Friday, December 24, 2010

I Want to Help You Make Money!



This column dates back a few years. It was written for the April Fools' edition of the Advance-Titan, the college rag I contributed to. Devious and charismatic salesmen who peddle easy solutions to life's complex problems have always been funny to me. When a conservative newspaper on campus printed a story about an ambitious business major promoting his get-rich-quick scheme, complete with a picture of the student beaming prosperously, clad in a suit-and-tie, and brandishing a wad of cash, I couldn't resist the urge to spoof the charlatan. I suspected he was a colossal tool.

***

Hi, I'm Nicholas Olig and nothing would give me greater pleasure than helping YOU make money with one of MY ideas. See that picture of me? I look pretty darn rich, don't I? Not to sound boastful about my affluence, but let's just say that pile of loose change in my hand contains more quarters than pennies. And you see that coupon? It's for $1 off a pack of cigarettes. Only a fool would poison his lungs at full-price!

If you're like me, you value the love and respect of your family and friends. Well, by employing my perfectly legal scheme, you'll have enough money to buy up every ounce of love and respect your family and friends have to offer. (Next week I'll tell you how to SELL the love and respect of your family and friends to cost-effective markets overseas. Prediction: You'll be rolling in the dough along with various attractive people that want to have sex with you!)

Now for the perfectly legal scheme: If your mom is anything like mine, she is a sweet and caring woman who knows very little about sports. Family ties aside, that lack of sports knowledge is begging to be exploited. Hey, moms are great, but if they don't want to be exploited by their own children they should follow sports as obsessively as their male offspring.

Recently I was faced with a fiscal dilemma. I couldn't afford to pay my lofty heating bill because I blew all my money on miniature pilot costumes for my five kittens so they could regale me with feline reenactments of scenes from "Top Gun." It's a predicament almost everyone can relate to.

At home over spring break, as I brooded over ESPN Classic on the TV, mom walked in the room, glanced at the screen and said, "Oh dear, It doesn't look good for the red-and-blue football men, does it? The blue-and-white squad is up by a lot of runs."

A light-bulb flashed atop my head, and that light-bulb was made out of solid gold. She had just used baseball terminology in reference to a football game and had no clue the game had already been decided over ten years ago. What an opportunity!

After much persistence and a teary-eyed declaration that she didn't love me because she wouldn't gamble with me, I coaxed her into a hundred-dollar wager. I bet her the Buffalo Bills would come back from a 35-3 deficit to defeat the staggering Houston Oilers in overtime, and I gave her 3:1 odds to sweeten the deal.

And when the final whistle blew, sure enough, the Bills prevailed in the 1993 AFC Championship Game, just like I remembered. I was one-hundred dollars richer and I had more money to spend on Top Gun kitty reenactments.

My luck didn't run out there. Next they aired game six of the National League Championship Series from 2003 between the Marlins and my beloved Cubs. I waited until the eight inning, then called her into the living room and bet her double-or-nothing the Cubs would squander their two-run lead due in large part from fan interference from a future dead man in the bleachers alongside the leftfield foul line. She totally fell for it!

Now, don't get me wrong. I love the Cubs, and my mom for that matter, but not as much as I love money and the kitty Top Gun re-enactments money affords.

And by the way, some of the perfectly legal money I earned from my sports-ignorant mom was donated to charity. The charity is called, "Electronics for the Homeless," and because of my donation, a labor-challenged Oshkosh man who resides in the Dumpster Hut outside of Fletcher Hall was blessed with a free blender.

So there you have it: Exploiting your mom's lack of sports knowledge can make you a lot of money, and it is also a noble cause. I'll see you next week, when my photo will showcase the awesome calf implants I just purchased with one of my many piles of cash!

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

The Danger Zone Mix





Me: If the Danger Zone referenced on the Top Gun soundtrack was a literal, tangible place instead of a metaphor, which vehicle would you drive on your journey on the Highway to the Danger Zone?

Willy: Hold on. I won’t answer that question until you clarify a few things for me. In the first place, why would I voluntarily travel to a place called “The Danger Zone”?

Me: For the sake of thrill-seeking, maybe.

Willy: But I’m not really a thrill-seeker. I mostly seek paychecks and relaxation and sex. When I get done with work, I spend time with my wife and daughter. Sometimes I spark a joint in the basement and then put on NetFlix and fill out a crossword. Maybe get laid, if we can get the baby to take a nap. It’s a pretty tame lifestyle, based on routine, but I kind of prefer it that way. I’m not the Danger Zone type. I have no reason, no inclination to take a trip to the Danger Zone.

Me: Well, what if circumstances forced you to drive to the Danger Zone? What if you had to enter the Danger Zone in order to rescue your wife and daughter?

Willy: Then I’d call my wife on her cell phone. I'd be like, “I thought I told you to stay away from the Danger Zone. And you brought the baby along with you, too? What the hell? That’s pretty weak, honey.”

Me: Okay, okay. What if evil forces from the Danger Zone kidnapped your wife and daughter?

Willy: What kind of evil forces?

Me: Let’s see...How about a coalition of al-Qaeda zombies and black bears armed with bazookas?

Willy: Those creatures don’t exist. You know that, right?

Me: Of course I do. But the entire question is hypothetical in nature. The Danger Zone doesn’t really exist, either. It’s imaginary; therefore, it harbors imaginary things.

Willy: Well-played, nut-job. All right. So, the question you’re asking me is as follows: If al-Qaeda zombies joined forces with bazooka-shooting black bears and then kidnapped my wife and daughter and stole them off to a place known as the Danger Zone, which vehicle would I drive on my journey to rescue them?

Me: Yes, that’s it. Exactly.

Willy: Okay. I’m tempted to opt for a souped-up squad car or something flashy, with plenty of gusto, like an Escalade, but because the question itself is fantasy-based, I had better squash that rational instinct. Something invincible and deadly, such as a tank, seems like a good answer, but then again, tanks aren’t exactly designed for highway driving, are they? A monster truck comes to mind, but those are reckless vehicles, and I’d probably destroy a dozen or so cars accidentally on my way to rescue my wife and daughter. And that’s no good. I don’t need my conscience terrorized by the deaths of innocent strangers I was responsible for, just because I had the balls to command a beast like the Gravedigger on the highway. So forget about the tank and the monster truck.

Me: Will do. The tank and the monster truck are now dead to us.

Willy: What about the DeLorian from Back to the Future?

Me: On the surface, it’s an alluring choice, considering the appeal of ‘80s nostalgia, but keep in mind, if you exceed 88 miles per hour in that thing, you’ll be going back in time rather than saving your wife and daughter from capture in the Danger Zone.

Willy: That’s a valid point. Also, you really should talk to chicks more often.

Me: Neither here nor there but noted. Do you have an answer to the question?

Willy: Yeah, I think so. Staying true to the appeal of ‘80s nostalgia but excluding the time machine factor, I’m going with KITT from Knight Rider. That car is conditioned for danger. Plus it’s incredibly fast and nimble, perfect for highway driving, and if I drove the black sports-car from Knight Rider back to safety with my family in tow, I guarantee I’d have sex at least twice that night.

Me: All right. That was a clear and thoughtful answer, and I respect it.

Willy: What about you? Which vehicle would you drive along the Highway to this Danger Zone?

Me: Oh! It’s a no-brainer. The Batmobile.

Willy: Okay. I’ll go along with that. Which Batmobile?

Me: The one that Batman rides in, stupid.

Willy: Oh, my. How flabbergasting. No, I mean which incarnation of the Batmobile? Adam West’s muscle-car from the late ‘60s? Michael Keaton’s sleek and aerodynamic ride? The phallic-shaped version from Batman Forever? The militaristic vehicle with the escape pod motorcycle from the Christopher Nolan flicks...

Me: Got’cha. My bad. Allow me to clarify. I’d go with Michael Keaton’s Batmobile. My hunch is strong that, of all the Batmobiles, Keaton’s showcases the best balance of style, giddy-up, armor, weaponry, and handling.

Willy: Fair enough. So, I’d drive KITT along the Highway to the Danger Zone, whereas you’d go with the Batmobile from the original Batman movie. Are we through here?

Me: Not quite. We’ve established the cars we’d drive, but an additional question to consider is as follows: What kind of music would you listen to en route to the Danger Zone?

Willy: Aside from the obvious choice of “The Danger Zone” by Kenny Loggins?

Me: Preferably, yes. That pick doesn’t require much imagination. Plus, in this hypothetical scenario, your journey to the Danger Zone is long enough to include exactly ten tracks of your choosing. It would be trite and agonizing to listen to “The Danger Zone” ten times in a row.

Willy: Hey, that’s debatable. It’s clear you don’t have much respect for the soundtrack king of the 1980s. “I’m Alright” doesn’t put you in the mood to take off your shirt and run around a sprinkler with a bottle of champagne in hand? I’m worried about you.

Heavily rewritten with better results, this one appears in my eBook More Stories, and Additional Stories. 

Monday, October 18, 2010

Will Write Book for Food




Every time I tell someone I’m releasing a self-published book, the first question he or she asks is, of course, “What is the book about?” That is a legitimate question with a complex answer. For the most part, There Will Be Blog is: A COLLECTION OF POP-CULTURE OBSESSED COMEDIC MEMOIRS. This means that I tend to infuse a multitude of references to movies, TV, sports, and literature when I tell stories about the tumultuous, sometimes wretched and despairing, pursuit of happiness that is my life. An essay such as “People Don’t Usually Forget Human Train-wrecks” is a personal account about fainting in my friend’s basement, bashing my head against the concrete, and then asking my pals a series of loopy questions under the guise of having a concussion. The piece is loaded with allusions to Trailer Park Boys, Predator, and Billy Joel.

But the terse description of the book offered above in bold is only about 60% accurate. Memoirs are supposed to be truthful. In essays such as “Professor Radington” and “The Cut Upper Lip,” I take a sliver of truth (wanting to become a father someday and cutting myself shaving before enrolling in a class at the Second City, respectively) and then I use hyperbole to launch the accounts into farcical, self-effacing fiction.

Also included in the book are six or seven Open Letters From Eccentric Buffoons. The OLFEBs were written from the perspectives of different characters, irrational loons, by and large, who berate the reader with strange lectures, appeals, or confessions. “Everybody Be Cool and Listen Up,” for instance, was written from the viewpoint of a disgraced cop who attempts to galvanize a small group of Apocalypse survivors gathered inside an abandoned fireworks shack. Essay such as this, along with “The Great Waldo Column,” “The Seafood Casserole,” and a few others, reflect very little about my personal life and should not be mistaken for memoirs.

Oftentimes the book is quite funny, but the word “COMEDIC” does not apply entirely. On a few occasions, I become more concerned with providing insight and/ or exploring emotions than making jokes. I don’t want to be charged with failing as a comedy writer in the instances when I wasn’t even trying to be funny. “The Dark Knight and Brett Favre” and the gloomy parts of “The Boner Way Out,” for instance, were not conceived with intentions of inducing laughter.

The book is (usually) humorous in tone, with a personal delivery. Keep in mind, though, that there is a difference between 1.) offering one’s pithy opinions and goofy observations 2.) conveying a funny autobiography. I don’t always accomplish both of those objectives at the same time. Readers of There Will Be Blog will learn more about my opinions and observations than the specifics of my experiences; this is because what I think is (sadly?) more interesting than what I have actually done.

The language is meant to be eloquent and vivid. If you don’t own one of those vocabulary-building word-of-the-day calendars, you might have to consult a dictionary on occasion while reading the book. I have ambivalent feelings toward “big words.” I believe that readers should be challenged, that a writer should use a wide array of words to avoid stagnated and repetitive prose, and that vocab-words commonly boast a degree of exactness not offered by everyday language. On the other hand, “big words” can alienate readers, butcher and enfeeble the message the author is trying to convey, and, horribly enough, writers sometimes employ “big words” in a pathetic and haughty attempt to bloat their own disgusting egos...at the expense of the very people who keep them employed, no less. There is not excuse for doing that. Therefore, I made several late edits to the manuscript to make the language a bit more accessible, but you’ll still have to suffer through some of the verbosity featured in my first book. (Concupiscence, languorous, paradoxical, mawkish, ebullient, eviscerate, etc.)

Also regarding language: My mom really wishes I didn’t swear so much—in print, at least. If vulgarity upsets you, it’s probably best to avoid reading There Will Be Blog. It is indeed possible, and perhaps more virtuous, to create brilliant comedy without resorting to profanity. And an argument could be made that cuss words tarnish merit. I don’t subscribe to that mindset, though; I believe that properly used obscenities capture a weird sense of catharsis. They can also provide a sort of fireworks display within the language. So there. I’m all done defending profanity. I must take the high road on this matter. If you don’t read my book because you don’t care for all the swearing, nobody has the right to call you a pussy.

In case you’re wondering how my material compares to some more credible books and authors you might be familiar with...

I’m not as intellectually gifted as Chuck Klosterman,* but, according to me, at least, I’m slightly funnier and more personal than he is. If you enjoyed America: The Book and I am America (and So Can You!), the satirical, sometimes wicked comedy featured in There Will Be Blog will most likely appeal to you as well. Truth be known, though, I can’t quite match the comedic clout offered by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert and their team of writers; plus, I don’t often focus on politics. The books of George Carlin inspired me greatly. He was no doubt funnier and smarter than me, but I am less pessimistic than Carlin, not as comforted by the notion that we are all doomed. The last author to consider is David Sedaris, a terrific memoirist whose humor is more refined and subtle than my brand. His prose is also much crisper and more economical than mine. Sedaris’ willingness to inject humor into self-deprecating testimonials no doubt impacted parts of the book I wrote.

There is a puzzling quality to There Will Be Blog, and I think the mystery runs deeper than being left wondering, “What is wrong with this guy?” or “Why did I read this book?” Some of the questions the book implicitly poses, by accident, are as follows:

“To what extent does our consumption of pop-culture affect our identities? And if the impact is significant, as it is in my case, what does that say about me (or possibly us)? Pop-culture grants us shared sentiments and experiences; it’s easier to relate to someone who likes the same bands, TV shows, or sports teams that we do. But how genuine is the binding force of pop-culture? Is the force in question cheap, dubious, and artificial? Or is it a privilege exclusive to advanced societies that we should embrace? As an author, do I present a valid and engaging blend of memoir and media criticism, or am I just a shallow curmudgeon, ‘Lost in the Supermarket,’ shopping for ‘Fake Plastic Trees’?”**

I don’t have answers to these questions—or if I do, I’m not yet willing to share them. My hope is that I can at least prompt a handful of readers to invest some thought into these queries.

That old, familiar feeling that I have rambled too much is upon me, and so I really should wrap up this plea of self-promotion. In the opening essay of the book, I state that even if There Will Be Blog turns out to be “yet another blundering failure, I’m grateful for it.” That’s the truth. I’m grateful for the opportunity to say to an audience, “This is what I want to do with my life. Do you think it’s any good? P.S., it’s going to cost you roughly $20 to answer this relatively insignificant question.”

I will not make a profit on this book until its sales exceed 54 copies.

I am asking you to please help me break even.

Book page: www.xlibris.com/ThereWillBeBlog.html
Author page: www.xlibris.com/NickOlig.html
E-mail: orders@xlibris.com




*Chuck Klosterman is the author of Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs and Eating the Dinosaur. He excels at finding correlations between two seemingly disparate ideas—such as Kurt Cobain’s psyche during the recording of In Utero and the fatal fiasco of the Branch Davidian cult in Waco, TX...or the pathos of Generation X and the film The Empire Strikes Back. A few of my essays set out to accomplish the same sort of thing. (“The Type who Craves Punishment” and “Musicals and Superhero Flicks, Fighting in Harmony,” among others.)

**”Lost in the Supermarket” and “Fake Plastic Trees” are ballads by the Clash and Radiohead, respectively. The lyrics to both songs lament the ways in which consumer culture dilutes, troubles, and wearies the spirit of the individual. Excerpt from “Lost in the Supermarket”: “I’m all lost in the supermarket/ I can no longer shop happily/ I came in here for that special offer/ Guaranteed personality.” And from “Fake Plastic Trees”: “She looks like the real thing/ She tastes like the real thing/ My fake plastic love/ But I can’t help the feeling/ I could blow through the ceiling/ If I’d just turn and run/ And it wears me out.”

Friday, September 24, 2010

Too Sad to Dance




I stumble on some mental and physical obstacles on the dance floor. When I was 15 years old, I was the only one in a class of 20-plus to receive a grade lower than a “B” in the dancing unit of gym. Our teacher, a mustachioed tough-guy-type who cherished Jim Croce and sips of whiskey from his flask between classes, felt strongly that the uncertain rhythm of my steps in clumsy tandem with my partner brought disgrace to “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown.” My sparkling blue peepers and earnestly formed dimples couldn’t save me as I stomped on the dainty feet of beauties in bloom. Where would I be without shameful memories such as these? More prosperous and happier, probably, but stuck in a different line of work.

My old gym teacher’s disapproval hasn’t stopped me from ever dancing again. In fact, sometimes I dance out of sheer spite for that nimrod. It is unwise to cut a rug with gnashed teeth and a glint of disdain in your eyes. When I’m in that sort of a vindictive mood, I feel like the only brooding street tough from West Side Story dancing among dozens of the cheerful youngsters at the prom from Footloose. Then I laugh at myself, lose the scowl, and pretend that I’m happy. I fake it on the dance floor—but unlike Kevin Bacon, I’m not much of an actor, and the Hollow Man is a better dancer than me, too.

****

I like to peel off ladies’ panties and then make wild thrusts of passion. It has got to be my favorite physical activity, and I really should do it more often. A billion men feel the same way. That’s the only valid reason why dancing matters; women dictate that it is the sincerest form of foreplay. What puzzles me about dancing is that, on the surface, a lot of movement is required to go nowhere. Every expressive journey on the dance floor leads you to where you started. But that line of thought is literal and reductive. Effective dancing can lead to the ultimate destination: The bedroom. Like a blood-lusting shark, a gyrating man encircles an alluring woman, on a mission to lure her back home to his bedroom, a special place to him (and sometimes to her), where all fantasies of anywhere else in the world become obsolete.

A lot of times, the best dancers prove themselves worthy of a nude romp between the sheets.

This truth poses a problem for me because, all things considered, I’m a pretty shitty dancer. Granted, I can offer sincerity and a willingness to please, but I really struggle with wiring my body and mind to a specific rhythm. The logical part of my brain convinces me that the act of dancing is little more than a glorified tantrum, a spastic flailing of limbs set to music. Despite the benefits of smooth dancing (like getting laid), I can’t get over the fact that I’m playing by rules that seem too ludicrous and funny to take seriously.

“Hey, pretty lady, my cock-thrusts really meshed well with the beat of ‘Brown Sugar,’ don’t you think? Therefore, we should totally fuck.”

That unspoken pick-up line has worked thousands of times. How do I feel about this? I am partly jealous but mostly dumbfounded...or maybe those adjectives should be transposed.

Walking ranks second on my list of top physical activities. Walking gives you plenty of time to daydream and observe the scenery and ponder your next destination. I wish that a man’s prowess was more readily determined by his aptitude as a walker, not a dancer, but this is rarely the case. That seems like a shame. We walk with much greater frequency than we dance. Dancing is a novelty. Walking is more of a necessity. Dancing is how we escape from reality. Walking is how we cope with reality. I'd much rather talk to a chick on a walk around the neighborhood than try to impress her with some "Brown Sugar"-inspired cock-thrusts. It's no contest! On the dance floor, people drool over each other’s bodies without having to rely on words for anything, but it’s all a charade, a reprieve from the burden of having nothing meaningful to say.

That last sentence wasn't funny, but I've got range. Read all about the part of my range that includes not being funny even though that's probably what you'd expect and would also be the most satisfying but oh well I guess standards have fallen in my better-than-average eBook More Stories, and Additional Stories. 

Monday, September 6, 2010

An Interview with Gay Mascots




Written in 2006, I do believe.

***

This gay marriage debate gives me an endless migraine. Remember when the country’s most heated debate revolved around whether the hillbilly in office should be impeached for getting a wink-wink from a plump intern and then lying about it? The state of the union was by no means perfect back then, but all things considered, we were in much better shape.

Since we’ve had a new hillbilly in office, I’ve become more aware of the crusade against gay marriage. In regard to this terribly divisive issue, I would like to state that I have no problem with two same-sex people marrying each other. I think homosexuals are simply born gay; it’s ingrained in their genetics. With that in mind, discriminating against them is senseless. To prove my point comically, read this: “Horniness, and the cause of horniness, is rarely a well-thought-out decision.” Like many of you, I have indeed experienced horniness, and it’s really more of a visceral reaction than a damn career choice. Some people get that undeniable, flush-faced hormone buzz from a person with genitalia similar to their own. What’s the big deal? If a gay couple wishes to express its mutual devotion by getting married, I say, “Good luck with that. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to un-pause my game of NBA Jam and play it until I throw up.”

Recently I had the opportunity to interview a gay couple—and a famous one, at that. Both men rose to prominence as flamboyant NFL mascots, only to be replaced by “more masculine” logos in the mid-1990s. The motives behind their firings were dubious; one could argue they were victims of discrimination.

I spoke with Bruce Buccaneer and Pat Patriot in Boston shortly after the 10th Annual Revolutionary War Reenactment for A.I.D.S. Research. Bruce and Pat offered their time in between the reenactment and the after-party at a nearby nightclub.

Nick Olig: Thanks for the interview, guys. It’s a real privilege.

Bruce Buccaneer: Oh, stop it. Pat and I can spare some downtime between appointments on an otherwise busy day. We’re happy to talk with you.

NO: Great. Pat, this is the first time I’ve been to a Revolutionary War Reenactment. It’s been a lot of fun.

Pat Patriot: I’m glad you enjoyed it. Reenactments are a big passion of mine. Ever since the New England team...since they decided to go in a different direction, I’ve worked as a manager at a Colonial Museum in Wooster. It’s such a captivating and time and place in history, when men fought and died for the freedoms we still hold dear. It’s a thrill to do my part to preserve it all in some way, you know?

BB: God, don’t even get him started. He’ll gab all night long and be too preoccupied with “musket chatter” to have a dance with me.

NO: (laughs)

BB: I mean it! He takes his work so seriously. Two years ago, I participated in the reenactment hoopla. I fought with the Redcoats, just to mess with Pat—plus the uniform radiates this intense pizzazz, you know. It’s very gaudy. I didn’t want to carry a gun—a fake gun, mind you—so I was one those easy targets that banged on a snare drum as I marched. That was such a riot.

PP: Bruce, this really is an unfortunate tangent...

BB: Well, it’ll be over soon enough, sweetheart. Wait ‘til I get to the best part.

PP: Worst part is more like it.

BB: So, Pat spotted me on the battlefield—I was just playing my drum, not pretend-hurting anyone—and the jerk pretend-shot me, then expected me to play dead. My own partner pretend shot me. What an insult, you know?

PP: Tell the nice columnist what happened next.

BB: I will. I waited until I could see the whites of his eyes and then I chucked my drumstick at his face. Direct hit! I nailed him in the eye.

PP: (chuckles) It really hurt! I had to wear an eye-patch for a week.

BB: Oh, quit your bellyaching. Eye-patches build character. Anyway, I’m into that swashbuckler look, if you haven’t already noticed.

NO: Yeah, and speaking of swashbucklers, Bruce, you’re known for your pirate ensemble and trademark wink. How were you discovered in Tampa Bay all those years ago?

BB: Well, it was back in the late ‘70s. I came in contact with this sort of entrepreneur, head-honcho guy with clout in the south Florida music scene. I was...God, in my early 20s and very naïve—starry-eyed and longing for fame. The Village People were big, and he wanted to cash in on the craze. So he assembled this Village People replica group, and after a few auditions, I was named the group’s pirate. I sang alongside a lumberjack, a hairdresser, and a figure skater. It so ridiculous and fun and...hazy. Our debut bombed, not unlike O-Town, but singing in the group got me some recognition from this football franchise that was just starting up, and a fierce wardrobe, too.

NO: Did the organization in Tampa know of your sexual orientation?

BB: It was all a hushed, “don’t ask, don’t tell” sort of deal. Same thing with Pat.

NO: Where did you two meet?

BB: We met at a party thrown at Steve DeBerg’s mansion—he was the quarterback for the Buccaneers at the time. We were introduced by Thunderous Cleats, the mascot for the Redskins. I won’t bore you with the schmaltzy details, but it was a very special night.

NO: Cool. Well, on to more unpleasant topics. Pat, you were fired before the start of the ’93 season.

PP: Yeah. The owner told me I was getting up there in age, which was true.

BB: Honestly, Pat, don’t do this to yourself. It’s like that Outkast song says, “Age ain’t nothing but a number.”

PP: I have no idea who the Outkasts are. Anyway, it just so happened that I was terminated a week after Bruce and I finally went public with our relationship. I think...maybe the franchise had some ulterior motives, but either way, I had a good run as the official logo. And now, I’m doing work I really enjoy. No hard feelings, I guess, but I was disappointed.

BB: I got the ax a few years later. And those three or four years weren’t much fun, either. The team kept having losing seasons and I felt like I was walking on thin ice, even though the organization was a bit more tolerant of (self-mocking finger quotes) “alternative lifestyles.” After the ’96 season, I was told the franchise was going in a “more aggressive direction with their logo.”

NO: Lame.

BB: I was okay with it. “Good run. Bigger and better things and blah-blah-blah.” Two things for the record, though: Pewter is a God-awful, hideous color, much less pleasing to the eye than Popsicle orange. Ahem! And secondly, gays can be every bit as aggressive and feisty as straight people. I’ve seen Nathan Lane and Clay Aiken tussle over the last pair of Lumiani shoes at a clearance sale and it was not a pretty sight.

NO: (laughs) I understand you two have an adopted son?

PP: Indeed we do. Lucas turned twelve in March.

BB: He’s a Pisces, just like Pat.

PP: Whatever that means. As I was saying, Lucas has grown up surprisingly fast, as kids tend to do, and...it hasn’t always been easy for him, but the crap he has had to deal with has never tarnished his love for us. The adversity and the scorn you get from certain people just make the bond you share that much more essential. Lucas is such a blessing for us.

BB: Pat is grooming him to become a center on the football team. From time to time, I like to spoil Pat’s efforts by suggesting Lucas try out for the cheerleading squad.

PP: Offensive linemen are usually smarter than cheerleaders, Bruce. My persuasion is merely in the interest of the boy’s intellectual growth.

BB: (sarcastically) Oh, I’m sure.

NO: Well, I’m just about out of questions. Thanks for your time. Any parting comments?

PP: Sure. In regard to homophobia, or racism, or any other form of discrimination, when you question the reasons behind those beliefs, you’re likely to find feelings of hatred and superiority. To my mind, sentiments such as those can only serve to damage your good will toward others.

BB: Isn’t Pat a great orator? Oh, I could gab all day about his oral skills. At Steve DeBerg’s party, the night we first met...

PP: Bruce, I’m sensing a blow-job joke in the works. Hush up, please. We were so close to concluding this interview in a dignified fashion.

BB: (laughs) Oh, I’m sorry. We’re two middle-aged men, dressed-up like a pirate and a soldier from the American Revolution; dignity really matters to us, obviously. We demand to be taken seriously!

PP: Point taken. Anyway, let’s get going to that after-party, shall we?

NO: I’m down with that. Elton John is playing, right?

PP: He sure is.

NO: Excellent. If he plays “Your Song,” I’ll have no choice but to cry my eyeballs out.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Van Halen and Potato Salad




This essay marks the start of a new era for me, in that it’s the first thing I’ve written since the roster was set for my upcoming book. In the interest of progressing rather than regressing as I wander into a different phase, I’m becoming more interested in the why as opposed to the my. The why, which involves an effort to explain the reasons behind the truth, has more universal value than the my, expressing my opinions—which is little more than a necessary evil. The trouble is that everyone’s got a better grasp on their own viewpoint than the actual truth. I’m more likely to fail when I explain the why as opposed to the my, but in the rare instances in which I succeed, the reward is greater. That is why, with this essay, I will try to refrain from asserting that Van Halen sucks, and the same goes for potato salad.

Allow me to explain. Not long ago I had a discussion with my friend Matt about music, which evolved into a discussion about food, and later on, we found similarities between taste in music and taste in food. Music and food were on our brains for some reason.

I told Matt that the primary reason I don’t like Van Halen is because of the band’s lead singers; the cheesy egotism they share is repellent. Matt allowed a grain of truth in that indictment, but countered with the following.

“I see what you’re saying. There is an element of unabashed dick-waving to Van Halen, an element of sleaze. But sometimes I’m in the mood for that type of music. And more importantly, sometimes women are in the mood for that type of music.”

“Sure. People embrace Van Halen because they’re decadent and self-assured, and their music constantly reminds the listener that sex is a whole lot of fun. I get that. The problem is that their lead singers bother the hell out of me. Both of Van Halen’s lead singers, and never mind the third one, were bozo showmen with lackluster voices that make me cringe.”

“Cringe? Really? Well, neither one is in the same league with singers like Stevie Wonder, McCartney, or Steve Perry,* but...the vocals really make you cringe?”

I nodded to confirm that I did not care to retract what I had said. Seconds passed by, and then Matt offered a tangent about potato salad.

“The lead singers are probably the weakest links in the band, but it’s like potato salad. One of the ingredients in potato salad is celery. In and of itself, celery doesn’t taste good to me. I would never eat a stick of celery on its own. Gross. But then the celery is mixed with ingredients that appeal to me, and somehow the celery compliments the potatoes, onions, and salad dressing. And I love potato salad, and I’m not going to stop eating it because of one ingredient that I’m not crazy about. If someone offers me potato salad, I’m not going to turn it down because there’s celery in it.”

I gathered what he was saying.

“Okay. So Roth and Hagar are like celery. Just as you’d never buy one of their solo albums, you’d never snack on a stick of celery. And Van Halen is like potato salad, which hardly requires an explanation at this point.”

“Right.”

“Well, that all makes sense, but I’m not fond of celery and I can’t stand Roth or Hagar. And because of that, I hate both potato salad and Van Halen.”

We had gained an understanding of each other, in agreement about the why and not the my. We drove to Tucker’s and split a six-pack of cheeseburgers and had nothing left to talk about for quite some time.

###

All too often, one foul-tasting ingredient ruins the whole experience for me. I am the fussy malcontent who shuns a plate of potato salad kindly offered to me at a party. Likewise, I am the hyper-discerning snob who changes the radio station in the midst of an intense hard-rock overture, fueled by Zeppelin-infused precision, as soon as I hear one of Roth’s trademark girlish yowls. I hate things because of their components. Matt loves things in spite of their components. Clearly I am the one who could benefit from some reform.

Conor is an old friend who played guitar and sang along with Matt in a band called Reveal. When I asked Conor to provide a modest 50 to 100 words explaining why Van Halen rocks, he was thrilled. In no time, he let it known that his prose tribute to Van Halen would exceed 400 words, since he truly wanted to expound on the group’s awesomeness. Once his reply came, I parsed through what he had written, in the interest of citing an opinion to challenge my own. What follows explains why some people love Van Halen.

“My idea of a great rock band is a synergy of talent that 1.) makes unusual backstage demands, 2.) doesn’t get along, 3.) innovates, 4.) rocks, and 5.) destroys hotel rooms.”

1.) Van Halen’s most notorious backstage demand was that a jar of M&Ms, absent of all brown shells, be provided for the band before the start of every show. I was under the impression that the band did this for the sake of haughty mischief, or perhaps latent racism, but Conor informed me that this was not the case. In actuality, the bizarre request was made as a roundabout way to ensure safety at the workplace for their crew members.

“Van Halen added addendums to their contracts that required the venue to perform specific tasks, but they found promoters were not taking the demands seriously; sometimes conditions were still hazardous for the band's crew. The solution was an additional demand within the safety section of the addendum that required the venue to provide a jar of M&Ms in the band’s backstage area, with all the brown-colored candies removed. If the jar wasn’t backstage when the band showed up, they knew those safety standards had not been met.”

Sweet Jesus! Do you realize what this means? It means that it’s not insane to compare Upton Sinclair to Van Halen. In 1906, Upton Sinclair published The Jungle, a scathing exposé of the meat-packing industry that prompted a demand for more stringent standards of safety in factories across the nation. Nearly 80 years later, Van Halen sought similar advancements in basic human rights for roadies. It was wrong and inexcusable when a 15-year-old boy had his hand hacked off by a faulty meat grinder in 1906, and the same goes for old T-Bone Willis when he got blinded by a pyrotechnics mishap at a Ratt show in ’82. Both Upton Sinclair and Van Halen led crusades against negligent power-holders whose intent was to maximize profit and dehumanize the working class. With this in mind, it is also not insane to claim that Rage Against the Machine could have learned a thing or two from Van Halen. It’s amazing. Who knew cock rockers could have such virtuous motives?

The glaring qualm that I have with this bit of enlightenment is that it doesn’t enhance Van Halen’s music in any way. The group’s music never coincided with their progressive reforms for roadie safety. Van Halen never recorded a ballad to lament the plight of a roadie who was poisoned by Alice Cooper’s python, or had his eardrums ruptured while loading explosives into Keith Moon’s kick-drum. What separates those who enjoy Van Halen from those who don’t is this: Van Halen devotees are thankful the group never put out “The Ballad of Gordy the Roadie.” ** On the other hand, I’m convinced that such a song would have enhanced the group’s creative range.

But true Van Halen fans realize that a ballad about an oppressed roadie would stray too far from the core message of the band. Here is an approximation: “We want hot sex, nervous parents, and mounds of cash.” Van Halen critics bicker that this message is delivered with narrow-minded redundancy. Those who love Van Halen will contend that aside from getting hot sex, making parents nervous, and acquiring mounds of cash, genuine rock and roll doesn’t really have much else to say.

Both arguments are sound. If you’re still on the fence about whether or not to embrace Van Halen, consider the lyrics to their hit song “Jump.”

“I get up, and nothing gets me down.” If you like that lyric just the way it is, then clearly, you adore Van Halen. However, if you would prefer, “I get up, and nothing gets me down...except for the shameful treatment of stagehands as perpetrated by greedy concert promoters,” then Van Halen will always leave you longing for more.

2.) As evidenced by the three lead singers the band employed during its reign at or near the top, the members of Van Halen tended not to get along well with each other. Lurid stories of internal strife abounded throughout the group’s history. According to Conor, the combustive clash of egos that hounded Van Halen validates them as a great band.

“A band without conflict is boring. Modesty and stability don’t always propel a band to legendary status, or create good songs. I want to listen to a band with drug problems, lineup changes, and megalomania. I want a lead singer who is completely delusional.”

Without question, it is true that a band without conflict lacks a certain appeal. But the conflict can be expressed in one of two ways: within the band itself or within the songs themselves. A band such as Van Halen expresses conflict in life as opposed to art, whereas a band like Radiohead is the exact opposite. The five members of Radiohead have played together since 1985, without any lineup changes; in that regard, they embody stability. But Radiohead’s songs are mostly about neurotic chaos in a senseless world, constant discontent, and sorrowful longing. In contrast, Van Halen rarely dealt with chaotic and morbid themes such as mental illness, third world misery, and baleful technology. Van Halen lived the searing conflict but chose to create songs about frivolous and joyful things. Radiohead choose to craft songs searing conflicts, within the confines of a stable group foundation.

Van Halen are the embittered and combative couple on the verge of divorce who, despite openly hating each other, throws rowdy parties and entertains guests with tales of their bawdy trips to exotic locations. (Including Panama?) Radiohead are the contended couple at a party who will probably remain intact for many years to come, yet insist on steering all conversations into gloomy topics ranging from Orwellian forebodings to global warming to the brutality of the Karma Police.

Of the two unions in question, whose party would you rather attend? Do you prefer a happy presentation with chaotic undertones to a morose presentation with stable undertones? Conor does...but I don’t.

3.) Mike Campbell is my favorite guitarist of the 1980s, and up until ten minutes ago, I didn’t even know his name. He plays lead guitar for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. While we’re on the subject of premier ‘80s guitarists, the Edge deserves a mention, too. But I rarely listen to Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers or U2. I think the ‘80s were a shaky decade for music.

He’s certainly not my favorite, but Eddie Van Halen has got to be the greatest guitar player the ‘80s produced. I am not crazy about the tune “Panama.” I can’t understand why Diamond Dave invokes the name of a country in Central America in the chorus, and trying to pin his motives seems pointless. Apparently “Panama” is an ode to Roth’s luxury car, but that hardly matters; the song deserves a listen because of the riff provided by Eddie Van Halen. It’s an awesome riff, charged by metal lust with hints of glam, that must have left Jimmy Page and Mick Ronson kicking themselves and wondering, “Why didn’t I think of that?”

Conor is more effusive in his case for Eddie.

“Eddie Van Halen revolutionized guitar playing. He constructed his own guitar, known as the ‘Frankenstrat.’ Before writing the song ‘Eruption,’ tapping was only used to play the Chapman stick, a stringed instrument that was tapped instead of strummed. It was such an unknown way of playing the guitar at the time that Eddie would perform this method with his back to the audience to prevent everyone from figuring out what he was doing and copying him.”

Nobody should deny that Eddie was an innovator...but he sure was a snob about it. They say a great magician never reveals how to do his tricks. I say, “Have you ever noticed that all great magicians come across as vain assholes?”

If, by some miracle, I was to come up with the invention for a fully functional Hoverboard, inspired by Back to the Future 2, I would feel that sharing my knowledge with my new peers in the world of science was essential. I’d be obliged to clue in my contemporaries on how they could make Hoverboards a reality. But if Eddie Van Halen invented a real Hoverboard, just as he did with “tapping,” he would bask in glory but keep his knowledge to himself. He was more interested in the expansion of his ego than the betterment of his field at large. And perhaps that is what all the best rock stars are in it for...but dude, turning your back on the crowd to coddle and protect your precious secret is downright weird.

“Get over yourself.” Such advice applies to everyone—virtuosos, geniuses, and innovators not excluded.

4.) Does Van Halen rock? Short answer: Yes. Long answer: Yes, but they do so in dumb fashion, even by the standards of rock music. Conor supports the short answer but would quibble with the long answer, and I would do the inverse. A case can be made that only impotent losers care about the intellectual merit of a song, especially when the music boasts raw sexual power or an irresistible groove. My musical appetites for raw sexual power and irresistible grooves that don’t require much thought are pretty much sated by Led Zeppelin. Conor isn’t as easily sated on these two fronts; he craves infectious sleaze from more than just one band. That’s another reason why he loves Van Halen and I don’t.

5.) The claim that a great band must routinely destroy hotel rooms is one that I reject. Using power tools to mount all the furniture to the ceiling in a lavish suite in no way ensures that your next album will merit a four-star review from Rolling Stone.

My dad and my brother Dave have amassed almost 40 combined years of service on the police force. This means that, surprisingly, traces of cop instincts speckle my D.N.A. Among these cop instincts is the lame conviction that it is wrong to commit acts of vandalism. Van Halen peed on drapes, rammed surfboards into TV sets, and tore down ceiling fans with the following thought in mind: “Some poor piss-ant is going to have to clean up this mess.” And more than once, I’m sure, the worker whose job it was to tend to the ruinous squalor left behind by Van Halen was the same guy who bought a copy of 1984 the day it was released. Come on, Conor...do you really think that shit is cool?

What ever happened to the Van Halen from 20 paragraphs ago, the band that showed respect for the working class? I really put my ass on the line asserting that Van Halen can be likened to Upton Sinclair. And now I seem like a fool and Van Halen reek of hypocrisy. Splendid.

###

As a coda to this essay, I asked for Conor’s thoughts on potato salad. Here is his reply.

“Eggs? Celery? Potatoes? Whose idea was this? It’s freakin’ potato salad and it tastes good. It’s freakin’ Van Halen and it rocks.”

There you have it. In matters of food and music, you can’t argue taste-buds...but for some reason, I will always try to, anyway.




*Steve Perry, nicknamed “The Voice,” is the lead singer of Journey. When I offered Matt a footnote to briefly explain why Journey’s music so massages his soul, he shouted, “I wipe my ass with footnotes, Olig! Don’t include Van Halen and Journey in the same essay.” He nodded thoughtfully and then added, “All I will say on the matter is that one band rocks like a bull while the other rocks like a China Shop.”

**When I asked Conor if he would like Van Halen more or less had they recorded a tribute to their roadies, he said it would all depend on the quality of the song, which remains hypothetical. Fair enough. He added that Roth would never hazard into such sentimental territory, but Hagar just might. The Red Rocker is more emotive. Hagar sincerely wanted to know why this can’t be love, whereas Roth didn’t seem to care much about that sort of mush. Roth was happy as long as the local strippers brought him Big Macs to eat at midnight, then treated him to dessert.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Customized Hell




A vital question that I like to pose on first dates is, “What do you imagine it's like in Hell?” This is by no means the first question I ask; I'm not quite that tactless. But if this question is answered thoughtfully, with little reluctance, I know I've found a chick with a limber imagination, and that's a profound turn-on. When a woman openly tells me what she imagines Hell is like on our first date, I make a mental note not to screw the whole thing up for at least three months.

If the woman provides a cursory description of a massive underground cave, rampant with raging infernos and torture devices, I ask her to think deeper. The devil has a wicked imagination. It would be creatively stilted of him to offer the same exact punishment for everyone in Hell. Satan is omniscient; he knows everything about us, our virtues, flaws, desires, vices, and fears, things we love, things we hate. That's why I think Hell has got to be a customized experience unique to the individual.

Additionally, some people, Satanists and Slayer fans, mostly, are enamored with the idea of a lake of fire and boundless suffering. They are drawn to the stereotype of Hell; it actually fills them with mirth. Hell should be a domain of eternal punishment, not a thrilling theme park for sadists. Hell cannot reward someone for leading an evil life. Chalk up another reason why Hell must be different for everybody.

At the risk of stealing my own thunder on my next first date, what follows is a description of the horrors that would await me in Hell. This essay is going to scare me so much I will refrain from whacking-off, to God's chagrin, for a week...

Okay. Maybe not a week. I'll aim for three days, instead.

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To find out the horrors of my Customized Hell, follow this link to buy a copy of "There Will be Blog."
www.xlibris.com/NickOlig.html