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Cartoons and More From John X. Ambrosavage


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Sir Alexander Korda’s Guide to Full Employment
(or How I learned to Stop Worrying and Start Spending)

by John X. Ambrosavage

The day before I left for Paris, my employers presented me with a bon-voyage present: a pink slip. They had gathered amongst themselves and decide it would be wrong to allow me to depart on a European excursion with the delusion that I would have a job when I returned. Actually, it was rather considerate, really, in a sick and twisted manner….

So, a day later I found myself thinking about unemployment as I sat on the balcony outside of my suite of rooms at the Hotel Home Latin in Paris’ bustling Latin Quarter. While sipping a Beaujolais from one of the hotel’s elegant plastic cups, I thought, "This makes sense: vacationing in one the world’s most expensive cities when I don’t have a job!"

It wasn’t until I returned to the Unites States, while reading a copy of Michael Korda’s Charmed Lives, that I discovered it did make sense. Charmed Lives is a family chronicle of Sir Alexander Korda, a Hungarian immigrant who rose from humble origins to the heights of movie moguldom, founding London Films and becoming a Knight of the Realm.

Alexander Korda, it was said, was a man so charming he could talk money out of an empty safe. Here is what Korda said to do when entering a town penniless and with no prospects (i.e. unemployed): rent the biggest suite in the best hotel, dine in the best restaurants, tip lavishly and travel by limousine, do this and people will give you money! And people did! During the height of World War II, during the blackout of London, Korda's’ hotel suite burned as brightly as an ocean liner in a vast and darkened sea. Caviar was consumed, champagne flowed, cigars burned brightly, gay laughter echoed down bleak, empty, war-torn streets.

Sir Alexander Korda helped me realize my job hunting strategy was all wrong. People do not give jobs and money to people who need jobs and money; people give jobs and money to people who have jobs and money! Therefore, I have thrown out What Color is Your Parachute and am now using Charmed Lives as my job-hunting manual.

Following the book’s advice, I have sublet my cheesy U-District studio apartment and am writing this article from the Cascade Suite of the Olympic Four Seasons Hotel, one of Seattle’s finest! All around me in the hushed silence is the crisp crackling of serious loot! The room-service waiter has just served me my afternoon martini. My travel agent has just confirmed my rooms for my return to the fabulous Hotel Home Latin in Paris. My parents have just called wondering if I have yet to find work. "Oh, please," I say, laugh politely and hang up.

Having successfully rented one of the most luxurious hotel suites in Seattle, I consult the manual for the next move in my job search. Of course! Dinner in one of Seattle’s finest restaurant, traveling there by limousine. The limousine service is easy to take care of; dozens are listed in the Yellow Pages. The "finest" restaurant is a little trickier. Having foolishly always limited my lifestyle to my income, I have no clear idea as to what one of Seattle’s finest restaurants might be. After making a few discreet phone calls I settle on Palisades as the sort of joint where one might drop a hundred bucks before hors d’oeuvres are served, virtually assuring access to bored, half-tanked international financiers!

While refilling my glass from the quaint cut-glass decanter the room-service waiter has left for me, there is a knock at the door. It is, I think, someone who wishes to give me money. Actually, it is a representative from MasterCard, somewhat concerned about my rather extensive, rather expensive, rather overdue account. I tip him lavishly and he goes away.

I take my glass and wander over to one of my suite’s many floor-to-ceiling leaded glass windows. Any city looks different when viewed through the windows of a luxury hotel. As seen through the windows of the Cascade Suite, Seattle looks far different from the congested, unaffordable, stressed-out ‘burg I have grown used to. Now Seattle looks as exotic as London or Rome and shimmers with the promise of high adventure and fabulous wealth always offered by the mythical Emerald City.

I raise my glass and toast my new hero, my mentor, my guide to full employment, Sir Alexander Korda.

What color is my parachute?

Green. Very green.

John Ambrosavage Wins Toonie Award

"Working Stiff" an animated film by Pandemonium Online cartoonist, John Ambrosavage, and his brother Joe, will be featured at the SXSW Music Festival.

Election 2000

Your Where's My Slice? Cartoons Menu:

Main Ambrotoon Page

Sir Alexander Korda's Guide to Full Employment

The Scotch Man Ponders

Bag Lady Blues and No Virginia, There is No Rent Control

Just Hangin' Around

Elvis and the Shrink

Mother Earth's Miranda Rights

"This Meal has been genetically altered..."

The Trouble With Pondering

Attorney Fees

When Good People Stop to Ponder

When Good Men Do Nothing

How Paradise Was Really Lost

The Work Week In Review

Jesus Heals a Grouch

Voyeur Watching TV

Where Are You Going?

The Universal Symbol of Life

Ken Starr Subpoenas Santy-Claus

Santa Belly Jelly

The Early Santa

The Angel and the General

The Angel and the Lawyer

A UPC Symbol Rises in the East

Three Wise Men, One Waitress

 

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