Originally posted by Tribune Media Services COPYRIGHT © 2012 GREG SCHWEM DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC
I spent the last two weeks faithfully watching both political conventions and, like previous election years, came away with the same three questions:
Exactly who ARE these people in the audience?
What purpose do they serve other than to hoot and holler every time a speaker says, "transformation"?
Why are they wearing funny hats?
I listened as President Obama and Mitt Romney laid out their plans to cut the deficit, put people back to work and find a nice retirement community for Clint Eastwood. Yet once again, neither candidate unveiled a simple solution that would allow the average American family to save more money by cutting their food bills in half. I have the solution and am happy to share it with either man but so far, my phone remains silent.
I'm not asking Americans to skip meals or eat instant oatmeal three times a day. My plan is far simpler. Ready?
Ladies, stop sending your husbands to the grocery store. The reason? Guys always come home with two of everything.
I am guilty of this reckless spending each time my wife pushes me out the door with a list. Mind you, a wife's grocery list is never specific; there are no numbers anywhere on the paper. My wife never writes that she needs "four tomatoes." Instead, she just scrawls "tomatoes."
And this is where the problems begin.
What husband hasn't returned with bags full of groceries and his nose proudly in the air because, yes, he found every single item -- only to see a disgusted look on his wife's face as she unpacks the goods. The inevitable inquisition follows.
"You bought ONE box of tortellini?"
"Yes, the list said 'tortellini.' There it is."
"How am I supposed to make a tortellini salad with one box? Should I just put a note on the bowl that says, 'No more than three noodles please?'"
"I'm sorry, I did not have average tortellini consumption figures at my disposal."
And with that, the husband sighs heavily, grabs his car keys and returns to the store to buy another box, along with a case of beer since we can NEVER have too much of that item in the house.
Recently we hosted a party for 11 adults and five children. The menu -- and the list -- consisted of hamburgers and Italian sausage. Again, no specific numbers, just the items. Armed with those requests, I ventured to the local grocery store determined to get the most and spend the least.
Once inside, I was confounded by questions that invariably pop into my head when seeing the different numerical packaging of each item. Italian sausage comes in packages of eight, while the sausage rolls I selected are six to a bag. A pound of ground beef should make four hamburgers, but what would I do with the remaining buns in the six-bun package? To make things equal, I'd need 3 pounds of ground beef and two packages of buns.
Then I tried to anticipate each guest's culinary preferences. If they all opted for sausage, would I have enough? If they were burger people, would I have to say, "Get in line first if you want one?" If two trains leave Boston traveling opposite directions at 40 miles per hour . . . OK, stop it!
Besides the ground beef, I returned with 24 sausages and rolls. When the party ended, we were left with enough food to invite everybody back the next morning and have a delicious burger and sausage breakfast. But no tortellini salads; we ran out of that.
Maybe I should have gone to Costco. The "purchase two of everything just to be safe" rule never applies there because that would mean buying 6 pounds of salted cashews as opposed to a 3-pound container. Costco items weigh more than some newborns. I recently bought what passes for a "can" of Costco coffee and am confident I will not live to see its bottom.
Whichever candidate wins in November, I'm calling on him to appoint a grocery czar. Sex, race and ethnic heritage are immaterial; he or she simply needs to school the nation's wives in the finer arts of food demands and their other halves into not needlessly emptying the shelves of hot dogs. The savings will be astronomical.
Good thing. Some of those convention hats look awfully expensive.

One Against Three...and The Dog Makes Four is the blog of corporate stand-up comedian,author and nationally syndicated Tribune Media columnist Greg Schwem. Read how Greg survives in a family that includes his wife, two daughters and yes, a female dog. Hungry for more? Check out Greg's book, "Text Me If You're Breathing: Observations, Frustrations and Life Lessons From a Low Tech Dad" now available at your favorite on line or retail bookstore
Showing posts with label humor column. Show all posts
Showing posts with label humor column. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
My daughters WILL become actuaries
Originally posted by Tribune Media Services
COPYRIGHT © 2011 GREG SCHWEM DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC
I crept up behind my daughter as she sat at the kitchen table, slumped over her MacBook.
"What are you doing?" I asked.
"Facebooking."
I had no idea "Facebook" could be used as a verb. "Why are you on Facebook?"
"Because my homework's finished. That's the rule, right? I can Facebook after homework."
Suddenly "Facebook" had become an action verb. "Well, as long as you're on Facebook, why don't you join the actuarial science newsgroup? And check out the Actuarial Bookstore in Greenland, New Hampshire. It has a Facebook page, too."
"Dad, what are you talking about? What is actuarial science?"
I pulled up The Wall Street Journal on my iPad and thrust it in her face. "Read this article, 'From College Major to Career.'"
"How come?"
"So you won't be sitting around the house Facebooking in seven years."
Using 2010 census data, the world's leading business newspaper explored how various college majors fared in today's frightening job market. Actuarial science, commonly referred to as risk management in insurance and financial circles, received an unemployment rating of zero percent. Still, it was the 150th most popular major. Business management and administration topped the popularity list, in spite of the 6 percent unemployment rate.
The low ranking for the actuarial profession didn't surprise me. I've met, for lack of a better phrase, actual actuaries and there is truth to the joke: How do you tell an introverted actuary from an extroverted actuary? Answer? The extroverted actuary looks at YOUR shoes when he talks to you.
Other majors that assured instant employment included geophysical engineering and astrophysics, according to the article.
"Pick one," I said.
"Dad, I'm 14. Haven't you said that if I work hard enough, I can be whatever I want to be?"
"Yes, as long as it doesn't involve library science or clinical psychology," I said, pointing to the respective 15 and 19.5 percent unemployment rates for those majors. The clinical psychology statistics make no sense. Surely our nation has a demand for experts to counsel recent college grads who spent four years and thousands of dollars preparing for a career in military technologies, only to realize the profession has a 10.9 percent unemployment rating and their first job application may come from Starbucks instead of the State Department.
My daughter grabbed the iPad and began scrolling. "I guess Miscellaneous Fine Arts (16.2 percent) is out?"
"Absolutely. Who is going to hire somebody that walks into an interview and says, 'I'm really good at doing miscellaneous stuff, particularly if it's art-related.'"
"Didn't you want to be an astronomer when you grew up?"
"Yes and I should have gone with my gut. Look here. Zero percent of astronomers are unemployed."
"Where does stand-up comedian fall on this list?" she said, referring to the vocation I have held for the past 22 years.
"Comedians are self-employed. If you choose a career on this list, you'll be working for somebody."
"So maybe I should start my own business. Then we wouldn't be having this conversation."
"Great idea! You could be a self-employed actuary. The best of both worlds!"
"Dad, isn't it a little early for you to be steering me towards a particular career? I mean, mom just had 'The Talk' with me two years ago."
"How did that go?"
"She got most of it right."
"Honey, I just don't want you to major in something that isn't going to bear fruit once you're out of college. You don't want to be like that kid down the street who graduated last year and still can't find a job. What was his major?"
"Medieval history."
"Right. Who's going to hire him? Harry Potter?"
"Here's one with a zero percent unemployment rate. School student counseling."
"Now that's perfect! You'd be good at that. Think how rewarding it would be to give advice to students. What's the first thing you would tell them?"
"When your Dad approaches you with an iPad, run."
COPYRIGHT © 2011 GREG SCHWEM DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC
I crept up behind my daughter as she sat at the kitchen table, slumped over her MacBook.
"What are you doing?" I asked.
"Facebooking."
I had no idea "Facebook" could be used as a verb. "Why are you on Facebook?"
"Because my homework's finished. That's the rule, right? I can Facebook after homework."
Suddenly "Facebook" had become an action verb. "Well, as long as you're on Facebook, why don't you join the actuarial science newsgroup? And check out the Actuarial Bookstore in Greenland, New Hampshire. It has a Facebook page, too."
"Dad, what are you talking about? What is actuarial science?"
I pulled up The Wall Street Journal on my iPad and thrust it in her face. "Read this article, 'From College Major to Career.'"
"How come?"
"So you won't be sitting around the house Facebooking in seven years."
Using 2010 census data, the world's leading business newspaper explored how various college majors fared in today's frightening job market. Actuarial science, commonly referred to as risk management in insurance and financial circles, received an unemployment rating of zero percent. Still, it was the 150th most popular major. Business management and administration topped the popularity list, in spite of the 6 percent unemployment rate.
The low ranking for the actuarial profession didn't surprise me. I've met, for lack of a better phrase, actual actuaries and there is truth to the joke: How do you tell an introverted actuary from an extroverted actuary? Answer? The extroverted actuary looks at YOUR shoes when he talks to you.
Other majors that assured instant employment included geophysical engineering and astrophysics, according to the article.
"Pick one," I said.
"Dad, I'm 14. Haven't you said that if I work hard enough, I can be whatever I want to be?"
"Yes, as long as it doesn't involve library science or clinical psychology," I said, pointing to the respective 15 and 19.5 percent unemployment rates for those majors. The clinical psychology statistics make no sense. Surely our nation has a demand for experts to counsel recent college grads who spent four years and thousands of dollars preparing for a career in military technologies, only to realize the profession has a 10.9 percent unemployment rating and their first job application may come from Starbucks instead of the State Department.
My daughter grabbed the iPad and began scrolling. "I guess Miscellaneous Fine Arts (16.2 percent) is out?"
"Absolutely. Who is going to hire somebody that walks into an interview and says, 'I'm really good at doing miscellaneous stuff, particularly if it's art-related.'"
"Didn't you want to be an astronomer when you grew up?"
"Yes and I should have gone with my gut. Look here. Zero percent of astronomers are unemployed."
"Where does stand-up comedian fall on this list?" she said, referring to the vocation I have held for the past 22 years.
"Comedians are self-employed. If you choose a career on this list, you'll be working for somebody."
"So maybe I should start my own business. Then we wouldn't be having this conversation."
"Great idea! You could be a self-employed actuary. The best of both worlds!"
"Dad, isn't it a little early for you to be steering me towards a particular career? I mean, mom just had 'The Talk' with me two years ago."
"How did that go?"
"She got most of it right."
"Honey, I just don't want you to major in something that isn't going to bear fruit once you're out of college. You don't want to be like that kid down the street who graduated last year and still can't find a job. What was his major?"
"Medieval history."
"Right. Who's going to hire him? Harry Potter?"
"Here's one with a zero percent unemployment rate. School student counseling."
"Now that's perfect! You'd be good at that. Think how rewarding it would be to give advice to students. What's the first thing you would tell them?"
"When your Dad approaches you with an iPad, run."
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