Week 733: Just Drop It, Okay?


I-am-I Beach: The last resort spot for egotists.

BS-ervation: A stupid platitude, like "It's not whether you win or
lose, but how you play the game."

After reading humorist Gene Weingarten's online chat on
washingtonpost.com, in which the Empress wrote in about "jokes, humorous
bservations, etc.," Indefatigable Loser Peter Metrinko was inspired to
come up with this week's neologism contest.

This week: Drop the first letter from an actual word or term to make a
new word or term, and define it.Its use in a hilarious sentence is
also welcome. The new word may not be a well-known existing word. This
contest has enormous scope; it'll be very easy to come up with something
or other. So edit yourself: Send no more than 25 entries.

Winner gets the Inker, the official Style Invitational trophy. Second
place receives the "No Plot? No Problem! Novel Writing Kit," a
book-shaped box containing such keys to literary eminence as "Daily
Noveling Briefs" as well as "motivational materials, pop-talking letters
and commitment coupons."

Other runners-up win their choice of a coveted Style Invitational Loser
T-shirt or yearned-for Loser Mug. Honorable Mentions (or whatever
they're called that week) get one of the lusted-after Style Invitational
Magnets. One prize per entrant per week. Send your entries by e-mail to
losers@washpost.com or by fax to 202-334-4312. Deadline is Monday, Oct.
8. Put "Week 733" in the subject line of your e-mail, or it risks being
ignored as spam. Include your name, postal address and phone number with
your entry. Contests are judged on the basis of humor and originality.
All entries become the property of The Washington Post. Entries may be
edited for taste or content. Results will be published Oct. 27. No
purchase required for entry. Employees of The Washington Post, and their
immediate relatives, are not eligible for prizes. Pseudonymous entries
will be disqualified. The revised title for next week's contest is by
Tom Witte of Montgomery Village. This week's Honorable Mentions name is
by Dave Prevar of Annapolis.

Report From Week 729, in which we asked you to take a sentence from The Post and "translate"
it into "plain English".

A bunch of entries cited one or another
verbose BS-ervation (see This Week's Contest) meant to assure the
populace about progress in Iraq, security measures, etc., and
translated it as "We're doomed."

4. (Job posting) The mission of the Office of the Chief Financial
Officer (OCFO) is to enhance the financial stability, accountability and
integrity of the Government of the District of Columbia.

Plain English Version: Good morning, Mr. Phelps . . .

(Brendan Beary, Great Mills)

3. "It was the one of the most different halves of football I've ever
been around."

PE: "It's too soon after the game for me to talk good again yet."

(Russell Beland, Springfield)

2. the winner of the stationery made of Panda Poo paper:

"Our overall evaluation is that real progress has been achieved," Jones
told the senators, and then he qualified that judgment with words such
as "uneven," "unsatisfactory," "overly sectarian" and "failed."

PE: "After uneven, unsatisfactory and overly sectarian progress, our
overall evaluation is that failure has been achieved."

(Kevin Dopart, Washington)

And the Winner of the Inker

"If the kind of success we are now seeing continues, it will be
possible to maintain the same level of security with fewer American
forces," Bush said.

PE: "Sure, maintaining the level of 'insanely dangerous' takes almost
no troops at all."

(Russ Taylor, Vienna)

More To-the-Point Conversions

Iraq Study Groupreport: "Good policy is difficult to make when
information is systematically collected in a way that minimizes its
discrepancy with policy goals."

PE: "Bush cooks the books."

(Kevin Dopart; Ned Stone, Atlanta)

FREE RAZRPHONES!

PE: EXPENSIVE SERVICE AGREEMENTS!

(Ira Allen, Bethesda)

"The economy was in strong condition going into the recent period of
volatility, and while certain sectors like housing are undergoing a
transition, overall economic fundamentals remain solid."

PE: "The poo hasn't hit the fan -- yet."

(Susan Shapiro, Annapolis)

"And -- let's be honest here -- "

PE: "And -- let me sugarcoat this a little less than usual -- "

(Russell Beland)

Larry has been seeing "Carrie" for five years, and I don't want to hurt
Larry or our friendship.

PE: You got any tips on how to McQuickie my friend's squeeze without
getting caught?

(Lawrence McGuire, Waldorf)

British regulators said yesterday that they are prepared to allow the
creation of embryos that are part human and part animal for use in
medical experiments.

PE: Evolution has come to a spork in the road.

(Phil Frankenfeld, Washington)

"I certainly want to win the gold, and in Beijingalso." -- Chinese
gymnastics coach Lu Shanzhen

PE: "I certainly want to win the gold, and not die."

(Chris Doyle, Ponder, Tex.)

"To the extent that we can move quickly to denuclearization, we can
move quickly to normalization."

PE: "This damn well better work."

(Mae Scanlan, Washington)

Photos become property of The Washington Post, which may edit, publish,
distribute or republish them in any form.

PE: We can Photoshopyou right out of your skivvies.

(Brendan Beary)

Fred Thompson: "I know that reform is possible in Washington because
I have seen it done."

PE: "I've never actually managed to reform anything myself."

(Russell Beland)

"Seeks intelligent, civilized man, 60+ for lasting friendship."

PE: "Is hopelessly delusional."

(Kevin Dopart)


PE: Granderson had a historic night with his 20th "date."

(Kevin Dopart; Clifford Fishman, Rockville)

Story about a toy recall: The items are small and "don't pose a lead
poisoning risk in themselves."

PE: They only pose a lead poisoning risk when in a child. (Jay
Shuck, Minneapolis)

Sen. Mitch McConnell: "It is my hope [Larry Craig] will be
remembered not for this but for his three decades of dedicated public
service."

PE: He will be remembered for three decades of public services.

(Howard Walderman, Columbia)

Fill in the blank spaces in the grid so that every vertical column,
every horizontal row and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9,
without repeating any.

PE: Fill in the blank spaces until you realized you went wrong a long
time ago, then swear and throw the damn thing away.

(Brendan Beary)

Entries may be edited for taste or content.

PE: We are funnier and more sophisticated than you are.

(Beverley Sharp, Washington)

Complete auto care starts with our $17.99 oil change.

PE: For only $17.99, we'll tell you that you need new shocks, struts,
brakes, exhaust system, valve cover gaskets, water pump, CV joints,
wiper blades and, of course, tires.

(Russ Taylor)

Anti-Invitationals -- sugarcoated interpretations of actual plain
speaking:

FEMAstopped testing occupied trailers after March 2006, when it
initially discovered formaldehyde levels that were 75 times the
U.S.-recommended safety threshold for workplaces.

PE: "We've found no additional evidence of elevated formaldehyde in the
last 18 months," FEMA officials said.

(Russ Taylor)

The New York Timesand other newspapers vied with trash-TV talk shows
hosted by the likes of CNN's Nancy Grace, a biased
wacko-feminist, and MSNBC's Joe Scarborough, a right-wing
blowhard, in a race to the journalistic bottom.

PE: A robust exchange of ideas emerged from a diverse mix of media
sources.

(Russell Beland)

Next Week: Time-Wastes for Everyman, or Even Trivialer Pursuits