Threadless

JebC
JebC aka Jeb Cadwell is a boy, has been a member since August 4, 2009, has scored 88 submissions, giving an average score of 2.74, helping 0 designs get printed.
I work at Threadless, and have my own side comedy blog: Karmalampoon.com. Some of the satire is inspired by threadless and includes some of the team. We had an ant farm and this is what it inspired:

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Disassociated Press. It took over the vibe of the whole desk area. A little ant farm with a lot of impact. One of the company employees had won a gift card and on a whim purchased an ant farm. It was placed in a central location at the Withoutthreads.com warehouse where everyone could take a peek.

“In no time at all, it went from an idle amusement, to an uplifting metaphor for life,” said Jef Kaplan, a quality Manual Headquarters Head Quality Manager. “And it also pretty quickly turned into a death heap, a slowly twitching pile of lost dreams.”



The Beginning
There is such joy in potential energy. Three and a half months prior to the sad demise of this ill-fated whim, the colony was a budding new venture filled with hope and symbolism.


“It’s like they were setting out to engineer an empire. Just like we do in our lives,” said Mitch Borkowski, freshly back from winning a debate against a Buddhist Monk, “Only, in our lives we would have brought a queen. You know, keep the party going.”

The farm had been delivered in two parts. The Habitat: a small Plexiglass box containing neon green gel, the consistency of which only Jef knows (because only Jef has poked it with a pen. But it looks pretty hard). The gel was a completely inorganic replacement for both soil and food.

Part two of the delivery: The Inhabitants. The ants were kept in a test tube and put in the fridge to slow them down during transport. Throughout the rest of the metaphor, this point will be ignored, as it bears no metaphoric value.

By the second day of having the ant farm at Withoutthreads.com, the active minds of the employees began to draw parallels. “We also live in square little man-made structures, and our food is also often neon and fake,” thought almost every warehouse laborer, verbatim. But they kept it silent because they were about to have Slush Puppies and Volcano Tacos.

Bad diet or not, both the ants and the workers were determined to work hard and really make a difference in their worlds!



The Middle
During the first few weeks the ants made very slow progress. They had a very hard time digging into their new shiny green homeland. Not even one anthill was built.


Despite these odds, the ants kept working to improve their lot in life. They tunneled slowly into the depths of their captivity, creating one solitary chamber. And just like these ants, the warehouse workers kept on pushing hard with full-blown optimism for job security.

At about this time Jef speculated that he had been sent a factory second ant-farm, or at least a very old one. “The green stuff was completely compacted, there was nothing farmable about it.” Jef got pensive for a moment, and looked up, “But it was free, so I’m not complaining.”

Warehouse workers, who resembled ants with their daily movements, weren’t discouraged by the green stuff.

“I’m sure the ants were totally loving not being in the mail anymore, and we were totally loving being able to dote over the ants every now and then throughout the day,” said Jeb Cadwell who wrote this story so was easy to quote.

Temp notable Billy Besley added, “And whenever the bosses see anyone just looking at the ants and wasting time, we come across as nature-lovers instead of lazy-people. So it all works out”.

To please the ants, Jef taped up a picture of relaxing co-worker, Ashley Hypes. He also put a playmobil astronaut in the farm. “That way they’d keep on working whether or not the humans were looking,” said Jef. “Just like the staff here keeps up the good work whether or not the management is looking. Heh.”

The End
But the glory days of healthy, happy ants were limited.

At about this time, most warehouse workers were unable to comprehend the further implications of their metaphors.

“I was right in the middle of appreciating my metaphor when I noticed there was a dead ant up at the top of the green stuff,” thought everyone.

Within a week there were two more dead ants, and then a few days later, three more. The focus of the colony shifted drastically. They went from “domestic” to “desperate” in no time at all. The inner-existentialist within each warehouse worker could relate.



“It was like, a minute ago they were all happily tunneling," reflected everyone separately, "but then they saw some buddies croak and they were like, ‘I don’t have time to be digging deeper into that green stuff!'"

During the weeks that followed their realization of mortality, the ants no longer tunneled and they no longer ate. They only tried to escape their fate. They did this until they all were dead. At about this time, most warehouse workers were unable to comprehend the further implications of their metaphors.

Billy Besley touched the interviewer's shoulder, “Before the genocide, they were happy as long as they stayed focused.” He stopped to ask for a smoke break and then continued, “Just don’t obsess about your daily struggle in relative terms of your mortality. But seriously, I need a smoke break.”

Jef braved onward for a dramatic conclusion, “In the end the only remnant of order they possessed, was their habit of dying in the same place. These ants really only made one tunnel, and they died in it.”

JebC
JebC on Aug 29 '10 at 12:00am
At the time of this article, there were still a few survivors. Rumor has it they were set free in the end!
shakethesheets
shakethesheets on Aug 29 '10 at 12:03am
tunnel of death.

may they rest in peace.
Chipmnk
Chipmnk on Aug 29 '10 at 12:03am
My heart goes out to you and the ants.
radiomode
   radiomode on Aug 29 '10 at 12:03am
i got an ant farm from the loves contests. Either it does not work, or I am a very bad farmer. Or probably I just got the lazy bunch.
ratkiss
   ratkiss on Aug 29 '10 at 12:04am
poor lil' ants
radiomode
   radiomode on Aug 29 '10 at 12:04am
i also blamed the society
JebC
JebC on Aug 29 '10 at 12:14am
Jebbie! That was my first choice of profile name. I was so bummed when it was taken! About two.5 years ago hence.

Our ants got to listen to some great 8-track challenges. They partially inspired the Dead people challenge.

Thank you all for your condolences, and radiomode, for the empathy.
SnakeMan
SnakeMan on Aug 29 '10 at 12:32am
this really puts that story about the trapped chilean miners in perspective.
littlem
littlem on Aug 29 '10 at 12:50am
i didn't read a lick-o-dat. but i looked at the pictures, cuz i like pictures, and those ants are dumb. my niece and nephew have one and their ants are dumb, too!
Goldendust
Goldendust on Aug 29 '10 at 1:59am
Ants are more fun when they live under your steps. Then, you can put out sugar for them, and watch them carry it back home.
Haragos
   Haragos on Aug 29 '10 at 2:03am
Be glad it wasn't filled with this...

Suicide Ants!!!!
igo2cairo
   igo2cairo on Aug 29 '10 at 2:38am
The horror... the horror.

Even after the detailed description of events still not sure what happened here, I'll leave that to the authorities, but I blame the green stuff. If there is a next time use good ol' fashioned soil and please feed them actual food, some crumbs from your lunch, whatever!

Tnanks, I'm going to have nightmares tonight about suffocating in a plastic coffin filled with green goo.
JebC
JebC on Aug 29 '10 at 12:46pm
I know, the horror! That green stuff almost matches the hue of the green stuff from our Slush Puppie machine.

No worries re: Jebabuse, we're all Jebs here.

Ironically, while I was writing that article, I noticed that my laptop had an ant infestation because I keep eating at the computer. I had to spray them out with that pressurized air for use in similar situations. And of course, quit with the sour patch kids on the space bar.
nathanwpyle at gmail.com
   nathanwpyle at gmail.com on Aug 29 '10 at 12:50pm
This wins the morose blog bestee 2011. Moving
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All about me

Stand-up comic. I do that 4 to 6 nights per week, and during 3 or 4 of those nights I'm on the road throughout the midwest doing it.

Threadless Warehouse Worker. I do that 3 to 4 days per week, and I totally love it. I collect orders, and during sales I'm a team leader. I also drive the forklift and sometimes do returns or quality control.

Karma Lampoon: Body. Mind. Spirit. Comedy.
This also a huge project I work on: It is a satirical eZine about the Health and Wellness and New Age Community. And delusional neo-hippies.