Streeter Seidell

Top of the Morning


Welcome back, everyone. I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving full of food, family and fornication with your high school ex. Now, back to business as usual…

Or not! When we were all home for the long weekend I asked the staff to get pics of themselves for the Gnarly 90s and I’ll be posting one a day in the Top of the Morning article. I might as well start with myself, so here I am in my most badass ski suit. I must have been going fast judging by the way my hair is positioned on my head although the pizza-slice ski arrangement would beg to differ. Stay tuned for pics of Ricky, Jeff, Amir and Pat.


Also, check the Morning After Dexter by Jake Klocksien

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I Fought the Law Run-ins with the cops See All »
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Search and Siezure

When I was 16, I was walking home one night from my girlfriend's (at the time) like any other night. Now, as a teen, I had a shaved head, but that's as far as it goes for me looking like "a bad ass". I was super straight edge. I got to the corner across the street from my apartment, and I was waiting patiently at the light to cross, when all of a sudden I hear the... Read More » wailers and see flashing lights coming in my direction. Two cops get out of their car, tell me to come over and proceed to start hassling me. Given where I lived (tantamount to gang territory) and the fact that I was a teen out past 11PM, this was annoying, but not a huge surprise. The first question they asked me was "where am I going?" I said home. They asked where home is, and I could point to my window from where I was standing. That wasn't good enough. They decided they were going to demand that I "empty my pockets on the hood of the car". I refused, at which point they accused me of having something to hide. But what they didn't know was that I was taking classes in Canadian law at my high school, and had already covered the section on statutes on search and seizure and probable cause. So I told them flat out: "Give me your badge number, and I'll empty my pockets. And, when you find nothing there, I'll be down at your station tomorrow with a lawyer and I won't leave until I have your job because I gave you no probable cause to stop me, let alone undergo a search and seizure of my personal belongings. And if you don't like it, fuck off". Needless to say, they got back in their car and told me to go home. And I did, smiling.