Monday, August 27, 2007

Neckface Strikes Again

This time on some lovely decorative ceramic in Chelsea.


Totally aside, why do men in this city seem to not have nosebuds? There is a disgustipating cologne that breaks my sinuses into quivering pieces too often this summer: I smell it in the hot air of the subways, in the bathrooms at restaurants. ...Did I just make up the word "nosebud"?

We're Done For

Watch this video of a Miss Teen USA contestant being dumber than the dumbest speck of dumb on the planet. Watch it because a friend who watched it just said to me, "After my brain stopped hurting, I wanted to kill myself."

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Twirling, Standing Still, Flying

A marching band clomped through my neighborhood last night. I don't know why. There was a flag-twirler and all. "Ironic."


Earlier in the day, I was on a mission that involved ringing the bell of the filthiest sex shop in Chelsea while tottering in my prissy work clothes. Passersby gawked at me. No one appeared to open the door.

This is a store that sells mannequins:


I'm going to Scotland next week. To see someone I have not seen in four years. I may have officially gone off the deep end. But I may have made a jackknife somersault that scored a 9.7 by the Austrian judge, too.

I am listening to a friend of mine interview Phil Collins on the radio about breaking up. I know some strange people. You, included.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Cloudy Here, With a Chance of Stars in My Eyes

People have been crawling out of their hidey holes these days to say hello, and I am just thrilled. I feel like my arms are open and there are all these friends rushing up to hug me. A new map is forming in my head of my human connections from points east and west of New York City: England, India, England, Italy, Iraq…England again. Why are all you Brits so good at making me happy?

In totally unrelated photo posting…
Here is a photograph of a 99-cent store sign. And a connecting overpass with that fantastic copper-green tone. There are many of these overpasses in Venice, only they are much, much lower down and usually made of stone. I have heard stories that they were constructed when a couple got married. The husband and wife would live in one building, and the bridge would connect to another home, one occupied by the wife’s family. I don’t think that is what is happening in this shot near Penn Station. But who can be sure?

Sunday, August 19, 2007

The Car (Subtitle: "The Story of the Car")

Last night around 11 I received a text from a friend:

"Whatchya doin'?" she asked.

"Dancing to 'Shimmy Shimmy Cocoa Puff' at a wedding in Maine," I replied.

And I was. No, to be fair, I believe I had just finished dancing to "Push It" with the bride's father and had stopped for breath when I sent that message, and was, in reality, listening to "Shimmy Shimmy Cocoa Puff" and not dancing, per se.

We were in the middle of the woods. All around us it was dark. Pine tree silhouettes limned the sky and above us hung white paper lanterns. We ate our miso-dipped green beans and heirloom tomatoes and boogied like you only wish a wedding party would ever get down. Heels never felt so superfluous but kicky. The cold of August never felt so shivery but fresh.

The bridegroom's mother gave a speech that made us cry. "He taught me words I never knew before," was her refrain about her son. She said, at the end of the speech, that there was one word she had never known the true meaning of and had never used before tonight: "Daughter," she said.*


Then we ate cheese.

Then we drank more. Then we left the woods.
The after-party was worthy of mention.

Picture this: A bride in white-white, white petals in her hair, voluptuous cleavage spilling over her red plastic cup of boxed wine on a polyester-clad bed in a motel room. Considering the professional achievements of most of the people under that drop-ceiling, this was the lowest-brow highbrow after-party possibly ever thrown. My one regret is that a cohort and I had, earlier in the day, in a fit of brilliance, deviously rigged the pool so we could access it that night. We never made it in, instead crashing unchlorinated in our rooms among beer cans and ice buckets. Life is super rough sometimes.**


I am now in a car driving from Maine, seated in the back behind S (girl) and D (boy). Our topics of conversation have flown from how the nickel is the underdog of the coin world ("Nickels are shit." "I'd kick them in the nuts." "Pennies are trash.") to why we don't like to date people in our own professions and how we don't necessarily like to date people in other professions.

I just read that sentence to them.

"No, I'd date people in my own profession," S said. "And I want to date people in other professions."

"So you want to be a whore," I said.

"Yes," she said.

"I want to date an alien," D said. "But not a squishy alien."***

Our latest brainstorm was who at the wedding is what animal. Par example:
On the scale from chicken to cat, S is an otter
A is a kangaroo.
M is a moose
H is a duck-billed platypus
D is a kingfisher
D is a monkey
I am, according to S and D, a wild horse.

On to who is what food:
M is a bratwurst
D is cole slaw and fries
Now we debate which is more whimsical and which is more serious: coleslaw or fries? Coleslaw is definitively more serious that fries, I say. We argue fiercely.

Amarone--they are debating what drink I am, and are venturing into dark wines.
D is a negroni
M is a Long Island iced tea
S is a gimlet
Who is the white russian? Who cares? They are vomitous.

Our party has become gratuitously hostile. "Hello and fuck you," D smiles at a carload of little kids.

Rest Stop.

We debate the positive and negative aspects of remaining in a Pizza Hut in New Hampshire for the rest of our lives.
"S, you can work in the CVS across the street in the pharmacy." (Med student.)
"D, you can wait outside for car accidents and then sue people." (Former lawyer.)
Me: "So I am the one with the useless profession here?"
"No," D says. "You're going to be putting out our newspaper." We will be our only sources for every story and feel at liberty to quote ourselves profusely.

"How quickly do you think we would turn to cannibalism?" D asks. He answers his own question. "Hours," he says.
"Minutes," I venture. "Minutes." We consider making a break for the door. We hang out heads over our individual not-what-we-ordered pan pizzas.
To be safe, we pick out which family we might devour first.
The blond one with string-bean daughters, we decide. Not the table of old people in pastels behind us. Definitely not. Chewy.

We realize we are actually on the verge of spending the rest of our lives in the Pizza Hut and force ourselves to leave.

...Hours pass...

We stop again for a bathroom at a convenience store with a strangely long line of men at the register. Across the street is a cemetery. We debate spending the night in it. I declare we will. They declare they will not listen to me. A rebellion is fomenting.

I wonder if we will make it to Brooklyn tonight.

Unclear.

We do not, however, die on the Mass Pike, as we speculated we might, and feel a surge of joy at that development.

"Maybe I will go to a diner tonight," D says. He thinks aloud: "Can I do that?"

"I want yogurt and fresh peaches," S says.

"Spinach," I say.

"Let's get a farmer with dirt on his pants--"

"And lick the dirt off," I say.

To sum up: We are greased out, hungover, and insane. One of us has fantasized about licking dirt off a farmer's pants. Send help...?


___________
* This is not a generic "feeling" shot. This is actual lavender from the actual wedding site.

** No, this does not illustrate the point "super rough sometimes." And no, it was not taken the night of the after-party but is in fact the bar from the previous night's after-party. I returned the following day to this bar to attempt to retrieve two friends' jackets. They did not get their jackets. And then they froze to death.

***D soon clarified: "A taut alien. I would date a taught alien."

Text Blap

A selection of recent text messages that possibly stand on the three legs of their own merits. I mean, demerits. No, dementia. I definitely mean "dementia":

FROM OTHERS:
Saw a show that had some wolves in it on the Discovery Channel and thought of you. So there's that.

Oh yeah? Well you and the [REDACTED] retard clown patrol can suck it, sweetheart.

I have a bad case of herpes and have been laying low.

I'm the handsome gentleman by the window. I hope you look like your picture!

Send it back and tell him to save it for his thirsty skanks, one of which you are not.

In my underwear, eating crackers with cream cheese.

TO OTHERS:
OMG I'm being held hostage at Circuit City by [REDACTED]. Send help.

I totally just put my thumbprint in wet concrete.

[REDACTED] says you are going a bit too far. We're not loser retard clowns, she said. We're asshat illiterate journalists.

I have enlisted [REDACTED] to jack your bike.

Dorothy Parker said, "There's plenty of time to do nothing once you're dead."

[REDACTED] wondered if you want to have "freaky cripple sex."

Are you naked and punching people yet?

Friday, August 17, 2007

Inner. Mongolia.

Forget whatever you are doing and feast your brains upon what my old friend Mo has been up to:

“I am directing a dating reality show for Inner Mongolia satellite TV.”

No, he’s not kidding. Yes, he is a bit crazy. And no, I can’t explain how he ended up doing this.

For now, I’m too frightened to ask. We haven’t talked for maybe eight years, and I’m taking the updates one step at a time. One strange, absurd, China-based loopy-world step at a time.

Back to my report on Taliban attacks on an Afghan radio station now.

Buon weekend.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Lingua Texta

I’m working on a story that involves making a lot of calls and sending a number of e-mails to Gaza.

Here are some of the interesting aspects of trying to be in contact with that mangled place:

1. Phones ring and ring and between foreign-sounding beeps, whooshing, windy sounds blow. It sounds far away, desert-bound, tired.

2. Phones are tapped.

3. Whooshing, windy sounds are probably not related to phones being tapped. But it makes one wonder.

4. Not dialing “011” in order to ring out of the U.S. and following that with a phone number in Gaza leads you to a nice woman in Plano, Texas, who has had the same number for 12 years. “Oh,” she said when I told her I forgot to dial “011,” “I do that all the time.”

5. My correspondents write to me in very good English, considering. But let’s parse this last message I just received:
“OK ,, my dear ,, but i'll send it tomorrow, r u agree ??”

Let’s start with the double commas. That’s it. Just pointing out the double commas.

From there, I believe we can hop, skip and sally past “my dear” and forgive it, as in Arabic he was referring to me as “aazeezati.” Apparently, I was supposed to respond with “aazeezi,” which I have now done, belatedly.

And then we arrive at “r u,” the most puzzling piece of this one-sentence enigma.

Apparently, men who speak Arabic as their primary language have no problem corresponding in the stunted language of English text. I find that fascinating.

--30--

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

We Are All Triathletes!

...because we made it out of the hot, stinking hole they call the “subway” this August morning, dripping as it is with the wet, putrid sludge of an early morning storm and moving with the speed of a salted snail.

As my third train of the morning went out of service at West 4th, the conductor, he laughed.

He. Laughed.

But here we are, happily ac’ed, and CNN has outdone itself with this headline, making me smile:

Airline asks, 'Is that a monkey in your ponytail?'

Or are you just a fucked-up nutball to see me?

Let's go with "fucked-up nutball," unless you have any better suggestions.

Addendum: 1010 Wins reports that "other passengers asked the man if he knew he had a monkey on him." I will hereby attempt to coordinate that phrase into my lifedidyouknowyouhaveamonkeyonyou?

Monday, August 06, 2007

Suck It Up (Or Cry Like the Little Baby You Are)

“New format of Times is freaky. I’m freaking out. I’m going to sue everybody.”

As a defender of journalists, I replied to this text at 9 a.m.: “That would put us at odds. [REDACTED] Bring it on.”

“I’ll sue you too,” he wrote.

(No one ever said the Welder was subtle.)

But yeah. “Freaking out” is probable for the city today. Or for those of us who read newspapers in the city today. Which, at last count, is three-to-forty of us. In case you missed it: The Times cut its physical paper width finally to the size of The Washington Post. It is nothing short of terrifying. Or jarring, maybe. Depends how overdramatic I feel like being right now. And right now, I feel like being pretty fucking overdramatic. Terrifying. I’m going to go with “terrifying.” Picture mass panic: Tourists in Times Square being clubbed in the head by newspaper-wielding New Yorkers with insanity in their eyes. Dogs attacking like 1,000 angry Cujos with foreshortened New York Times in their teeth. Commuters waving their arms around in confusion and thwacking small children and pregnant ladies with rolled up papers. Just like that.

Totally aside, or perhaps entirely relatedly, this lyric from One Ring Zero will not get out of my brain (damn you, you know who you are):

“All…the plants…are on…fire…
All…the plants…are on…fire…
They’re…looking for a wife.”

Sunday, August 05, 2007

I Go to a Car Service

I get in the black car.

The driver exits the corner bodega, cigarette in hand. He gets in.

"You're smoking?" I say. "I'll smoke too then!"

"Ah!" he says, turning around with a grin. "I like you!"

He starts the music. He turns it up. It's funk-ish, jazz-ish, with fantastic Quincy Jones interludes. His name is David. He is from "Cairo, Egypt."

We fly toward the Manhattan Bridge.

"My hair is going everywhere!" I shout above the music, the wind.

"Your hair goes everywhere like a wild horse! So beautiful!"

Ha ha ha! I laugh and laugh. I smoke. The music floats around the car and the city skyline rears up ahead of us.

"Your hair! Your hair is like a beautiful hair in the air!" he says.

Ha ha ha! I laugh.

Ha ha ha!

Ha ha ha!

"I've seen you in the neighborhood," he says.

Ha ha ha!

Ha ha oh!

Oh.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

It Says 'Antiques' in Crazy Scrawl on the Wall

There is a man who sits in a folding chair on the sidewalk of a zippy Brooklyn street. Zippy—it has twinges of old-school crappiness, but is mostly restaurant-laden, college-grad-heavy bar-full. There is, however, a kind of veterans' man-club right in the middle of it all.

Back to this old man.

He sits out almost every day, wearing these blind-man large, black coverall glasses. He is rotund. Behind him are objects. They rotate. They are often there against the wall even if he is not sitting among them. They are always dirty, probably broken: a filthy old stroller; a handcart, rusted. The thing is though, these are not free items. Black marker signs hang on each—"$20" (handcart), "$30" (cradle). I.e. these are the most highly priced, run-down, piece-of-shit things you've ever seen for sale.

The day I took these photos, the man was lumped out in his chair as usual, only he had strung up a line of orange tape around his "lot." And he was reading a newspaper with those blind-man glasses. I don't even know what to say about it. A barrier. He had strung up an orange barrier, as if he were the police and he were sitting in the middle of an investigation. Or he finally had realized that he should put himself on view like an animal in a zoo. Or he felt the need to protect his shitass items for sale. Or. Or Or. My head hurts suddenly. People are asshat bananas.


(Skeevy things for sale.)



(Asshat bananas.)

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