On the business band · 11:22
“Lamb chop is insulting”: a workplace nickname meets its end on the NXEGEN trunk
A brief negotiation over the etiquette of pet names, conducted entirely over the radio
At 11:22 a male voice on the NXEGEN business trunk opens with the usual “Hey man, what’s going on?”, asks “What happened?”, and then, without any visible provocation, lays down the day's clearest rule of office decorum: “You’re supposed to say be a lamb, not a lamb chop”. The corrective followed within the same breath: “Lamb chop is insulting”. We have no idea who was wronged or what the original endearment had been, but somewhere in Western New York a person who routinely greets a coworker as “lamb” learned, today, that the diminutive is a one-way bridge.
BuffaloLimo · 12:13
“Stringy, and with the jelly”: a midday menu dispatched at radio range
BuffaloLimo, once again, doing the Lord’s work on the lunch hour
BuffaloLimo, at 12:13, with no audible prefatory context: “7 stringy and with the jelly”. Eight seconds later, in case anyone aboard the fleet missed the order, the dispatcher restated it with the syllables tightened: “Stringy and jelly”. We are not in the business of decoding cab-driver shorthand, but we will note that whatever was being ordered, the dispatcher considered it specific enough to broadcast twice.
BuffaloLimo · 13:24
“That relationship is deeper than I thought it was” — BuffaloLimo, processing in real time
A dispatcher discovers, mid-shift, that a customer called both of them this morning
BuffaloLimo at 13:24: an exchange begins with “I called you this morning”, escalates to “Oh, she called you?”, and lands on a quiet thunderclap: “That relationship is deeper than I thought it was”. We cannot tell whether the conclusion was warm, wary, or simply correct. We can confirm only that a Buffalo cab driver, at one o'clock on a Wednesday, paused work to reckon with the topology of a customer's love life over an open radio.
Cheektowaga · 10:01
A dog bite, a dog warden, and the question of cortex proximity
Cheektowaga PD asks a neighbor patrol to take the call — anatomically
Cheektowaga PD at 10:01, with the kind of inadvertent poetry that only a tired Wednesday dispatcher can produce: “Are you able to handle a call for a dog bite with the dog warden going, or is it too close to your cortex?”. Whether “cortex” is a Whisper-mangled landmark, a Whisper-mangled patrol zone, or a small piece of accidental neuroanatomy, the line stands on its own. Receiving unit declined.
Grand Island Central · 08:22
A bus dispatcher pauses the morning run for a birthday announcement
GI Central, 08:22 — “We have a special birthday girl, one of the drivers today”
At 08:22, in the middle of the school-bus operational chatter, GI Central came on the air to share a non-operational bulletin: “We have a special birthday girl, one of the drivers today”. No name, no balloons over the dispatch console (presumably), but somewhere on Grand Island a driver got the public-radio version of a happy birthday, broadcast over the same channel that routes the children.