Monday, October 31, 2011
# 7,000,000,000
Sunday, October 30, 2011
7 Billion More or Less
A Last Sherman Tank
In the Words of Albert Finney
Few films are as bittersweet romantic as the comic road movie TWO FOR THE ROAD starring Albert Finney and Audrey Hepburn. The two play star-crossed lovers traveling throughout Europe. Their honeymoon brings them to a country hotel in France, where they observed older couples speechlessly dining together.
“What kind of people don’t speak to each other.” Audrey asks in a haze of smitten amusement.
“Married people.” Albert Finney answered with a vow to never be like their aged compatriots. Of course within the movie’s plotline the two evolved into despicable people riven by greed. The ending had them abandoning the ways of the flesh and driving off into the scenery to save their love.
There was never a sequel, however years later a British TV host interviewed Albert Finney and asked, “You’ve been married six times. What was the similarity between your wives?”
“They all left me.” Albert Finney quickly quipped, fully understanding that some men are not made by the women behind them, but by those who have left them behind.
That last line is from James Steele, America's leading pseudo-intellectual.
He speaks.
He lives.
He left no one behind without a thought to see them one more time.
Men Versus Women – The Eternal Struggle
To Grope or Not Grope
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Live Long and Prosper LOL
The River Is Wide
The Polling Of The Right
Friday, October 28, 2011
More Than 10% Divine
right before I left for Luxembourg, my co-worker Deisy announced that she had no gay friends. She was a fundamentalist and a firm believer in the Bible. Hell was reserved for sinners and God has a special oven for the worshipers of man-sex for her church. Her church was not Catholic in origins.
"Deisy, you know many gays. And you probably have many gay friends, only they won't tell you." Most of my gay friends never mentioned their sexual preference, although it was fairly obvious by the way they checked out my rack.
Most people have no idea what is a gay man.
Certainly Rock Hudson didn't fit the caricature and I told Ava, "Jesus was gay."
"Blasphemy."
"He hung around men, lived with his mother, had long hair, and wore a dress. You're lucky if he wasn't a transvestite." There was no mention in the New Testament about his liking Broadway show tunes or gladiator movies. "Some people could have considered him 'gay'."
"Why are you saying this?" She had her hands over her ears.
"Because my brother was gay and he wasn't bad. You only think gays are bad, because your pastor tells you that." She had no knowledge about the recent Gay Jesus exhibition in Europe and the USA. Most of the art was second-rate, then again Jesus faked dying on the cross, but that's another story.
"I did know a gay man."
"And?"
"He belonged to my church." Deisy is a very good person. She loves her daughter and friends. I never discourage her prayers for my soul.
"And the pastor threw him out?" Gays weren't welcome in many churches.
"Yes, he was asked to leave."
"And you stopped being friends with him?"
"Yes."
"You're better than that. The church does not own your heart and mind. Those belong to who? "My baby." "Same as me." I will say prayers for you." In her mind I was doomed to hell and I gave her fundamentalist prejudice against gays a pass, for Ava loved her church, but later in the day I showed her the great YouTube ex trait of a faux Jesus lip-syncing I WILL SURVIVE. She shut her eyes. Ava was into see no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil, but you can see it by going to the following URL
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9j6ie0qFSgY
Needless to say my beliefs are my own.
Civil Disorder
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Ding Dong Gaddafi's Dead
Monday, October 24, 2011
Burn Berlin Burn
Froide Comme Une Reine
FIELD GREY by Philip Kerr
What's Yours Is Ours
Anti-Protest Camp - London
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Scrounging At St. Paul's
London Redux
The City of Oxford is served by an express bus to London. The cost of a return ticket is 20 quid. I caught an afternoon bus last Saturday. The trip was quick and painless. I jumped off in Nottinghill Gate. It had been over ten years since my last visit to London, but my memory synapses clicked into action the second the soles of the shoes hit the sidewalk. My internal GPS plotted the Underground voyage to Putney and I descended into the station to buy an Oyster weekly pass for 27 quid.
"Where are you headed?" the clerk asked from behind a thick glass window.
"Putney." The District Line ran direct to Putney, where my godson was waiting on Swinburne Road with the keys to his mother's house.
"Not today, sir." The polite clerk explained that the Underground was undergoing weekend work. "The District and Circle Lines are closed."
"Closed?"
"Best you go to High Street Kensington by bus and catch the train to Parsons Green."
"Thanks."
His advice filtered through the dusty bins of my hippocampus and provided a concise map backed up by the amygdala's store of emotional recall. The double-decker bus provided a view on the sites of past incidents; a young girl shaving her armpit in Nottinghill Gate ( her name was Victoria ), breaking a tooth on a baguette at the Kensington restaurant, and meeting Osama Bin Laden's brother at an apartment behind Harrods. I jumped on the train at the High Street and proceeded to Parsons Green. The Fulham bus carried me across the Thames into Putney. Dusk was thickening into darkness. I thought about calling my godson for directions, but I am a man and preferred to rely on semi-intact brain cells and opted for a bus traveling along the Lower Richmond Road.
There is no such thing as bad luck in a situation like this, only bad choices.
I was lost within three minutes and couldn't remember the street name of my destination. My Luxembourg SIM card wasn't operating in England, but I was able to vampire a phone call from a perfect stranger. My godson muttered a swear. I was supposed to be on the Upper Richmond Road. It wasn't a huge mistake like Columbus thinking his discovery was the fabled isles of the Indies, but righting my direction required some trans-navigational re-interpretation of advice from the bus driver.
30 minutes later I was sitting with my godson, drinking a beer.
The house was warm and we were cooking steaks.
It was good to be back in London.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Back In The Smoke
Friday, October 14, 2011
No More Zrooom
Hell No We Won't Go
Monday, October 10, 2011
Burn Credit Card Burn
Wait Till Next Year
Two Horses' Asses Wide
WOMEN'S ENGLISH / MEN'S ENGLISH
No = Yes
Maybe = No
We need = I want
I'm sorry = You'll be sorry
We need to talk = You're in trouble
Sure, go ahead = You better not
Do what you want = You'll pay for this later
I'm not upset = Of course I'm upset, you moron
You're very attentive tonight = Is sex all you think about?
MEN'S ENGLISH
I'm hungry = I'm hungry
I'm sleepy = I'm sleepy
I'm tired = I'm tired
Nice dress = Nice cleavage
I love you = Let's have sex right now
I'm bored = I'd like to have sex with you
May I have this dance = I'd like to have sex with you
Can I call you some time = I'd like to have sex with you
Do you want to see a movie = I'd like to have sex with you
Can I take you out to dinner = I'd like to have sex with you
Those shoes don't go with your dress = I'm gay
This lesson in political incorrectness comes from the ever-popular Nick Tottenham ex of Pattaya.
Thanks wanker.
Lady Words That Men Don't Know or Use
JFK was reputed to be the fastest speaker in the English language. Whereas expert typists can tap out 120 words per minute, JFK could string over 300 words in a minute.
JFK is the recognized champ, however my fast-talking mother could have whipped the Boston-bred president like a red-headed step-child, mostly because women have a larger everyday lexicon than men.
16,215 versus men's 15,669.
Feeling has to be one of them.
Men only say that word singing the song FEELINGS.
Here's a sampling of words listed by The Magazine which will never cross our lips.
Book club: A female dominated affair, perhaps because women read more fiction, or perhaps because men aren't very good at talking about it.
Accessorize: If men were ever to use this word it would only be in the context of cars.
Empowering: Men never use this word, perhaps because for the 200,000 years humans have been on the planet, men have had all the power.
Burlesque: Something involving strip-tease that can apparently involve the above.
Size zero.
Home birth.
Pilates: Men in the UK, particularly, seem to have no interest in building up their core strength.
Pomegranate: Men seem ill-equipped to understand the significance and full range of superfoods.
Absolutely beautiful: The words women often use to describe friends who are not.
Breastfeeding.
Emotional intelligence: Something that men usually do not possess, instead preferring the kind of intelligence that involves dates of battles.
What are you thinking?: The classic female condition check.
Feminism: If even veteran feminists can't agree on what this means then it's probably best avoided by men.
Airbrushing: The process by which magazine picture editors oppress women in an underhand way.
Babies.
Superwoman.
Why: As in "why do you never call?" Now that I think of it, JFK never used any of these words, because he was a real man. Just don't tell my wife I said that.
SUNNY by Bobby Hebb
Sunday, October 9, 2011
A MEAN OLD MAN / Bet on Crazy by Peter Nolan Smith
"Next door to offer the new guys my best wishes." I believed in the goodness of humanity. "Don't you have anything better to do?" Manny meant like making him money. "No." It was slow this time of the morning.
"What happens if they're not lucky. They'll blame it on the goy. Better you than me." Manny came from the old school of the Bowery. Trust no one and don’t spend the money until the check clears were the eighty year-old's two favorite mantras. Time has proven the wisdom of each adages more than once.
"That may be true, but it's a good neighbor policy." I dealt with everyone on the street. The merchants hailed from every corner of the earth and sold an unbelievable array of gems and jewelry. Richie and I spoke them all, because one can own everything. "Good neighbor. You think this is the suburbs?" "No, but its' a lice gesture." "Nice, schmice. It's a waste of time." At his age time could be counted on fingers and Manny returned to shuffling the papers on his desk.
"Talk about a waste of time, if we had online banking, you would only have to spent 20 minutes a day on those papers.
"I like papers." Manny resisted every attempt to modernize the business. Chaos protected him from having to pay his memos on time. "Those people next door. They'll never be a good neighbor. They're trying to steal money out of your kids' pockets." "You don't even know them." "I don't have to. Its every man for himself on this street."
Good attitude." I was used to his negativism and exited from the exchange without a backward glance. I would have kept going to the subway, except tomorrow was payday and I wanted a full week's wages. I had four kids. That made me smile and I looked up at the sky.
It was a sunny day.
A customer was coming later in the day. She had gold to sell. My commish would pay off the last debt of my wife in Thailand. I knocked on the glass window of the new store. The two young owners waved me inside. Its decor was standard clean lines with bright lighting unlike the yellowing lights of our exchange. Their diamonds sparkled white.
"Congratulations and good luck."
"Good luck depends on God," the younger brother said with uplifted eyes.
Good luck depends on good decision." Bad luck was determined mostly by bad decisions.
"And not God?" The younger brother frowned with disapproval. He was good-looking for his age. Both of them dressed with style.
"If God grants you good luck, sie gesund." I had no argument with people's beliefs.
"Are you religious?"His question sought out my faith.
"I am a shabbath sheygutz. A goy. I was baptized a Catholic, but now I'm a non-believer."
My atheism dated back to Vatican II. The Mass in English exorcised the magic out of the Old Religion.
"I believe more in luck. Hard work too, for luck is 95% hard work and 5% being in the right place to take advantage of the hard work."
"Yes, but God has a hand in our luck." The younger brother was not Hassidic. He didn't wear a yamulke either. They were the new wave of Jews from Central Asia. They liked fast cars and young wives. None of them were Hassidim.
"For you."I was loyal to my conviction, but didn't want a fight over a god in robes. "I just came over here to wish you good luck."
"Good luck from God." He wasn't compromising on his dogma.
"Good luck or God luck. It's only one letter difference. Sometime neither does you any good. Twenty years ago we were across the street." The year was 1991.
"A nice spot. Always good to have your own entrance.
"I liked it too."
That store supported my travels in Asia for 15 years.
"Anyway one winter day the glass door shatters. Maybe it was too cold. We swept away the glass and I said to Manny that we have to close. Snow was falling and the temperature was well below freezing. Manny told me if I wanted to go home, then I would only get paid a half day. I cursed his meanness and sat next to the store's only electric heater. Manny wanted it, but I wasn’t giving the old bastard anything. Even with the heater my feet and fingers were losing sensation. I was about to walk out the door, when a black man entered the store wearing gang colors. Delroy was from Detroit. I knew him from the clubs. He had a roll of cash in his hand. "I need something for $80,000." I sold Delroy everything I showed him. My commish came to over $2000 and later I realized that this sale had nothing to do with luck or god. It had to do with the meanness of an old man."
"Your boss." The older brother understood the connection. He wasn't a friend of Manny, but then again Manny thought everyone was a piece of shit.
"And worse was that I had to tell him that he was right not to close the store. So good luck." The younger brother smiled with the irony.
"And God bless you." The older brother and I shook hands.
"You know how it is on this street and everywhere else in the world."
I returned to my store. Manny looked at his watch. I had been gone ten minutes.
"How long does it take to say good luck?"
"That's a good question." I had never heard Manny wish anyone 'good luck. I sat down at my desk. Manny waited for several seconds for my explanation, then realized that I wasn't going to give him an answer.
"You are trying my patience." Manny was shuffling his papers like a blackjack dealer. The house was winning either.
"Manny, you don't have any patience." I sat at my desk and his head disappeared under the pile of bills, invoices, and memos.
"I'm a boss. No one pays us for that." Manny had been a boss for over 50 years.
"Believe me I know." I had had my own business and it had failed three years ago.
Manny muttered under his breath about 'pieces of shit'. They were not connected to a pirate chest of pieces of eight. I had a lot to learn from him, because while Manny was a mean old bastard, he was my mean old bastard.
And neither luck nor God had anything to do with a piece of shit. They just are.
Okie City Sex Avenger
Anita Bryant, former Miss America and Orange Juice spokeswoman, campaigned with a vengeance to pass a 1977 anti-gay adoption measure in Florida. Her ceaseless efforts proved successful and the ban went into effect for over 30 years. Encouraged by her triumph Anita nationwided her attacks on gays and lesbians, but met with defeat with even President Reagan coming out against her discriminatory proposals. Later in Iowa she was subjected to a pie in her face by a gay activist.
Anita instantly quipped,”At least it’s not a fruit pie.” and then beseeched her attacker to repent from his ways of sin.
The nation rejected her campaign and she was ousted from her job for the Florida Citrus Commission and her marriage failed due to pressure from her fundamentalist husband. Her attempt to recoup her losses through music ended in bankruptcy and she retreated to Oklahoma City to lick her wounds.
The capitol of the Sooner State appealed to Anita Bryant mainly because over half the population are registered as Evangelists and nearby Tulsa is heralded as a major buckle of the Bible Belt. Religion grasps the faithful with heartfelt devotion, but Oklahoma City has earned a more wicked reputation for rampant prostitution of South Robinson, three strip clubs, and a widespread swinger’s scene.
The city court responded to the uprise in sin by seizing all videos of the Oscar-winning German film THE TIN DRUM on the grounds that any sex scene with a minor is both obscene and a crime. The judge explained his decision by saying,
"The police brought me by a movie with one scene. The scene involved what appeared to be a young boy about 6 or 7 and he was having oral sex with a girl who was about 16 in a bath house. By definition of our criminal code, if anyone under 18 or anyone portraying someone under 18 is having sex, it is by definition obscene.”
Street prostitution has proven harder to combat, but a video vigilante has taken on johns, pimps, and hookers with his camera by unmasking their wanton ways on his website. Brian Bates aka the Video Vigilante has posted hundreds of bushwhacking VDOs on YouTube to fight the sex trade on old Highway 77. This do-gooder goes the distance by dropping a VDO to the offender’s house and informing their girlfriends or wives of the sin living under their roof.
His fervor got him in trouble, as he was arrested in 2008 for soliciting prostitutes to bring johns to a locale better suited for his video sniping.
Some consider him a hero or others call Bates a villain.
I have another word for him.
Snitch and the Bowery Boys never hung out with a dirty rat.
Me neither.
When a man takes justice into his own hands, his greatest danger is that he get caught jerking off - James Steele
ps Bates recorded a pimp sending a teenage hooker to sell her flesh. He caught it on his video. Isn't that obscene according to the judge involved in THE TIN DRUM case?
Anita Bryant would know the truth.
She believes in God.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Only 40%
Millions of foreigners will come to the Philippines every year. The government promotes festivals celebrating religious, animist, and modern tradition to appeal to the diverse tastes of different nationalities with the Cebu City’s Sinulog Festival kicking off the calendar of celebrations in January. year. The archipelego’s many attractions appeal to tourists, because of their historical significance or natural beauty. Manila’s old walled city and hot nightlife are counter-balanced by the beaches of Borocay, Aklan and Palawan, diving at the 100 islands, the eye-soothing symmetry of the Banaue rice terraces, the stunning vista from Taal Volcano, and the diverse biosphere’s of Mount Apo. This week the island nation received a surprising evaluation of its tourist market from the American ambassador, when the long-time diplomat stated that the main purpose of 40% of the male arrivals in the Philippines was sex.
The ambassador’s word created an outrage and the harlem native was fast to apologize for his off-the-cuff comment at a conference on human trafficking. His missive via text was met by scorn by the Philippine press and guffaws from the local and foreign sex tourists seeking the services of the 800,000 women working the brothels, karaoke bars, massage parlors, streets, and go-go across the country, despite its illegality. The money earned by these workers support numerous families, lazy boyfriends and husbands as well as provide a good income for the under-educated female population. Few revel in sin, but men being men don’t care about the feelings of women when it comes to sex no matter what number of male tourists come to the Philippines for the business of pleasure.
The ambassador also said at last month’s conference that he was not proud of his countrymen making up a large percentage of the sex tourists. I have never been to the Philippines, but many farangs voyage from Thailand for a change. They are not seeking such culinary delights as echon, mechado, or crispy pata or deep-fried pig foot.
Sex is the drug, because there is none in the western world.
Not for the unfuckable.
Western men live for a dream and who can blame them with all the fat women in the West.
Stop easting potato chips, you buffalo ladies of Europe and America. It's time to save the souls of your mankind. The end of the world is around the corner in 2012 and a guilty conscience lasts a long time in eternity..
Worthless Billionaire BackLash
Friday, October 7, 2011
When Humor Had Class
These glorious insults are from an era when cleverness with words was still valued, before a great portion of the English language got boiled down to 4-letter words.
The exchange between Churchill & Lady Astor: She said, "If you were my husband I'd give you poison." and he said, "If you were my wife, I'd drink it."
A member of Parliament to Disraeli: "Sir, you will either die on the gallows or of some unspeakable disease." "That depends, Sir," said Disraeli, "whether I embrace your policies or your mistress."
"He had delusions of adequacy." “ Walter Kerr
"He has all the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire.“ Winston Churchill
A modest little person, with much to be modest about.“ Winston Churchill
"I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure."Clarence Darrow
"He has never been known to use a word that might send a reader to the dictionary."“ William Faulkner (about Ernest Hemingway).
"Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions come from big words?“ Ernest Hemingway (about William Faulkner)
"Thank you for sending me a copy of your book; I'll waste no time reading it.“ Moses Hadas
"He can compress the most words into the smallest idea of any man I know.“ Abraham Lincoln
"I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it.“ Mark Twain
"He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends.“ Oscar Wilde
"I am enclosing two tickets to the first night of my new play; bring a friend. if you have one.“ George Bernard Shaw to Winston Churchill
"Cannot possibly attend first night, will attend second¦ if there is one.“ Winston Churchill, in response.
"I feel so miserable without you; it's almost like having you here.“ Stephen Bishop
"He is a self-made man and worships his creator.“ John Bright
"I've just learned about his illness. Let's hope it's nothing trivial.“ Irvin S. Cobb
"He is not only dull himself, he is the cause of dullness in others."“ Samuel Johnson
"He is simply a shiver looking for a spine to run up.“ Paul Keating
"There's nothing wrong with you that reincarnation won't cure." Jack E. Leonard
"He has the attention span of a lightning bolt.“ Robert Redford
"They never open their mouths without subtracting from the sum of human knowledge."“ Thomas Brackett Reed
"In order to avoid being called a flirt, she always yielded easily.“ Charles, Count Talleyrand
"He loves nature in spite of what it did to him.“ Forrest Tucker
"Why do you sit there looking like an envelope without any address on it?“ Mark Twain
"His mother should have thrown him away and kept the stork.“ Mae West
"Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go.“ Oscar Wilde
"He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lamp-posts¦ for support rather than illumination.“ Andrew Lang (1844-1912)
"He has Van Gogh's ear for music.“ Billy Wilder
"I've had a perfectly wonderful evening. But this wasn't it.“ Groucho Marx
Thai Perfection or Lák-sà-ná têe dee próm
Few girls answer those simple needs, but in Thailand it is more than likely that your girlfriend’s father is distilling moonshine lao khao or rice whiskey, she’s 5-3, and there is no way any Thai will let you mess with their head even if it’s flat.
So what qualities make up the perfect Thai girlfriend?
I googled ‘perfect thai girlfriend’ and the search engine came up with over 870,000 results.
The late mangosauce’s contribution was his reverse alchemy factor where a Thai girlfriend can turn gold into a base metal. His comment was funny, but it was more a warning shot over the bow than a helpful hint as to what pluses might answer a farang’s fondest desires.
Thailovelinks.com promises the perfect Thai girlfriend on their website.
The girl on the home page seemed right for me, but she’s nowhere to be found within their promo pages, plus my attraction was only physical. Being near-sighted I don’t need a beauty queen. Pretty yes, but I don’t want to fight duels over the perfect Thai girlfriend every other farang wants. The next website was asiastreetmeat.com.
No one is looking for girlfriends here.
Only girlfiends who serve the purpose of lust.
I’ve had several Thai girlfriends. Everyone of them was nice, until they weren’t nice and I made up my own list for the perfect Thai girlfriend.
No tattoos / especially if it’s a heart with a name scratched out.
Minimal to zero English / Not long on the bar scene.
No cigarettes or drinking / nasty habits in a woman, but makes for a good bloke.
Dead Thai boyfriend / hopefully by a meteorite to the head so everyone would be scare shitless at the mention of his name.
No children / Mam and I have three. Fenway, Fluke, and Noi. I can deal with that number. Four too. But I’m very happy with three.
No internet skills / Dead give-away of a foreign boyfriend, who strangely shows up when you are leaving town. “Not worry, he only friend.”
No Gold necklaces / Another indication of sucker boyfriend, although we have to defer to mangosauce’s theory of reverse alchemy. Diamonds to ashes.
Your first date shouldn't be a short-time from Soi 6 although there no more blinding passion than lust at first sight.
And penultimately of all no slash marks across the wrists, which are the warning sign of a true dangerous maniac. Also great sex.
She also has to be beautiful, funny, and loving.
Needless to say no such creature exists in Thailand or America or the rest of the world, because no one is perfect.
Not now.
Not ever.
Charles de Talleyrand manipulated kings, emperors, and statesmen during the 18th Century. This powerful eminence gris had been in love with the most beautiful and erudite woman of the Paris salons. The haute-class courtesan ditched him for a captain in the Swiss Guards, who was supposedly gay. Being smart she needed a challenge. Talleyrand was broken-hearted, but his friends and critics were shocked by his marriage to the daughter of country gentry, until he confessed, “One must have loved a genius to appreciate the love of a fool.”
And I’m no different.
No matter what qualities I admire in a woman they will be never enough to satisfy my dreams, so we have to be content with what we get, because as the great philosopher MICK JAGGER said, “You can always get what you want, but if you try some time you might end up with what you need.”
Deviant Londoners would love to see Mr. Jimmy, except the Chelsea Drugstore is a Mickey D. fast food chain instead of a nihilistic heroin connection as featured in the movie CLOCKWORK ORANGE.
Nothing is sacred anymore, especially the profane.
Shakespeare 101
Mipples For Moobs
“I’m like the Acropolis. In a state of ruins, but you can tell at one time I must have been splendid.” David Tidball said more than twenty years ago.
The English painter was describing himself, but I have quoted his words on many occasions to Americans without a single reply.
I attribute their lack of response to an absolute ignorance of classical ruins, for my fellow countrymen have a limited scope of history, except for sporting events.
27% of my countrymen have no idea what year the WTC collapsed in flames, so why should they remember a stack of carved stone atop a Greek hill?
No reason, but my body has lost its resemblance to a glorious marble statue of antiquity. The six-pack abs are a plastic sac of beer gut. My tight buns are sagging like melted cheese and worst my chest has ceased to be a chest. It’s man boob territory. My friends mocked my decrepitude. Women envy my 38 C Cups. I have shaved them to enhance their beauty, but I have come to see that they are missing an essential accessory.
Cigar-sized nipples.
I need an operation to enlarge them or get transplants from well-teethed teats.
The ridicule of my moobs would end the instant that I took off my shirt at the beach.
The critics would be stunned to silence by the sight of mipples hanging from my moobs like strangled worms. They will avert their gaze, except for those those possessing twisted minds, because when the weird get weirder, things get out of control and while my ruination might rival the neglected Maya pyramids of Tikal, mipples on moobs will resurrect the dead.
The photo is the glory that was 256 East 10th Street – 1978.
RIP Steve Jobs / 1950 Something - Now
Thursday, October 6, 2011
For The Love Of Hockey
My paternal grandfather had a saying about the seasons in Maine.
"There are two seasons up here; winter and preparing for winter."
My early childhood contradicted this adage, for my five year-old senses recognized a very short and wet spring followed by a little longer and slightly warmer summer capped by a short and wet autumn before a very long and cold winter. Whenever I mentioned this to my father, he would correct my theorem by saying, "Spring, summer, and fall exist, but only as a time for battening down the hatches for winter."
My mother was from Boston. The distance from Falmouth Foresides to the Charles River was a little more than 90 miles. The difference in climate was immense. Winter continued into April and started in earnest the beginning of November. She dreamed of swimming at Nantasket Beach. The water temperature at Old Orchard Beach rarely rose over 60. My mother had her own comment on the Maine weather.
"There are only two seasons; winter and August."
My older brother and I knew winter was coming by my mother having us try on the previous year's snow clothing. He and I were the same size. We never got hand-me-downs. Every year my mother was disappointed by our steady growth.
Benoit's Department Store had a sale in mid-November. My mother waited for that day and drove across the Back Cove Bridge into Portland. She had five kids. My sisters got pretty coats and galoshes. My baby brother two snow suits. My older brother were given matching outfits. My mother liked passing us off as Irish twins. My eyes were more blue.
The savings was appreciated by my father.
Once the temperature dropped below freezing, he would construct an ice rink from long 2 by 10 planks. We played hockey from the minute that we arrive home from school to after dark. The Boston Bruins were our team. I listened to their games on the radio. The Chief, Johnny Bucyk, was my favorite player.
I dreamed about playing in Boston Garden. My father's attempt to teach me how to skate backwards was cut short by his tripping on the backyard rink's uneven ice. Blood gushed from a jagged gash. I never got the hang of skating in reverse. This failing didn't prevent my playing pond hockey or celebrating the Bruins' Stanley Cup victories in 1969 and 1971. Their theme song was NUTTY, but as Ranger's defenseman Brad Park said, "Bobby Orr was—didn't make—the difference"
The owners' dismantling of the Big Bad Bruins sent the team into a hockey purgatory. The fucking Canadians beat them in the finals in 1978 and 1979. I was living in New York. Two days before Xmas 1979 a Rangers fan stole a Bruin's hockey stick at the end of the game. The team charged into the stands and I cheered every punch. It was a lonely town to be a Bruins fan.
My Aunt Jane had moved to New York in the early 60s. Her husband retired from the Merchant Marines and bought three tenements on East 11th Street. Carmine earned good money as a plumber on the Lower East Side. Landlords called him to right violations. The two of us did some business together. We never told anyone what. The cigar-chomping curmudgeon loved his wife for putting up with his idiosyncrasies and bought her season tickets to the Rangers in 1987.
Aunt Jane had attended U Maine. My alumni was a rival of the Black Bears, but we shared our love for the Bruins and hockey.
"The only way you're going to Madison Square Garden is if you accompany me to the opera." Jane came from Columbia Falls. She called it the last place God created before he had his rest. They grew people tough that far Down East.
"The opera." Opera was theater with screaming fat people on stage. It hurt my ears.
"Yes, opera. You don't get to see the Beast unless you sit through the Beauty." Jane drove a hard bargain. Her husband Carmine had nothing to do with opera. He was a a jazz man.
"I've never seen an opera." CBGBs had been my La Scala during the late 70s.
"Not Jesus Christ Superstar?"
"I'm an atheist." The Red Sox had tested my faith early and I had failed the final.
"Tommy?" Jane was a decade younger than me. She had been a hippie, which was another shared brick in our heritage.
"Rock opera's different?" I knew every word to The Who's opus of a blind pinball player. "It has soul."
"And so does Carmen." The heavy-set Maine native held up tickets in both hands. The left two were for Lincoln Center and the right pair were seats for the Bruins-Rangers. Raymond Bourque and Cam Neely had transformed my hometown team into a Stanley Cup threat. The Rangers had been exiled from since 1940. They sucked and their fans were even worse, but Jane's tickets were good seats.
"Count me in." Five rows from the ice was an easy sell.
"The opera too." Jane wasn't one to let his fish wiggle off the hook.
"Carmen." Somehow I knew the opera was about a cigar. They were Uncle Carmine's favorite vice.
A week later Jane and I taxied uptown to Lincoln Center. The Upper West Side was terra incognito for the denizens of the Lower East Side. I had worn a suit for the occasion. Aunt Jane proudly entered the red and gold auditorium, as if I were a gigolo. She waved to her fellow affectionados. Our seats were dead-center in the second-tier balcony. I examined our fellow opera lovers.
At 34 I was one of the youngest men in the audience.
I liked that.
"See if isn't so bad." Jane smiled with contentment. She was with her nephew at the opera.
"Ask me in 30 minutes." I resisted any sign of pleasure. I was a punk, not a fat lady fan.
"Sssssh."
The curtain parted on the stage and two seconds I was transported to Seville, Spain 1820. Carmen was a bitch. The fat lady playing Carmen fucked with the stupid love-smitten corporal. I sympathized with his throwing everything away for her love. I had done the same on more than one occasion and if Aunt Jane hadn't stopped me, I would have jumped to my feet, when Don Jose killed Carmen for betraying his love.
"Not bad?" Jane applauded softly with gloved hands.
"Good. Not bad." I answered from my standing ovation. I was a convert. "Count me in."
"I knew I would."
A week later Carmine drove Aunt Jane and me to MSG.
"Don't do anything stupid." Carmine had frisked me before getting into his modified station wagon.
I was clean to his touch.
"I'll be a good boy." I was wearing a black leather jacket and heavy boots. My gloves had pennies stitched into the knuckles. Three of them taped together packed a good punch.
"Just remember it's only a game." Jane waved good-bye and the station wagon roared up 8th Avenue. Carmine was heading up to Charley's Soul Kitchen in Harlem. He liked their fried chicken.
We walked into the arena with thousands of Rangers fan. They hated the Bruins, but their real enemies were the Devils and Islanders. A flutist played POTVIN SUCKS. I hadn't been to an NHL came in years. We stood above the ice and I thought about my father's rink in the backyard.
"Fucking hockey."
"Damn right." Jane clapped my back. Women from Columbia Falls liked a good swear.
Sadly the Rangers bettered the Bruins on the ice. The fans nearest us were familiar with Aunt Jane's ties to Boston and assailed her with light-hearted ribs. I almost changed my opinion about Ranger fans.
The two seats next to me were empty, until the 3rd period. Two drunken yahoos from the upper decks commandeered the seats. I said nothing, since liberating the good seats was an honored tradition at sporting events, but the one closest to me caught my accent.
"Boston sucks." He was in his 30s and wearing a toupee.
"Tonight, but not all season." They were 2nd in their division.
"Boston sucks." Rogaine had failed to cure his baldness and his rug was slipping off his head.
"Keep it clean." Aunt Jane sensed the water boiling in my pot. Her hand clasped mine. The message was to let it go.
"Don't tell me what to do, old lady." He smelled of Budweiser. It was a cheap beer for the masses. They didn't sell it at Lincoln Center.
"Old?" The word body-checked Jane harder than 'fuck'.
"Old like Gerry Cheevers." The rug-wearer knew his hockey. His friend laughed at his quip. The bald guy never saw me flick the gloves.
I heard a ring when the wrapped pennies stuck his temple. He was out cold. Jane covered her mouth. Her smile was too wide for her fingers, even though the Bruins were losing 4-2.
Outside in the winter air Jane asked, "So what is better? Hockey or opera?"
"The crowd is better at the opera."
"And hockey."
"Hockey is hockey." I shrugged and pointed to Carmine's station wagon.
Inside the car he asked if we had a good time.
"The Bruins lost, but we had to good time." Jane patted his hand. He loved him more than hockey.
"No trouble." He looked at me in the rear view mirror.
"Hey, it's only a game." I put my gloves in my pocket.
"Only a game?" Carmine didn't believe me, but he didn't know anything about hockey otherwise he would have known that Kate Smith sang at the beginning of the Philadelphia Flyers games and nothing ever starts until the fat lady sings.
Not in hockey and most certainly not in opera.