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Good morning John; it's Friday.
This time last week, and this is a little hard to believe considering the weather we're
having here in Missoula right now, I was pulling out of Port Everglades on a beautiful, sunny
evening in a boat. And let's be honest, it wasn't really a boat. Technically, it was
a ship. More technically, it was a 150,000-ton, 240-foot tall, 1,111-foot long, 183-foot wide
floating luxury hotel with a climbing wall and a basketball court and mini-golf and a
Johnny Rocket's and four swimming pools and precariously placed hot tubs and several beautiful
performance venues and an arcade and a beautiful dining room and a casino and weird, big, red
dogs, and a mall, and a giant cake, and freaking ice skating rinks!
A ship that burns 8,000 gallons of fuel per hour, which it uses not just to power the
engines, but to distill sea water for us to surf on, power over a dozen elevators, keep
the ice cold and the hot tubs hot.
While environmentalist Hank is rebelling against the very existence of this thing, scientist
Hank wants to know, how does this work?! How on earth was it ever even created in the first
place? The massive technological and logistical inputs required to keep it moving and floating
and safe and happy. The goal, in fact, seemed to be for us to just completely forget that
we were on a ship at all, best to just imagine that you're in a quite nice entertainment
venue that just happens to be experiencing the longest, most laid-back earthquake of
all time.
So I was on this ship for the fourth annual JoCo Cruise Crazy. a floating nerd adventure
featuring semi-celebrity nerds like John Hodgman, Peter Sagal, John Scalzi, Pomplamoose, Molly
Lewis, the Doubleclicks, Paul and Storm, Paul F. Tompkins, Grant Imahara, Wil Wheaton, me,
and, of course, Jonathan Coulton, the JoCo of JoCo Cruise Crazy.
It was pretty clear from day one that the biggest advantage of being on this cruise
was not all the luxury amenities and not the free room service and not never being more
than twelve feet away from a hot tub; it was being locked on a boat with cool people, with
no escape except for watery oblivion!
Every day, John Hodgman sat in a hot tub for two hours, answering questions; I got exposed
to talents I never knew existed, got to meet my idols, got to hang out with a bunch of
awesome nerdfighters. And that's what all the people on the cruise were there for. Yeah,
we stopped in Caribbean islands and swam with sting rays and snorkled and went on the longest
zipline over water in the world and saw this goat chewing cud on a grave in Jamaica and,
yes, those were cool experiences, but it occurs to me that the real value of this somewhat
monstrous, technological marvel, is to give us a kind of ancient, simplified life.
A small community where you can walk everywhere, seeing the same people every day, people that
share your values and interests and passions and experiences. A place to be foolish and
comfortable and joyful and proud, and somehow, these days, we require an awful lot of complexity
to get back to simplicity.
Now, I know that cities are valuable and that the internet is lovely, and we can't live
that sort of insular life everyday, but, I'll tell you what, six days didn't even feel like
long enough. Does it have to be on a boat that consumes a gallon of gas every twelve
feet? Maybe not, but I don't know how else to pull it off. I will be thinking about that
though. I'll also be thinking about sunshine, because this is a bunch of balls. John, I'll-
oh my god. I can't even go there. This is just a lake now.
John, I'll see you on Tuesday.