Friday, February 18, 2011

How To Bring Home The Blogging Bacon?



Lately, it has been tense at home. Making light of anything has been perilous.

“We’re going to get eight to ten inches, tonight,” Hope said, as I came through the door dusted like a jam biscuit.
“Oh goodie,” I say. “A porno!”
“Why the f*#@ do you always have to f%$#ing talk that way? Jesus f@#*ing Christ!”



“And I thought I was being X-rated?”



And then she left. San Diego, she said. I presume it was work, because the court papers haven’t arrived. Sheeesh. Where’s the levity, Caruthers? Where art it?

If she comes back, I have to act. You know, obsequiously worm my way back into her good graces. Apologize for turning the weather into a Jayden Jaymes movie. Novel idea, but unlike distance, money makes the heart grow fonder. And I need some, and thought I knew where to get it.

Confessions From The Man Cave has been live for a year—coddled in the omnipotent hands of Google, the world’s biggest aggregator of information since a Yenta played Chinese whispers. In the panic of trying to restore harmony to my temporarily broken eternal bond, I did as most debt-disabled plebs would: I raided my corporate piggy bank: dipped into the 401K of my life, that is this: my blog. So, off I trotted, hitting the “monetize” tab on the Confessions toolbar and settled down to see what one-year’s worth of blogging bacon looks like. 

$1.53.

I know. Hypothetically speaking, the hypothetical beers are on me. Let me reiterate and make clear, the decimal point hasn’t been incorrectly placed: one American dollar and fifty-three of its national cents.

Now, I’ve never seen myself as an easy pushover, a “mamaluke,” but Google has me by my blogging balls. In stroking my own ego with various wise-ass posts, I’m adding a little more dough to their already Everest-sized pile. Look at the site. I’ve got Justin Bieber selling tickets for his new film, NOT MINE—thanks Scooter, you schlemiel; Groupon is getting it on all over my postings, motorcycle insurance, Full Sail University flogging another useless MFA in creative writing; Living Social—oh, please; coupons for Arby’s and Boston Market; Google’s Chrome—the crafty fuckers; relationship counseling—funny. How did they know? And finally, Netflix, bringing up the rear that’s getting royally shafted by the princes of Silicone Valley.

Taking me as the model for this virtual revenue stream, it’s hard to imagine that blogging can pay. And, if you want to make bank, having a strategy is golden. Dan Zarrella, of DanZarrella.com, a clever marketing wonk, has some cunning plans to up your blogging game and get seen. Tip #1: publish over the weekend. Why? Because people, who aren’t wonks, have time on their hands and instead of doing something different with those hands that have just been released from an 80-hour work-week, working for $11 an hour, they can put them to use doing the same thing in their free time: being online. Ah, the clang of money. Can’t you just hear it? What kind of content should you post? Tip #2: let me put it this way, Danny boy’s stats show that the topics of media, learning and anything with a positive spin on it is three times less popular than your favorite and mine: sex. Yes, blogging on hanky-panky definitely puts a glide in readers’ strides. So if you wrote a how-to on having sex with people in the media—Bill O’Reilly with a hard piece of black rubber comes to mind—in a positive light, you’d be a blogging phenom. Tip #4, the most shareable word in the online vocabulary is “Facebook.” The least shareable word is “vs.” The list of most shareable words from mah to wow are; Obama, first, top, media, Apple, you, video, best, says, big, bill, health, how, world, most, why and Facebook. In fact, if you wrote and spoke in only those words you’d be a rich gibbering freak. Isn’t that what we’re all striving to be? Try it. Write a sentence including all the above and I’ll publish them. That way I can make money off your hard work. Isn’t that how the Internet works? Original content? Oh, really? Okay. My bad.

If word games aren’t your bag, I suggest an easier way to get seen. Record the evening network news and post it. They speak SEO. In fact, newspeak is marketingspeak, just with more pith and moment. And if all else fails write down all the people and things that Yahoo is trending. Today, it’s: Michelle Pfeiffer, Nancy Kerrigan, Dwayne Johnson, Christina Aguilera, Foreclosure and the Coca-Cola recipe. Cheery stuff, don’t you think?

Do all these things and you’ll be the next Michael Arrington of Techcrunch who makes $400,000 per month. I bet he could arrange the most searchable words faster than Google could make off chumps like me. He’s a Bling Blogger, that one. Perez Hilton is up there with $450,00 per month. And the Jay-Z of all Bling Bloggers is Arianna Huffington whose cyber paper makes a mind-googling $2.33M PER MONTH! People! What’s not to like about blogging?

So, how am I going to move the decimal point to the right until my $1.53 becomes the GDP of Mali? Trending? SEO-ing? Posting on weekends and bringing readers in at an absurd rate? You’re darn tootin’.

If I can swell my cash flow before Hope gets home, I’ll be out of the relationship doghouse and back down in my man cave in peace and quite before you can say, How top most Obama health media first world video, says big Apple bill. Facebook most, why you? Make sense? No. It makes dollars, ha ha.

Post Script: Samson came home, yesterday, from the movies. “Papa! I watched the new Justin Beaver movie. It was fantastic!” I didn’t correct him. Beaver, it is.







Thursday, January 20, 2011

No Food. Plenty of Thought


Happy year of the rabbit, reader(s).

My more than a month-long absence from my beloved blog has been a trying thing. The reasons are many, the one that laid me down to be licked by the dogs was Scooter Braun not reading my previous post declaring my wish for him to shoot me to stardom as Senior Bieber. But let's no dwell on my minor setbacks. This post has to do with you--actually, me, but it is a sort of public service announcement on what to do after all the festive eating, drinking, smoking and whatever else people do when recognizing the man who died for our unending, unalterable sins. I say, give your body a rest. Fast. I did, earlier this year, and afterward felt better than ever. In fact, I am soon to start another one. I've forgotten why I decided to detox my pollutant riddled self. Fear of dying, no doubt. My cowardly sense of self preservation that has imagined all that had built up inside me was but one steak frites away from assaulting my enfeebled constitution with the corporeal equivalent of a dirty bomb.

Inherently, I eat well and I drink well. I eat with the mind that what is gulped and slurped should be of as good of a quality as it tastes. I don’t eat foods preceded by the words “fast” or “junk” and neither do I believe that food is medicine. In a nutshell, I’m a conscientious, yet particular omnivore.
          
But, why deny myself this three-times-a-day pleasure? Why give up pate, smoked blue fish, grilled lamb, asparagus with vinaigrette and that bottle of ’86 Pauillac, I’ve been hording, for seven long days of absolute torture? That's right, fear. At the tender age of 45, my thinking is, why not reboot the body? Why not relieve my veins, heart, digestive tract and intestines for a bit, while having the skin of a 15-year old, the lightness of a feather and the energy of a pink bunny beating a drum? Furthermore, I have no desire in the future to have my eating and drinking habits curtailed for reasons to do with cholesterol, liver malfunction and such nonsense. Added to this, is the habit factor. Eating just because it’s breakfast, lunchtime or dinner, doesn’t mean you’re actually enjoying it, or thinking about the pleasure it gives. Apparently, one of the benefits of this healthy stunt is that it will rejuvenate my sense of taste, so much so that hopefully, the effect will be as sensational as a newborn sucking a lemon. So, come with me and flip the breaker switch on your gastric activity. If you get through this, you’ll be back in the culinary saddle in no time, digesting the holy trinity of butter, fat and sugar with renewed gusto and a smile. 
            
And what did I use to bring about this new state? Which road did I take to supreme inner cleanliness? Juice? Fresh Fruit? Raw Vegetables? No. Much simpler: water. Distilled water, actually, since the body, if given no other intake is unable to break down the minerals that exist in all the designer l’eau out there. The bi-product of seven days of drinking two-liters of water per day and nothing else is of course weight loss. Before starting, I weighed 138lbs. I had a few pockets of fat here and there, but no hold-alls, no saddlebags. By the reckoning of others who’ve gone before me, I estimated loosing around 5 to 10 lbs as my body, starved of fuel, turned to itself for nutrition and consumed what it could find.

Before entering into this, there were two preconditions. First, reduce my food intake. This lessened the effect of going off food cold turkey. This fed into the second precondition, which was the most important: the psychological effect of not having a full belly, having no taste for an entire week, basically letting go of what changes our moods and comforts us. Going from full to empty was hard. Going from taste to no taste was psychologically devastating.

Here's the diary I kept from this self-imposed gustatory gulag, which, if you are brave enough to undertake, will release you into a new state never before experienced. Bon courage.
             
Day 1: This is it. I’m off to buy my food for the next seven days, which by my calculations will be about 14 liters of distilled water. Leaving the house this morning, I joked with Hope, “Honey, where’s my lunch?” Her reply? “You’re breathing it.” 11am—I’m sure it’s all in my head, but I can definitely feel my body humming. In addition, my peripheral vision seems greater than 180 degrees, my stomach is churning like a washing machine on the heavy soil setting and I’m yawning excessively. 1pm—This excessive yawning is either a sign of hunger, or hunger induced fatigue. 1.30pm—Time is moving slowly. I now have an extra two and a-half hours in the day to kill. This was eating time, drinking time, table conversation time and time spent talking about what we would eat in the up coming days. Thinking about food is not an option. 4pm—My mouth feels thick, tacky…like someone is sleeping inside it. Also, Hope called to say we’ve been invited to dinner at Al Forno in Providence, tonight, and then on Saturday to 22 Bowen’s. I declined. She was not amused. 5.30pm—Return home. The family is eating. I drink a huge glass of water and immediately take the dog for a walk. I am as grumpy as I am hungry. I think the toxicity that’s leaving my body is coming out of my mouth and onto my poor brood. I had no idea that this purge would lead me to become a low-blood sugar level bitch. 7.00pm—Sitting across from the bookshelf, the titles of my favorite cookbooks; Madhur Jaffrey’s Foolproof Indian Cookery—god, I love her fish in green sauce, Arabesque by Claudia Roden—her eggplants with tomatoes and chickpeas and pomegranate molasses is majesty on the tongue. Seeing them takes me to all the times I’ve enjoyed the recipes from their pages. I switch seats. 8.30pm—I feel more tired than usual.  I’m going to bed.

Day 2: 6.45am—The noises from my stomach wake me. Lying in bed, things don’t seem too bad. I hope today will be easier than yesterday. I think I can do this. I’m sitting around the breakfast table, gulping water and watching the family eat French toast, maple syrup and bananas. 10am—I’ve hung a mirror, cleaned out the basement and will head to the garden to rake. Keeping busy is key. 12:10pm—Making lunch for my daughter was torture. You’ve heard the saying “as easy as taking candy from a baby?” I’m almost that guy. In fact, I’m so used to walking by her tray and picking up a morsel to chew on, that that’s what I’ve just done. I walk to the trashcan and spit out a piece of ravioli. 7.00pm—Any exertion causes me to shake. I thought that condition was reserved for booze and drugs rehabilitation, but if you consider that 34 percent of Americans are considered obese (Centers for Disease Control) then food is a drug, right? Hope and the children have gone out to dinner with friends. Food is social and that’s why I’m sitting at home…alone. 9.25pm—My stomach is starting to hurt. The feeling that it’s being sucked away is palpable.

Day 3: 2.25am—I’m standing in front of the refrigerator with a heartbeat pounding hard in my stomach. It's obviously migrated and is now being digested. Illuminated by the light from the open fridge door I ponder what to eat; leftovers, or fruit, or maybe a crisp bread? Even my mother-in-law’s ashen meatloaf in a Gladware container looks like manor from heaven. I close the door. Pour myself a big glass of water…down it and go back to bed. 3.55am—I can’t take it. I can’t sleep. I wake up Hope and she leads me downstairs and hands me an apple. How Biblical. I tear into it. “I’ll be able to do this with a little sustenance,” I say. 8.30am—I juiced carrots and apples for all four of us. I feel better with this inside. 1.49pm—I definitely feel lighter not in terms of weight, of which I’ve lost 3lbs, but as in “made of feathers.” There’s evidence to suggest that an extended water fast can cure colitis. Which brings me to the point you’ve all been waiting for. Let me answer it this way. When we were visiting the Charleston Aquarium, the chief veterinarian at the turtle rescue center said about turtles that if one end isn’t receiving food then the other end is not delivering the digested remains. In this respect, let me tell you, people are not turtles. 5.43pm—I’m feeling good—remarkably so. Cooked dinner for the family and didn’t salivate...not one drop.

Day 4: 6.30am—I have seen God and he is 8oz. of prime steak with tributaries of marbling, ground into a patty, cooked medium-rare, served with tomatoes, thinly shaved raw onion and Dijon mustard inside a whole-wheat bun. There would be coleslaw made with a light dressing and grated lemon rind and there would be a glass of Cotes de Rhone. Halleluja! 12.34pm—My remembrances of food come to me. The first time I realized food wasn’t just for eating but tasting was in France. I was 16 and spent the summer with a woodcutter’s family in Bordeaux, a mile or two from Roquefort, the place of delectable blue cheese. The lady of the house prepared a welcoming meal of grated carrot and garlic drizzled with olive oil, and rabbit wrapped in bacon and thyme cooked in red wine. From that day on, I’ve lived differently. 2.30pm—It’s remarkable that I’m feeling so good for someone that hasn’t eaten in 96 hours. 5pm—My day with my children has me fit to drop. I’m light-headed. Oddly, the tips of the toes of my left food hurt, and I have a throbbing on my left side…luckily my liver and gallbladder exist on the right. 7.30pm—Drinking my final glass of water for the day, I’m struck by the idea of how much people in the West eat? Could we live on half of our daily intake? The medical costs in the US associated with overeating and poor diet is $147 billion per year. Think what we could do with that? The hardest feeling so far has been going to bed hungry. It makes you wonder what that must be like for so many around the world and with no end in sight.

Day 5: 7.15am—The pads on the toes of my left foot are now red hot and in the absence of eating my mind is working over time. The thought, then, why this same affliction hasn’t affected the right foot is disturbing or consoling depending on how you look at it. 8.30am—Driving to work. I wonder what these drivers around me had for breakfast? Lucky bastards. 10.50am—While in a meeting, I draw a slice of mortadella showing the pistachio slices, cubes of fat and the yummy combination of coriander seeds and myrtle berries. 1.33pm—Even a Tsarist penal colony served its inmates bread with their water. I’m going for a walk! 2.35pm—For the last five days I’ve felt cold. I’m leaving work early as I feel that draining feeling overtake me and have no way of knowing when it will pass. 8pm—My son, Samson, chose Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs for his bedtime story. Kissing him good night and leaving his room, the desire to have it rain pancakes and maple syrup like in the town of Chewandswallow is overwhelming.. Better still, would be smoked fish, a little fresh cracked pepper, lemon and a spicy Gewürztraminer.

Day 6: 10.46am—I seem to constantly have a glass of water in my hand. Seeing as it’s my only grip on life, that’s not surprising. Water is boring. It was boring by the end of the first day. It’s really boring, now. 12.50pm—To reach a weight just under 130lbs will mean I’ve lost 8 precious pounds and for my stature the definition of the unbearable lightness of being is no stretch. 3.45pm—When your toes are red and sensitive, the best course of action is to call your alchemist…really. I have one. He lives in Portsmouth and keeps bees. He said my condition could be my organs righting themselves and that the effects are felt where the majority of nerve endings exist in the hands or feet. He also thought I was crazy to undertake a fast of this kind with two children and working full time. He said my pulse rate is much lower than normal, my gamma brain waves have decreased and my base metabolic rate is way, way down…he’s a persuasive kind of guy and recommended seclusion, mountains and exercise—three phenomena I’m fresh out of. 6pm—Our family has had much to celebrate this week and today Hope added one more to the list with a new job. I chilled two cocktail glasses. She received a gin martini, I partook in chilled water. Cheers.

Day 7: 1.35am—“If there’s one thing I crave, its Mexican food,” I said to Hope. She didn’t answer. No doubt the time had something to do with it. Chava’s in San Francisco’s Mission District might be one of the best I’ve had. On Sunday’s it cooks its famous tripe “menudo” soup, which people flock to eat. Lots of fresh lime juice, cilantro and flour tortillas and away you go. I’m so hungry. And knowing that this is the last day makes it harder. 7.15am—There have been extensive test to support the fact that eating less is better for you. A more dramatic piece of evidence is that the vast majority of people who survived the concentration, POW and torture camps of Germany, Russia and Cambodia lived well into their ‘90s from their forced starvation. 10.48am—I’m looking at the last jug of water that is almost empty. 12.45pm—Throughout this fast, I have been expecting to see a dramatic change; the oozing toxins, the nausea, outbreaks, the flu and other wild transformations…I even read that my hair would fall out. Instead, barring my red toes, which have since subsided, I’ve had mild symptoms of dry mouth, thick tongue, some pains and a week-long rumble in the stomach. On the positive side, my usual aches have completely disappeared, I feel light, limber and have twice the energy. My alchemist called to say that on second thought, my red toes are a reflection of my pancreas. He advised to go have it checked. Looking back on this week, food moved from real to cerebral. The feeling that this fast would be the opposite of supersize me so that it would minimize me never entered my mind. I don’t advocate this kind of fast without a great deal of research and perhaps a doctor’s consultation. However, if you want to know a little more about yourself and those close to you, and if you want to feel the way I do—I mean the good parts—have a go. It is without doubt, the mother of all spring cleanings and I do believe something I might endure every spring. Now, what to eat? Hmmm, a steamed floret of cauliflower sounds about right. Water anyone?

This story originally appeared in Newport Life Magazine, http://www.newportlifemagazine.com/. Many thanks to my editor for letting me tweak it and hang it up on my own blog. Cheers, Annie.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Justin Bieber Geezer














I want to go viral. That’s right, viral. I want to move through the Internet like a dose of salts. Capiche? Okay, in a nutshell, I want to be Justin Bieber. And, but for the thirty-year age difference, I don’t see anything getting in my way. If the Internet is ageless, then, why can’t I be?

For anyone suffering from acute atrophication of their abiding hipness, Justin Bieber is a Canadian whippersnapper, posing as an internet pop phenom with more marketability than an iPhone that gets 100 miles to the gallon. Bieber was discovered by accident, when his, now, manager, Scooter Braun was online hoping to snag some other talent. It goes to show you, one wrong click and you’re famous. I mean, if the Internet isn’t the continuance of the American Dream, I guess I don’t know my AOL from my elbow. America might be flushing itself down the porcelain love seat, but the Internet has become the country in a very real sense: it’s virtual like our footing. We are a land of dreamers. We sold away our manufacturing. Gulped an ocean of corn syrup. Lost our homes. Fought wars in Iraqifuckknowwheresstan and mislaid the keys to the kingdom. Not objective enough? Then, watch a movie, America, and get real. These are great times for idols and I aim to be one.

It was Bieber’s mother who posted her son’s prowess on YouTube. Without knowing it, he already had a manager. Note to self: need web-savvy parents in order to become an Internet Idol. No. Scratch that. My parents are luddites. I’ll leave my meteoric rise in the hands of my kids. Samson can, at least, get to YouTube to watch re-runs of Thomas The Tank Engine. Launching his dad as a something between Susan Boyle and the Backstreet Boys should be a cinch.

Through her enterprising motherliness, Bieber’s mom received a call from the agent. Her response to this good fortune was to pray, saying, literally, “God, I gave him to you. You send me a Christian man, a Christian label.” And in walks Shmuel Ben Elieze, a.k.a. Scooter Braun. Not quite the answer to her prayers, but Yahweh works in mysterious ways.

The point is that I need a religious moment to propel me into the celebritysphere. I need prayer on my behalf to gather the forces and bring forth a merchant of Hebraic acumen to lead me across the Red Sea of my anonymity. Then I’ll be flown somewhere, like Atlanta, schooled by Usher, and told to sing into a microphone because everyone is gonna get paid.

First: get online by doing something exceptional or something exceptionally stupid. Remember, as P. T. Barnum said, if there’s one thing the people of our nation love more than anything else, it is bunkum. Matt Harding knows all about bunkum. This bobble head Aussie decided to do something daft, as Aussies are prone to doing, and before he knew it he was doing daft all around the world for a chewing gum manufacturer. Aussie Jackass. I’m not entirely certain on the kind of stunt I can pull, now that Dick’s dead. Yep. Dick. My first ever pet. Hope purchased the wee Siamese fighting fish when we lived in Manhattan. Dick was aggressive, colorful and took excellent direction. It started with fish food and tweezers: dip tweezers in water, dip tweezers in fish food, hold just above the surface and flash, snap, gulp: food gone. As a joke, I decided, and I’ve forgotten the exact number of gin and tonics involved, to put the fish food on my nose. Again, put water on nose, dab on fish food, hold nose just above the surface and flash, snap, gulp: food gone. I showed this to my friend Lee, when he came to visit us in Provincetown—the height of Dick’s career—and he said we should contact the Letterman Show. Lee, if you’re still reading, you were right. Needless to say, he was amazed. Everyone who saw Dick feed off my nose was amazed. I need to find another such act, if I’m to rival Bieber’s song Baby as the most watched video in the world. Get this: “Baby” was number one in 17 countries. Which brings me to another Barnum quote, “Without promotion something terrible happens… Nothing!”

The question is, though, can a Scooter Ben Shmuel really make me the Internet version of H1-N1? According to Scoot, no. The fans will. They’re smart and want ownership and recognition of their innate smarts. So, they go online and click, which is the new way of saying, “I’m smart. I’m money.” This to me is foreign. It isn’t the atmosphere I grew up in. My era taught me: children should be seen and not take on the corporate world as consumer vigilantes. Putting trust in strangers is Biblical, but not for a Gen-Xer. I need a scientific measurement. I need statistics.

Going viral is also aided by hyper-frenetic Twittering. I need to make statements of a social, political and personal nature to let my fans know that, a) I’m for real and b), as “The Scoot,” has correctly identified, that I respect their intelligence. I’ll begin my Tweet campaign with something like “Dove soap is evil.” It isn’t just political. It lets people into my world.

In his 18-month career, Bieber hasn’t broken into the music world; he has broken the music world. He’s used the Internet matrix to go over the industry gates and their keepers and into the market place. Going viral is guerilla advertising. It is D.I.Y. meets Madison Avenue, cutting out the middleman…aside from “El Scooterino,” of course. Going viral is another bonkers move to have come out of the virtual world and what it does it to strip away all the parts: the publicists, the radio and TV stations, the hordes of people working on getting the word out. It has put publicity at the fingertips of one or two people, who can hand it over to the audience. And by buying the product, the audience simultaneously markets the product. Most will say this isn’t real. Think again. Moreover, the new method of promotion makes the old method of promotion appear equally unbelievable. It too was viral, but with more manpower. What the web has done, especially for the young, is to take the age old tradition of being in your room, door closed, acting out your fantasies, be it singing, acting, strutting your artistry in any way you can, and pumping it out into the world. You become legit as soon as you hit send.

I might be old enough to be Justin Bieber’s dad, but that’s not going to stop me. What counts is talent and getting the word out.

Now, instead of a fish jumping from the water to feed, I could be the one doing the jumping? Scooter! Click here?

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

SEX: Seldomly Entering Xanadu


It isn’t that my turning 45 is a big deal, or anything. Age isn’t the concern, when mind and body are still willing. The problem is that sputtering into mid-life allows most of us to become the characterization of the person we feared people would discover, when we cared. Put succinctly, our cartoon selves.

Perhaps I'm speaking from my perspective alone, but during puberty and through the most vital period of our lives, we spend an inordinate amount of time hiding our true selves, because as we all know; being yourself won’t get you laid. When we reach, say, 45: the point when death is within our reach; that is when we give in to our innate characters and take our chances. My birthday of last weekend gave me the opportunity to embrace the grotesque sketch of my true self. And what or who is that, I hope to hear you say? “That” is the sex-starved, depressive, death-fearing Alvy Singer in Annie Hall. Just ask Hope. She’s my Diane Keaton.

Hope: “Get your hands off my ass! You’ve always got your hands on my ass!”

Alvy: “You should be flattered. It’s where I want to be.”

Hope: “What is wrong with you.

Alvy: “You’re asking a forty-five year old guy what’s wrong with him when he has his hand on your tush?”

Hope: “What’s the opposite of Viagra?”

Alvy: “I don’t know. You, right now?”

Hope: “Listen, I get the fact that you think you’re going to die and that this might be your last chance to get some, but why does the mourning of your life always involve my ass?”

Alvy: “Oh, so now you want me dead with no where to put it?”

Hope: “I bend over and whoop, there it is: "The Hand." Can’t you take your mind off of it?”

Alvy: Errr. No.

Hope: “You’re a sick puppy, you know that, don’t you?”

Alvy: “My only explanation is that I have to have sex with you all the time out of frustration that you won’t have sex with me! When I get nervous. I get aroused.”

Hope: “Lucky me.”

Alvy: "I’m going down to my cave to contemplate why swimming and libido remind me of the same thing. Happy birthday to me."

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Lexicon


In August, cool is the best way to describe the man cave. Dark, cool, sunless. I’m hanging here, the way a cured ham ages in some Italian chateau.

The family and I have just returned from a week on Cape Cod, living high on the hog…guests at the country club and enjoying the recession proof luxuries provided by the Wianno Club. All I have to say is that real life sucks. It isn’t about being rich. It is about pleasure. In my personal lexicon, rich means irritable bowel syndrome and erectile dysfunction. It’s the price one pays for flogging oneself in getting onboard the gravy train. I know, I know. It sounds judgmental, but it's too hot for rational thought. And besides, why read well thought out arguments that have you saying to yourself, “U-huh, u-huh,” when outrage induced by flagrant abuses of poor word choice, inattentiveness to logic and leaping assumptions really get the juices flowing?

Words have power and none more so than this little sample of Samson’s latest incursions into meaning and context. Stay cool. Go underground. Get a man cave.

Cuckoo bananas=all things inexplicable

Trees=broccoli

White Trees=cauliflower

Annoyful=me, or any one of his friends he currently finds as annoyful as me.

Hairy Penis=Hope’s hoo ha

Poofer=Samson’s preferred swear word

Bajshead=a compound word, from Swedish and English. It’s meaning? Shit-for-brains.

Mealy Bugs=his sister

Play-Doh= Either a toy, or Greek philosopher. Comes in electric pink.

Absolutely tired from dead=deader than dead

Awesome=a lazy word. Samson told this to the daughter of the headmaster of the school he is about to attend. Clever boy.

Evil Fuzzy Face. Samson’s made up character. I think it’s a synonym for annoyful. I can’t be sure.

Friday, July 2, 2010

In The Mood


On this July morning with the family asleep I trundle down the stairs, literary ideas in tow, and catch this scene out of the bathroom window. Ah, 5 am is pastoral. Dewy grass, the first calls from the neighborhood birds and the unsullied perfumes of the garden are the rewards for making the effort to get up with the guy who delivers the newspapers through the window of his car. The sounds of the morning commute won't begin for at least another hour. Life couldn’t be better—if you like that sort of thing. And therein lies my dilemma. Life could be better, it could be more dynamic…vital, the way an ER unit operates, or a newsroom on deadline. Which is exactly why I think the time has come to find a different reason to get me up and at ‘em. What I have in mind is a drawn out and bitter professional fight. Not a spat. Not a tiff. I want to feel the unremitting crosshairs of a loathsome adversary upon me, while returning the favor in kind.

Seeing that I’m done providing a livable income for my family—a task I have thankfully lost the stomach for, I thought it best to find a more worthy pursuit. Something I can really throw myself into, the way finding someone to vilify has always inspired in me.

In the course of my writing career, I’ve had my share of published pieces that have gone out into the public domain. Opinion pieces; pieces where I’ve injected a point of view that has stirred umbrage in a number of readers. I have had threatening phone messages left at my place of employ: that was for writing an editorial, where I mentioned the family history of a certain candidate for Provincetown selectman. His father had brutally murdered two girls earning himself the apt moniker of “Chop Chop.” Resurrecting touchy town history aside, I think my coining the phrase “Son of Chop Chop” was what irked the caller most. Then, there was the time I wrote a review for a show, calling the venue’s décor “cacogenic.” Well, how was I to know that owner of the said locale was the magazine’s biggest advertiser? I apologized, when he called, beginning his rebuke with “Who the hell do you think you are?” From that moment on, I wrote deferentially whenever his business was on my assignment list and felt “the eye” upon me from all his staff as I entered his premises. However misdirected my writing of the past was viewed, it has never produced the shot across my bow to ignite a war I now feel so ready to prosecute. The very essence of who I am has never been used as a battering ram against my professional output. I’ve never been called a “Jackass” in print, never humiliated for thinking what I think, never been afraid to “put in” again, having just survived a public mauling. But now I am. I’m buffalo tough and as pig-headed as anyone who has nothing to lose, including his reputation.

Of course these battles are normally reserved for writers, or people dealing in opinion and whose words correlate to their credibility. I mean if I were a manual laborer I would put my dukes up and toe the line. A chef: would relieve himself in his advisory’s soup. A cop: would frame you. A politician, tax you. A doctor…you never want to mess with a doctor. And yet, in the grand scheme of being tarred and feathered, the printed word still provides the ultimate reprimand.

And it's because writers are mostly solitary creatures. Alone with only their work, which is to say they are alone with themselves. And when this comes under due, or undue criticism, especially from a critic—a writer who has better connections and so gets paid to write subjectively—well, you can just hear the clang of the gauntlet striking the ground, cant’ you?

Some of these spats are now literary lore. They sit beside the author’s published work as if the incident were somehow was a prelude to their printed works. Norman Mailer, that Jewish Pulitzer Prize fighter, threw a drink at his longstanding rival Gore Vidal and punched him at the now infamous Lally Weymouth soiree—whoever she was. Keeping his composure Vidal replied, “As usual, words failed him.” Not to be left out, Truman Capote, equally at home in the viper lounge, wrote of the incident that it was a shame Mailer had not killed him. He, Capote, it must be said, was always the queen of bitches. On another occasion, a literary observation made by John Updike at Salman Rushdie’s choice of character names in his novel, Shalimar the Clown, riled Rushdie to make the philosophical observation, “A name is just a name. Somewhere in Las Vegas, there’s probably a male prostitute called John Updike.” This is the stuff that’s worth getting up for. Instead of coming down the stairs thinking, oh, yes, what was that line that slipped from my dreams into my semi-awaked consciousness? Broken on the wheel of her love? Broken by the weight of unmeasured sorrow? Instead, I could be fulminating how many eggs to leave on my adversary’s face. You know you’re alive when you’re being bad.

And it isn’t just the old-time writers who had the luxury of well-paid assignments and a population who read to provide them with the time and money to sit about being venal. That quality is found even in the jumpy clutch of contemporary writers living on bread and water and writing paragraphs for the discount online mob. The last tiff I followed was the very public, very personal altercation between the Esquire writer A. J. Jacobs, and another scribe Joe Queenan. It happened five years ago and started with a review: WHAM! Queenan's Assault. This prompted a rebuttal: SMASH! Jacob's Last Stand. It lasted just one round, then the referee jumped in and stopped the fight. No blood. No Mailer penknife in the back type thing. The combatants went to their desks and their lives carried on. For Jacobs this meant successive movie deals, one on the book in question. And for Queenan no movie deals at all. Which proves that in this day and age, the writer who goes to film laughs longest.

So then, who will be my lucky victim? Someone from my inner-circle? A hapless git who won’t fight back? I thought that I would fight myself…as in someone with the same name. Just google yourself and you’ll get the idea. There is a particular Michael Persson, who heads up the marketing team for Absolute vodka. He’s very successful, very well covered by the media and always, always available for an interview. Yes, him. I’d like to take on that big girl’s blouse and Bukowski him into submission. Which means I’ll drink 15 shots of Absolute and whiz in his shoes while he’s still in them. Or, I’ll send him a Linkedin “Please join my network” bleat, with the addendum “asshole” in capitals as my sign-off. Linkedin would be the perfect forum for this brawl. The business professional’s octagon.

So, on this morning as I slip down the creaking stairs to see the morning reflected in the kids’ paddling pool, what better way to receive that shot in the arm than to open my computer and see the blood run out of my screen from another murderous assault from my new best friend, my poison pen pal. En garde and come out fighting!

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Raising The Baby Revolutionist


When Samson was in utero, I started calling him “Baby Jihad.” You could say, I got caught up in the whole Iraq War debacle and was hoping other parents-to-be would catch on and send word of “resistance” to their unborn.

Let’s face it, when it comes to resistance, our society is impotent. We are sheep. Herded by the judiciary as well as the economy; fearful of the most draconian legal system in the world and potential loss of income keep us tightly balled and behaving. Lawfulness and wealth are the only two factors society deems respectable. So my question is: what’s the youth going to do about it? Where is their spirit of fight…unconformity…dissatisfaction manifested in out-and-out anti-disestablishmentarianism? Some parents play Mozart to their unborn, in hopes of making them smarter. Me? Public Enemy all the way.

Feeling this way has been in me a constant. It resurfaced last Thursday morning, when Hope and I sat on the porch drinking coffee. We’ve started the “Coffee Club:” our half-an-hour of peace and Zen-like emptiness to catch up and sip some Joe. Starting the day as God intended.

“The youth seem so cow-towed, so completely at a loss when it comes to making their presence felt.” This really happened—at 6.30am.

“I…”

“I know what you’re going to say,” cutting her off and sending her back to commune with the soft, fluffy top of her cappuccino. Yes, with our morning cuppa we foam. “But the kids of this country have been placated by gaming, sugar and an anti-social society that frowns upon them being able hang out. In a group, they’re seen as criminal. And their boisterousness or mischievousness usually ends in court. Kids in the US run the gauntlet in just trying to be themselves.”

“And you suggest they take up arms?”

Even in the half-light of the new day, Hope knows my trigger points.

“Yes! No! I mean, take it to the institutions. Don’t conform. Don’t buy in and by doing so, stop the self-perpetuating cycle of our sick societal propriety.”

“So, when they’re old enough, you want your kids to fight the power too?”

Ah. Hmm. Taking it to the streets is a tough road. In 1989 I saw the revolution in Prague in, the then, Czechoslovakia. People of all ages, all walks of life came out to protest and even died to bring about change.

Ruled since the end of WWII by a Soviet system that imprisoned people for their beliefs and practiced espionage within the society to weed out dissent or anti-party feeling—family members would literally spy on other family members and report them to the authorities—the prolits could no longer take the persecution. Big Brother had life by the scruff of the neck and society was divided into the communist oligarchy—those who believed and worked for the party and reaped all the financial benefits and social status—and everyone else, educated or not.

Now, to make the comparison with our country is to stretch the theory a little thin. But in a society where companies take out life insurance policies on their staff, having in the wording of such documents, “the dead peasants clause.” And when you have the American oligarchy receiving financial literature from their investment companies, in this case Citigroup's Citigroup-Oct-16-2005-Plutonomy-Report-Part-1", declaring the country a “plutonomy.” (a society "where economic growth is powered by and largely consumed by the wealthy few"), with the top 1% of the population controlling more financial wealth than the bottom 95% combined. The question is, like it was in Czechoslovakia, can the youth become the catalyst for change? Because is it not the youth who have the zeal to lift up the rest of society from chewing the placating cud they’ve been fed for so long they no longer know the difference between citizenship and bondage? Where are our Baby Jihadists?

That still doesn’t answer Hope’s question. Did I want my kids to storm the barricades? If it’s to bring about a society they feel is fair and where the electorate are truly considered then, yes. Unfortunately, I didn’t have enough of my wits about me to tell her this. Rambling diatribes tend to make you forget the whole point of the conversation in the first place. Though, I shall express my feelings to her as soon as I finish this post.

“Hope,” I will say. “I know you think me an armchair agent provocateur. In this you have cause. I’ve made the decision that we will not be enrolling Samson for summer camp, but will have him instructed in the art of people organization and propaganda dissemination.” I’ll say it just like that. Her family already suspects that she’s with a “Red.” So why disappoint?

Well, taking this discussion into the evening, I began mixing margaritas. The key is to make the sour mix from scratch. Limes, lemons and oranges all squeezed, and an egg white mixed in. The egg white keeps the fruit mix and tequila from separating and makes it a smooth drink. Over this a little Grand Marnier a la Cadillac style and vavooom, you have yourself something gutsy and delicious. With two of these to our names, I started playing Samson Youtube videos of his father’s era of social distaste with songs like “God Save The Queen,” “We’re So Pretty,” “Take A Walk On The Wild Side,” “Hong Kong Garden” and “Holiday In Cambodia (that’s before it became chic to do so).” Samson was enthralled. Hooked! His head was bobbing up and down as the video of showing Holly plucking her eyebrows and shaving her legs. Since that night Samson tells people he likes Rock ‘N’ Roll. Hope and I were dancing/pogoing and I was becoming more crazed and deranged about rebellion and resistance.

“We need to raise a baby revolutionist!” I implored. “Samson!” I bellowed. “Public action is public opinion!” Yeah, I was Robespierre, alright, with a cocktail glass spilling its contents with each nonsensical declaration slurring from my maw. Samson thought his mamma and pappa really entertaining, especially when they fell over in a heap. He didn’t want to go to bed. I didn’t care. Bedtime was conformity. And conformity was death. No more bedtime!

I really don’t remember what happened after that.

The next morning, the coffee club adjourned. We sat in a non-communicative bliss, nursing all that throbbed and ached.
“How is the pappa of Baby Jihad, this morning?” asked Hope.

“mmmmmm.”

“Had enough of rocking the boat?”

“For the moment,” putting the safety on my trigger I suspected she was about to pull.

“You know last night’s indoctrination of your “Baby Revolutionist” used the tool we capitalists call commercial music?”

“He’s young. I don’t want to blow his mind.”

“Seems a bit contradictory to use a product sold by EMI, GEFFEN and whatever other labels you were D Jaying to promote rebellion, when you give me grief for buying our kid’s clothes at the evil corporate GAP?”

“How many pairs of pants did Che Guevara need, anyway?” I said.

“Oh, I suppose the same number as it takes in albums to make an insurgent?”

“Even Zapata fell off his horse.” I bellowed. It was too early for this kind of treatment.

“Oh?” said Kitten. “What song is that? I don’t think I know it.”

Thank God for foamy coffee. Very soothing.