Category Archives: Life & Other Distractions

Planeswalking With The Clothes On My Back, or A New Appreciation Of The Boy Scout Motto

It all started so innocently…a great day at the ballpark

There was a time when I would head out for a night or two of adventure in parts unknown with little more than the clothes on my back and what was in my pockets. Too often, I would find myself crashing on someone’s floor in the attire I’d been wearing all day, and waking up with gummy contact lenses and a mouth that tasted like a gecko with eczema had spent the night in there. My excursions into the wider world have lessened since I’ve gotten older, but the lessons I learned in my younger days are not forgotten. At least, I had believed they were not forgotten. At a crucial moment, the harsh school of experience failed me.

Although the Boy Scouts is an organization that always gave me a slight case of low-level creeps, I do admire their motto. I try never to leave the house, even if it’s just to work or to the store, without a rucksack of items I might need when away from home base. Ninety-eight out of 100 times, I have no need of most of what I bring. But on the rare occasion when I find myself in need of my effects and they’re not with me, I’m quite miserable.

Such was the case a few weeks ago while heading out for the San Francisco Giants game with my good friends MDG and WH. I collected WH (pictured on the left, before the day went sour), and we met MDG at his north Sacramento home. MDG would then navigate the three of us from his house to AT&T Park. Here’s the crux: I almost grabbed my backpack from my car before getting into his, but at the last possible second decided it would be an unnecessary encumbrance at a ballpark. My wallet and phone, plus a dab of sunscreen borrowed from WH, would be all I needed.

If only the ballpark had been the only stop on our itinerary…

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Life & Other Distractions

This Used To Be My Playground — Interlude

#63. “Jeremy” — Pearl Jam

Jumping ahead slightly from where I left off, in the late summer of 1992, MTV began airing a video that kind of made all of us in the Yuba City area shift uncomfortably whenever it came on — it served as a reminder of the events of early May. Pearl Jam’s “Jeremy” was the last narrative (non-performance) video Pearl Jam would make for the better part of the decade. It depicts the violent suicide of a misfit child in front of his classmates. Thanks to some oblique editing, the video can also be interpreted as the “Jeremy” character shooting those classmates, which is the scenario that played out at Lindhurst High School on May 1, 1992.

Eric Houston did not have the fortitude to off himself, despite being a self-confessed miserable piece of shit. Instead he came to Lindhurst High School, about nine miles away from where I sat in Creative Writing at Yuba City High School, and began shooting. He killed three students and a teacher, and held eighty-five more as hostages late into the night, before being led meekly away in handcuffs.

It was the third day of the L.A. riots in the wake of the Rodney King verdict, so when an announcement came over the YCHS public address speaker stating that all students should go “straight home” after 6th period, I assumed that it had something to do with the tension and unrest that had been all over the media, and humming through the school, for the past couple of days. Everyone already had the protest bug, and it had been a year of student rallies and sit-ins for a variety of (mostly petty) causes so I genuinely believed that the YCHS administration was trying to defuse some kind of uprising by a group of well-meaning, mostly white, middle-class high school students acting in solidarity with disenfranchised inner-city African-Americans 400 miles away. As it turned out, it was the deadly situation rapidly unfolding at LHS to which they were reacting.

So I followed instructions and went straight home — which I would have done anyway. I was no longer gainfully employed by my father, who was in the process of shutting down his struggling body shop and going back to work for The Man. Afternoons were now filled with MTV, my stereo, and maybe a little homework. (What wasn’t filled? My wallet. I was back on a mow-the-lawn-do-your-chores allowance, which barely covered the Mattmobile’s enormous appetite for gas.) As soon as I flicked on the TV and saw the aerial shot of Lindhurst on the news, I understood why all of us were sent straight home.

I was surprised, then, when Emily showed up at my door hours before our usual late-evening hanging-out time. She was very upset. Her cousin was believed to be one of the hostages. She asked me to come back to the house to be with her.

And, as the horrible evening unfolded, we discovered that her cousin was one of the four fatalities.

I was a relatively new addition to Emily’s family scene, so I could do nothing except sit mutely at her house among all her relatives (including her uncle who had just lost his teenage daughter) and watch the grieving process unfold from initial shock to waves of anguish. I offered what comfort I could, later, to Emily, but I am a poor comforter. I don’t know if I’ve gotten any better since, but I’ve never been in a situation where I’ve had to be. I hated being there, and I hated myself for selfishly hating being there. Through luck and maneuver, I’ve never been around anything as terrible since then. But someday, I know I will have to be, since no one can duck dealing with tragedy his or her entire life.

The Lindhurst High School incident stands as the first on-campus shooting of students by another student (or rather, former student — Houston had dropped out) in anyone’s memory. It was overshadowed by the Columbine shooting seven years later, and has gradually faded from general awareness, but it certainly was on the minds of everyone I knew for a long time. And of course, there are four people who are no longer here — social studies teacher Robert Brens, and students Judy Davis, Beamon Hill, and Jason H. White were forcibly ejected from this world on a sunny spring day eighteen years ago.

I’m afraid I don’t really have a profound point to make here, but omitting this from my look back at my memories of the 90’s, or worse, briefly alluding to it in passing would do a greater disservice than including it. I guess what little point I have to make here, other than to give a brief remembrance of those who died, is to say that in spite of all this nostalgia I shovel out, I’m really not bitter about growing old because some people don’t get the privilege…

2 Comments

Filed under Life & Other Distractions, Music -- 1990s, This Used To Be My Playground

The 4 Types of Women on OKCupid

The Holy Bee is not made of stone. There are times when my solitary lifestyle is…well, kind of sad. Not often, mind you. Don’t shed any tears for me. For the most part, I have zero problem with an existence of doing whatever I want whenever I want to do it, but how many Deadliest Catch marathons and trips to Brownie’s Lounge will make a life complete? Sometimes, the need for companionship of the feminine variety rears its ugly head. Easy enough to solve, right? Hell, I’ve even managed it in the past a few times myself. But these days, I have a special set of issues that prevents the solution from being cut-and-dried:

Issue #1: I’m not really sure, deep-down, that I want companionship after all. I’m a loner by nature, so any move in this direction is hesitant and half-assed.

Issue #2: I’m waaaaay pickier than anyone who looks/acts like me has any right to be.

Issue #3: I don’t go out, and where would I go if I did? (A “nightclub”? Hahahahaha. Can you imagine me at a “nightclub”?) Brownie’s Lounge doesn’t count. You can see the STD microbes jumping off the women at Brownie’s Lounge. And I’m not yet reduced to flirting with women in the checkout line at WinCo.

Issue #4: Can’t flirt anyway. Got no game. Had it once. Lost it long ago. The idea of walking up to a stranger and striking up a conversation is as ludicrous an image as me in an Ed Hardy shirt at a “nightclub.”

Even my next door neighbor, a shuffling, tubercular sixtysomething with a porkpie hat and a permanent scowl seems to have a girlfriend, although she has twice made nocturnal visits to dump boxes of his shit on the lawn, so the relationship seemes somewhat volatile at best. But if he can do it, why not me? (Actually, he can do it because he doesn’t seem to have my Issue #2. I’ve caught glimpses of the gargoyle he “dates”, and it’s no coincidence she only moves around by dark of night.)

So that leaves us with the wonderful world of the Internet. The fine folks who brought us Anna Nicole Smith autopsy photos, “Leave Britney alone!”, and “2 Girls, 1 Cup.” Sure, you can pay good money and sign up for the nationally-advertised E-harmony.com and Match.com. But “paying” for “romantic companionship”? It’s a slippery slope, brothers and sisters, and I refuse to do it. It’s one of the few principles I have left. So the free site, OKCupid, is the only viable option.

I’ve long since gotten over any embarassment over having a profile there, but it was a rough start. I was in a depressed, drunken stupor when I signed up on the day after Thanksgiving 2007, and I immediately went into a cringing shame spiral. But I shook it off, hung tough, and explored the opportunities. I don’t expect miracles, and I’ve sometimes gone months between log-ins, but the hook is in the water, right?

Let’s talk age. One of the first things OKCupid asks you is what age range you’re interested in. I initially cast a pretty wide net (21-38), then two things (very) quickly occurred to me:

1. Any self-respecting woman in her early-to-mid twenties with all of their faculties would rather gnaw off one of their own limbs than date a fossilized fud like myself, unless he were fabulously wealthy (or at least the owner of a ski-boat.) I have to remember I’m 35, and a haggard 35 at that.

2. #1 doesn’t matter, because I would end up chewing off one of my limbs if I had to spend too much time with one of those hyperactive chatterboxes too young to remember Johnny Carson, Cheers, or the World Series earthquake.

So I reined in the age range a little. 29-38 seemed appropriate. This makes the dating pool extremely shallow, because most women my age are still trying to make their first marriage work (spoiler alert: it probably won’t).

After over two years of dipping in and out of OKCupid, it has gradually dawned on me that most (not all, you nitpickers) women, 29-38, who have profiles on that site fall into four broad categories (no pun intended):

#1. The Whirlwind
“Grab your passport, let’s travel!! Where? Any-fucking-where! It doesn’t matter, as I’m kind of an empty shell, and constant motion is preferable to sitting still and listening to the roaring void that is my personality!” Snowboarding in the winter, wakeboarding in the summer, the Whirlwind has no patience for soft, sedentary reflection, it’s go-go-go. She will run you into an early grave if you try to keep up with her, which is fine ’cause your premature death gives her more time for rock-climbing and trips to Ireland.

#2. The Girly-Girl
She matches all the stereotypes. These are the girls that the “oppressed males” in beer commercials are always trying to escape from, and with good reason. They like wine-tasting, celebrity gossip (Jon & Kate count as celebrities to them), chocolate, Oprah, Lucky magazine, and relationship discussions. Especially noteable for their absolutely appalling taste in all forms of popular culture, their DVD shelves are groaning with titles like Dirty Dancing and The Notebook, and their iPod playlists are chock full of Jack Johnson, Keith Urban, and Colbie Caillat. They may be smart, but they never display an iota of intellectual curiosity. (Warning: She will eventually turn into The Castrating Shrew, but that’s a different set of categories.)

[SIDE NOTE: I thought the “Girly-Girl” was a Madison Avenue cliche, a creature existing solely as an antagonist in the above-mentioned commercials, but they’re clearly out there. I suppose their opposite number is the “Manly-Man,” but it’s no longer the rugged, square-jawed Marlboro Man type. No, the new “Manly-Man,” according to the advertising wizards, is an unshaven, overgrown fratboy prone to bellowing incoherently and high-fiving his Token Black Friend over how shiny his truck is or how good he thinks his pisswater light beer tastes.]

#3. The Pretentious Grad Student
She may have graduated long ago, but never left the mentality behind. Very, very intelligent — much more so than you, certainly, you scruffy fuck — but hasn’t laughed out loud in a dog’s age. (A particularly pithy Jon Stewart quip or trenchant New Yorker cartoon may draw a wry smirk.) Reading list consists of hefty volumes on socio-political issues, or Gabriel Garcia Marquez novels. She listens to jazz, or Brazilian folk, or just whatever pops up on NPR’s Fresh Air that day (who has time for music when there’s causes?) She loves Thai food, or is vegetarian, or God help us, vegan. She often has a little bit of the Whirlwind in her, enjoying an occasional escape into the “real” culture of Europe, or some oppressed Latin American banana republic. Her Facebook profile picture for the next eighteen months will be her in front of some Mayan ruins in oversized boots and a hemp rucksack. In short, she’s completely insufferable.

#4. The “I’m-Just-A-Country-Girl”
Whole lotta these lurking around. She owns Tim McGraw and/or contemporary Christian CDs (hasn’t bought an iPod yet). Enjoys camping. Probably voted for Bush, twice, if it occurred to her to vote at all. Dumb as a fucking fencepost.

So no match for me. I seem to fall between the cracks (again, no pun intended) of these categories. The 21-28 year olds have their own set of categories, which are embryonic versions of all of the above (the only real difference is the 29-38 year olds have decent jobs), with the addition of Party Girl, Faux-Hippie Girl, and Aren’t-I-Nerdy/Quirky?-Girl.

In ten years, I might be writing about a whole new set of categories for 39-48 year olds. Stay tuned.

[ANOTHER SIDE NOTE. ACTUALLY, MORE OF AN END NOTE: Despite the rib-tickling satire above, I really believe these websites do work if you want them to work. I actually did meet one or two nice, normal women through that website, and even went “out” once or twice. What happened? See my Issue #1. I backed away.]

[END NOTE #2, FIVE YEARS LATER: Ok, the site works. See comments below. B-T-dubs, replace the incredibly dated Internet and Jon & Kate references above with whatever happens to be the new viral sensation and reality show celeb-du-jours in the year you’re reading this.]

4 Comments

Filed under Life & Other Distractions

"Are You A Collective?": The Holy Bee’s Adventures at the San Francisco Zine Fest

A number of developments marked the last few weeks of August for the Institute of Idle Time “collective.” First of all, WH and I went back to work after a summer break (MDG runs a summer camp, so no break for him, poor chump), and our place of employment is under new management. Second of all, our grand project — DECADES — hit the streets on August 21st. A thought-provoking, argument-starting ranking of our favorite 400 albums of the past fifty years, complete with individual write-ups for each album. It’s published by ComiXpress and written in large part by the membership of the Institute of Idle Time. (If I’ve never introduced them by name officially in this forum, they are: myself, MDG, WH, RF, 3D Chain, Arcturus the Boy-Tune Wonder, and JH. For a reminder of what we’re all about, click here.) Even the seven of us could not possibly do write-ups for 400 albums in the time we had, so there are also contributions from over thirty of our friends and family. You might know one. You might be one. It’s a damn good bathroom read, contains original art by Jim Shepherd and photography by John Muheim and George Umpingco, and looks nice on a coffee table. Copies are available through me for $12.

Third of all, we decided to pack up our new books and several copies of our zine that we printed in late ’08 and early ’09, and make a fortune at the San Francisco Zine Fest.

A “zine” is simply a self-published magazine that initially came of age in the underground-punk-rock-DIY 70’s, a paper-and-staples relic being made increasingly irrelevant by the very thing you’re staring at right now. Sporadically produced, lovingly assembled, and indifferently distributed out of copier paper boxes and duffel bags, a zine is a soapbox guaranteeing your extremist and incindiary opinions will be read by literally tens of people, and discarded unread by dozens more. The Institute of Idle Time produced three issues of Idle Times between September 2008 and March 2009, with threats of a fourth issue made every so often. Mostly harmless pop-culture piffle (articles on monster movies and breakfast cereal, interviews with local artists and sub-minor celebrities, etc.), they have some pretty good stuff in them, and like the book, are available through me at a buck a throw.

So a couple of Saturdays ago, I made my leisurely way down to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, and the County Fair Building therein, where MDG and his girlfriend Sherice, along with his brother Matt, photographer John Muheim, and fellow Idle Timer Arcturus the Boy-Tune Wonder, had set up the official Idle Time merch table. I was there to keep everyone company and lend moral support. I certainly wasn’t there for my salesmanship. I took the preschool advice “don’t talk to strangers” to heart, and it’s still a credo I try to live by. When forced to deal with large numbers of people I don’t know, my stomach clenches, my palms sweat, and when I’m not communicating in a hoarse whisper, I’m setting records for awkward pauses. (Low-level social anxiety disorder? Or just a misanthropic asshole? Who can tell?) But by the time I arrived, MDG was ready for a coffee break. I was counting on MDG’s megawatt personality to be a buffer between my reticent, surly self and the general public.


And this was not exactly the “general” public we’re talking about here. These were the denizens of the San Francisco Zine Fest, and within five minutes of my arrival, I was the official representative of the Institute of Idle Time to a crowd of hundreds of people who were each trying in their own special way to be as different and off-putting as possible.

Pic snapped by MDG as he left me in charge of the table. L to r: John Muheim (standing), Your Humble Narrator, Sherice Wu, Matt. My expression says it all.
 
Almost immediately, our table was approached by a young girl of indeterminate ethnic origin and about the size of a border collie standing on its hind legs. She peered at me through eyes fringed with neon-blue mascara. “So, what are you guys all about?” she all but snapped.I blinked in small-town confusion. Sherice blinked. I blinked again. “Don’t everyone talk at once,” she said and lit the fuse on a firecracker string of staccato chuckles. I shifted into my brand-new role as Group Spokesperson and stammered out a thumbnail sketch of what we’re all about. She seemed enraptured, propping her tiny elbows on the table and leaning into us. I was suspicious immediately. She asked us several follow-up questions, among them “Are you a collective?”
In the fifteen minutes that I had been there, this was the second time I had heard that term. “Some friends and I from the east coast are trying to get a collective together…”was a snatch of conversation I overheard as I was walking in from an erudite young lady in a suede coat and (presumably fake) fur collar, complete with knee-high boots and what appeared to be a bandolier. I expected her to announce at any moment that she was, in fact, Inigo Montoya, and that I had killed her father, and should be prepared to die. I had only the vaguest idea what the term meant, but people kept trying to apply it to us.
Anyway, our new friend finished her interrogation of us, and immediately launched into her own completely-expected sales hustle. She was starting a fest of her own in September, and was trying to gather sponsorship. We took her flyer and watched her move on to the next table, where she plunked her elbows down and asked them what they were all about. Within the next few minutes, someone else dropped the collective terminology on us.”What’s a collective? Are they asking if we all sleep together and raise soybeans?” I asked Sherice.”I think you’re thinking of a co-op,” said Sherice. I pondered awhile.

[So here’s an official definition of “collective” that I looked up later: a group of people who share or are motivated by at least one common issue or interest, or work together on a specific project to achieve a common objective. So far, I guess we are, indeed, a collective. Collectives are also characterized by attempt to share and exercise political and social power. And that’s where the similarites end for us. We know and accept that we’re merely opinionated attention-whores, which is exactly like everyone else there, but we use no pretense of activism or artistry as a smokescreen.]


MDG’s coffee break extended into attending a screenprinting workshop, which extended my duties as Chief Salesman. Not that there were many sales to be made. As MDG pointed out, “A free zine fest does not attract the type of person with gobs of spending money.” What it does attract:

  1. A person with what appeared to be a gutted sheep carcass on his head. Upon closer examination, it turned out to be a particularly horrid set of dreadlocks, with what I’d wager to be a population density greater than San Francisco itself.
  2. A person who thought a plum-colored blazer gave him the air of a sophisticated bon vivant, but this belief was undercut by the many cigarette burn holes dotting the garment like moon craters.
  3. Women (now well into their thirties) who still think striped stockings and zany hair color are the height of alterna-culture.
  4. Bi-polar lesbian vampire enthusaists. (I’m not kidding, their table was right next to ours.)

MDG finally returned, but business at our stall remained slow, even when not fronted by the scintillating personality of Your Humble Narrator. Why?

  1. We in no way espoused a radical political cause. (One prominent silkscreened poster nearby depicted an armed, masked thug with the legend This Isn’t A Smash-And-Grab…This Is A REVOLUTION! stencilled across the bottom. Whatever. You’re not Thomas Paine, you criminal shitbird. It is a smash-and-grab, and they will probably catch you because you’re stupid. Good luck with the “political revolution” defense in court.)
  2. Our material in no way depicted or endorsed the activities of vampires, zombies, or a fiendish blend of both.

We were strictly music, which actually put us odd-man-out amongst this conglomeration of oddities. I was mistaken in my initial belief that these folks would gravitate to stuff of a musical nature. Music was a distant second (or third) to whatever other fringe hobbyhorse occupied their fevered minds.

I wasn’t getting any more comfortable working the table. What I need most in situations like these is a little infusion of Dutch courage. So not long after MDG came back, I was off like a shot to find the nearest public house. I didn’t have to look far.

On Lincoln Way, just across the street from the zine fest, is the Little Shamrock, and it is just the place to kill a few hours. The barkeep had his poodly hair tied back with a leather thong and was draped in tie-dye, but was such a font of hearty goodfellowship I immediately forgave him his unfortunate sartorial taste and decided he was one of the Good Ones. His obvious fondness for his products and his liberal use of the word “fuck” as noun, verb, adjective, and preposition marked him as a man after my own weaselly, wicked heart. He extolled the virtues of the recently-discovered Three Olives bubblegum-flavored vodka, and was generous with the free samples.

“My buddies and I had way too much of this last night,” he declared to his coterie of adoring female barflies. “We were like a bunch of fuckin’ Bazooka Joes!”

After three fingers of Bushmills on the rocks and a couple of IPAs, I felt much better about manning the zine fest table. It must have shown on my face as I returned, with Matt remarking “Looks like Popeye’s had his spinach.”

“Let’s sell some fuckin’ zines!” I hollered as I parked myself and prepared to press the flesh. But the only person who made a lengthy stop at our table for the remainder of the evening was a blind guy. He was one of those non-sunglasses-wearing blind guys, with his spooky eyes on full display, along with the white tapping cane. Seriously, he couldn’t have looked more blind (this will be important in a moment). All he lacked was a dog, but I guess he felt he didn’t need a dog when Matt would do just as well.

“Excuse me, sir, could you direct me to the restrooms?”

Matt looked up, and did exactly what I’d hoped he’d do.

He pointed.

“Go about ten tables down and take a left.”

It was my favorite moment of the day.

Blind people have acute hearing to compensate for their lack of sight, so he must have heard by involuntary chuckle die an embarrassed, choked-off death in my upper thorax. But he chose to continue his awkward conversational waltz with Matt.

“Excuse me, sir, but as you may have noticed, I’m visually-impaired.”

Shooting the rest of us a hangdog, why-me stare (unseen by its cause, of course), Matt put down his copy of Decades ($12, e-mail me) and walked the man to the bathroom, leaving us to ponder how he knew Matt was a “sir.” We supposed he could see vague shapes, but even so, a six-foot-plus shape with a booming bass voice was no guarantee it was a “sir” at the zine fest, which ended soon after.

After an awesome meal at Pizza Orgasmica, the next item of business was a Decades-themed DJ set at uber-hot downtown San Francisco nightspot House of Shields presided over by 3D Chain, WH, and MDG. I understand it was a roaring success. I wouldn’t know personally. I never found a parking spot. It was Saturday night in the busiest part of one of the busiest cities in the world. WH and JH got there hours early (they didn’t bother with the Zine Fest). MDG, an SF native, parked 200 blocks away in the Financial District. I could have found somewhere to get cash to pay for the exorbitantly expensive (and dangerously seedy) public lots, but I decided, in the Great Holy Bee Tradition — fuck it. Home was a more attractive option. I pointed my car toward the Bay Bridge and got the hell out.

I’m told there will be a Sacramento Decades DJ set soon. That’s more my speed.


MGD DJ’ing at House of Shields. Photo by JH. I wasn’t there…

Up next, the final installment of Marysville: Then & Now, and a return of This Used To Be My Playground…

6 Comments

Filed under Books, Current Events, Life & Other Distractions

Moving Day

July was a much busier month than any month during summer vacation has a right to be. Mostly due to the big move back to Sacramento after over four years of stagnating up north in the Yuba-Sutter area. (As the ’90s playlist series demonstrates, I’ve already stagnated there once before in my high school/college years.) I’ve spent the last two of those years stuck in Marysville, the town that literally can’t grow (I’ll explain why in the next entry.) Now I can at least stagnate in a place that has decent bookstores.

Moving house isn’t fun in the best of times, but it’s especially enervating during the hottest week of the year thus far, on average. (July 15-22, 2009, look it up.) There were times at the end of the day when my clothes looked like I had jumped in a pool. My raging taste for alcohol subsided, and was replaced with an obsession with Wild Cherry Pepsi Super Big Gulps (I must have had two dozen in five days.) I wasn’t moving a glass menagerie and little lace doilies, either. My “stuff” consists of about 400,000 pounds worth of CDs, DVDs, and the Movers’ Bane: books. I am a literate and highly well-read fellow, and that comes with a price beyond a simple loss of social skills – it means every time you move, you have to box up all those goddamn books, and, well…move them, as the term implies. And nothing weighs more than a box full of books, with the possible exception of a fully filled tropical aquarium.

And most of that stuff I moved by myself. It wasn’t until I got to the furniture that I had to call in reinforcements – namely WH and RF, who gamely assisted me in squeezing a 35-inch wide couch through a 33½-inch wide door. (It only landed directly on WH’s hand once, and I’m told he’s healing nicely, with almost full mobility regained.)

“Next time, we’re just going to heave it over the back fence and bring it through the sliding glass door,” I panted to WH as we collapsed at the conclusion of the ordeal.

“No. You’re never moving again, asshole,” was WH’s response. (I inferred the “asshole” from his tone.)

Once everything was pretty much in its place, the next order of business was hitting the store to get all the things you need to replace when you move. New toilet brush, new broom, some hooks, some lightbulbs…and I have never felt as gay as I did standing there trying to determine which fuzzy toilet seat cover/bathmat set to buy. “Just because I’m straight doesn’t mean I have to live like a savage” became my official motto of the day as I went off to explore house plants and throw rugs.

Then the cable guy came to hook up my TV and internet. He wasn’t the jovial, wisecracking, sleeveless redneck I had come to expect from the portrayals of cable guys in the popular media. No, my cable guy was a bitter, eye-rolling quasi-sophisticate of about 23, vibrating with barely suppressed rage, and he clearly believed that his recent college degree entitled him to a life that didn’t include crawling around in the privet hedges outside my townhouse. Clearly, I should be the one mucking in the shrubbery, and he should be deciding on throw rugs. (Things are tough all over, Rob From AT&T, and maybe someday you’ll go far. But not with that attitude.)

The first cable guy did not have what was required in his magic van, and promised to return the next day. Anyone familiar with cable guy promises knows that he had no intention of returning without my calling and making a second appointment. Which I did. The situation required a second and third visit from Cable Guy #2, the altogether more amiable Eduardo, who spent much of his time gleefully bad-mouthing Rob.

With the computer finally set to go, I discovered that the copious notes I made on the next entry of This Used To Be My Playground had not been saved before I shut down and packed up. So, until I’m motivated enough to start the entry from scratch, I’ve decided to pay a little tribute to the city I’m leaving behind. Watch for The Holy Bee Presents MARYSVILLE: Then & Now to pop up here, perhaps later today, perhaps tomorrow.

Leave a comment

Filed under Life & Other Distractions

Sad day

A lot of us lost a good friend today when Jeff McKinney passed away. He was one of my best friends for awhile in the mid-90s, a sometime roommate (when it suited him), and a memorable road trip companion. He had a machine-gun mouth and an enormous heart, and was a hilarious co-conspirator in all manner of mischief.

The Holy Bee trying to keep a good man down, 1994

Jeff was the first person to sign my senior yearbook
When I put together the blog entries dealing with my first girlfriend, Brenda, in a failed attempt at brevity, I did not mention my bitter rival for her affection: Nathan Schumer, another member of the class of ’93 who left too soon. At each others’ throats for all of freshman year, we developed a grudging affection for each other over the years, and ended high school as pretty good friends. Just after McKinney wrote his “sentimental bullshit,” Nathan added his two cents:
Two all-around good guys who deserved a longer run, one gone in 2006 and the other just today. Both made their marks on my life…and on the inside cover of my yearbook, moments apart, on an overcast June day in 1993. Rest in peace.

2 Comments

Filed under Life & Other Distractions

Goodbye 2008

After two-plus months of listening (and re-listening) to and scoring five other people’s “Best of 2008” albums for the Institute of Idle Time’s annual compilation (due out January 24, 2009, along with Issue #3 of the Idle Times zine), I am finally free to listen to music of my own choice again. This means a gleeful, Nestea-like plunge into the back catalog. I’ve been gorging myself on Bob Dylan and Prince, who are really two sides to the same coin, approaching similar levels of iconoclasm from two very different paths. Both artists have had their songs covered by others numerous times, but both remain the best interpreters of their own material. Compare that to Kris Kristofferson, who can’t sing a lick but writes good songs that only really come alive when others perform them.

Some artists, though, have such a personal voice that it seems impossible to imagine anyone else doing justice to their songs. 2008 marked the 15th anniversary of Liz Phair’s Exile In Guyville, which was reissued in a deluxe format this past summer. Like Kris, Phair is a writer who can’t really sing all that well, but unlike Kris, she writes songs perfectly suited to her vocal limitations, to the point where no one else could put them across with the same level of truth and intensity.

The songs on Exile were intended to be a response to the Rolling Stones’ Exile On Main Street, although having listened to both hundreds of times, I’ll be damned if I can see a specific connection. Phair’s Exile sounded like a series of diary entries from a very damaged soul. And I mean that in the best way. Phair’s innate sense of…well, taste is the wrong word for the self-described Blowjob Queen…I guess a certain lack of ego or self-obsession keeps her from going off the rails, lyrically. Korn songs sound like damaged-soul diary entries, too, but…yeesh.

Exile In Guyville quickly gained Phair a lot of notice among musical tastemakers of the early 90s. And at no time were musical tastemakers less fun to be around than the early 90s. “Credibility” and deadpan seriousness were everything. In 1995, Spin magazine (a few years before it became essentially Rolling Stone Jr.) even put out a glossy Alternative Record Guide which, naturally, I bought the day it came out. The Spin guide was so desperate to distance itself from the uncool dinosaur bones of classic rock that it insisted Phair’s Exile In Guyville was a response to noise-rock act Pussy Galore’s track-by-track re-recording of Exile On Main Street (limited to 550 cassette copies) rather than the Stones’ original. That perfectly illustrates the level of hardcore music snobbery one was forced to deal with back then. Thank goodness those days are over.

Phair finished out the 1990s with two more pretty well-regarded albums (1998’s whitechocolatespaceegg featured “Polyester Bride,” which I think is one of the best songs of the decade), then, in 2003, committed one of the most gloriously jaw-dropping acts of career suicide ever witnessed in my lifetime. She signed to Capitol Records, abandoned her old producer Brad Whatshisnose and hired slicky-boy producer Michael (“No Myth”) Penn, ditched every aspect of her songwriting that made her special, posed for a series of photos where she’s basically naked as a jaybird, and lunged gloriously for the brass ring of pop-chart success…and fell flat on her face.

Her old fans abandoned her like rats fleeing a sinking ship, and she did not acquire new fans in any noticeable quantity. Even Capitol Records decided Penn’s production wasn’t “commercial” enough (imagine!), and sent Phair back into the studio with a production team known as “The Matrix” who had recently guided Avril Lavigne to superstardom. Lavigne, of course, made her reputation by pretending to be as rebellious and honest as Phair really once was. And instead of nursing wounded feelings at home alone or driving alone from nowhere to nowhere, Lavigne nurses hers at the mall. Y’know, with all her friends.

I guess we can’t begrudge Phair’s attempt to tap into Lavigne’s audience and go for the big bucks. Every performer wants as wide an audience as possible, and don’t let them tell you they don’t. (Although as a widely respected recording artist for Matador Records and a popular touring act, I don’t think she was exactly starving on the streets as her old self.) And this isn’t the early 90s anymore. Slick, commercial pop in the Pink or Gwen Stefani tradition isn’t viewed as inherently terrible, or the antithesis of true art anymore. It’s actually pretty fun. But Phair’s journey from what she was to what she is is sad because of its brazen crassness. The honesty that has always served her well in her early songs compels her to admit in interviews that selling out is exactly what she’s done. And she also admits, in a roundabout way, that she has stopped writing songs with any meaning:

Rod Stewart—I mean, he used to make, like, brilliant music, right? And then he kind of went the whole celebrity route, and he stopped making brilliant music. But I wasn’t mad at him. I didn’t go, like: ‘You fuckhead! You fuckwit!’ I don’t get that. I just stopped buying [his] records, which to me is the appropriate response.

I’m not mad at you, Liz. But I will respond appropriately.

(OK, I actually didn’t intend for this little good-bye message to 2008 to turn into a lengthy screed on an artist who ranks pretty far down on my favorites list, but that’s where it went. So be it. Maybe if I hired a “production team” that went by a single-word moniker I could stay on track…)

Coming Soon: My Top 20 Albums of 2008 (#11-20)…

1 Comment

Filed under Life & Other Distractions, Music -- 1990s, Music -- 2000s

That Championship Season: Idle Time Trivia’s Year-End Triumph

WEEK 1 (12/01/08)

The first round of the December season began Monday, December 1st, and it was not a very auspicious start. We stumbled right out of the gate by failing to come up with the last names of “Alan” and “Charlie” from the puerile sitcom Two And A Half Men, which airs on a pretty much constant loop on Fox 40, eating up airtime that could be used on reruns of worthier sitcoms, like Too Close For Comfort (that Monroe was such a card!), or One Day At A Time (Bonnie Franklin — rowr!! And that Schneider? A card!). The quizmaster appears to have discovered our weak spots (shitty TV, shitty 2000s-era pop music, college sports, vital current events) and exploited them.

One question threatened to tear the whole team asunder: What is the #2 selling British group in the U.S. after the Beatles? At first, it seemed easy — the obvious choice was the Rolling Stones. But Will began the hallowed tradition of casting doubt. The devil’s advocate. The Doubting Thomas. The dickhead. “I think it’s Pink Floyd, guys,” he said. “Dark Side Of The Moon has sold, like, 40 million copies.” It wasn’t long before he had convinced me. Ever since the late 1960s, the Rolling Stones sales pattern has been to release a new album, shoot to #1 or #2 on the charts for a week as the hardcore fans snap it up, and then fade until the next new album. They don’t have the cachet with young stoners just getting into music, and thus, their back catalog remains pretty stagnant. Pink Floyd is considered “cool” by high schoolers and junior collegers making the simultaneous discovery of music made before 2002 and controlled substances. The fact that the Rolling Stones are approximately 1000 times better than Pink Floyd does not translate into continuous sales. The Rolling Stones are not cool. MDG then tossed in another possibility: Led Zeppelin, which he pointed out would have healthy sales for the same reasons as Pink Floyd (and are also about 1000 times better.) MDG’s opinion was absolutely valid, but may have been subconsciously discredited by the rest of us because his knowledge of classic rock is pretty much nil. Or is it?

JH had almost won me back to the Stones camp by pointing out sales figures also count greatest hits albums (which always fly off the shelves when the Stones tour), but I couldn’t ignore the sales behemoth Dark Side Of The Moon, which spent 741 consecutive weeks on the Billboard charts (over 14 years), and is owned by 1 in every 14 people under the age of 50 in the United States. Google it yourself if you don’t believe me. Will and I called the very first Double Doobie — Pink Floyd had to be the answer…

…but it wasn’t. It was Led Zeppelin.

Who very recently took over the #2 spot from…the Rolling Stones. So we finished fourth for the night.

The points standings after Week 1:

1. Shelby Drink Your Juice                  27
2. Mistletoe Gang                                  27
3. Suburban Underground                  25
4. Idle Time                                            24
5. Perverse & Often Baffling                23
6. Hung Like Mistletoe                         23
7. Brown-Chicken-Brown Cows        23
8 The Duncecaps                                 21
9. G-Unit                                                 20
10. The Taco Stand Has Moved        19

Looks like it’s going to be a close season. Which is just the way we like it. Three measly points out of first place. Striking distance, and we don’t mind coming from behind. You can drive faster looking through the windshield than in the rearview mirror. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Life & Other Distractions

Here I come a-wassailing…


I have a new holiday tradition to add to my list: the consumption of wassail. I understand recipes vary, but the brew I had yesterday was pretty sublime. The ex-wife, with whom I remain on quite friendly terms, was kind enough to stop by my bachelor hovel yesterday and stew up a pot of the stuff.

It’s basically this:

In a large saucepan, simmer a mix of orange juice, apple cider, orange and lemon slices, cinnamon sticks, whole cloves and whole allspice (and star annis if you can find it) over low heat for two hours. (Have some Sam Adams Winter Lager and watch Elf in the meantime.) Strain, then infuse with a shitload of white wine (all measures approximate) and a few cups of rum, and continue simmering for about another 20 minutes. Ladle into mugs and enjoy. It can stay in the pot on the stove on its lowest setting for hours.

You’re welcome.

1 Comment

Filed under Life & Other Distractions

Locke, Talk, and Live Music Perils


I had an entertaining couple of days last weekend. As some of you may be aware, the music criticism group/social club Institute of Idle Time is a many-tentacled creature, dipping its beak into multiple areas of media, culture, and society. (Is that a mixed metaphor? Octopi have beaks, don’t they? Let’s assume they do. Onward!) The latest area we have been dabbling in is the burgeoning field of paranormal investigation. Head over to the Idle Time blog PARANOISE for the scoop on the technicalities, ins & outs, whys and wherefores of our new endeavor.

What really started the whole thing was JH’s and my devotion to the Sci-Fi Channel TV show Ghost Hunters, in which the The Atlantic Paranormal Society (TAPS) uses scientific methodology to debunk (or sometimes confirm) reports of paranormal activity. The two lead investigators, Roto Rooter employees by day, are rigorous in their procedures and pragmatic in their conclusions. It’s an entertaining show, even for those who don’t really believe in that stuff. Compare that show to, say, Most Haunted over on the Travel Channel, which eschews the foundations of skeptical inquiry in favor of using hammy, overwrought psychics going into trances and making statements like “I see a man with dark hair…He’s got something wrong with his arm…He says his name is ‘James’” and so on and so forth. Such claptrap makes them rank pretty much below the Scooby-Doo gang in the areas of rational thought and sober-minded analysis. Their target audience seems to be people who see the image of the Virgin Mary in the stucco pattern on the wall of their cramped duplex that smells like a giant litterbox, UFO buffs, conspiracy theorists, and angel enthusiasts. (And thank the deity of your choice that that trend is dying out. Ever worked with one of those loons? Angels, angels, angels.)

The Idle Time crew is generally a pretty jaded, cynical bunch, and all of us consider ourselves hard-nosed skeptics. But at the same time, few of us could resist a jolly outing like a ghost hunt. If a bunch of fucking plumbers could do it, so could we! So at about 11 P.M. on Friday, December 12, JH packed up her EMF meter and voice recorder, 3Dchain grabbed his video camera, MDG strapped on his forehead lamp, and the rest of us (WH, Sherice, Gilly and Idle Time website designer Nina) took along an open mind and headed south out of Sacramento on the river road toward Clarksburg. The Old Sugar Mill in Clarksburg looked like prime haunted material.
Part of it has been renovated for banquets and weddings and the like, but most of it retains the broken, skeletal appearance typical of abandoned industrial areas. We stopped there first, hoping to ask the janitorial crew for a quick look around, but couldn’t find anyone, although the lights were still on. We decided to return later.

Next, we went in search of a “haunted” location from the bowels of Nina’s memory that may or may not still exist. It turns out that it doesn’t (by luck, we stumbled across the concrete foundations), but we did find this place, a rotting southern plantation-style pile which we quickly dubbed the “Haunted Mansion.”

We, of course, had absolutely no permission to actually enter any of these structures, putting what we were doing somewhere in the gray area between trespassing and breaking & entering. Obtaining clearance from the property owners will be a vital part of the planning process for Ghost Hunt #2. I was less worried about running into tormented poltergeists than running afoul of territorial river folk anxious to exercise their Second Amendment rights into my fleeing backside. Sure enough, right behind the abandoned Haunted Mansion was a brightly-lit, clearly occupied house trailer. Undaunted, WH and 3DChain tumbled from our own little Ectomobile (a Pontiac Vibe) like Navy SEALs being inserted behind enemy lines. MMDG quickly somersaulted from the follow-up vehicle, but kept his headlamp off. Both vehicles had an inability to kill their headlights, so we tore ass out of there, leaving our three investigators alone in the thick brambles surrounding the Haunted Mansion for three full minutes. We returned for personnel retrieval, and they breathlessly informed us that the rear of the building was partially wall-less, but also facing the aforementioned house trailer, derailing the ability to investigate further. We continued down the road.

Our next stop was the town of Locke, a small, ramshackle hamlet built by Chinese immigrants in 1915 (pictured below in daylight).
The main (and pretty much only) street consisted of semi-decrepit little shops and museums, which served not only as a source of livelihood for the 90 or so citizens, but also their places of residence. When we hit town around midnight, the place was totally shut down (even the one bar, Al the Wop’s) and eerily quiet. It looked like a movie set. WH had a bit of a scare when he was investigating one of the back alleys (pictured below left) and heard drawn-out, rasping sigh that seemed to come from nowhere. We determined that he was hearing the sound of one of the Lockians snoring behind their thin, clapboard walls. WH tried to convince MDG to take a picture of the front of one of the buildings, but MDG was fearful that someone might be sleeping under the copious piles of garbage near the open-doored entrance. JH did some EVP work and took several photos (go to the Paranoise blog for the results), and then we headed back north.

When we returned to the Old Sugar Mill, the cleaning crew was long gone, and there was one car in the parking lot, presumably a security guard. Assuming the security guard was about as competent and motivated as most security guards, MDG and I decided it was safe to investigate a little further. We got around the side of the old, run-down part of the building without ever technically crossing a fence line, providing us with a defense that absolutely, positively would never stand up in any court. But in our adrenaline-addled state, it provided us with sufficient peace of mind to poke around in a dark, off-limits area for several minutes with only moonlight to guide us. The rear of the Old Sugar Mill looked like a tetanus shot or broken ankle waiting to happen, with huge chunks of rusty equipment, and steep drop-offs into mysterious pits and trenches scattered throughout the area.

With the equipment (and our nerve) tested, locations scouted, and a few lessons learned, the first Idle Time Ghost Hunt came to an end, and we headed for the Freeport Bar & Grill to toast our success. It was really only a test run, and our first real investigation will probably be at the Ryde Hotel in Walnut Grove and take place early in the New Year.

And speaking of the New Year, whisper it quietly, but there is the possibility of an Idle Time podcast premiering in 2009. Still in the research & development stages, it may come to pass that the general public will have access to the sound of WH, MDG, myself (and assorted guests) expounding on (mostly) musical minutiae on a regular basis. You’ve read the words, now hear the mellifluous voices!

Saturday was another late night for me as I headed to Woodland to see JH’S and Gilly’s band Ahoy! play at The Stag. After a big dinner at Ludy’s BBQ, (where I met the other members of the band, Julie and Joy, for the first time) we headed across the street to the venue. Woodland’s downtown has been experiencing a resurgence and gentrification over the past few years, and as a result, legendary dive bars such as The Shanty and The Sportsmen’s Lounge have shut down. The Stag is the last of their breed. No bigger than an elongated sitting room, the musical acts that play The Stag are relegated to a small area toward the back. The first band came and went, did a fairly serviceable job, with extra bonus points awarded for a good sound mix for such a small area. WH and I secured seats at the bar, which was another bonus – I don’t like to stand for long periods of time. I am a big fan of sitting. And an ever bigger fan of lying down.

I am a music-lover, but not a musician. My knowledge of music theory and terminology is on the limited side, but a lifetime of listening and voluminous reading on the subject of music history and appreciation (particularly forms of 20th century western popular music) have allowed me to be able to back up my opinions and tastes with confidence. There was one time when I did want to be a musician, and received for my ninth birthday a small Harmony electric guitar, and an amp the size of a shoebox. Never having played a note of any instrument before in my short life, I took it out of its cardboard mail-order packaging, plugged it into its tiny amplifier, grabbed a pick, and…

…made sounds that were still better than the second band that played The Stag that night!

No joke, the second band that played was the worst fucking band I have ever seen take the stage at a venue where people paid money. I will not name them because they seem like the type of band who Googles themselves often, and this blog might come up in a Google search. I am a nice enough guy not to want to hurt anyone’s feelings even semi-anonymously on the web, and what I am about to say about this “band” (let’s just say their name rhymes with “Schmender Schmed”) is bound to be hurtful. But only because they hurt me first with their “busted-ass songs” (to use WH’s phrase).

They opened with a droning, feedback-drenched version of “Amazing Grace.” No, that is not a typo. The vocals sounded as if they were piped in from the first week of American Idol tryouts. There was no sense of rhythm or melody even remotely connected to what was emanating from the performance area. Some bands have the discipline and talent to utilize non-traditional tunings and washes of noise to interesting effect (Sonic Youth springs to mind.) Not these jokers. At first, I thought I was just a philistine unable to appreciate the jagged, complicated tone-poems of Schmender Schmed. But the pained look on everyone’s faces assured me that I wasn’t flying solo in my belief that these people should be forcibly restrained from picking up or even looking at a musical instrument ever again. (I mentioned to WH at about that time that a good alternate band name for them would be “The Room-Clearers,” because that was the effect they were having.) And if they looked like nervous, amateurish first-timers, they might have won some sympathy points. But no, they pranced about like preening, strutting divas. The guitarist even sported a set of Bono shades, presumably because the neon Bud Light sign serving as a makeshift spotlight was a just too much illumination. JH remarked later that the only time she wore sunglasses in performance was when they were playing outdoors facing the glare of the setting sun, and she still felt like an ass.

This wretched excuse of a performance set the table for Ahoy!, who tore through a stomping, thirty-minute set secure in the knowledge that they were following a clusterfuck of the first order, and were bound to sound even better by comparison.

So if you’re perusing the Scene section of your local periodical, looking to take in some live music on a Saturday night, if you see a “band” whose name rhymes with “Schmender Schmed,” give them a wide berth. (Presuming they escaped The Stag that night without being fell upon and slaughtered by a group of torch- and pitchfork-carrying patrons who had paid a five-buck cover charge to listen to their self-satisfied, tuneless, masturbatory garbage.)


Me in 1983 with my sweet axe

3 Comments

Filed under Life & Other Distractions