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Still playing with my fish pop molds.  I ended up making a nice mango-lime fish pop.  Or a diver pop in this case.

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I guess I also ate his skull and a good portion of his spine too.

I ended up just making a mango purée with maybe 1.5-2 cups of mango, a tablespoon of sugar (the mangoes were fairly sweet already), the juice of a lime (probably about 2 tablespoons), and a 0.25 cup of water.  What I should have done, and I didn’t think of this until after the fact, was to make a lime infused simple syrup and purée the mangoes in that.  And then also add in the zest of that lime.  Oh well, next time.

Just the mango purée lime pops were pretty good.  I will say that if you just purée and don’t strain, you’re going to get mango fibers throughout the pop.  I don’t have a problem with this but I imagine some people would, as they do sometimes look like small segments of hair.  Which would be gross if they really were hairs, but they aren’t as mangoes are just a very fibrous fruit.

 

You might not think that’s a good superpower, but it actually is. If you’re a supervillain that is. And in your supervillainy ways, you’ve been made at least middle management. Preferably middle management. And your dastardly plan involves slowly destroying the morale of your employees while extracting ever more work out of them. And if one of your employees is a superhero in disguise, all the better.

Still don’t believe it’s a good superpower to have if you’re a villain? It’s true, this superpower isn’t very flashy and might not be very good in a fist fight, but if you want a long lasting career as a supervillain, you have to be subtle and you have to plan.

Think of how easily supervillains crash and burn. Actually, not just supervillains. Think about how easily mere villains crash and burn. How many of them even make it to the super status? Sure, you’ll have the plucky villains who resolutely make new plans each time their originals were dashed, but they’re basically treading water. You can’t hope to achieve fame and recognition if you’re always treading water.

And that in itself is a problem. Supervillains make themselves too vulnerable when they’re widely recognized. They’re basically a beacon to every passing superhero to come and knock them out. True supervillains have to be crafty and subtle. Hence, the middle management. They’re there to make you miserable. You, the optomistic, cheerful, spunky superhero that you are. Or the normal worker drone. Whatever. Supervillains probably are not picky about to whom they spread misery.

Think about how quickly a supervillain in middle management can upend your day when they appear out of nowhere right as you were going to go on a coffee break, or lunch break, or leave for the day, and start a long and involved discussion about something work related. And somehow, before you even realize it, you’re saddled with more work, half of which is busy work but absolutely essential to the success of the project. It will probably require days more work with overtime (which you will not be paid for because you are a salaried worker drone).

Supervillain.

Superpower.