Chief Editor’s Note

BTSB

Welcome to the jungle! (I’m sorry, I just had to)

It is time to write my first chief editor’s note and suddenly I’ve got nothing to say (people who know me know this to be rare). I have thought about writing this for quite some time now; what I would like to promise, the super magnificent awesome good time articles we are going to publish this year, a new logo, more illustrations and so on…

We live in a world of promises. The presidential election is circling around us at the moment and we constantly hear promises from our candidates, commercials are filled with somewhat empty promises, which we buy simultaneously with the product. And we promise things to ourselves: the New Year was the golden opportunity for this. Making promises is sometimes too easy.

But promises are forgettable and they can be broken. Actions however stay and are visible. So instead of making promises, I want to be part of the future works which I know Better Than Sliced Bread is completely capable of making. I see great potential in our group of tremendous editors, and the co-working with BTSB’s another chief editor Patrik has so far been brony awesome.  I also know that there are promising new writers just waiting to be discovered!

So I’m looking forward this year with great expectations and I hope that you, dear reader, are too!

Kaisa Leino

Chief Editor

A Seasonal Greeting From Better Than Sliced Bread

BTSB

The year is almost over and it is time for the staff of Better Than Sliced Bread to bid you a happy holiday season and a happy coming year!

This year was definitely a defining one for BTSB. Not only did we indoctrinate a number of new editors into our staff, but we also took up a more rigorous schedule for releases. The staff of BTSB is going to keep on trying to improve upon the zine. While our other main editor, Niko Pasanen, is leaving his position, he will be undoubtedly delighting us with poetry in the coming months to help us brave our way through the rigors of an academic life.

Taking the place of Niko Pasanen as BTSB’s other main editor is Kaisa Leino, a prolific and active contributor to BTSB for well over a year now and one whose head is filled with great visions of a brighter future for BTSB.

With all that said, we look forward to the next year of BTSB and wish you all happy holidays of whichever religious/sacrilegious denomination you may belong to!

Forever yours,

Patrik Renholm

Editor in Chief of BTSB

Announcement: Better Than Sliced Bread Logo Competition

BTSB

Greetings and welcome again to another issue of Better Than Sliced Bread! We have, yet again, a great issue, filled with great articles from both our regular editorial staff but also from a number of keen new contributors. This feels like an appropriate way to start a new academic year.

Now, if I may, I would like to divert your attention to the logo of Better Than Sliced Bread. It’s there in the upper left corner of the page.

This one.

Now, this logo has proudly served Better Than Sliced Bread for many years. However, all good things must eventually come to an end and thus it feels appropriate that the good old logo be let into retirement gracefully.
As we say goodbye to the old logo we are also opening a search for a new logo for Better Than Sliced Bread and nothing feels more appropriate than a good old competition! Therefore, from this point forward Better Than Sliced Bread will be accepting submissions for a new logo from you, our dear readers.
To take part in the competition you must only design a logo, find a way to get it on your computer, save it as an image file (the file extensions .jpg, .jpeg, .jpe and .png are accepted) and fire it away at yours truly, patrik.renholm(at)helsinki.fi! Please use the subject line “BTSB Logo Competition Submission” to make it easier for me to sort through all the logos.
You have until the end of November to send in your submissions. The deadline is wednesday the 30th of November, after which the logos will be put under close scrutiny by a panel of expert judges (i.e. the editorial staff of Better Than Sliced Bread) and voted on. In the unlikely event of there being a draw between two or more logos we will set up an open ballot for our dear readers to take part in.
If your logo does get chosen, not only will you gain bragging rights, but a number of complimentary overall patches based on your design AND a gift voucher allowing for a seat at SUB’s annual anniversary dinner party next spring for but half the regular price!
So, get out your pens and other drawing equipment and get working! This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to put a lasting mark on the world’s premier webzine of the students of English philology at the University of Helsinki!
And now for the necessary statements from our expert lawyers:
Only one submission per contestant. In the event of more than one submissions being sent the judges will only consider the last one sent. Better Than Sliced Bread reserves all rights to the use of the winning logo. All logos submitted may appear in Better Than Sliced Bread for purposes of showcasing the different submissions.

We are BTSB!

BTSB

Without further ado, in alphabetical order, the people who make Better Than Sliced Bread happen each and every month:

Kerttu Kaikkonen

Kerttu is a 21-year-old student who has no clue of what she would like to do when she graduates (if she ever does). At the moment, she is on exchange at Edinburgh University (YAY!) and is doing important work as the foreign correspondent for BTSB reporting life from the United Kingdom in her monthly article during the Autumn semester. Kerttu is interested in many things, both academically as well as otherwise. Among other things, Kerttu does horseback riding, agility with her dog, and consumes a lot of vampire literature. Random fact: she is bored very easily.

Pilvi Kirppu

Pilvi is a writer with a lot of potential. So much, in fact, that she has been saving that potential for nine months in order to write such wonderful, mind-blowing articles about the most fascinating topics that can only be created in the careful process of slow contemplation. Pilvi may have also been slightly clueless about what to write about during these nine months, but prefers the former explanation. She is, after all, an artist. And as we know, you never rush one. Other facts we know about Pilvi: she adores music, Pokémon, fantasy & sci-fi, rpgs, and her crazy puppy Labrador named Zorlag.

Kaisa Leino

Kaisa is a third-year student, born in Kruununhaka, Helsinki. Kaisa has written BTSB stuff for a couple of years and loves it! She is also very interested in developing the webzine even more awesomener (sure it’s a word)! Kaisa also has her own comic blog (kitty.sarjakuvablogit.com) and draws some strip comics to BTSB as well. She has a very healthy obsession with Batman and dinosaurs.

Kristiina Nieminen

Kristiina Nieminen is a third-year-student who hails from Kajaani, a town of around 40,000 people in the north. She has been writing for BTSB for about two years on a regular basis. In her articles, she has mostly stayed on light-hearted subjects, but this year she hopes to venture into more academic topics. Close to her heart are things such as literature, good and bad puns, animals, music, dancing, movies and long walks on the beach. Sometimes a tad shy, she takes her time warming to new people and things. When she grows up, she’d like to do something which would allow her to write and read a lot. Although, she wouldn’t mind sitting on a mound of sand in the Kalahari, watching meerkats.

Niko Pasanen

Niko has been known as a pessimistic little troll for most of his life. This fall he finally became a man and left his freshman-status behind him and now he has been working hard(ish) to see the positive side in all the annoying stuff happening around him. This shows in his writing mainly as the overuse of the word “awesome”, mostly in places where he would have used something like “goddamn” before, like in the sentence “awesome elderly people spending hours in the grocery store queue with their awesome stories”.

Patrik Renholm

Patrik is Better Than Sliced Bread’s editor in chief (a title of his devising) and is thus in charge of most of the dirty work that goes into keeping up the webzine. When he is not lamenting his nonexistent skills at php-editing and trying to keep the zine afloat he enjoys listening to music, mostly of the post-punk, lo-fi and minimal wave variety, and plays bass and makes squeaky noises in a band that is so obscure it might as well be nonexistent. When he does write articles for the magazine they are usually in bad taste and full of really terrible attempts at witticism.

Esko Suoranta

Esko is a fifth-year student with a habit of whipping things up an hour before the BTSB deadline. Mostly, his writing has concentrated on science (i.e. dinosaurs) and pop music (i.e. Judas Priest), but there’s an useful article or two around there somewhere as well. Sometimes, he tries to write something funny, or “humorous”, often to no avail. Further, Mr. Suoranta is an expert on the literary Gothic, specializing in the notion of “beauteous orbs”. In January, he’ll become BTSB’s foreign correspondant in an undisclosed location in the United States.

Editorial: Greetings, Mortals!

BTSB

A brand spanking new Better Than Sliced Bread is here: not only have we recently updated the appearance of our website to look ever so slightly less internet 1.0 than before, but we’ve also got copious amounts of new features and stuff coming this year. For now, however, let’s focus on the things at hand: many of you reading this right now are (hopefully) new freshmen of English philology, sent here at the urging of your benevolent tutors. Surely you must be wondering what Better Than Sliced Bread is.

Well, Better Than Sliced Bread is, to put it simply, SUB’s very own webzine, run by students of English philology for students of English philology. At the moment BTSB’s editorial staff consists of some half a dozen regular editors and a number of contributors who contribute on a less regular basis. BTSB is a general interests magazine with no focus beyond what is relevant to the interests of students of English philology. Therefore, on this website you may find articles on such a wide variety of subjects as cars, superheroes, music, literature, language and, of course, dinosaurs. If you consider yourself an intrepid reporter or a budding prosaist, do contact us and watch the SUB mailing list for BTSB-related spam!

Within these past two years, with me essentially in charge of the magazine, BTSB has striven to become even more relevant to the average student of English philology. This year we intend to make it happen in full force. Stay tuned! Oh, yeah, and welcome to English philology! It’s a pretty cool subject!

BTSB: Requesting Feedback

BTSB

We here at Better Than Sliced Bread take great pride in offering you the best in journalism by students of English Philology at the University of Helsinki. However, as it is our philosophy that there is always room for improvement, we are asking you, our dear reader, to submit your ideas and feedback to us so that we may further improve our magazine.

So, if you have suggestions about features, content or the focus of our magazine or other ideas for improving the magazine, you can either hit us in the comment section of this post (see below). You may submit your input either by your own name, under a clever pseudonym or anonymously.

If posting your feedback on a public forum is too much for you, contact yours truly at patrik.renholm@helsinki.fi!

Patrik Renholm
Editor in Chief

BTSB: Hobbies and Interests

BTSB

Everyone’s got one. Most people have more. They define who we are as people. They are the things that most matter to us. They are other things that merit extremely verbose statements that while having a certain measure of truth to them are actually empty in informational value.

Hobbies and interests. Such a broad subject for anyone to tackle, as there are as many varied interests as there are people. Some people listen to music, some people make music and yet others endlessly criticize other people’s music.  Some read, some write. Some can’t spell the the phrase sesquipedalian loquaciousness without consulting the dictionary. Some people would rather be playing Portal 2 right now. I am one of those people. I hear it’s a pretty good game.

Some people have already stopped reading this headline. So should you. You should go and read about what others enjoy, if that is what you enjoy. If not, maybe you should play some Portal 2 as well. I’m up for co-op.

Yours,
Editors and staff of Better Than Sliced Bread
Apologizing profusely for the fact that their editor can’t seem to get over how awesome Portal 2 is.

BTSB: Party All the Time

BTSB

The time for partying is at hand again. As SUB takes another leap forward and celebrates its conception with another annual dinner party, so does BTSB get in the festive mood and let its hair down.

As the old saying goes, studying hard calls for partying hard. The student life is filled with so much stress, uncertainty and hard thinking that on occasion it is only befitting that one should chillax with fellow academics. As the writers of BTSB are nothing less than paragons of academic achievement it goes without saying that we are also party animals par excellence. It is thus only appropriate that the members of our staff share with you our expertise on matters related to partying.

This issue has been written with thoughts towards partying hard in mind. It is our sincerest wish that you find material within these pages worth considering when next you choose to embark upon a quest to party.

Partying like it’s 1999,
BTSB staff

BTSB: Working From 9 to 5

BTSB

This year’s second issue of Better Than Sliced Bread comes at you with a rather heavy subject at hand: that of the eternal balancing between work and studies. Both of the two figure into the lives of most students: when you’re not studying towards a better future job you are working a job to make ends meet in order to fund a lifestyle necessary for any student. It is a sad reality, but for most students having a job isn’t a means of gaining luxury, it is a necessary evil.

The possibilities for employment for students of arts and humanities is an issue that has been on the forefront for past years and for good reason: in an economic climate as uncertain as it is (even with recent trends showing an upsurge in the economy) it is of utmost importance for people in our field to demonstrate initiative as far as getting ahead in working life and to prepare ourselves for a life of employment.

However, as our zine does not support such a somber view, we hope that we can briefly draw your thoughts away from the difficulty of working life and studies with this new issue of Better Than Sliced Bread. May your studies be filled with fortune and happiness.

Letters to the Editor, January 2011

BTSB

As a new feature each month, in the event that we have gotten any feedback, the staff of BTSB will answer questions that have been sent to us via email and try to address the issues raised therein. Onwards to our first email:

Hi Mr. Editor,

I’m not really replying to the Moving to Helsinki-thing, since I’m Helsinki born and
bread. But I was just wondering, is there any possibility to have a creative writing
section in the site, like poetry and short stories? Back in the day magazines used to
publish short pieces of fiction, and I wish they still did that more :)

Cheers,
Kaisa

Dear Kaisa,

Thank you for taking the time to write about this issue. Admittedly, our beloved webzine has seen a lack of fiction and poetry for quite some time now and we haven’t addressed this lack all that well. However, I would like to stress that just like before Better Than Sliced Bread is open to all kinds of submissions and this includes poems and short stories.

Also, you may find this and the following two issues more to your liking, as not only has our new editor Niko taken it upon himself to provide us with new poems each month, our old acquaintance Katariina Kottonen has submitted to us a trio of poems, the first of which you can find in this month’s issue.

So, to put all that in a nutshell, we are more than happy to publish any and all short stories and poems sent to us and you may see more poetry and prose in the future.

Yours truly,
Mr. Editor

No More Candy Cotton Castles

BTSB

A horrible nightmare woke me up in the middle of the night. In the dream I found myself sitting in a room full of people somewhere in Helsinki. Everybody was, for some reason, staring at some kind of a cipher written on a large screen on the wall. I couldn’t understand any of it. Then I heard the question ”who wants to be the editor of BTSB?” and suddenly felt someone or something grabbing my arm and raising it slowly towards the ceiling. It was some weird red-haired woman sitting next to me. After that a short applause followed and then… there was nothing more than darkness.

Now that I’ve become, more or less, a minion of the Dark Lord as BTSB’s new co-editor, I thought I should clarify a few things right off the bat. Judging by my first few pieces of input, someone might actually believe that I’m a genuinely nice guy who likes to write sugarcoated stories and poems about bunnie-wabbits living in castles made of bubblegum. Half of that is actually true. I do like writing, but I’m by no means a nice guy. Now that I actually have to write for BTSB continuously, and not only when I have something nice to say (which is 2 times a year), I’m going to have to unleash the pessimistic little troll that I really am. Just wanted to give everyone who doesn’t know me a little heads-up.

Having read some of the old captain Renholm’s works, I realise I will definitely bring something different to the table: first of all, I’m going to write poems, whether you dislike them or hate them. I also promise to write articles that are a bit more approachable, since my vocabulary and wits in general are still at the freshman level (what the hell does ”cultural consciousness” mean?). To make things clear, that’s the level when you don’t even know what epic means yet. So, those of you that are either stupid or partly illiterate, or those who just haven’t learned English yet might actually feel quite comfortable reading my grim prose.

As an ending to this ramble I would like to challenge each and every one of you, especially my fellow freshmen, to seriously consider whether you could spare a moment of your time to write about something close to your heart and make BTSB’s future editions even more awesome (I had to use the word somewhere!). I know there are several freshmen out there who actually enjoy writing and even have the time for it. If we all work together, perhaps some day a person we haven’t forced or bribed will intentionally find his way to the website, instead of just having horribly misspelled BBW in a google-search.

BTSB: Culture Schmulture

BTSB

For those of you who were not aware of it, the now traditional HUKU culture weeks arranged by Humanisticum took place this month. Many brilliant expressions of culture took place and it felt only natural for us to do a special issue on culture.

Writing a headline on a topic as broad as culture is a daunting task, since almost everything can be considered culture or forms of cultural expressions. When you could easily write about anything one finds that they really have nothing to write about. We could discuss the inherent badness of the Star Wars prequels and how calling them “not so bad” should be considered a crime on the level of murder, arson and not knowing how to match colours. We could discuss our western culture’s obsession with shock, terror and horror, which occasionally manifests as, to give an example from no one’s life in particular, us purchasing games which we have no hope of finishing simply because the first five minutes are too scary and some people just enjoy sleeping with their lights on, okay? We could even discuss the very definition of culture, a task so intimidating that it is better left to the philosophers.

Instead, we would like to let the material submitted by you do the talking and present to you an issue equal parts visually appealing and nice to read.

Yours truly,

BTSB’s Editor In Chief Patrik Renholm

BTSB: Never Fearing Deadlines

BTSB

As with any project that features tightly-enforced deadlines, the editors of BTSB will occasionally find themselves in a situation where the deadline is closing in and nothing has been done yet. This may or may not be one such occasion.

What is there for one to do when the deadline is closing in and there is not a single idea to take up? One could simply do nothing, hoping that the complete non-effort will go unnoticed by people. One may write something, whatever comes to one’s mind first. One may even choose to combine these seemingly incompatible ideas: write something that actually says nothing, such as a meta-textual analysis of deadlines when one is actually working on a deadline. The third option is by far the most sensible choice, as it frees the writer of the painful awareness of not having actually contributed anything to the discussion, but at the same time frees one of having to actually think deep about what one is writing.

With all that said, we present to you yet another issue of Better Than Sliced Bread, carefully crafted and no signs of sloppy writing apparent.

BTSB: A Refuge For the Tardy

BTSB

Since the March issue of BTSB revolves so heavily around time and the passing of it, it
seems only appropriate for it be coming out in April.

Lateness, as we all know, is the pleasure and privilege of students. It is with us in all aspects of our brief (or not-so-brief) student lives: we guiltily sneak into the backs of lecture halls in medias res, blush ever so slightly as we hand the overdue books to a disapproving librarian, sneak around the Department corridors like that creepy little midget in Mission: Impossible to turn papers in late.

As with all the pleasures in life, moderation is the key here. Letting things slide a bit every now and then is one thing, chucking your self-discipline altogether is another. Then again, there is the option of becoming That Person Who’s Always Late. You know, the one who gets invited places 15 to 30 minutes before everyone else, so that no one has to wait around for them. BTSB encourages occasional tardiness, but being late is a subtle art and there’s an etiquette: job interviews, first dates, movies theaters? Unacceptable. Parties? Expected. Nothing is more annoying than a guest who is right on time.

That being said, being constantly late is not an attractive quality in a person, but for us students it is a small luxury that we know is not going to be around forever. As our carefree youths slip from our grasps, being late becomes less and less acceptable. Most of us land jobs where staying up late, sleeping in and stretching deadlines will become a thing of the past. The luxury of running late should be relished, now, while we can.

Belatedly yours,

Maria Koistinen and Patrik Renholm
Editors

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BTSB: Branded

BTSB

If the staff of Better Than Sliced Bread were to choose four words that best describe BTSB the said words would be hand-picked for unity in sound and form, not only to strengthen the brand of BTSB but also to sate our love for alliteration and other sound devices that is so typical of us English majors. The words would thus be Intelligence, Integrity, Intuition and, er, Intonation, I guess.

BTSB’s brand is one built around the common ground between the majority of its writers and readers: being an English major. Now, no matter what you may think you know of English majors, they are a varied bunch and thus BTSB is representative of only a minority of people studying English in Finland. If one were to build a model English major in the vein of Dr. Victor Frankenstein based simply on the content of BTSB the said chimeric creature would have at its disposal the weapons of geekery, cars, dinosaurs and a smattering of English literature.

While this may have the unforeseen effect of making our brand very schizophrenic we here at BTSB believe that it is our strength: with the varied interests of our small clique of expert writers (whose ranks even you may join by getting in touch, hint hint) we may cater to the extremely varied tastes of people insane enough to choose English as a major. That is our brand promise here at BTSB.

Marketably yours,
Maria Koistinen and Patrik Renholm,
Editors

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BTSB Gets A Concussion

BTSB

It all happened up in Vaasa. For those of you unaware, Vaasa is a wide part in the road in eastern Finland and it’s well known around the world for absolutely nothing at all. Anyone who actually does know it falls into five certain categories (based on polls of 2006): 1) they were forced at gunpoint to go to Vaasa (25%), 2) they were stranded there by pirates (25%), 3) they were left there to die (25%), 4) they have absolutely no idea whatsoever (24%), or 5) they were there to visit someone in one of the above categories (1%). Thankfully, I was of the last group.


Traveling in style, I called my attorney and we booked a train ride. When I say he is my attorney, that’s because he was the brains of the operation. And when I say I am his customer, that’s because I was the one buying the whiskey, which I did. Together, we were both the ones drinking it, which we did.

The train ride went as most do, at least for the first half of it. I don’t remember the rest, nor do I remember getting off in Vaasa, going to my friend’s place, or anything else until ten hours after I started the journey. My optimism will assume, as always, that this means the day was perfectly wonderful and my conscience, as always, will not give a shit whether that is true. I suppose one could ask the natives of Vaasa what really happened but that would require deciphering their primordial language and I suppose one just doesn’t have the time. So, perhaps I shall start from where I do remember.

B • T • S • B

I am lying in a hospital bed and vomiting. All of my mental and physical clarity whatsoever is extremely off kilter. As I puke onto the floor, I notice other matching spots on my shirt, the pillow, the bed. These spots are most likely my creations. I can barely turn my head and make out some people who look like doctors and/or nurses. There’s about three in all, I think, and one, the leader, I assume, is speaking to me. Despite my condition, I am still startlingly aware that she believes I am able to hear, understand, and even care what she is saying. This is amazing. Does she not see the vital fluids fleeing my innards? Shouldn’t their escape be job number one? As if this weren’t enough to distort my views of her as a doctor (and rational living creature, in general), she orders one of her orderlies to give me a cup to throw up into. There are gallons of vomit on the floor, gallons on the bed, and gallons more coming out of my mouth and she gets someone else to give me a cup. My gaze almost crushed the thing. Suffice it to say that I realized my intense terrible physical condition was not the only thing I had to worry about. But it was the first. And on that note, I went directly to sleep.

When I woke up, I had to puke again. But this time I had proper warning, so I decided to find the bathroom. Whether or not that person in a lab coat had informed me of the bathroom’s location, I did not know. She could have informed me that they had given me a sex operation and I wouldn’t have known. At least not until I found the bathroom, that is. But, much to my good luck, the bathroom was the first door I tried. I walked in, knelt down, and proceeded to praise the porcelain immensely. At that time, it was unarguably the most important object in the world. After this, I decided the smartest thing to do would be to go straight back to my bed to pass out again. So I did.

The third and final time I was awoken at this wonderful establishment, of which I’m sure its employees would have me call a hospital, was by a nurse. He informed me that it was 7:30 in the morning and I had to leave. I, in turn, threw up. He then told me to go. I asked him if he knew where my shoes, phone, wallet, memory, will to live, etc. might be. He gave me my passport, some shower caps to put on my feet, and told me to go. I figured this was about the extent of good will offered to patients of the Vaasa “hospital” and decided that it was, indeed, time for me to leave. And fast.

I got into a taxi and made my way back to R. Duke’s place, feeling better with every foot that passed between me and that morgue I had just left. When I arrived, my attorney answered the door, said “I thought it might be you”, and went back to sleep. He is forever charming. I thought sleeping would be a very good idea at this particular time so I went and found Duke’s bed, which, ironically, held Duke, who was either heavily passed out, dead, or both, judging by his lack of movement and half-opened eyes. Any of those three states seemed very desirable to me at the time, and I laid down hoping he was contagious.

He was not and I spent the entire day waking up every two hours to vomit. It was not exactly the best day I’ve ever had, but what do you expect? I was in Vaasa, remember.

The following day I enjoyed the worst train ride ever had by a person leaving Vaasa. I made it to Helsinki and decided that the wisest thing for me to do would be to go straight to sleep until I felt at least somewhat coherent.This did not happen and after two days in the city I remembered the pleasurable fact that Helsinki has what general, cognitive Homo sapiens like to call “hospitals”. This was pleasurable because it was time to go. Thither I went.

So, in the middle of the night (my usual time for visiting health places, in case you haven’t noticed), I arrived at the hospital in Helsinki and informed them my head hurt so bad that I wasn’t able to sleep, not even on numerous pain killers. My girlfriend was there too and she informed them that the real reason I was in the hospital was not the pain in my head but the fact that I wasn’t able to sleep. And that she had come along because this fact worried her greatly.

Now, enter a doctor. Seeing that I was 1) at least somewhat coherent and/or conversationally capable and 2) that I was not throwing up like my life depended on it, he asked me a few questions, took a few tests, ran a CT scan, and basically did everything a doctor should have done to a patient in my situation even though it was four in the morning and he could have cared less if I passed out, died, or both. He also informed me that Vaasa just received the technology of stitches and that was why they failed to do any of these other routine medical examinations. Then he asked me if it had hurt when they put the leeches on me in Vaasa.

It wasn’t long before the routinely normal, ordinary, custom, and average medical tests proved the contusions on my brain and I was sent to stay the night in the ward. So, they did what any great hospital would have done: they drugged me up and threw me in a wheelchair. From there I knew it was definitely time to go straight to sleep. So I did.

B • T • S • B

Let me tell you a little something about the room on the first floor of the east building of Maria Hospital. There are twenty people there and the average age is 107. Only two people were under the age of five score and ten. And we return to our story.

I was the first of these lucky humans younger than a century. The other was lying directly across the room from me. She was about forty, judging by her cough, a pneumonic clamor that sounded like the collection of forty coughs from forty mine workers from the 1840’s. The cough certainly wasn’t killing her, so I can only assume that it saved her own brain from self-annihilation because of the real reason she was in the hospital: her voice.

It started with the phone calls. She searched her cell phone calling every number she had, asking where they were, why, she’s in the hospital, and then going into some sort of scam the hospital was apparently pulling on her. The fossil in the bed next to her wasn’t having this and told her to shut up. This worked for a second. Then she started receiving phone calls on the hospital phone next to her. Yes, on the “last-minute-I’m-about-to-die” phone, she was taking calls. She actually had other people calling her. All this started at six a.m. and went on into the late, late night. It more than sufficiently drove me stark, raving mad. I wasn’t in the hospital to rest my head; I was there to test my head. I was there to see if it could still handle all the annoying things I would have to deal with on a daily basis. But here, I was dealing with them at one time in the form of one person; a person that I was sure must be some sort of robot. I now decided exactly that it was most certainly time to go right to sleep. So I did.

The next day was depressingly similar. But two things out of the ordinary happened. First, I was told by my doctor that I had conclusions on my brain. This puzzled me, but I figured that, due to the contusions on my brain, I had better not think about it too much. Second, I met the greatest hospital employee in the history of the world. He was a good man. He worked the evening shift. He came to ask me how I was doing. And then he made himself forever awesome; he gave me ear plugs. Jukka Kornilow, you are the sole reason that my brain did not completely melt; that my amygdala did not take over and destroy everything in its path, starting with that robot from the eighth level. I cannot thank you enough.

So, I was eventually released back into the wild. Whether they cared to stop treating me or just stopped caring to treat me, I’ll never know. What I do know is that when I wake up, my brain feels like scrambled eggs. When I think about smoking a cigarette, I get sick. And most importantly, Finland should really inform the people of Vaasa about things like modern medicine, evolution, and gravity.

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Hello and Welcome

BTSB

On behalf of the editing staff here at Better Than Sliced Bread, allow me to be the first to thank you for stopping by. This article will give you an introduction to what we’re all about.

First, a short history is in order. In the beginning there was a newspaper at the University of Helsinki’s English Department. And the paper was good. But, alas, the paper went to that great recycling plant in the sky. And it was missed.

Enter our three heroes – Simo Ahava, Joonas Pulkkinen, and Joseph McVeigh. Together, they decided to restart that pillar of literature, which had been lost to antiquity. But when they started, they quickly learned that a regular old newspaper would simply not do. They realized, friends, that they could make it better and faster and stronger- they had the technology.

What you see before you right now is the fruit of their labors. Better Than Sliced Bread is not just a paper nor is it just a open forum. It is a place where original ideas can be channeled into concise articles, be they academic, humorous, or just plain informative. It is a place where you can come together with others to discuss what’s on your mind. In short, it is a place where you can tell the world what it needs to hear.

As was stated, originality is at the heart of this publication. We encourage people to be open-minded and energetic. We want to see a place where people can report the issues of the day and the events of their daily lives. If there is something happening, tell us about it. Basically, we encourage people to be themselves. And we believe, as should you, that others want to hear what you have to say.

While originality is at the heart of BTSB, humor is in its soul. Not all the texts in this publication will be serious. I can speak for all the editors here when I say that humor is a theme you will see running through this publication, as it is in our nature.

So, please, take this newly created being and make it your own. Grab it by the horns and lead it. It was made for all of you. So make it the great example of originality that it can become.

Hello and welcome to the future at Better Than Sliced Bread.

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