This . . .
was at the ex-job yesterday. The flash washed out the purple lights, so this isn't quite how it really looked (I've tried to compensate by turning down the green a little), but perhaps you get the idea anyway. It was very, y'know, striking, so I said so to a former co-worker, who was all like, "oh, yeah, the hooker tree." And then there was a discussion with her and another employee about whether "hooker" was appropriate or not. (The other employee pointed out that we had no reason to think that the tree actually slept around -- all we actually know about it is that it has flamboyant tastes -- and said she preferred "burlesque Christmas tree." I like "burlesque" better too. And I'm pretty sure I now like the other employee, who I'd not previously met.)
You know you're having a nice day when you get to talk about whether or not an artificial Christmas tree is slutty.
For my part, I was initially horrified, but the more I look at it, the more I think it's one of those so-wrong-it's-cool things. Your mileage will vary.
In more houseplant-relevant Christmas merch, we have this:
Poinsettias don't fall apart and die fast enough on their own, so we have to speed it up by sticking them in tiny, no-drain spherical pots full of sopping wet peat. The wooden sticks don't seem to serve any useful purpose; they read "http://www.optimara.info" on one side, but that address goes to a page displaying African violet varieties (which, judging by the page's formatting, was last updated in 2001) and "easyGrowing...easyCare" on the other, none of which is true. Unless the ellipsis stands in for missing words, like:
easyGrowing is not at all what this plant is, even under ideal circumstances, nor are there any imaginable circumstances under which this plant, as it is currently being grown, could be construed to be easyCareIn that case, then the ellipsis, at least, might be true.
This, I think, is just kind of self-evidently horrible and wrong, but everything involving poinsettias tends to strike me as horrible and wrong, so whatever. I'm not sure what could possibly happen to launch these poinsettia-balls into so-revolting-it's-awesome territory (Glitter? Bows? Plastic neon bows covered in glitter? Artificial ivy spilling out of the bottom? Little metal stars bobbing above the plant on springs? Plastic neon glitter-covered bows on springs? Spray-paint? LEDs around the inside rim of the pot? Plastic neon stars encrusted with blinking LEDs, on bobbing springs, with a tiny mechanical Santa walking in circles through the artificial ivy spilling out of the glitter-covered metallic-painted spherical pot?), but I enjoyed thinking about the possibilities.
7 comments:
Definitely burlesque. No self-respecting hooker would be that gaudy; she'd be a beacon for the cops.
What, no glitter poinsettas? And sorry even burlesque queens have some style even if over the top; this poor tree is simply, well, tasteless. Poor dear.
The Phytophactor:
There will be glitter poinsettias, eventually, but it's still a little early in the season for them. (I've already seen glitter Norfolk Island pines.)
That's like DMT Drag Queen burlesque. I think I got eye cancer just looking at it. Not good.
And those poinsettias! My receptionist has a 2 year old one on her desk that STILL has not died. I'm sorta impressed, sorta scared. It's a personal, morbid science fair experiment waiting for it finally die. I'd repot it, but meh...those things are horribly overrated anyway.
I definitely don't even.
The one good thing about the poinsettia gift it that it will speed up the process of death. I can get with more dead poinsettias.
"New Frontiers in Christmas Decor" ... where no self respecting tree has gone before -- or would ever want to.
On a positive note, it does cause me to reminisce about the Charlie Brown Christmas special -- particularly where he and Linus wander through that tree lot with the hideous pink & other tasteless trees.
BAHAHAHAHA!!!
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