Perhaps the most common of all campus seats, the Hamilton desk-chair is here reviewed for posterity. Chair reviews—like CULPA for things on which it is appropriate to sit.
You walk into Lit Hum just as it starts—as always—and quickly scan the room to find the open seat. There’s one in the corner, so you sneak over quickly and quietly sit down.
Or so you’d like to think.
But this is Hamilton Hall—the chairs are not chairs, but utilitarian chair-desks. Because this seat is in the corner, it is at such an angle that the desk blocks you from slipping gracefully into the seat. You try to reposition the chair, but end up slamming it into every adjacent desk, backpack, and classmate. The people next to your target seat begrudgingly nudge over their own chair-desks, giving you a measly five inches of clearance to slide into the chair.
Finally seated, you pull out your copy of the Aeneid and put it on the diminutive desktop. Then you lean down into your backpack to grab your notebook and a pen when—plop—your book falls off the desk, hits your shin, and bounces into the middle of the room. It’s time to do that desk dance again.
With all materials securely arranged on your desk, you begin to take notes. The desktop isn’t big enough to write in your notebook alongside an open book, but as you’re “chill” and “easygoing,” so you decide to hold the book open with one hand on your lap and write with your other—hoping the notebook doesn’t take a nosedive down the glossy desk surface. It does.
After half an hour, the professor tells everyone to pull out their laptops for a quick exercise. You need both your notebook notes and the book to complete the assignment. Shit. Somehow you manage to get your laptop out and, with no room left on the desk, have the notebook and book piled in your lap.
Now, you need to use your notebook notes but can’t because the book is covering them. You try putting the book on the elbow section of the desk, but that’s not working as you still have to keep it open to a certain page and it keeps slipping off the side.
With no room left on your desk or your lap, you resignedly place your book atop your head, opened like a triangular hat.
This malicious inbred chair-desk has succeeded in turning you into a dunce. At least you’re already in the corner.
Hamilton chair-desk: 2/10 for utility; 5/10 for poetic justice
12 Comments
@Anonymous fuck these chairs
@Anonymous It’s more the WOOOOOOOOOO they do after EVERY SINGLE SONG
@Anonymous … That was supposed to be a reply to other anon’s comment on sorority girls
@Wooo girls Just know that with every “WOOOOO”, they are crying on the inside.
@Anonymous holy shit sorority girls running around campus singing songs has to be the worst part of the semester
@Anonymous posterity, posterior, lol
@crusty grumpy mofo these posts are kinda clever. golf clap. but in all honesty, these posts are a joke compared to the kind of top-notch content we used to get from bwog. five months ago i came here and would find well-researched articles on moodygate and careful explanations of why important developments in the university had far-reaching effects on student life, mixed with actually funny posts, and witty guides for freshmen adapting to a new school culture.
now i get these chair reviews. i feel like i’m reading assignments from a high school creative writing class. it’s telling that the only good article posted in the last week has been by former bwog editor eliza shapiro. i still come here out of habit, but this just ain’t doing it for me no more. i want old bwog back. STEP IT UP.
@Anonymous it’s not every semester that a dean resigns in protest. so chill
@Anonymous i, too sir, find the variable quality of this free, student-run, comedic establishment simply detestable.
guffaw
@Anonymous Dude. It’s called fucking February.
@Anonymous I think these posts are funny and cute. It’s nice to joke about shared experiences and it makes it feel like there is a community here. There’s no reason to be so serious all the time.
Good job Bwog.
@Anonymous I miss the old Bwog! Of…five months ago? Really, five months? It can’t be THAT different…