With much of the South either bracing for or fucked up by hurricane damage, the president suffering from historically low approval ratings, and the daily civilian death toll from Iraq taking on Halo proportions, a bruised nation turned its hopes to Apple’s latest portable music player this week.
“We fully expect he Nano to change the way we live our lives just as much as the original iPod did back in 1997,” Apple founder Steve Jobs announced at a recent press conference, possibly referring to how additional profits for Apple could change his lifestyle for the better. Unfortunately, no one present had a microphone with which to argue or pose questions of semantics. “Besides, I know you’ve all got shit else going right in your lives right now, so fork over the cash already.”
Disaffected Americans from across the iPod-affording spectrum licked their chops in anticipation of the Nano, which is just like the last iPod, except smaller and more expensive.
“This year has really been a shit biscuit,” lamented Syracuse sophomore Sean Hannesy. “But I’m pretty confident that my spending $250 on an MP3 player is going to turn things around.”
The release of the Nano comes not a moment too soon for a worn-out American public. With the Catholic Church in icky disarray, misogynistic gangsta rap topping the charts, and the recent news that California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will seek re-election, many have been searching desperately for a money-spending distraction.
Hollywood has provided no solace, with a disappointing batch of summer movies—even by summer movie standards—leading to another terrible box office slump that has limited studio profits to the mere billions. Even sadder, American audiences have been robbed of one of their most time-honored means of avoiding awareness of the world around them.
“I like to call it The Summer of Gigli,” explained Paramount executive Paul Walters. “I know that came out last year, but this summer really was that bad. It didn’t even have a movie notable enough for use in a clever name.”
Meanwhile, 500 Iraqi civilians were blown up by a different group of Iraqi civilians on Saturday, for reasons incomprehensible to white people.
Somehow even more depressing, some asshole in New York this week set the record for consecutive hours of TV-watching, only to have his record rescinded by Guinness when it was discovered he was just watching the first season of Lost on DVD.
“Thank God Apple came out with another iPod,” sighed tech writer William Pepper. “Otherwise, this could have been a terrible year for everyone. Now it’s just terrible for the poor, liberals, Southerners, Iraqis, movie buffs, music fans, Catholics, Sony, Californians, the Amish, steroid-abusing ballplayers, environmentalists, true conservatives, Cubs fans, animals of all kinds and children. I’m probably forgetting somebody. But it’s been a bitchin’ year for iPod fans, that’s my point.”