Monday, April 14, 2008

Cubs Fan Wants to Waste Time Travel


CUBS FAN WANTS TO WASTE TIME TRAVEL


I like to wear a blue hat with a red "C" printed on it. The "C" represents my affinity for the Chicago Cubs baseball squadron. Because of the team’s 99-year championship drought and knack for faltering in the presence of greatness, many people who follow sports consider Cubs fans pathetic and masochistic. But I don’t see it that way. I prefer to think we are dauntless optimists who never lose hope but occassionally lose self-respect. Being a Cubs fan has taught me that hope can’t be killed by oodles upon oodles of disappointment, frustration, and failure. Thanks to a revolving cast of jocks that wear matching hats and uniforms, I have learned a lot about hope. Hope is like a cockroach in the nuclear winter.


Of course, this column wouldn’t be very funny if I didn’t segue into the disappointment/ frustration/ failure realm of loving the Cubs. My darkest day as a Cubs fan should come as no surprise: October 14th, 2003. On this date, the Cubs squandered a three-run lead in the eighth inning and wound up losing game six of the National League Championship Series to the Florida Marlins. A few days later, the Marlins eliminated the Cubs in game seven and went on to win the World Series. A crucial play in this dreadful eighth inning occurred when Marlin Luis Castillo sliced a foul ball toward the left field stands—right in the area of seat 113 in aisle 4, row 8. The fan who claimed seat 113—a bespectacled geek named Steve Bartman— lunged for the airborne souvenir, oblivious or indifferent to the fact that Cubs leftfielder Moises Alou was tracking the ball, poised to make the catch. Alou didn’t catch the ball, however, because Bartman knocked it down. Thus began a gut-wrenching plummet down an emotional black-hole. Thanks a lot, Bartman. I mean...What the fuck?!


I realize there were many other factors in that eighth inning debacle (including but not limited to starter Mark Prior’s abrupt loss of composure, Alex Gonzalez’s error at shortstop, the relievers floated the ball to the plate in under-handed, softball fashion), but for the sake of this column, let’s just assume a fan with busy hands deserves 100% of the blame. Steve Bartman could discover the cure for cancer and he still wouldn’t redeem himself. Don’t get me wrong: I hate cancer as much as the next guy. I’m anti-cancer all the way, but on the other hand, I can’t overlook the fact that Steve Bartman sucks as a person.


I have a request for any scientists that are reading this column: Invent a time machine. I’ve never asked you for anything before; PLEASE scientists, invent a time machine so that I can travel back to October 14th 2003 and restrain Steve Bartman in a full-nelson hold for a mere three seconds while that infamous foul ball is in flight. I want to go "Quantum Leap" on that chump!


Some of you may be wondering, "Aren’t there more important historical events to rectify through time travel? Genuinely tragic events that we could set straight if only the damn scientists would get off their duffs and invent a damn time machine?" It’s an interesting argument that I’m willing to counter. So with no further ado, here is a brief list of some other catastrophes that do not, in my opinion, merit time travel intervention.

***

No free rides. To read all of this essay, and 39 others that are just as loony, please buy a copy of my book.

www.xlibris.com/NickOlig.html

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

I'm OK, K107 Is Not Okay



College for me was followed by an interim period, the time between learning a trade and plunging into an official, unavoidable career. I'm still living in the interim period as I write this. It has been a relatively peaceful time.

I'm looking forward to the end of the interim period, in part because of the radio, specifically K-107 FM in Fond du Lac. I'm not self-employed, as a writer or otherwise, and as a consequence I have very limited control over the selection of music I listen to for about nine hours every workday. It is somewhat taboo to play a CD where I work, at Meixensperger Painting and Decorating. It pays most of the endless bills, puts pizza and Lean Cuisines on the TV tray, and leaves me comfortably dissatisfied.

The bizarre thing is that most of my daily tasks involve wood in some capacity--sanding, filling holes, painting--and back in ninth grade, Wood Shop (or Technical Education as it was euphemized) was a daily burden. My grades were subpar and I hated the class. Wood Shop was the thoughtless introduction to the morning blur, still half-asleep, ears getting harrassed by the hellacious SCREEEAAACH of buzz-saws gnarling into solid oak.

All students were required to wear cheap safety glasses with narrow black rectangular rims. They were similar to Buddy Holly's eye-wear, especially when you're a skinny, pubescent young man with braces. It was not a good look for me; looking into the mirror wearing those Buddy Holly glasses felt like a cruel joke. "That can't be me staring back...my God, it is."

As it turns out, wood isn't so bad. Those hellaciously screaching buzz saws were the source of the problem. Sanding, filling holes, and painting, while repetitive, are tasks that are conducive to the daydreamer's mind. Once your hands are experienced enough to perform using their own memory, very little conscious thought is required and one can set their mind to ideas on music, sports, women, reading, or writing. Assuming you're only planning to do it for nine or ten months of your lifetime, being a painter isn't so bad.
The closest thing to a buzz-saw I have to contend with on a daily basis is the radio. To me, the music played on mainstream radio stations is buzz-saw-lite. Mainstream radio music is slightly more melodic, more merciful than buzz-saws, but whenever I hear "Big Girls Don't Cry" or "Delilah" for the third time in a nine-hour span, I think of that old familiar buzz-saw SCREEEAAACH as a suitable alternative.
At Meixensperger Headquarters, which is referred to simply as The Shop, a common task involves spraying dozens and dozens of boards set on barrels. The boards are then transfered, usually by me, to a metallic rack with dozens of horizontal rungs. This process lasts for about an hour at a time. Ted Meixensperger, 28-year-old son of Jeff, the boss, usually does the spraying. Sometimes Jeff serves as the primary sprayer, whenever he deems that Ted and I need to "Kick it in the ass." Jeff is in his mid-50s and he might be the most inexaustible worker I've ever met.

Spraying dozens and dozens of boards inside a fume-hazy room with a cardboard floor is a manly job. Jabberjawing and ball-breaking and lethal farts are constant. At least once a week I hear the following conversation: "Hey, you missed a spot. What, do you need to get your eyes checked?" "What are you talking about? I didn't miss a spot. Maybe YOU need to get your eyes checked." Then somebody farts to prove there are no hard feelings. It's manly work, and you might expect us to listen to bands such as Led Zeppelin or Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers or at the very least stupid fucking Van Halen while we do it. But this isn't the case. While we're hard at work, jabberjawing and all that, we're usually listening to an effeminate song on K-107 FM. It's an embarrassing contradiction, and I'm the only one who takes notice. Aside from modern-day crappy rock like Nickelback, we listen to some of the most pussified music available.

Radio stations such as K-107 are not hazardous only because of the bad music and ham-fisted local advertisements. These radio stations are an infringement on our free will. Nobody at the Shop likes hearing Pink segue into Fergie, we're just resigned to it, as if it's not an option to bring in a copy of Led Zeppelin I through IV. It is, God-dammit, but everyday we end up listening to non-objectionable soft rock.
The situation is so depressing. The good news is that I write to alleviate the depressive tendencies of the problems my mind embellishes. Pay-checks be damned, I am not a painter and I am not resigned.
What follows, then, is a wolfish reply to the singers and bands that make mainstream radio seem slightly more appealing than a hellaciously screaching buzz-saw.

The Singers...
Kenny Chesney: "Don't Blink," because the temporary lapse of vision won't save your ear-drums from being violated by Kenny's patented D-Bag nostalgia. This song includes a total of 25 cliches about the bittersweet nature of aging. Country garbage is being played more and more on mainstream radio, and I don't like it one bit.

Fergie: My biggest qualm with certain female vocalists is when they perform ballads that are fueled by an ERUPTION of estrogen. When you see a diva perform these types of ballads, the vains in their neck protrude grotesquely and one hand covers their sternum to keep their hearts from breaking. The experience is ugly, comically dramatic, and uncomfortable.

Fergie's "Big Girls Don't Cry" is a fitting example. Fergie wants us all to know how vulnerable she is feeling, and it's really terrifying. "Big Girls Don't Cry" is scarier than "The Exorcist" and stretch-marks combined times a thousand.

Women who passionately relate to this song on an emotional level are quickly rising on my list of people I don't want to associate with.

Alecia Keys: Her latest hit, "No One," features some cool synth-effects and a voluminous sound. Enjoyment of this song is, however, made impossible by Alecia's vocals (eruption of estrogen) and her lyrics. In the song, Alecia is trying to console a loved one by promising them that, "EVERYTHING IS GOING TO BE ALL RIGHT!" At the risk of sounding pessimistic, everything is not going to be all right, and I'm exhausted by delusional sentimentalists who convey these exact words in their music. Everything has never been, is not, will never be all right because problems, sorrow, and anger are permanent qualities of the human experience. If you have a loved one who cries every time it rains, don't promise them it's never ever going to rain again because when it does rain you're going to feel like a lying piece of shit.

"Let It Be" is fitting advice to a down-and-out loved one. The next time Alecia wants to cheer up a family member, I really hope she refrains from writing her own song, wises up and pays Michael Jackson a shit-load of money for the rights to "Let It Be."

Pink: You can't present yourself as a sneering pop-outlaw AND receive three hours of airtime on mainstream radio for eight months at a stretch without being a hypocrite. Pink is not a pop-outlaw. She isn't rebelling against the mainstream because the mainstream has made her rich, filthy rich.

"Who Knew?" just sounds like a hostile bitch covering a song written for Kelly Clarkson. Oddly enough, Kelly Clarkson will be spared in this rant because, although I don't like her music, I have a strong hunch her soul is a thing of beauty. Who knew?

Billy Ray Cyrus and His Fortune-Making Daughter Hannah Montana: Billy Ray's career hit a lull following the "Achey Breaky Heart" hysteria of the early-90s. The song's pulse thrived like the triumphant blood of anyone trendy enough to dance away the last fifteen minutes of the Fanny-Pack explosion. The hysteria lasted for damn near two years. Billy Ray appeared to be invincible.

The only snag in the man's mullet was his inability to write and record a second popular song. His career cooled off as he flirted with Mistress Obscurity, played some state fairs, and didn't get a few dozen important phone calls returned.

But the man had an Ace up his sleeve, or rather a Queen: his daughter Hannah (Cha-Ching!) Montana. Here is a time-line biography of Billy Ray Cyrus, beginning with the year "Achy Breaky Heart" topped the charts.
1991: "Achy Breaky Heart" fills the void left by the phasing out of "The Safety Dance." "Line-dancing" beacme much more than a slang term used by boogying coke-heads, Billy Ray beat Stanley Cup champion Mario Lamieux in a mullet contest, and "Achy Breaky Heart" held strong at Number One throughout most of the vastly under-rated 21st season of "Hee-Haw."

1992: Still coasting on the success, and why the hell not? Common quote from Billy Ray during this era: "I want me some Mellow Yellow 'n' Jaegermeister stocked in the fridge at ev'ry show, plus some babes what got big hoots, up real close to the stage."

1993: Vacation time. Buys an island somewhere in the Carribean, later on loses the island in a high-stakes poker game. Still bitter about that poker game.

1994: Daughter Hannah Montana born. Jackpot status yet to be determined. Much to Billy Ray's disappointment, infant Hannah's rendition of "America, the Beautiful" is deemed "unprofitable-sounding" by his record company.

1995: Celebrity judge at the Kentucky State Fair's 42nd Annual Pie-Eat.

1996-1998: Records and then scraps several versions of his ill-fated concept album: "There's No House Like Roadhouse," a musical re-imagining of the Patrick Swayze film "Roadhouse." The album's woeful sales prompted BRC to sell off his two favorite monster trucks.

1999: Receives an honorable mention for performance at the Kentucky State Fair's 46th Annual Pie-Eat. Not content with a mere honorable mention, Billy Ray gets into a shouting match with celebrity judge Larry Flint. Billy Ray accuses Flint of crooked judgement, threatens to slash the tires on Flint's wheelchair, and tells the porn mogle he hopes a hurricane destroys his precious island in the Carribean.

2000: Soul-crushing year begins on a dreary note as the Apocalypse did not happen as some had foretold.

2001: Sues several "no-nothin'" televangelists who failed to deliver on promise of Y2K Armageddon. Billy Ray loses the case. On the bright side, he remembered to feed his daughter on a regular basis.

2002: Entertains a crowd of dozens outside of the 49th Annual Kentucky State Fair. He is upstaged by his opening act: daughter Hannah Montana singing medley of popular Disney songs. Billy Ray's eyeballs literally turned into dollar signs for the duration of the year.

2003-2005: Works tirelessly 60 hours per week to make sure his daughter works 50 hours a week singing at shopping malls and filthy rich nursing homes.

2006-present: Return to glory. Ready, set, don't call it a comeback! I would suggest that God is to Jesus as Billy Ray is to Hannah Montana if only it wasn't blasphemous to compare Jesus to a little girl.
It's worth mentioning that, although the song is irritating and irredeemable, Hannah's powerhouse vocals are impressive. She puts her daddy on her supple back and plows onward past screaming pre-teens toward an RV stuffed with One-Hundred Dollar Bills.

The Bands...

Nickelback: Every song they've recorded has been inside of a large bathroom. In addition to producing great accoustics, the bathroom setting allows lead singer Chad Kroeger to squat on the toilet during his vocal recordings. Most of the fart noises are edited out of the final versions.

The Kroeger also has a popular duet with Carlos Santana, who on numerous occassions has been paid excessively to whack-off with his six-string in support of younger rock stars. Carlos' talent has been spoiled for awhile now, he primarily whacks off with his six-string for pop losers, and in the after-life he deserves to clean the vomit from the clouds Jimi Hendrix threw-up on in heaven.

Plain White T's: Their corny ballad "Delilah" set back masculinity and the accoustic guitar twenty and five years, respectively. The lead singer needs to stop taking pills to boost his estrogen level.
The words, dedicated to an Olympic gymnast the singer met once, represent a stalker's masturbation session and not a heartfelt phantom encounter with your girlfriend. And stalking is not romantic. Don't be suckered by this type of bullshit, ladies. Sexist aggression is no good, but neither is being an unabashed advocate of Pussy-dom.

Bon Jovi: It's difficult for me to limit my distaste for Bon Jovi to fewer than 200 words once I get going like this, but I will try. Starting...Now!

Bon Jovi's latest hit, "Lost Highway," opens with a line that blatantly plagiarizes Pearl Jam's 1993 single "Rearviewmirror." That's lame and unoriginal. "Crush," a BJ chart-topper from 2000, also includes mention of a highway ("My heart is like an open highway"), and the words that follow are, "Like Frank (Sinatra) said: 'I did it my way.'" Jon Bon openly admits to swiping somebody else's lyrics in that song, and I wish he'd get back into the habit. He is a handsome man with average musical ability who has no reason to believe originality is profitable.

Bon Jovi was recently inducted into the Songwriter Hall of Fame, an organization I didn't know existed until I heard the news about Bon Jovi on K-107. That's when I lost all respect for the Songwriting Hall of Fame's voting commitee. Just as a garbage can stacked with used syringes does not belong in Cooperstown, Bon Jovi does not belong in the Songwriting Hall of Fame.

As my wayward friend Kodke once stated, "Leave me out of the Bon Jovi demographic." It is with immense pride that I plagiarize his thoughts on Bon Jovi.

OneRepublic: Listen dudes, "It's too late to apologize" for raping my eardrums with your drivel-gushing ballad. The guest vocalist on this shit-ballad is Timbaland, who can be heard on the chorus grunting, "Huh-huh!" The song's hook goes something like this: "It's too late to apologize...It's to laaattteee! (Huh-huh!) It's too late to apologize..." A vain male model whines and strokes his damaged ego, and then his retarded cousin moans in his sleep. Evidently, that's a possible formula for writing a song so popular it is inescapable.
Lifehouse: All you need to know about Lifehouse is that they are arguably less necessary than Hubastank.

Conclusion...
When the band Autograph encouraged us to "Turn Up the Radio" back in 1984, they had no idea the radio would become infested with bands that are half as talented as Autogrpah. In essence, the quality of the local pop station has deteriorated every year, going back at least to the era I was born in. If this downslide continues, in 50 years Jon Bon's son Ron Bon will probably be a radio DJ at a station that exclusively plays his dad's hit singles in between interviews with an old, pregnant Hannah Montana. In which case, I say bring on Gore's version of the End of Days: Global Warming.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Shooting Phish in a Barrel






When I wrote for the college newspaper in Oshkosh, I made it a point to include several recurring jokes in my columns. Their purpose was to strengthen the consistency of the writer's voice. A lot of times, because I exaggerate and bend the truth so much, the character of me exists in a sort of parallel universe, and the recurring references were put in to make the visit to such a strange place less alienating and more reassuring.

For reasons that I will soon explain (at length), I lambasted a band named Phish on a semi-regular basis. Until now, I've never done a column that exclusively deals with my distaste for Phish, but through grumbling asides and tangents, I took swipes at the quartet from Vermont and the mental lethargy the group embodies.

To the reader, I'd wager that these brief grievances with Phish were not always well-received. Indeed, not everyone is familiar with their music, and so the Phish-bashing tangents could seem obscure and random. Concerning the Phish fan demographic, they are an ardent, defensive bunch, and not all of them are illiterate, so I know some of them were angered and offended. To me, the shooting of Phish in a Barrel was always noble yet wicked, hilarious, and just a wee bit sad and petty. (And it still is.)

At my high school, a lot of the popular kids in my grade wore t-shirts in support of the Dave Matthews Band and Phish. Those were the two most popular bands in the popular crowd. Neither band appealed to me then, and years later, I feel pretty much the same way. Dave's music sounds like a trendy hoe-down, and it seems really effeminate, too. Phish was/ is even worse: the stoner vapidness they offer reinforces the pot-smoker stereotype, and the lack of thought and emotion don't result in a good time for me; the music just feels empty and stupid. Both bands represented the comical, gimmicky nature of high school popularity, which I never really experienced, of course.

In college I became friends with a few of the Dave fans as well as a handful of the Phish-heads, without ever having to buy any of the t-shirts or CDs. The pros outweighed the cons in these friendships; really, the worst drawback was getting drunk while listening to a CD someone else picked because we were getting tipsy in their dorm room or apartment and they had every right to choose the night's soundtrack. It wasn't much of a bother. Albums such as Check Your Head and Odelay always stayed up late for me until I made it back home.

To be honest, my contempt for the Dave Matthews band wavered in time. "Trendy hoe-down" and "effeminate" are still descriptions that apply, though. Also, it should be noted that guys who fake or embellish their love of the Dave Matthews Band in order to work the sensitive-confident-man-angle with a Dave-adoring chick are, without exception, lowlife con-artists. But I'll stand by this: the Dave Matthews Band have recorded at least five great songs.

Phish was an entirely different story. The more I listened (despairingly) to Phish, the more their existence as a band troubled me.

Some of my worst memories involve listening to Phish. These experiences were by no means catastrophic, but getting your ear-drums raped while the people around you celebrate is never a good time.

One such instance occurred on New Year's Eve of 2005. I went to the bar with my friend Tim and his buddy Noah. Tim and I were enjoying our argument about rock music, specifically which band has the more impressive song catalog: the Beatles (right answer) or the Rolling Stones (wrong answer). We both knew it was a totally subjective debate, but really, that only made matters worse. But in a funny way!

We were on the subject of Sgt. Pepper when Noah walked over to the jukebox and put some quarters in it. He played "The Wolfman's Brother" by Phish, and Lord have Mercy, the jukebox was really fucking loud. So loud I couldn't think. I lost my train of thought, overwhelmed by what struck me as shitty sound-waves.

Noah sat back down and lit a cigarette. I turned to him and, in an annoyed tone that he did not care for, I asked him if he really meant to play the song we were listening to. He took a slow drag, the cherry flared, and he nodded once without making eye-contact.

About three minutes into the travesty, I decided to step outside, have a smoke, and call a cute girl I would ultimately never have sex with. She was nice enough to laugh at a few jokes and I was more funny than flirtatious. We hung up after a few minutes. I truly thought I had waited out the worst that the night had to offer. I exhaled a puff of nicotine/ cold air, littered, and walked back into the bar.

Inside, "The Wolfman's Brother" was still playing, at about the eight-minute mark. The band was all done spouting inane lyrics, but they persisted in dicking around on their instruments for the foreseeable future.


Now, just because you're not likely to get sniped for playing far beyond the point when you should have stopped doesn't mean you have to do it. What's the point in jamming when the basis of the song itself is so flimsy and vacuous? “The Wolfman's Brother” is probably about a Monster-Mash with bongs; it's a shoddy novelty song, and in a divinely merciful world, God would not allow anyone to play that tune for longer than two minutes.

Elsewhere: While David Bowie, the man, is an exceptional singer and songwriter, "David Bowie," Phish song, is terrible. And I don't mean "terrible" in a good way, either. On a late-night drive home with a couple friends, I listened to this nonsensical crap for seemingly nine hours.

To my knowledge, the only words are: "David Bowie, you-be forty." I thought Trey the hippie was singing: "David Bowie, UB-40," as in, the popular music group from the '80s. I was wrong. Either way, it's one of many, many Phish compositions that defaces virtues of singing, songwriting, and brevity.

A persnickety Phish-loving friend has since enlightened me on the subject. Apparently the tune was written as a birthday present to David Bowie. Oh, boy.

"Hey David, happy birthday. We dig your music, man. Anyway, I lost my bucket-full of thoughts. Hope you dig brain-dead stoner babble!"

That's how the lead hippie introduces the song.

This one is always good for a laugh...

"Bag it, tag it, sell it to the butcher at the store." This is perhaps the most thought-provoking lyric in the Phish catalog. At a party in college, an exuberant A-Phishionado--clad in a tight-fitting Polo shirt--expressed praise for this line while it blasted from the stereo. My friend Jill and I were sitting on the couch and he turned to us, almost spilling his Jack and Coke as he swung his gaze toward us.

"It's not just a sweet jam," he said. "This tune has a message. Bag it. Tag it. Sell it to the butcher. At the store. That's the truth, you know?"

His eye-balls bulged and he stared at us for a few seconds. We had no idea what the hell he was talking about. I have a fierce immunity to the shaky wisdom of hippies in their 20s. This guy, with his backwards fitted hat and cherry-colored chubby cheeks, was more of a yippie, and yippies are even less credible than hippies.

He went on about the group's concerts as well as the stories behind their songs. There was something disconcerting in the way he gushed over Phish. Jill and I barely knew this guy. But he wasn't addressing us to be friendly; rather, he seemed to be actively recruiting us. It was a bizarre interaction, and it wasn't until years later that I pieced together an accurate comparison. Die-hard Phish fans are a lot like members of a religious cult. Only instead of handing out pamphlets at the mall, they hand out live-bootleg CDs at parties.

I've had the misfortune of hearing a live Phish bootleg that features a jam in which the crowd chants the name "Wilson" for the first minute or two. I'm not a fan of chants. They're redundant, they promote blind conformity, and they generally give me the creeps. Chants are a major factor in my aversion to Catholic mass, and some other religions chant even more frequently than Catholics. Religious cults, especially, rely on chants to get all members to think along the same narrow train of thought.

Now, I don't know the back-story behind this "Wilson" character, or what he has done to merit a song in his honor. Perhaps the answer is revealed in the liner notes of Billy Breathes. Maybe Wilson was a roadie for Phish in the early days, and his chief duties were scoring drugs and driving the van when the band was too stoned to keep their eyes on the road. I'm not sure, but I know this: Wilson's back-story is rooted in bullshit mythology. At Phish concerts, Wilson is just a name you chant to blend in with the rest of the hive. The name has no meaning and the song is thoughtless, but nobody minds because they are all part of something BIG and nobody who chants feels excluded.

Chanting works the same way in religious cults. The only difference is that cult members chant "Spaceship Messiah" instead of "Wilson."

In the process of writing this essay, I watched an episode of the Comedy Central show Strangers with Candy. Jeri Blank, the sleazy and tactless main character, gets recruited by a religious cult while she is at the mall playing an arcade game. In addition to her lust for the female recruiter, Jeri is also lonesome and longing to belong, and so she accepts a ride in a van back to the cult's mansion. Later on she is introduced to the leader, a conniving egotist who describes a dream he had to his members. The scene is absurd and almost unbearably loopy. It's also really funny.

I had the misfortune of watching part of a Phish concert DVD when I showed up at a friend's house to play a game of John Madden Football. At one point in this DVD, while the rest of the band noodled throughout a formless jam that brought to mind elevator music, Trey Anastacio set aside five minutes to tell his followers about a dream he had the night before.

Pretentious and uncalled for? Yeah, I think so, but as a silver lining, at least I didn't have to listen to the guy sing.

During the dream-telling portion of the concert, Trey was not a (lousy) lead singer; he was the leader of a musical cult. Now, Trey is not an evil person, which is a relief, considering the extent of his influence, but there is a reason one of his best-remembered lyrics is, "Come waste your time with me." That's his mantra.

Even though I can cite numerous bands that I think are worse than Phish, they still bother me like no other group because I still have friends who play their music constantly. I'd love to banish those shitty sound-waves from my life entirely, but that would entail severing ties with people solely because they really like a band that I can't stand. A few months ago I went to the bar for a friend's going-away party, and someone from the group played a half-hour block of Phish jams on the jukebox (about three songs). Again, the people around me celebrated while my ear-drums got raped. I was the only one in the group not hippie-dancing, thinking, "Jesus...these are my friends?!" And yes, they are. This sophomoric essay is not intended to ruin friendships. That may seem like a melodramatic disclaimer, but honestly, plenty of Phish-heads defend their band the way a mother grizzly defends her cub: Viciously.

Friendship is wonderful, but I'd much rather spend a summer weekend alone than pass a joint to a pal while chanting, “Wilson.”

In closing, I'd like to offer an example of a standard Phish indictment I submitted to the Advance-Titan, in March of 2005, along with one of the responses it drew from a Phish worshiper.

Nick: "Phish's dopey lyrics have killed more brain cells than weed, mushrooms, and LSD combined."

Angry Phish-head reply: "It takes a right-brained dope not to understand Phish's lyrics. You're obviously a fag."

OK, guy. You can have an opinion, too. Now nobody can argue that a Phish-head wasn't granted a rebuttal to my rather biased and salty opinion of the Grateful Dead's dimwitted nephew.

But I have to confess: There is one Phish lyric that I'm fond of. It's the line that reminds me of what to do if I ever see a Phish-head at a shopping mall, approaching strangers and jabbering about "Father Trey, the Crunchy Shredder." In addition to the tie-dyed clothing, a fanatic such as this is sure to stand out because of the line of stitches on the right side of his forehead. That's the spot where "Brother Wolfman" made the incision to remove and destroy that pesky, anti-Phish side of the brain. When I see that wild-eyed hippie coming my way, I'll know what to do. I'm going to turn around and "run like an antelope out of control."

Monday, April 7, 2008

The Idea Graveyard


According to Stephen King, creativity is the curse of expectations. Indeed. The man wrote and directed "Maximum Overdrive," people, and for that reason I believe everything he tells me.
Mr. King's adage hits home because I feel a tinge of regret for the good ideas I thought of during my tenure as a Lighter Side writer that never made it to print. Seriously, I had a few Showstoppers up my sleeve that, for whatever reason (whole world is plotting against me), were never printed in the Advance-Titan.
These ideas, which will be explained shortly, they're tortured phantoms whose initial promise was squandered by laziness and schedule conflicts. They linger in the mist of the Idea Graveyard. (More noteworthy inhabitants of the Idea Graveyard: a good health care system in America, peace in the Middle East, and the Beatles Reunion Tour, 1981.)
What follows is a somber tribute to the ideas that never really amounted to anything of substance--until now. So please join me as I pour out a 40 oz. of malt liquor onto some of the headstones in the Idea Graveyard.
The Mike Dewar Toss: Mike Dewar used to write for the Lighterside section, a few years ago. Mike D. weighs something like 140 lbs, which is about what I weigh. Nonetheless, I am amused by the sight of a short person being launched in the air somehow. And so I suggested that seven or eight members of the A-T staff pair up in teams of two to heave Mike as far as they can heave. We weren't going to toss Mike onto the cement, or a kiddie pool filled with broken Christmas ornaments or anything harsh like that. The idea was to toss him onto a thick gym mat or a sand volleyball court, which actually sound kind of fun. Mike said he'd be happy to do it.
The problem was, this idea was born just before the end of the spring 2006 semester, about a week before final exams. The Mike Dear Toss had to be postponed until fall 2006. But that was all right, or so I thought, because that gave me a whole summer to smooth out the details of the MDT.
Two staff members would sidle up on both sides of Mike, grab him by the belt and the back of his black Tool shirt, swing him three times for momentum, grunt, and then throw him "Roadhouse" bouncer-style as far they can throw. Four or five teams would compete, and the winners would become office legends and quite possibly national celebrities. (Camcorders are widespread and Youtube has glorified far worse ideas.)
UNFORTUNATELY, Mike chose to drop out of college in August of 2006, a month or so before school started. Then he contemplated moving to Canada, but never did. And after that, he posted a clip of himself on Youtube, "shredding" the hell out of a Buckethead song on "Guitar Hero." This is all true, and mostly lame.
Oh well. The important thing is that nobody got hurt. Because nobody risked injury. Namely, Mike Dewar.
The Beard vs. Mustache Wager: Nick Gumm used to be the B-section editor, and he wrote music reviews, too. In addition to editing and writing, Gumm is known for his trademark beard. One day, retired Lightersider Chris Becker refered to Gumm as "Beardo." Everyone loved the nickname, except for one person (Nick Gumm), and from then on he was called Beardo by several people in the office.
In spite of the childish insults, Beardo kept his beard, because Nick Gumm was simply Born to be Bearded. And he knows it.
Now, in regard to mustaches, I sported a mustache for nearly a month, just long enough to realize: that I can work it better than most, that most women I'm attracted to scoff at the sight of a mustache, and that sideshow experiments such as the mustache trial-run should be done only in moderation. I haven't grown out the old pushbroom since Jan. 2006. I am not Born to be Mustachioed.
Gumm has a beard similar to Paul McCartney's on the cover of "Let It Be." And I had a mustache like John Lennon's on the cover of "Sgt. Pepper." And while we're on the subject, the Two of Us are big fans of the Beatles. We agree that the Beatles are a no-brainer personal top-five band. We both know some fairly impressive trivia about the long-hairs from Liverpool, and I've sometimes wondered who knows more.
So, the idea I proposed was a Beatles trivia challenge, a showdown between two music nerds who miss the hell out of "Rock and Roll Jeopardy." And here's the clincher: if Gumm lost, he'd have to shave his thick, trademark beard. If I lost, I'd dust off the old pushbroom and rock the 'stache. Either way, our facial hair (or lack thereof), would honor the wager for a whole month.
The Beard vs. Mustache Wager never happened. I forget why, exactly, but feel free to assume it was all Beardo's fault.
Ex-Pro Wrestler Movie Review: This doozy has been rotting in the Idea Graveyard for quite some time. Let me explain. Pro wrestlers crack me up, especially when you put them in situations where you wouldn't expect to see them screaming and flexing. Sometimes I find myself wondering what retired pro-wrestlers do for a second career. The same theorizing applies to cheesey managers such as Paul Bearer, who would be hilarious as a creepy school bus driver.
In junior high, my friend Matt and I passed a notebook back and forth during History class, drawing a comic strip that depicted the antics of Hacksaw Jim Duggan and the Macho Man Randy Savage. Sometimes the duo chatted about violent guy movies (namely: "Over the Top" and "No Holds Barred"), and years later, in college, I got the idea that it would be funny to see them reviewing films, not unlike Ebert and Ropert on steroids.
A script exists for this bit, but a script without a visual counterpart is basically useless. Once upon a time I was faintly motivated to write a few phony movie reviews from the perspective of Misters Hacksaw and Macho Man. I'd better finish this one in the very near future because those incorrigible pro-wrestlers rarely live past the age of 50.
Robert Goulet Goes to Heaven: If a Will Ferrell impression has taught me nothing else, it's that semi-legendary crooner Robert Goulet was a freewheelin' cocktail fiend. Unfortunately, Goulet passed away not too long ago, and I thought it'd be nice to write him a comedic tribute. All I've jotted down for this bit are a few stage directions and some dialogue between Goulet and St. Peter. It goes something like this...
Recently deceased crooner Robert Goulet materializes in Heaven. He wears a dark suit and sunglasses, and as he inspects his bright-cloudy surroundings, he nods approvingly. Goulet approaches St. Peter just outside of the Pearly Gates.
Goulet: There's the man of the hour. So tell me, Pete, have I been naughty or nice this lifetime?
St. Peter: Ha. Yes, we've been expecting you, Mr. Goulet. Unfortunately a lot of people have died these last few minutes, but rest assured, we will call your name soon.
Goulet: Don't sweat it. Hey, while I'm waiting I could really go for a Tom Collins right about now. All that dying made me thirsty.
St. Peter: I'm sorry, alcohol is not allowed--
Goulet: Whoa! If this place doesn't have any Tom Collins, you might as well press the button for the trap-door, my friend.
St. Peter: But if you'll only let me finish, Mr. Goulet. Certain indulgences are in fact permitted in Heaven...a select few vices.
Goulet: Hey speaking of vices, you know who I always wanted to shtoop down there on planet Earth but never sealed the deal? Suzanne Somers. Is her name listed in the phone book up here?
St. Peter: Suzanne Somers won't be dead for another twenty-four years, Mr. Goulet.
Goulet: You mean, Suazane Summers is still alive? Yikes!
(End Scene.)
Yikes indeed. We just witnessed the exorcism of some harrowing comedy-ghosts, half-funny and half-scary, much like Slimer from "Ghostbusters."
Hey, maybe for "Ghostbusters 3," Slimer could grow a thick beard and join a rough-housing college frat, and there would be an asshole Dean--an evil, fun-hating ghost who enforces conformo rules that Slimer and the gang just ain't down with...
It's ideas like this that keep the Idea Graveyard decaying and thriving.