so, so many, including lots already mentioned (in particular, feral hamsters descended from Ward & June, "something smells delicious!", the sad fate of S. Johnson -- especially the description of the remains as "a nubbin"). reading this thread, by the way, i see for the first time another of DFW's ingenious intra-linkages -- Hal (tries to) tell the U-AZ administrators that he's the type who jumps in a cab and says "the library, and step on it" -- which is perfectly true, since he did exactly that when going to research what grief counselors want to hear.
anyway, a few others:
1. JOI's original ETA motto, translated "They Can Kill You, But the Legalities of Eating You Are Quite a Bit Dicier" (p 81 & n.32)
2. the section on the old Ennet House rock-eating initiation tradition, particularly the passage: "...have the life-forms out of the corner of your eye be your only distraction from the chainsaw-racing chatter in your head, sitting there, and have some old lady with cat-hair on her nylons come at you to hug you and tell you to make a list of all the things you're grateful for today: you'll wish you had some feldspar handy, too." (p. 138)
(oh, and btw, since it starts on the next page, it occurs to me to mention that while the whole workers' comp/bucket-o-bricks story is, admittedly, humorous, it is not, in fact, a DFW original piece. It's a
very old urban legend -- examples back to 1895 are known -- that has surfaced as newspaper accounts, mock workers' comp claim forms, sketch comedy routines, etc, and gained big circulation with the advent of email -- as did many urban legends, actually. see
http://www.snopes.com/humor/letters/bricks.asp for the interesting history of the myth. i forget where, at the moment, but i recall thinking "that's an old urban legend, too" somewhere else in the book, maybe it will come to me or I'll come across it and add it here. Doesn't detract from the humor of that section, to me anyway, it just feels like DFW was using the background radiation of urban myth the same way he does pop cultural artifacts, advertising, literature, etc -- part of the scenery & referential meta-language dialogue with the reader.)
edit: I just remembered the other urban legend DFW incorporates in
IJ -- the story of Gately's "toothbrush revenge" on the A.D.A. is another myth, although much more recent than the bucket o' bricks story (see
http://www.snopes.com/racial/crime/toothbrush.asp ).
3. the story of the woman getting her artificial-heart-in-her-purse snatched & yelling "she stole my heart!" to which a duo of Boston's finest remarked "happens all the time." (pp.142-44)
4. the whole idea of this guy being President (he's English, after all...):
http://www.johnnygentle.co.uk/photos_ga ... rannie.htm5. the cocktail party chatter about the filmmaker who served gourmet food spiked with ipecac & then filmed the resulting projectile vomiting (p. 233)
6. pretty much all of the Hal/Orin phone conversation starting at p. 242, but (in addition to "smells delicious") the following in particular: (a) when O c/n name his latest "subject," Hal notes "Boy, you really put the small r in
romance, don't you"; (b) H: "I think it came out generally at the funeral" O: "I keep getting your point, if you're wondering"; (c) O: "'Reconstructed the scene' as in the scene when you found him was somehow . . . deconstructed?" H: "You of all people, O. You know that was the one word he hated more than---"
... and, really, so many more, but that's what I've come up with while I'm in my second read through (perhaps I'll post again as I go through other big funnies in the coming days...)