February 12, 2004
The low culture interview: Stanley Bostitch Model B440 stapler

stapler.jpg
Stanley Bostitch Model B440 Stapler, stapler

The Basics
Age and occupation. How long have you lived here, where did you come from, and where do you live now?
I'm a Stanley Bostitch Model B440 stapler. I was made in Taiwan, probably around 2000 and sold at the Staples on Broadway and Havemeyer in 2002. I was "borrowed" from an office at 770 Broadway sometime in late 2002 and I now live in Brooklyn. It's been a wild journey, but I feel good here. I share a drawer with some envelopes. The shaded, "security" kind. They're cool: a little guarded, but cool.

Three for Thee
1. Do you have a staples preference?
Do I?!? On my ventral side, I clearly say "For Best Performance Use Bostitch Standard Staples." Luckily, a box of those were "borrowed" around the same time, too.

2. What is the weirdest thing you ever had to staple?
God. So much crap passes by me every day, I feel like I'm a slush pile reader at The New Yorker. Probably the weirdest thing was a story that literally wound up on the slush pile at The New Yorker. I'd tell you what it was about, but I never read the fiction in The New Yorker. I only read "Talk of the Town," and even that's gotten boring lately. Bring back Rebecca Mead, I say! I also stapled a dude's scrotum once. But let's not talk about that.

3. Do you feel obsolete with computers and email and stuff?
I did for a while. But then I remembered that I'm a stapler. People will always need staplers. There's always gonna be some tax documents or print outs that need to be stuck together. And who are you gonna get to do that? Fucking paperclips? Those little bastards are so drunk, they couldn't hold together Sigfried and Roy! Get it? Anyway, there's always tape, but that's a whole other headache. Staplers aren't going out of style anytime soon.

Proust-low culture Questionnaire
Time travel question: What era, day or event in New York's history would you like to re-live?
Such a good question! Those straight-laced envelopes never ask me stuff like this. I think I'd like to live during Herman Melville's time (you can look up the dates, right?) so that he could use me. He was a clerk, you know? How awesome would that be to work so closely with the author of Moby Dick and those other books?

9pm, Wednesday night - what are you doing?
Drawer, probably. Sometimes I'm called into service at a moment's notice when there's a long article in The New York Times Magazine that's worth saving but not worth actually reading this week. I'm usually always on call, but I don't have like a beeper or anything.

Best celebrity sighting in New York, or personal experience with one if you're that type.
I stapled Salma Hayek once. Afterwards, I was gonna ask her "Was it good for you?" but I'm a stapler and I can't speak. And she was a photo in US Weekly.

Describe that low, low moment when you thought you just might have to leave NYC for good.
I thought about it after 9/11 like everyone else. I used to work downtown, and that day is still, like, seared in my brain. I knew another stapler from my old Staples days who lives in Vermont. He's a typical second home stapler: sits around all week, doesn't see much work at all, just enjoys the sunshine. During the summer he's called on to, like, attach some receipts or whatever. It seems like a peaceful life, but you know what? I'm hooked on the New York vibe: I love this town and there's just so much more here I have to staple.

What's the most expensive thing in your wardrobe?
I'm a fucking stapler, asshole. So, obviously, it's my suede Prada slip case. If your stapler doesn't have one of these babies, I highly recommend it. If you're a cheap fucker, there are knock-off's on Canal Street. Your stapler will thank you.

Where do you summer?
I'm a Brooklyn stapler, through-and-through. All you ever need is right here in the 718! And in this drawer. Seriously. Dude keeps like everything in here. Hello? It's called the Container Store: look into it!

Who do you consider to be the greatest New Yorker of all-time?
Gotta be Norman Mailer. Big-time stapler. I hear he goes through three, four boxes of staples a year. He keeps us going, gives us all hope.

Of all the movies made about (or highly associated with) New York, what role would you have liked to be cast in?
Haha! Isn't it obvious? Nicolas Cage's stapler in Vampire's Kiss.

If you could change one thing about New York, what would it be?
I just wish those envelopes would open up. I've known some of them for months and they don't reveal anything. I'm all about bringing things together, you know?

The End of The World is finally happening. Be it the Rapture, War of Armageddon, reversal of the Sun's magnetic field, or the Red Sox win the World Series. What are you going to do with your last 24 hours in NYC?
I'd love to staple Michael Ian Black's lips shut. He was funny on The State and great in the first season of I Love the 80s, but he's getting on my nerves. I actually hate to say that, because I love Stella, but there ya go. I'd also like to spend some time with my loved ones, of course.

Posted in a Satirical, Shallow fashion.

Other Recent Items of Interest:

Make our "team" part of your "team"
jean-paul tremblayJean-Paul Tremblay written-ed, directed and co-produced a bunch of so-called "comedy" and "video" content, is notoriously competitive, and nonetheless settles for bottom-tier tokenism. Repped by John Herndon at Grape Dope Entertainment. Thrill jockey!
matt haberMatt Haber has written for The New York Times, Esquire, and The New York Observer. He is not allergic to pet dander and can do "ethnic" accents if the part calls for it. He is repped by Candy Addams at Entertainment 4-Every-1. Feeling special?
Guy Cimbalo is so cute! Yes, he is. Who's a cute little Guy? You are, you are! Guy's our very own star of stage and screen and is repped by Jeff Kwatinetz at The Firm. Rowr!
What "They" Say About "Us"

"Humor so black you're afraid to laugh." - Playboy

"Low Culture gets more mileage out of headlines and photo captions than most blogs get out of endless pages of text." - The Week

"No irony slips past Low Culture." - Daniel Radosh

"what's happened to this site? it used to be one of my favorites. now there are never new posts and when there are it's bloodied and dismembered dead bodies... grave, indeed." - Some Guy Named Tim

"I don't get it." - Some Person Calling Him-/Herself "Cubeoid"

Text Ads, our nod to the Plebes
or, "Fun with Adblockers"

Recent Artifacts

The Archive Office (Front Desk)

Additional Information
Looking for an RSS Feed, or want to syndicate this site? Click here for that purpose.

Some of our older readers may be asking, "Whatever happened to that 'famous' two-column, Shallow and Grave-formatted version of Low Culture?" Rest assured, we've archived that motherfucker here.

This here site, though, was built and crafted by none other than Low Culture Design & Media Mega-Powerhouse HQ.