Reporter’s Notebook
ALEX COOLMAN
In the shade beneath an awning at the Orange County Fair, Cliff
Elder is using science to unlock the most gruesome mysteries of my
personality.
I’ve handed Elder, a 75-year-old man with smoky driving glasses and
tidy silver hair, a small piece of paper with my signature on it. He
feeds the scrap into a refrigerator-sized machine called the Televac
9700. He hits a few buttons, smiles, and stands back.
A light flashes briefly on the Televac console. “Analyzation in
Progress.”
A moment later, Elder has his results: a dot-matrix printout
displaying a black-and-white breakdown of my personality, along with some
miscellaneous advice based on the fact that I’m a Capricorn.
“You sometimes tell ‘white lies’ to escape uncomfortable situations,”
Elder reads from the printout, eyeing me. “That’s about the worst result
you can ever get.”
“Wow,” I say, staring at my printout, which notes that “Isaac Newton,
genius” was also a Capricorn.
The results are a little harsh, but on the other hand, the Televac
notes that “you understand life, its difficulties and problems.” It tells
me that “you often gain what you want through logic and your powers of
persuasion.”
All in all, I decide, I’m pretty psychologically healthy. And I might
also be a genius.
But I only believe that until I head over to the other personality
analysis booth at the fair, the Lazer-Tech Telebrain stand operated by
Bill Antinori.
The Lazer-Tech Telebrain is sort of like the Televac with the gloves
taken off. It prints out something called an “electrohypothetical
romantic nature analysis” using a felt-tipped pen rigged like a
seismograph.
The Lazer-Tech Telebrain, Antinori assures me, is very, very accurate.
And what’s more, it tells it like it is.
Antinori feeds my signature (a newly created version, but with the
same shaky, illegible letters as the other one) into the Telebrain, and
the machine’s pen scrawls its treacherous trail across the analysis card.
A pattern of peaks and valleys appears on the form, a sort of Richter
scale of the psyche.
This time around, I don’t do so well. Under the category of “Schemer,”
my graph tops the charts. I practically break the machine with my results
for the category of “Conceited/Vain.” And I’ve got a massive spike
sprouting up between the lines of “Want to Control” and “Morning Grouch.”
“What’s fun about it,” Antinori explains, perhaps trying to console
me, “is that people get a big kick out of it.”
Maybe so, but I’m feeling a little deflated. Not only did my “Not Too
Tolerant” score dwarf my ranking as a “Great Kisser,” but I’m not even
sure I’m a genius any more.
Nobody said analysis was going to be easy.
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