![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgSn8MDDnPGTfKG2mjdw7o7PAhWMmEsqK29IS9lLbZeTCWIfQRHGWOPhMpv_hw8DLb33qQ59lyQfKlYmqzmNbj99uQJgydgBDQi7TXaP-Q_4ljVugt0VcEK5csvu56uDwGRnxy4fFiy5XXO/s200/moped.jpg)
Let me provide an example so that you can appreciate the gist of my nub. I was driving down the road the other day and was passed by a person on a European moto-scooter. This scooter looked like it should have been an accessory for the Barbie Dream House collection. Frilly and girly and cartoonish. A spectacle to be sure. The problem was compounded by the appearance of the person riding said scooter. It was someone who was trying to come across as a street tough. Dressed in a leather jacket, German army helmet, cool shades, and western-style American blue jeans. He even completed the look with several days of beard growth. It reminded me of the words of a critic of the "band" NKOTB. One of the members of this pre-pubescent boy band took on the persona of a tough guy. The critic described him as a motorcycle guy in a moped band. Someone who was trying to act out a particular role, but in the wrong play. Trying to be a square peg, but faced with nothing but round holes. Now, I am not one to criticize or look down on folks who bring something new to the table, but sometimes folks try so hard to be something that they are not that I have no choice but to gesture and laugh.