Subway Puzzlement

I am puzzled by how completely inept the New York City MTA is. You would think that with all the fare increases they would actually be able to run a reliable subway system. Ha! The audacity!

Instead, this morning on my way uptown, I sat on the D-train, just outside the 59th Street station. We were going nowhere. The conductor kept repeating the barely comprehensible announcement, “Ladies and gentleman, we have a signal delay, we will be moving shortly.” Fifty minutes later (yes, that’s 5-0 minutes) we were moving again. Do you know how infuriating it is to hear “We will be moving shortly” repeatedly for 50 minutes, when you know full well you’re going to be sitting there forever? I was fuming and wished I could poke someone’s eye out. So, instead of taking an hour to reach my friend’s apartment, it took two hours.

If I had only had this kind of experience once, I could get over it. But instead I’ve amassed an impressive number of subway horror stories, of which I will share only a select few:

  • Repeat the above story on the D-train, then change it to 2am and on the way home from a party in Queens.
  • A few years ago, I got on an uptown C-train because I wanted to go to a stop on the Upper West Side that the express trains don’t stop at. I step on the train, the conductor says, “Local train. This is a local train, I repeat, a local train.” Fabulous. The train shuts the doors and begins moving. Half a minute later, the conductor announces, “Ladies and gentleman, this is an EXPRESS train. Next stop, 125th Street.” Um, excuse me? Meaning, I had to get off at 125th Street and wait for a downtown local train, and I was totally late to where ever I was going.
  • A few weeks ago, I was taking the local 6-train downtown from my German class. At the last stop before we reached our express train connection, we sat and sat and sat for 20 minutes. As we sat, a total of four express trains went whizzing by. Sigh. Once we did start moving, we arrived at the next station, with an express train sitting across the tracks. Phew! Oh, except that as our doors opened, the express train shut its doors and left — causing me to exclaim “Unbelievable!” and causing others to swear loudly. So we stood on the platform in single-digit weather and waited 15 minutes for the next express train to take us to Brooklyn.

I could go and on about how the MTA provides unacceptable service because they know New Yorkers have no choice but to put up with it. It’s not as if we can just hop in our cars and go. Instead, we’re left completely helpless and dependent upon trains that don’t go where they’re supposed to or never come at all.

But instead I will give this link, where you can read of other’s frustrations and where you can watch the Muppets sing the subway song! And to diffuse some of the frustration, make sure to watch this funny clip from the Seinfeld episode about the subway.

More puzzlement, of other types, can be found here.

 

Would YOU Pass the US Naturalization Exam?

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has proposed adding 80 new questions to the test immigrants take to become citizens. The pilot exam will be administered in 2007 with the goal of using a redesigned test the following year with 100 questions. Some are controversial because they are ambiguous or seem irrelevant to the issue of someone’s fitness for citizenship.

By clicking here, you can go to a site where you will be shown a random selection of 10 questions taken from the new questions. After you have finished entering your answers, click on the “Show the answers!” link for the government-approved answers.

What’s even more entertaining (or depressing) is the percentage of life-long U.S. citizens that would (not) be able to answer the questions correctly. I’m always a bit frightened when I hear those statistics, aren’t you? Anyway, make sure to try out some of these questions yourself and see if you’re worthy of American citizenship.

Random Monday

NYC_Condom_product_shot

  • Everyone should go out and watch Children of Men right now. Really, I’m serious. Amazing and humbling because it is only a few more steps down the path of our reality.
  • Ewww, I am so glad I wasn’t anywhere nearby when this happened.
  • You know it’s a slow news weekend when all anyone can talk about is Britney Spears’ (lack of) hair.
  • I just finished reading Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble and Coming of Age in the Bronx by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc (it’s for a book club people, I didn’t actually choose the book myself) and wasn’t so impressed. The author followed a family in the Bronx for about 10 years, and the level of detail she provides is phenomenal. But that same level of detail can weigh a 400-page book down substantially. I feel the revelations you come away with need only a hundred pages to express themselves. And don’t get me started with the fact that she doesn’t even once address her role in the lives of the individuals she follows over the course of 10 years — to ignore that is to ignore a significant element of the story.
  • Also, on this cold holiday weekend, I watched A Scanner Darkly on DVD while I nursed my sniffles and sore throat. The story is fantastic, to say nothing of the incredible animation that took 18 months to complete, even after they finished filming the movie! It makes me want to read the actual novel by Philip K. Dick.
  • Oh, and if you haven’t heard yet, New York City now has its own brand of condom. I am absolutely giddy from the idea of the government associating itself with the use of a product that prevents HIV, STIs and pregnancy! Novel idea, isn’t it? Make sure to check out the website here.