1 hour and 16 min remaining
I’m sitting at my friends’ house. We’re watching an earth-based TV show. I
think it’s called Life? It’s close-ups of creatures and broad sweeping
landscapes. It’s Planet Earth with a different
name.
Currently it’s documenting the natural life cycle of
snakes. I’ve been working on my computer
and not quite paying attention. I hear
comments from my friends like, “I’m constantly at war with my wiener!” and, “Holy
shit look at THAT snake sex!”
1 hour and 3 minutes remaining.
I open up a document to write this blog, having meant to
spend a few intentional hours composing something of substance, but my workday
was long and my subsequent wind-down-friend-hang slash post-work-work-session
has fed me too many vodkas to coherently construct anything meaningful.
I’ve just spent a few hours combing through footage to
select the perfect beauty-shots and fun-focused-action shots from the latest
commercial shoot on which I worked to appease the producers’ anxious demands. I'm uploading the stills to send to those powers that be.
59 minutes remaining, my Google Drive upload status bar
tells me.
I suddenly hear, “What the fuck is that?!”
I look up at the screen and see a giant bullfrog’s eyes
explode out through the mud that it was hiding under. It’s mating season, the show informs us.
Apparently male bullfrogs are quite competitive and aggressively
attack and dominate each other in order to win their chance at mating with a
female.
“It’s like the Fast and the Furious but with frogs!” Doug
exclaims, as the camera displays low-angle-slow-motion-close-ups of frog legs
whipping through the air, water fan-faring in its wake as if to punctuate the
aggressor’s victory over competitor and nature.
I’ve missed some of the video in documenting this.
Somehow, the males have not all destroyed each other and a
few alphas have managed to impregnate some females. There are tadpoles in abundance.
A high camera angle with a wide lens accentuates the overwhelming
amount of tadpoles in an oppressive display of LIFE.
The narrator states, “One male stays behind—“
Before he can finish his sentence, Doug definitively claims,
“That would be me!” his arms crossed in resolute-highness.
“—to watch over his
own and all else’s offspring,” the narrator finishes.
I perk up for the joke, “To watch over your offspring?!”
“Nevermind,” Doug concedes.
We giggle.
The edit shifts from stately imagery of this species-specific
Father Figure to one of the blazing sun in a cloudless sky. The narrator continues, “The sun comes out,
and it shrinks the water to a sinkhole pool.
The tadpoles might be stranded.”
Whatever body of water they were inhabiting – the specifics
of the locale are lost on me and my editing – are shrinking before our
time-lapse-documenting eyes.
There are two separate pools of water. One houses the millions of sperm-swimming
tadpoles (why do sperm look like tadpoles, when tadpoles have already been
inseminated and will grow into full frogs?!), the other abundant pool houses
the guardian bullfrog.
The guardian bullfrog sits contentedly in his abundant pool,
but then hops over to stand watch over the evaporating pool containing his
species’ dying young.
“Look at that Doug,” I say, continuing the joke.
“Oh man, how do I get more water over there?” Doug plays
along. “I don’t know. I give up.
I’m gonna get drunk.”
The bullfrog starts to dig its legs through the mud to save
its future, funneling a channel between the two water sources.
There’s an extreme closeup of the mud squelching over and
through the bullfrog’s legs, as he messily continues to flail about.
Eventually there’s a small irrigation connecting the two
pools.
“They’re safe because of Doug’s balls!” Steve proclaims
victoriously!
The Planet Earth show continues. I’ve stopped paying attention in order to
write this. Brian just left to go to
Lost Bar. Danielle is long since in bed,
post our Franco’s feast.
We for a few minutes narrate the animals’ thoughts, making
side jokes and what-if statements about the bar where we all work.
13 minutes remaining.
“Giant straw-colored fruit bats inhabit the Congo, their
wings nearly a meter across.”
Doug falls asleep, and Steve feels uncomfortable staying
while our hosts sleep and disperse.
I revisit the earlier paragraphs of this post, refining and
regretting.
2 minutes left to finish uploading.
“In late October every year the fruit-bats set off across
the Canopy.”
A Danielle stirs upstairs.
1 minute.
Doug stirs as Steve whispers a sweet goodbye.
Less than a minute left.
I promise Doug I’ll leave soon. He insists I’m welcome as long as I want.
“Flocks of hundred become thousands and tens of thousands become
hundreds of thousands.”
63 uploads complete.
“How they know when and where to travel is a mystery.”
I pack up my computer, never learning the mystery of fruit-bat travel habits.