Quarterly projections

When I was a kid, my

mom got me a t-shirt

with a big S on it.

***

Excited, I put it on,

ran outside and spent

the sum of the

afternoon pretending I

was the Samsung corp.

***

“One VCR coming up!”

I’d say, making a sale.

***

When the mailman came,

I pretended to type up

a service agreement.

***

“One moment, please”

I said,

tap, tap, tapping away at

my make-believe typewriter,

stamping it,

signing both copies,

handing him his.

***

“And if there

are any problems,

you can reach me

at this number,

day or night,” I said,

pointing to

the number six.

***

When my mom heard this,

she came outside and

explained that, actually

the “S” on the t-shirt

stood for Superman, not Samsung.

***

“Ahh, Superman,” I said,

leaning back in my chair,

feet up on the desk.

“I think I may have to

loop my supervisor in on this.”

.


Keep circulating the URL

20 thoughts on “Quarterly projections

  1. I was more of a Sanyo kid myself.

    .

    (George, I was thinking of you last week as I read a delightful collection of stories by Shaun Tan. It’s called Tales From Outer Suburbia and if you can get hold of a copy I’m certain you would enjoy it greatly. The illustrations are fab too.)

    Liked by 1 person

    • Truth be told, I’m not sure Samsung was that big in the era this is set. But, while Sanyo is good, Samsung is somehow funnier. Sony is not funny at all. And as for Tales from Outer Suburbia, I just ordered it. Thanks, Bruce.

      Like

    • His enemies call him a pig, but he is much more than that. He is also salt, water, sugar, potato starch, and sodium nitrite. Spam Man is everywhere and he need not knock as he always has his own key. Thanks, Pam!

      Liked by 1 person

      • His code name is Maps—which is why he is known as the ubiquitous hero of not for an age, but for all time. Like Shakespeare (Jonson got the quote wrong), he is found everywhere.

        Liked by 1 person

    • You think I am older than the Samsung Corp? Oh woe is me, Janny! That said, Samsung moved into electronics in 1969 and that, more or less, fits my tale. So, yeh, pretty old, I reckon. Thanks, Janny!

      Like

Leave a reply to freelancewriterjannyc Cancel reply