foolish. We thought it would be obvious that we were kidding, but I guess it wasn't. Look for a follow-up post soon....

JR

January 2, 2008 8:07 PM
 

April said:

Sooo hilarious!  I am really laughing out loud!

January 3, 2008 8:33 AM
 

Ewokmama said:

I think this was a great way to weed out those without a sense of humor!

January 3, 2008 2:02 PM

in

About the Blogger

Steve Almond

Steve Almond in Boston

The author of My Life in Heavy Metal and Candyfreak found out his fiancée was pregnant five days after they got engaged. He tells you what it's like to be a brand-new Baby Daddy. Visit his website here.

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