dOC DOt nEW YORK, February 1, 2000 - Barely one month into 2000, times are changing and changing fast. I'm exchanging the cubicle-clad drudgery of corporate dronedom for the bright new vista of websites and e-biz. You know, that place where windows are wide, ceilings evaporate, and floors are little more than afterthoughts. Specifically, I'm off to help upstarts become oligarchs, transforming myself into a sort of Doctor prescribing the medicine that turns dreams to riches as I dispense my new business card listing me as "Doc Dot." Given the accelerated nature of my practice and the virtual cash flows of the Dot world to date, here's how I see my year unfolding: Some time in March I'll swagger through the hallways of various financial organizations that now delight in sending me student loan repayment reminders. With a pair of Las Vegas showgirls on each arm, I'll fish out a fat wad of moolah and slap it into some hapless loan official's trembling palm. "Will cash settle this nasty little matter?" I'll snicker, then turn on my heel, snap my fingers at the showgirls and peel off in an especially quick car "given" to me by an ambitious local auto dealer who wants to get in on some of my action. Not content to remain simply debt free, in April I'll buy one or two of the colleges and universities I'd been slaving to pay off. At the moment of purchase, I'll demand that each school immediately change its name to Doctor Dot U. To justify the name change, and my newly self-appropriated title I'll also demand several honorary PhDs of Dotology. Emboldened now with my new station I'll move into the philanthropic world in May, trying to do good deeds with virtual riches. First, I'll find something like a hospital for sick children, preferably in a poor neighborhood. I'll buy the place, promise to spruce it up and purchase the latest medical equipment. But when hospital officials inexplicably reject my demand that they re-name the hospital "The Doctor Dot Health Institute," I'll explode in a fiery rage, withdraw my offer, send henchmen to blast the place to smithereens then personally take a sledgehammer to the rubble as I cry out in the "humiliation" of my rejection. It's at this point that I'll develop a substance abuse problem complicated by lifelong depression and inability come to terms with my father's drinking.
"Kids today can't possibly understand the first half of this year.
Those were very, very different times. I can only say they were days of
great promise when any cubicle clad corporate drone could grab a balloon,
strap on a thong, and call the world his own - all without making a dime." Yours Truly, Copyright © 2001
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