Friday, July 23, 2010

Educational but . . .

"What, me worry?"

* * *

Educational, informative, authoritative (look! real citations! and no random editing to suit one's own agenda!), but . . . not once do they mention his successful career as a professional shithead.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Breitbart

Sunday, March 28, 2010

When "playing possum" goes too far

Only in Western Pennsylvania . . . or only where alcohol is involved . . . or both.

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10085/1045894-100.stm

I love this story because--
  1. A possum was involved. (I think possums are so ugly, they're cute. Still . . . there are most definitely limits in my take on "possum love.")
  2. It happened near Pittsburgh. (We've got a full Pantone matching system of local color.)
  3. The Post-Gazette felt the need to explain that "alcohol was involved." (Who would have ever imagined?)
  4. The story even made the BBC news headlines. (Oh august body, where is thy sting?)
  5. Naturally, all of the above.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Cantorankerous


I'm just a guy who can't say no . . . to a photo op!

* * *

Oh no! Someone's done got mad and shat . . . erm, shot at Congressman Eric Cantor's office in Richmond, Virginy. Who would do such a thang? Why he's the nicest, friendliest, kindest, most pleasantest feller around . . .

*gggggggaggggggggg*

Oh, sorry, choking on my own vomit there for a sec.

But, come on, really, who didn't see this coming? These threats against elected officials in a highly polarized, emotional political and social climate. Frankly, I'm surprised that worse hasn't happened so far--that is, something worse than being spat on or being called a racial or sexual epithet, which we've had plenty of lately.

And, frankly, I'm surprised worse hasn't befallen a Republican by now. Eric Cantor has proven himself to be a Level 1 a-hole, snarkier-than-thou--almost as snarky as John Boehner and Mitch McConnell combined--and quick with the petulant, insincere cri-de-coeur at every photo op or press conference.

Of course, it doesn't just come down to Eric Cantor, Virginia-R(ighteous Putz). He's just one of the many players in a very public performance of Birth of a Venal Nation: Demagoguery in White Sheets, brought to you by the Republican Party--plus the letters F, U, and U, S, of A. All filmed in glorious Tunnelvision by Fox News. The latter has done an especially impressive job managing the crowd scenes, featuring hundreds and hundreds of extras from the Tea Party Dance Troupe, the John Birch Theatrical Society, the Ron Paulettes, and the Lyndon LaRouchebags.

It's been out of hand for months, years even. From Bill Clinton onwards and maybe before--although while a group of us never liked nor trusted Reagan, and there were definitely protests, I don't recall a bunch of self-anointed "patriots" showing up at rallies menacing people with weaponry or threatening to water the tree of liberty with the blood of Ed Meese.

From what I recall from those days, the most high-tech the weaponry got was a loose Birkenstock or Doc Martens, which the wearer no doubt tripped on while running from the protest line.

I had hoped all this angry insanity would die down after the 2008 election, when there was a clear winner and a clear loser. But the clear loser turned out to be an especially sore one. Maybe the party-that's-really-noisy-but-not-much-fun, gave the new president a couple of months before they started their next election campaign. Agreed, though, this is more time than some of the liber-azzi (rhymes with Liberace!) gave Obama before they started talking about a "failed" (in their eyes only) presidency.

But, over the last year, this domestic dissent has only escalated, in- and outside of the Capitol. Some of it, I suspect, is just generalized whining and whimpering during an especially rough economic period, one that settled in well before January 21, 2009, but one that hasn't vacated the premises as quickly as the former president did. Social strife is to be expected when people are hurting and remedies aren't as forthcoming as we would all like. It's probably worse here than elsewhere in the developed world due to our full-of-holes social safety net.

Please note, I'm not making light of people's suffering, or fun of it either. From my limited experience being unemployed, all I can do is imagine. But I think it would be fair to say that the hysterical protests against health insurance reform and deficit spending--two actions designed to help alleviate hardship both in the long- and short-term--seem, hmmm, well, let's say misguided and counter-intuitive. I'm just not convinced that you'd think your government was doing much good by you if it stood idly by while you lived out your fantasia on the theme of individual responsibility and bootstraps, either.

However, the anger and drama have gone beyond the I'm-hungry-tired-and-cranky stage. Well beyond that. To a positively scary place, full of mobs and hate speech; crude, racist iconography; antique talk of "states' rights," secessionism, and "redistribution of wealth" (code for "I'm selfish and hate anyone who's worse off or better off than me"); and now, incrementally, violence.

I half-expect John McCain to cane an opponent on the floor of the Senate any day now. I wouldn't blink an eye if Texas Governor Rick "Good Hair" Perry fired on Fort Sam Houston. And, sadly, I fully expect there will be an incident of serious domestic terrorism before it's all over with.

So I agree with Eric Cantor--this has to stop now, before someone gets seriously hurt.

Funny, Eric, that this should upset you now that it's happening to you and not your colleagues . . . but, oh, let's not be cynical.

Fomenting a polarized, hostile social and political climate should indeed stop. I for one would fully support Mr. Cantor's call for members of both parties to work together, showing respect and decorum toward one another--not to mention toward those whom you allegedly serve.

Perhaps then, you could get back to your raison d'être for being in Washington--addressing the myriad of social, economic, and security issues confronting our country.

Heck, here's a topical thought--and a freebie: You might even start with working toward better gun control . . .

You're welcome.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

File under "Day Late, Dollar Short"

Or, if you prefer, "Insane Clown Posse, Right-Wing Contingent." Totally your call.

Report: Fox News ‘Divided’ over Glenn
Beck

http://www.fancast.com/blogs/2010/tv-news/report-fox-news-divided-over-glenn-beck/

Favorite quote:
Kurtz also spoke with Fox News employees claiming Beck stages his high-strung antics, including the infamous teary breakdowns, although a Beck spokesperson quickly shot that down as “cowardly” complaints.
To quote Jon Stewart from The Daily Show in a recent imitation of Glenn Beck, "I promised myself I would cry."

Laugh or cry, what's peculiar is that Glenn Beck divides the "talent" at Fox--meaning that there are those who stand with him, as well as those who don't.

Feh, this crazy new math. Rather than doing division or subtraction, apparently you can now add a negative like Glenn Beck with a negative like Fox News and still come up with positive numbers for both.

Only in America. Only at Newscorp.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Hurray for the Red, White, Black, and Blue, Part 1: Hit Me Baby, One More Time

Loving America is a lot like being in an abusive relationship, I would imagine.

At first, the relationship goes wonderfully. America showers you with attention and presents. America talks big and tells you how it's going to be for you two, when you're married, when you're settled in your new home, with your consumer goods and kids. It's exciting! Maybe a little too exciting! You can't catch your breath!

So you make the commitment. How could you not? He's the best thing you've ever known--albeit the only thing you've ever known. Everyone around you tells you how lucky you are, and who are you to argue otherwise?

And you believe it all. Until America starts neglecting to come home from work on time. Or doesn't come home at all. And doesn't even bother to call.

Other things seem amiss, and America is vague on details when you start to question him. Worried, feeling needy, you ask what's changed, what's gone wrong, what have I done?

But America isn't sorry. In fact, he's pissed off at you for asking, for "nagging" and "bitching."

"Bitch," he calls you. "Nigger." "Faggot." He spits at you.

"But wait!" you say--

And then it happens. He snaps. He slaps you hard across the face.

You scream and cry, and America cries, too, and promises never, ever, ever to hurt you again. There, there, baby, it'll be alright. I'll give you the moon and the stars, a trip to the Moon, and then to Mars. Or maybe Afghanistan and Iraq, too.

Nevertheless, they're all empty promises. America hits you again. And again. And again. And again. And again.

You cry, you wail, you grieve your guts out over your pain and the injustice of it all. Haven't you been there for America? Don't you feed it and care for it and give it money when it needs it?

You try to tell your family and friends, but they don't want to know, can't really fathom, don't see things the same way. You realize that either they don't care or that they're being abused by America, too, their own version of America at least. They just don't call it abuse though. 'Cause for them it seems normal by now.

They just tell you to tough it out, whatever it is, the problem you think you have. It's the best you're gonna get, so why make yourself miserable wanting something you can't have? Eat it. Suck it. Swallow it.

America cried with you at first, but then, he doesn't bother apologizing anymore and, worse, starts to blame you for his abuses. You cry louder at first, but this only makes him angrier, and the abuse intensifies and frightens you more.

So your tears dry up, and you start to suffer quietly on your own. That is, on the days when you feel anything at all.

Sometimes you don't know if America is going to kill you. Somedays you think it may have already done so. You feel dead inside, at least. Maybe you've killed yourself. Maybe you should.

After a time, too, you can't distinguish the abuse from a better reality--because the abuse is your reality. It feels normal, regular, expected. Maybe even anticipated. You start to want it a little maybe. 'Cause it's the only thing that makes you feel anymore.

You see others around you, suffering, screaming, fighting--for a while at least. At first you feel sympathy for them. You remember when . . .

But then, their complaints become tedious. Annoying. Enraging!

Why can't they just deal with it? Tough it out! Stop whining! It's the best you're gonna get! There's nothing else out there, certainly nothing any better, so don't go looking, don't go expecting!

And then you snap. And you slap. And in that very instance, you become just like America.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Reform-atory school

Good news . . . but we're still not there yet. The short version reads, "Tom Corbett, you're a douchebag," but I thought this might carry more weight.

To Attorney General, Tom Corbett, Pennsylvania:

Dear Mr. Corbett,

I understand that the Attorney General's Office is considering filing suit to block healthcare insurance reform legislation, in the process of being signed into law at the federal level.

I certainly hope it does not come to this. I think the legislation is a landmark effort at instituting much-needed reform, putting restrictions on insurance companies from predatory practices--something that, in theory, I think you would support (the restrictions, that is). In addition, it adds greatly needed coverage for all Pennsylvanians and strives to cut skyrocketing healthcare costs.

I fail to understand this weak argument, apparently Republican or Tea Party in nature, that this legislation infringes on states' rights. I thought we settled that issue in 1865. I can't see how this idea betters our country. Trust me, having grown up in a region known for flogging that old (Civil) warhorse, I don't think any of us want to go down that path, legally or morally.

Regardless, if you choose to follow through with this suit, I hope you will do so with consistency and file suit against accepting Medicare, Medicaid, military recruitment, highway safety laws, civil rights legislation, and any number of national legislative efforts that impact Pennsylvania and its citizenry.

Surely you can agree that as an attorney, consistency is important, no matter how unpopular it might be during an election year.

Kind regards,

Tim Winni,
Pittsburgh, PA

Saturday, March 20, 2010

What's that sound?

Alex Chilton passed away this week. I knew the name better than I knew his work, although I certainly heard him sing "The Letter" as lead singer of The Box Tops, way back when.

Way back when he was just 16 years old, apparently.

What I heard more, though, especially in the 1980s, were all the bands and musicians that considered him an inspiration--the dB's, Let's Active, Marti Jones, Don Dixon, Paul Westerberg and The Replacements, among others.

I didn't know it then, but I do know it now. And while my musical tastes sometimes (OK, OK, often) favor the silly, superfluous, and the non-guitar-based, I do have my moments where I listen to other styles and other sounds.

The 1980s were definitely one of those times, especially when I lived in Washington, D.C., and listened to the late, lamented WHFS from Annapolis. The early/mid-'80s 'HFS, the one that carried the tradition of college radio into adulthood, but which nonetheless got taken over by corporate hacks and made more "commercially viable," i.e., viable for playing commercials, not necessarily music.

(Thank goodness for public radio, especially here in Pennsylvania, with stations like WXPN in Philadelphia and WYEP here in Pittsburgh, where, at least if we support it, we get good, alternative music without all the talk, advertising, and pandering. If you don't believe government has a role in protecting the people from the market, then by all means, tune into your favorite Clear Channel Communications station--which got its start as a billboard advertising company--and sign off from this blog now.)

Before I end up in a grumpy-old-man dialog with myself, the kind that seems to be raging across our fair-to-middlin' land these days (passionate, yes, but devoid of self-editing or fact-checking, too), let me get back to celebrating a brief period in the '80s, the Golden Age of Jangly Pop, Post-Punk Edition, which was in heavy rotation on WHFS.

When I used to listen to the North Carolina's own dB's and Let's Active, and their Ohio friend Marti Jones and their Minnesota friend Paul Westerberg, and feel nostalgic for my home state and proud of its musical heritage . . .

Washington was truly one of the most hateful places I've ever had the experience of enduring (sorry, D.C. friends!), although I suspect it had as much to do with me and who I was then, as it did with Washington. But Mitch Easter, Don Dixon, Marti Jones, Chris Stamey, Peter Holsapple, and company kept me happy and humming during those years, as did Alex Chilton.

Even if I didn't know it then.

But I do now.

Enjoy.

http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=03DFD30F460E22C4

Caveats, I've had a few: Sorry, but I couldn't find on YouTube The dB's' "Spy in the House of Love" or "Lonely Is (As Lonely Does)" (or the Marti Jones cover of the latter), so this is an incomplete, sorely lacking playlist. But it's a start. iTunes and a good, old-fashioned vinyl or CD store, can help you further along.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Crocus? Both of us?


Alas, it's the punchline of an old, rude joke, which I won't bother to explain and which, besides, I only remember the punchline.

Nevertheless, I did spot my first crocus in Pittsburgh this past week, meaning that spring indeed is meandering toward Steel City.

So, to celebrate, let's do as we do in my home state, North Carolina, by greeting sweet springtime in song:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMKXcC80Zpg

Sour notes and all!

P.S. Thanks once again to Wikipedia and the WikiCommons for the image.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Where's a good "death panel" when you need one?

Ripped from the headlines--

"Cheney Resting Comfortably at Hospital after Chest Pains"

Golly, what shocking news--Dick Cheney's heart is giving him trouble. Who knew he had one in the first place? Badda-bing!

Thanks, ladies and germs, I'll be at Caroline's Comedy Club next week. On a double bill with Joy Behar.

I do hope Mister Cheney is receiving the most "enhanced" medical care his lifetime health coverage and pension plan can provide.

I know if I were at that hospital--whether as a doctor, a nurse, an administrator, or a cafeteria worker--I'd make sure ol' Lucifer's Grandad got the most appropriate treatment for his condition.

First of all, I'd crib a "do not resuscitate" order for the old bastard.

Second, I'd argue with the hospital board that waterboarding is, too, a suitable medicinal cure for whatever ails him. And I mean whatever--hangnail, ingrown toenail, boil on the ass of humanity. "Mister Cheney is taking to the waters just fine. He'll be back to his old, hateful self in no time."

Third, I'd yank the plug out of the wall myself.

And fourth, I imagine I would be totally frustrated that even a stake through his body somewhere in the general vicinity of where his heart might be wouldn't destroy Satan-with-a-Pacemaker. I suspect, like any determined specter in a slasher movie, he won't go down easily.

I don't usually speak ill of the dead, Dick, but, alas, you're not dead yet.

Try harder, though.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Herr today, gone tomorrow

From my friend Snorty (sometimes Blondie, sometimes Reddie). This had me doing the classic ROTFLMAO maneuver.

Ruth Elkins, "German Men: Hunky, Handsome, Wimpy, and Weak," Spiegel International Online, May 31, 2006. Retrieved February 21, 2010. [http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,419029,00.html]

Monday, February 15, 2010

Ski Pennsylvania!


Dear Olympic Organizing Committee--in need of more snow for your next winter games? Might I suggest Pittsburgh as the host city for 2026 . . . ?

The really big snow reported on previously apparently wasn't so much a one-time cataclysm. A snowpocaplypse, a snowmageddon, as everyone locally has begun to call it. Rather, it was really the beginning of a trend--or, if you a prefer, a curse--of snowfall that, a week plus later, continues unabated. And unplowed, and unshoveled, and unsalted, for that matter.

There can indeed be an embarrassment of inches, at least in terms of snow. (Who knew?) I've lost count at this point, but I think it would be fair to say that there is still 20 inches (50+ centimeters) or so of snow on the ground at this writing with more on the way--on a daily basis, until the end of time, at least if the weather reports are to be believed.

And I'm not sure I do believe them--after all, the 6 to 10 inches predicted for the really big snow turned into 21 handily and officially, with estimates running higher in the neighborhoods and toward the Laurel Highlands. So I'm snow-banking on it being worse, much worse, from here on out. After all, it's only mid-February. Even an unfailingly reliable weather prognosticator as Punxsutawney Phil says we're due for 6 more weeks of winter. This is a region where, during the last winter, it snowed from prior to Halloween until mid-April. This winter, we had our first threat of snow in mid-October. By next year, we should be giving Winnipeg a run for its loonies for most-populated, coldest city in the world.

So what to do? Well, as for me, I'd just as soon hibernate with the local groundhog community until spring springs forth. I've spent the last week stuck--stuck at home, stuck in the garage, stuck in the driveway, stuck on sidewalks and crosswalks, unable to trudge through the snow to wherever I might feel the limited need to go (the post office, the Get-Go, and, oh yes, even work on occasion). Why not make it official and bury one's self underground until my low Nutella supply and lack of cable TV programming options get the better of me and I'm impelled to venture outdoors again?

An excellent plan, if I do say no, but one that was not to be. Because when the going gets tough, the not-so-tough make it even tougher on themselves and go cross-country skiing.

* * *

I have been cross-country skiing before--once, in Colorado, last year--and I, well, more or less enjoyed it. The weather was crisp and cold, but not terribly so, and the day was brilliantly sunny. The snow was luxuriously powdery, the trails freshly groomed and mostly undisturbed, so it was easy to glide along the grooves. I took a lesson that day, and I was impressed by the helpfulness and mellowness of the trainers at the Nordic center in Breckenridge (it's either altitude or attitude out Colorado way, or a Nordic combined of both). Not for a second did I feel ridiculous as a then-47-year-old virgin on the rails and trails--at least no more than I do drawing breath on a daily basis.

The beginners' trail was easy enough, so feeling more confident, I had to go chance it all and get on the intermediate trail. And while that went OK, it also went quite fast in places, as some of the trail was downhill.

Well, I didn't try cross-country skiing because I wanted to go fast. I'd do downhill racing if I wanted that speed, that rush, and the opportunity for the full "Sonny Bono experience."

Still, I only managed to fall two, maybe three, times--once while trying to learn how to fall properly on skis and twice while on the beginners' trail, trying to cross under a bridge on a sun-dappled and glazed-over trail. The downhill wipeouts were more funny than anything--what I learned later might be termed "yard sales," as I ended up with my stuff scattered all over the place.

Nonetheless, while the experience wasn't terrible, it wasn't enchanting either. I wasn't fully convinced that cross-country was my thing. I can't speak for downhill skiing, but there's a lot of balance involved in cross-country skiing, and goodness knows, you need strong ankles to work those skis. In some ways, it reminds me of ice-skating: You have to be "present," mentally and physically, keeping your preferred choice of equipment in contact with the surface and, at least as a beginner, your mind on the task at hand (or, in this case, foot). These are not onerous requirements, mind you, but they require more commitment than perhaps I am willing to give to exercise and sport in general. Just call me Bode Miller at Torino, circa 2006.

All in all, I think I'm more of a snow-shoe kind of guy. From snow-shoeing, I still get a good workout tramping around with those ridiculous things on my feet, but I am less restricted by grooved trails and, more apparently, by my "balancing act," or lack thereof. Really, snow-shoeing doesn't require a lot of talent or ability--that's why it's not an Olympic sport, I'm assuming--but as long as you have the shoes and the poles, can stand upright, and enjoy the outdoors, it's accessible to just about anyone.

Nevertheless, I had been wanting to give cross-country another try, in part, to confirm my suspicions (that it's harder than it looks and that I'm clumsier than even I realized) and in part, just to do it again and maybe add a little something-something to my winter repertoire. Something to look forward to during the long, cold months, and something to get me outside and give me some good cardio.

So . . .

* * *

Yesterday, Valentine's Day, I met up with my friend, the Maryland Philosopher, in the Laurel Highlands to do this very thing.

This really wasn't my idea of fun on Valentine's Day. Not that I had Big Romance plans on the International Holiday for the Greeting Card Industry, mind you, but after a hard week of shoveling, sliding, and sniveling, I would have been all too happy to have sat at home all day, eating chocolate truffles I bought for myself, and watching my Sims get their groove thang on in Prairieview and Sunset Valley. When the going gets tough, the not-so-tough resort to cosplay online.

Still, I knew this was something that the Philosopher really wanted to do, and I figured it wouldn't kill me to spend some time with another human being while getting a little exercise and some fresh air along the way.

Wouldn't kill me and didn't kill me, but the risk of death of all varieties--physical, spiritual, existential--might have been avoided entirely if I'd only remembered to strap a third ski to my butt during the outing.

The first fall was funny, as was the second. The third, less so. The fifth, not at all. The seventh, hell no. And the ninth, well, by the ninth fall--when you're halfway around the 6 km trail, trying to climb uphill, going against the tide of other cross-country skiers, and end up laying splayed in deep snow on the sidelines, having passersby witness you buried in a snowbank of your own shame--the ninth fall leads you to rediscover your fatalistic Protestant upbringing in a huge way: God hates you--and, worse, you realize, so do you.

But wait, there's even more self-loathing.

At the Philosopher's suggestion (who while, breezing past me, casually revealed that he had spent many an adolescent winter at "ski camp" out West), we decided to forgo the limited beginners' trail in favor of the intermediate trail. And, at the Philosopher's suggestion, we also decided to "do something different" and head around the trail clockwise, rather than counter-clockwise, like everyone else that day. Because it would be, according to the Philosopher, "fun."

Fun. Hmmm. "Cavalierly suicidal" might be a better description. Going against the XC tide meant no groomed grooves to follow, no easy bypasses of the bigger hills, and no forgiveness from the other skiers as we positioned directly in the flow of opposing traffic.

The Philosopher navigated this alternative ski-style with aplomb and skill. And, really, in my own little way, I managed the situation, too--by falling into snowbanks on the sidelines, getting my skis stuck in the deep drifts, and after struggling Edward Scissorhands and -feet-like, eventually disconnecting myself from the skis, slinging them over a shoulder or under arm, and trudging up or down the hill on foot.

I got a good workout--just not like I originally envisioned.

I also got a goodly number of bruises, too. (For the inexperienced, it is possible to fall knees-first on your skis and, by the way, even though they are made of some flimsy-sounding carbon-fiber alloy, it hurts like hell when you do so.) Additionally, I also received my fair share of guileless (or so I'm assuming) observations from my fellow skiers. "Is your equipment broken?" one said. "No, just my spirit," I replied.

Nevertheless, we were on an actual trail, not back-country ("Maybe we could do that sometime?" the Philosopher questioned, with hope in his eyes), so this, too, should pass eventually. The warming hut--and the end of the trail--finally came into view. Downhill from where I stood, naturally.

"Come on, you can make it!" the Philosopher encouraged. "Just a little more," and he glided downhill, toward the path to the warming hut.

My turn. As I slid downhill and past the Philosopher, he called out, "You know, I really don't think it's a good idea to ski all the way to the parking lot."

"I get that!" I shouted back, snottily. "But I can't stop myself!"

Quite literally.

It should be noted that by the tenth fall, you really just don't give a flip anymore.

By this time, I'm fully feeling my Calvinist upbringing. Come on, God, I mutter through my frozen jaw, give it Your best shot. I'm halfway between loving the Devil and hating You. At this point, as the True Believers proclaim, it's all in Your hands.

In the meantime, while You're plotting Your next move in my snow-blinded predestination, I'm going to exercise some free will and head toward the relative safety of my car on icy, mountain roads, the pot-holed Turnpike, and the Promised Land that is Regent Square, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US of A.

Glory!

* * *

Once home, I decompressed. I took a long, hot bath, then changed into something more comfortable and cuddly--something sans poles or hoods or gloves or boots or skis. I made myself a warm cup of mango black tea and arranged a plate of simple, Kedem kosher, orange-flavored tea biscuits, which always comfort me in their blandness.

Hmmm, I thought. Maybe it's like they say: Without the extremes of winter, the lows of life, you might not properly appreciate the spring and summer, life's sweeter moments.

I nestled into my usual spot on the sofa and involuntarily picked up the remote. It's 5 o'clock, I thought. I wonder if . . .

I clicked on the TV and up popped the winter Olympic games in HD. On the screen, at that very moment, the French, the Americans, the Norwegians, and the Japanese were fighting it out for supremacy in the power cross-country skiing portion of the Men's Nordic Combined.

Touché, God. Your cosmic sense of humor is in good working order.

Unlike me and my knees.

Saturday, February 06, 2010

A really big snow

Snowmageddon. Somewhere in the East End of Pittsburgh, 10 a.m.-ish, 6 February 2010.



Sunday, January 31, 2010

From here to paternity


Is it possible to o.d. on schadenfreude? 'Cause I think maybe I just did. And, surprisingly, it doesn't feel good. Not at all.

For you see, I've been slightly obsessed of late over the latest episode of (yes, again, with the 1980s TV references) Flamingo Roadkill (or, if you're from the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area, you might prefer Falls of the Noose Road), in which yet another Southern celebrity-politician is found with his pants around his ankles while holding a bun reasonably fresh from the oven. That is, if you consider a 2-1/2-year-old bun of "pop'n fresh" caliber.

Am I referring to Mark Sanford and the Argentine Firecracker? Please, no. They are so last summer. Instead, this new episode stars former U.S. Senator from North Carolina and Vice Presidential Candidate-for-Life John Edwards as equal parts J.R. and Bobby. In the role of the long-suffering wife, mother, and steel magnolia, we have Elizabeth Edwards, doing double-duty as both Krystal and Alexis. As town good-time gal and inconvenient baby momma, the People's Choice Award goes to Rielle Hunter as Sammy Jo, Sue Ellen's baby sister Kristen, and Melissa Agretti all rolled into one chunky-jewelry-wearing, aura-sensing, over-peroxided package.

And then there's Andrew Aldridge Young as . . . well, there's never been anyone in an American nighttime soap quite like Andrew Young. Richard Channing from Falcon Crest was much more in control, much less passive-aggressive, and would have never agreed to such a ridiculous scheme as pretending to be the father of Rielle Hunter's baby to help his friend and boss John Edwards get out of a particularly embarrassing pickle. Cliff Barnes from Dallas might have done something as silly, but he was far too likable in a bumbling, Chinese-food-binging way to make it happen. Did Blake Carrington ever have a sycophantish, spurned male lover as a personal assistant? Then that might describe Andrew Young. Might.

You could be forgiven for not knowing all the ins-and-outs of this Southern Gothic-cum-Greek tragedy. It may be a North Carolina thing. Certainly it is so among members of my immediate family, who have followed the twists and turns of, let's call it, Edwardssaga, for the last couple of years. Ditto among my North Carolina friends on Facebook.

So as an ex-pat Tarheel (of the state, not the university) with an ongoing attract-repel relationship with all that is Southern, let me help you understand.

* * *

The news has been burning for quite some time, that John Edwards had an affair with a videographer-for-hire and '80s paperback writers' muse, Rielle Hunter. He apparently hired Hunterella to produce mini-documentaries for his website about his most recent run for POTUS. He did so in part while his wife, Elizabeth "The Velvet Hammer" Edwards, was stricken with cancer, a cancer that has turned out to be incurable. Then, thanks to the ruthlessly efficient sleuthing of The National Enquirer, it came to light that the former Senator might have fathered a child with Miss Hunter--a claim he denied repeatedly until this month. To complicate matters further and take them out of realm of the merely tawdry to the possibly criminal, the Senator may also have used campaign funds to cover up the affair and the baby.

For a while, his friend and personal gopher Andrew Young claimed to be the father of Rielle Hunter's baby, falling on the fetal grenade for the candidate, despite having a wife and children of his own. But sometime ago, the punch-drunk Edwards-Young relationship turned sour. Andrew Young started talking. And writing. And giving interviews. And appearing on TV shows.

In the last two weeks, the drama has rushed perilously close to a season cliffhanger--or so we can only hope. John Edwards finally admitted paternity of the child (possibly the year's biggest non-reveal, that). Elizabeth Edwards announced she and John were separating--something my North Carolina connections had known for some time, as the Raleigh rumor mill had them living in separate houses ages ago. Andrew Young started making the rounds to promote his tell-all book, The Politician: An Insider's Account of John Edwards' Pursuit of the Presidency and the Scandal that Brought Him Down. Not to be outdone or forgotten, Rielle Hunter has been determined to survive into the next season by having a restraining order filed against Andrew Young and his wife, requesting that he return to her a "personal video recording that depicted matters of a very private and personal nature."

Ah, so if this drama doesn't get renewed for another season, no worries, there's a sequel: A sex tape. Direct-to-video no less.

This may not be big news for your average citizen of the world, as inured to sex scandals and unsavory behavior as we've all become. But as a native North Carolinian, let me assure you, this is HUGE, somewhere between Andy Griffith being arrested for murder (which to my knowledge never happened) and North Carolina's favorite songbird Clay Aiken admitting he's gay and is the father of a baby with a female friend (which did indeed happen). Down home, this will keep tongues wagging and Bibles thumping for months, maybe years, to come. 'Cause if there's one thing North Carolinians hate is sin--but if there's one thing that they love more than hating sin it's relishing the details of the sins of others.

There's certainly been enough in the news about the Senator's Unoriginal Sin to satisfy that populist hunger. In their TV interviews, Mr. Young and his wife have spared us few details, except those that they have saved for their first book (now on sale at a bookstore near you).

Nonetheless, when is enough enough? How angry do you have to be, how abused do you have to feel, how eager for attention and fundage do you have to feel, to break one of the fundamental rules of Southern etiquette: Never air your dirty laundry in public? Worse, it's not just your dirty laundry--it's that of your boss and your former friends. And worst, must you do so in unseemly, at times lurid, detail?

For example, do we need to know that John Edwards talked with Rielle Hunter about how they would have the Dave Matthews Band (good god, could Southern romance be more dead?) perform for them when they were living in the White House, after he'd won the presidency and after Elizabeth Edwards had died? Do we need to know that John had sex with Rielle in the same bed he slept with Elizabeth? Do we need to know about the sex tape and that while Andrew Young recognized John Edwards' face in the video (yes, he watched it--heck, he apparently reassembled it after Rielle had tried to remove the tape from the casing), he "couldn't attest to the other body parts belonging to Senator Edwards" or to Miss Hunter?

It's all very strange. And it's also all a bit . . . queer. Certainly that last part.

Other statements and facts queer up the story, too. For example, the first sentence out of Andrew Young's mouth on Friday's 20/20 interview on ABC TV was that when he first heard John Edwards speak, he "fell in love with him." Not "became mesmerized by him" or "inspired by him" or "enthralled with his message." No. In love with him. And Mr. Young not only said it once, he has said it a number of times in subsequent interviews.

While we're exploring all things queer, let's discuss this: How real is this marriage between Andrew Young and his wife? What straight, married woman, in love with her husband, would tolerate the intrusion of Rielle Hunter into their lives, having a pregnant, by most accounts "challenging" mistress of another man, hide out in their home, with their children, all while having to live down the bare-faced lie that her husband (Mr. Young) was really the father of Miss Hunter's baby, not John Edwards?

Come to think of it, there were an awful lot of camera shots of the Youngs holding hands throughout the 20/20 interview. There's rarely a scene where they're not holding hands, in fact. What's the point of that? Is there perhaps something else they're trying to prove, one that doesn't involve displaying mutual affection or even presenting a united front against the world?

And, finally, I don't think I'm the only one having, uh, homosexual thoughts about John Edwards. In a recent article in New York magazine, adapted from John Heilemann and Mark Halperin's book, Game Change: Obama and the Clintons, McCain and Palin, and the Race of a Lifetime, the authors note that Edwards had "always seemed . . . well, sorta asexual, at least to his staff."

Asexual--or homosexual? Granted, Mr. Edwards never exuded the overpowering testosterone that apparently is required behavior for the American male. Thus, some might mistake this for "homosexual tendencies."

However, I think they're missing the "Chapel Hill Industries" aspect: The Southern gentleman--as produced by the best schools and high society--isn't a brute; he is refined and polished. Others do the heavy lifting for him while he smiles, makes conversation, and lets you bask in his radiance.

Which makes it all the more easier to pull the wool over your eyes--or lift your skirt over your head.

* * *

Perhaps I'm grasping at pink straws where none exist. It has been known to happen. Back in Pittsburgh for a moment, I only recently realized, after 2-1/2 years of seeing numerous cars and trucks emblazoned with black-and-blue vanity plates and stickers, that these were not emblems of Pittsburgh's S&M pride, but, rather, citizens proudly supporting law enforcement. Although, admittedly, at times it's hard to tell the difference between the two groups, I am, nonetheless, sometimes too blinded by my pink-colored glasses to see things clearly.

However, I perceived rather quickly that John Edwards was not exactly what he claimed or appeared to be. Some of my aversion to him was that he seemed all too perfect--and way too pretty. Friends, especially from out-of-state, would tell me how impressed they were by him--which more often translated into how good they thought he looked. Never mind his politics, whatever they might be: He's handsome! So he must be right! Shades of Sarah Palin. Colors of Scott Brown.

To me, though, John Edwards's type--the auburn-haired, always-smiling, ever well-manicured, professional man--is a dime a dozen around the Triangle. The produce 'em by the truckload at UNC, all identical, all with the same pedigree, worldview, haircut, and freckle pattern. Ho hum.

On a deeper level, I knew, too, that he and Elizabeth Edwards had both been very successful, high-powered lawyers back home, and John himself had been a well-to-do trial lawyer, taking some very high-profile--and high-paying--cases. Not to be too judgmental, but in my experience, few people get to that point in life by being Mr. or Mrs. Nice Guy, living for others, thinking about the little guy and gal. That's why everyone in the U.S. House and Senate is such a dick, after all.

Still, when everyone else kept telling me I was being too cynical (who, me?)--especially when I claimed that the reason he and Elizabeth had two more children later in life was to make them look "Kennedy-esque" to the electorate (admittedly, a low blow, although I've probably gone lower)--I started to rethink my criticism. After all, $400 haircuts be damned, he did seem sincere about helping little Mr. and Mrs. America, bridging the wide gap between the haves and the have-nots in this country, a very real problem that few were addressing at the time and no one has successfully dealt with since Lyndon B. Johnson. And people smarter than me seemed to be responding to him. So maybe, just maybe, I might be wr . . .

Phew. I barely missed that dodgeball of contrition.

So, yeah, I'm cynical, but that doesn't mean I'm wrong. I'm generally not too far off the mark with my mistrust and measured responses to people and events.

Nonetheless, I can say that even on my most mistrustful days, I never, ever wanted to see this much revealed about John and Elizabeth Edwards, Rielle Hunter, and the Youngs. And while I wouldn't be above taking a quick peak at the fruit of John Edwards' loom under the right circumstances (a Playgirl centerfold in the offing?), my need to know everything and my schadenfreude have their limits.

And those limits were reached around 10:54 pm, Friday, 29 January 2010, the moment when Andrew Young used the term "body parts."

Really, I don't need to know anymore. Does anyone?

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Doubles troubles

"Do you have a brother who works at the Mattress Warehouse in Monroeville?"

One of the problems of having a very generic look--as apparently I do--is that you get compared to every other person--famous, infamous, or obscure--who possesses the same, basic set of physical features. Bald head, glasses, goatee, and a whiter-shade-of-pale complexion? Tag, you're it. Fill in the blank.

Never mind that the person in question is a good 10 years older or a hefty 50 pounds heavier than you or adheres to a pyramid scheme passing itself off as a religion. You, bald and beautiful (oh so we're assuming . . .), are his spitting image. Congratulations!

It's a dangerous game, this comparing and contrasting of appearances. My sister periodically reminds me--and not in a jokey, wasn't-that-funny? way either--of the time I suggested she looked like Mackenzie Phillips during her One Day at a Time era. In the moment, I thought this was a compliment because of the following reasons:
  1. She was a celebrity.
  2. Being all of 14 at the time, I thought she was an attractive celebrity. (What can I say? It was the '70s. Standards were more generous then.)
  3. Who would want to be compared to Valerie Bertinelli anyway? (Ick.)
  4. She hadn't yet been busted for binging on illicit substances or gone on Oprah to purge herself of the news of an adult affair with her father, a man now too dead to claim otherwise. (Eww. Double ick.)
Some 35 years later, she continues to beg to differ.

But, no matter. Perhaps it's time to suck up the moment and savor the salty tears of indignation a little more stoically. So to inaugurate a new year, and perhaps even to herald the second coming of Blogtucky: The Next Generation, I present you with the first installment of All My Doppelgangers, a going-rogues gallery of Tim Winni's lookalikes and possible long-lost relations, as related to him by various and sundry, friends and strangers alike, over the last six months, while I've been literarily M.I.A. (Coinky-dink? Mayhaps . . . .)

Do enjoy--and if you talk to the guy at the Mattress Warehouse in Monroeville, tell him the rest of my sibs and I expect some serious Christmas presents to come our way next December. You've got a lot to make up for, bud.

* * *

Anthony Edwards

With goatee but without glasses.



Then with glasses but without goatee. The man will not cooperate.



Jason Statham

Really? I think this is wishful thinking on everyone's part. If this were even halfway close to the truth, I'd be too busy shtupping every orifice on two continents to blog or do much of anything else.



Andre Agassi


Before or after relationships with Brooke Shields and Barbra Streisand? Either way, I lose.


Mario Biondi


For the uninitiated, a rather dreamy Italian R&B singer, for whom my friend the Music Lover has offered to bear children. Again, I think this is wishful thinking on the part of the legally blind, but it's probably the look I would most aspire to. Now if I only get taller, pad my crotch, and go to Italy for some new duds. (Don't know what I'm talking about? Go here.)




One of the members of the group The Bad Plus

All I can say is that it had better not be the chubby one on the left.

John Travolta

Good lord. Now you're just being cruel.


Mister Garrison

Bitches. All of you.
















More to come, I'm sadly sure . . .