Sunday, June 11, 2023

Top 40 Albums*


 The * is there to note that I'm not repeating any artists. For instance, I could include more than one Radiohead or Beck record in my top 40, but nah, I wanna give spots to others. 

I'm 40! So I'm doing top 40 lists this year. My big takeaway is that these things are always flawed... Perfect!

I didn't put these in a specific order. I worked pretty quickly to get it over with. In general, my personal no-brainers appear towards the top. 

If something clicks for you, that's outstanding. I just dig into lil' projects, spit 'em out, and move onto the next one. 

Shoutout to these great artists. 

Even the dead ones? you may ask.

Especially the dead ones. 

One more thing.

Ugh, Jesus. What?

Is this just going to be pointless doom scrolling? 

Alright, that's actually a great question. Doom scrolling is running amok and screwing up our minds. The best way to avoid it is by listening to Who Needs More Content? on Spotify. It's content, without the doom scrolling. 

Now I feel dirty.

Well, get yourself clean by listening to Nick's stories on Spotify. You want a shirt that reads "Who Needs More Content?" Cool, make one. 

Anyway, here's the list:

OK Computer by Radiohead

Odelay by Beck

London Calling by The Clash

Exile on Main St. by The Rolling Stones

The white album by The Beatles

Houses of the Holy by Led Zeppelin

Extraordinary Machine by Fiona Apple

Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd

self-titled/ The Ramones

Nevermind by Nirvana

Yield by Pearl Jam

Check Your Head by Beastie Boys

The blue album by Weezer

Dookie by Green Day

Axis: Bold As Love by Jimi Hendrix

Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga by Spoon

Is This It by The Strokes

Elephant by The White Stripes

The Lonesome Crowded West by Modest Mouse

Homogenic by Bjork

Violator by Depeche Mode

The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars by David Bowie

White Pony by Deftones

Speakerboxx/ The Love Below by Outkast

Swimming by Mac Miller

Bringing It All Back Home by Bob Dylan

Willy and the Poor Boys by Creedence Clearwater Revival

Songs for the Deaf by Queens of the Stone Age

Midnight Marauders by A Tribe Called Quest

Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys

Comfort Eagle by Cake

Siamese Dream by Smashing Pumpkins

self-titled/ Vampire Weekend

From a Basement on the Hill by Elliott Smith

Pleased to Meet Me by The Replacements

Funeral by Arcade Fire

Stop Making Sense by Talking Heads

Live at Folsom Prison by Johnny Cash

Whatever People Say about Me, That's What I'm Not by Arctic Monkeys

Random Access Memories by Daft Punk


Thursday, May 25, 2023

My Favorite Stuff from the B(art) Exhibit


By that, I mean welcome to this post. 

Appleton's Trout Museum of Art has an exhibit of animation cels from The Simpsons. As I write this, it's winding down; the last day of the display is Sunday, May 28th. I saw it twice this spring, and I may even rally the troops to see it one last time on Memorial Day Weekend. I'll be sad when it's gone. But also, a few minutes after that feeling of sadness, I'll get over it. 

The man who amassed a few hundred of these perfectly cromulent cels goes by the name William Heeter. (William, I don't use the word "hero" very often, but you, sir, are the greatest hero in American history.) Heeter began collecting in 1993, when Simpsons artwork was finding its way into galleries, to the delight of superfans with a buck or two to spend. He's been hunting, networking, bidding, and collecting ever since--although no new cels exist after 2003, season 14, when the show switched to a more advanced digital system to speed up the process of animation.

I totally get why that change occurred. The move was cost-effective, efficient, and inevitable. Technology, like shit, happens. 

But I'm so grateful to see how the old stuff was made. Plus, in this case, the "old stuff" coincides nicely with my favorite stuff, from the '90s and early 2000s. 

I'm posting this only a couple days before the exhibit goes the way of the dodo. If you still haven't seen it, but you'd like to, and you live fairly close to Appleton, let this be a sign. If you're one of my friends in New York or Florida, or if I don't even know you and you live somewhere far away like Brockway, Ogdenville, or North Haverbrook, I hope this lil' peak at the B(art) Exhibit Scratchy's that Itchy of Simpsons fandom. Enjoy. 


"Ay Caramba." It's the new "Cheeeese." Here I'm posing beside Homer in a giant sombrero, which basically means I could do no wrong in this moment. Even better, we can see an image from "Treehouse of Horror III" in which monster ape King Homer falls in love with Marge and tries to climb the Empire State Building. "King Homer" is one of my favorite Halloween-special segments. Somewhere beneath that beard I'm smiling big. And it's a smile that's almost as big as Homer's sombrero. 



Let's start with what we all came here to see: Hardcore nudity! In this image from "Treehouse of Horror VIII," in the "Homega Man" segment, Springfield gets nuked by France, but Homer lucks out by browsing through a fallout shelter at the moment of impact. Early on, he thinks he's the sole survivor, so that's a bummer. But he cheers himself up by dancing nude in church. He sings: "War! Huh! Good God y'all! What is it good for?" This man is my hero. 


From "Krusty Gets Kancelled," Homer offers the perfect target for Krusty to regain his form as a first-rate pie-slinger. The double cel continuation of this scene is a cool, neat treat... Much like pie. Mmm... pie. 


Sorry about the glare on the left panel, but on the right side, I hope you can see a slight pop-out effect used on the crazy old man with his pants around his ankles. It was cool to see the layering of characters in the foreground standing out against backgrounds to make the image more striking. You can see the details that go into bringing these characters just a bit closer to us. Up close, the subtle 3-D appearance is a trip. 




I'm in the Simpsons living room, sitting on the couch, wearing a Springfield Isotopes shirt. Dreams come true. (I've had some pretty wacky dreams.) 



Lusty Burns voice: "Happy birthday, Mister Smiiithers." This is a nod to Marilyn Monroe singing Happy Birthday to President Kennedy. The two were (allegedly) having an affair at the time. I've always enjoyed connecting Simpsons references to things that happened in real life--events in politics, pop culture, and sports. Hand to Jebus: the show has great educational value. 



...But there's no educational value here! Ha ha, which is 100% fine. To explain: While Marge is out gambling too late (because she is caught in the neon claws of Gamblore), a sleeping Homer is awakened by Lisa, who says she had a nightmare about the Boogeyman. Well, Homer freaks the eff out. He's instantly terrified of this Boogeyman creep. Marge returns home to this delightfully messed-up scene. 


This is a twice-amount of silly. I'm seeing double here. Four sillies! 



In this classic routine from "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part 2)," Moe is exonerated in a lie detector test. But then the thing buzzes him into admitting that he's going to spend the night alone at home ogling the girls in the Sears catalog.  


I want that jacket so bad! Like, I gotta fall in love with someone soon, then drop not-so-subtle hints about how awesome it would be to have a custom-made Mr. Plow coat as a Christmas present. In return I can teach my true love how to sing the "Mr. Plow" jingle. Let me dream!!!


I'm a big fan of this image because it's the perfect encapsulation of the "Grimey" episode. Homer is asleep at the funeral of Frank Grimes, a coworker at the nuclear power plant who despised the Simpsons patriarch.
Homer's Enemy had valid reasons for his disdain, but Homer is like the dumb, beloved family dog, and fans love Captain Wacky (later renamed Homer) despite and because of his multitude of flaws. 
Homer be like, "Change the channel, Marge." 
And Lenny be like, "That's our Homer!"
It's a beautiful moment at Grimey's funeral. 



Flanders is so chill when he realizes Homer is about to hit him on the head with a lead pipe. Springfield's saint has tickets to a football game and Homer is willing to take them by force. But Flanders invites his neighbor to come along with him to the game. He even laughs about the weapon: "What, were you gonna give my noggin' a floggin'?" 


If your kid insists he's not going to smoke any of these cigarettes because he's hiding them for the mob, and it turns out he's actually telling the truth, then you gotta redeem yourself by telling your kid "I'll never doubt you again." 


If I have to explain ^this, really, what are you doing here?


One of Krusty's trading cards. If you think this is a banger, you gotta get a load of "Krusty visits relatives in Annapolis, Maryland." 



One of my favorite images at the museum for the way it tells a story. It's a sight gag worth 1,000 words.


A heatwave comes to Springfield. This is my man's solution. I remember turning to my friend and doing my best Homer voice: "I got the idea when I realized the refrigerator was cold." Oh Homer, you are so 
S-M-R-T.


In the couch gags section of cels, this was my favorite. It's an homage to the painting "Relativity," by the Dutch artist MC Escher. Intellectually, I'm pretty hit-or-miss, so I really do treasure learning new stuff from The Simpsons. I hope you learned a thing or two as well. Like, I showed this to my niece, and we looked up a few other surrealist paintings, like the one with the aqueducts pouring water down, yet on the same level--and we had a nice little chat about optical illusions and perception. That was cool, so I saved this one for last. 

Hope you enjoyed this post!
In the words of Spinal Tap, "Goodnight, Springden! There will be no encore." 

Saturday, May 20, 2023

Botch Volleyball

 


 

    I have a bold statement to make about my athletic skills. When it comes to playing a game of catch with a football or baseball, I am not a liability.


Now, when it comes to actually playing sports, not just slingin’ a ball back and forth Field of Dreams style, I have some bad news.


My career in youth league sports was a mixed bag of both failure and  disappointment. Now, I did run for three touchdowns in an eight-game season in fifth grade, but aside from that, my statlines were shitty. Other than the intangibles, like acute anxiety and intrusive thoughts of getting booed by my dad, I didn’t have much to offer. For the most part, I can function alright with some OCD quirks, but I like having personal space, so slamming against random dude-bodies in a blur of motion is the opposite of comfort for me. My comfort zone is a bit of a diva. 


Plus, I’m five-foot-eight and I weigh a buck-thirty-five. I’d love to hit a baseball 500 feet or windmill dunk on you, but that ain’t happening. In the case of athletes, I admire what I am not.  


Having said all this, how did I ever rise the ranks to become a one-time sub on a bar league volleyball team? And how did I ensure that this challenge to my comfort zone was going to be a disaster? 


Well, back in the summer of 2011, I was part of a big group of friends. Before folks in the tribe got married or divorced, had kids or moved away, and before I just got older and weirder, we all used to meet up a lot. One ideal spot to hang out was The Shop, which was shorthand for the worksite of my friend Cal’s family-owned painting business. Doors, cabinets, and dressers get painted at The Shop, and an abundance of tools, supplies, and paint buckets are stored within the spacious building. More importantly, for hangout purposes, a plot of land the size of a football field sprawled out behind The Shop. At the center of the finely mowed field, we set up a volleyball net.


Several times that summer, as many as a dozen of us met up at The Shop. We brought coolers of refreshments, slapped burger patties on the grill, cranked up some tunes, shot the shit, and sometimes even managed to play volleyball. 


During games, my beercan was my faithful spectator sitting in the grass a few steps out of bounds. I’d walk across the line to enjoy a sip while the others debated what the score was. Between games I’d light up a Camel Blue and try to make someone laugh. Hypothetically, I might have tried a little something that’s now legal in half the States and rhymes with “dot” and “parijuana.” This is what I associated with volleyball. Not super proud of that, but in my 20s I had a lot of shitheadedness to get out of my system, and I had a lot of fun. At 40, I know that fun could have led to tragedy and trauma. I was lucky. 


As the weeks went by, I became decent at thumping the ball over the net or setting up a tall asshole who could spike it. I later learned that I volleyballed with inherent fundamental flaws, but the beautiful thing was that no one at The Shop cared. Even better, I did comedy bits. My favorite routine was the Trash Talker, which I did with my friend Ian. 

 

“Ian, you best get ready for some trash talk.” 


“Yeah?” 


“Yyyup. Nick is my name and trash talking is my game.”


“Whoa! Easy, man.” 


“Hey Ian, knock knock.”


“Who’s there?”


“The world’s greatest trash talker, that’s who.” 


“Ouch!” 


“I tried to warn ya. You know your Mama asked me to stop talking trash? And I respectfully declined.” 


No! That’s just mean.” 


I’d laugh a lot, enjoy conversations, get some exercise and a nice buzz, then ride my bike home, sticking to the sidewalk, basking in the quiet breeze of summer in slow motion. For almost a whole summer, I thought volleyball was pretty great. 


Then in mid-August, I got a text from Cal. That Thursday night, his volleyball team was shorthanded. They’d have to forfeit their game at a bar called The Press Box if they couldn’t find a sub. And no, he added, I wasn’t their first choice, and yes, they were desperate. 


I was flattered. V-ball on a weekday? Whoa, I was moving up in the world. I didn’t even know myself anymore, and I wanted to excitedly embrace this stranger.


Cal was like, “So… that’s a yes?” 


He and his wife Ophelia picked me up at 6:30. I was cheerful, unaware that I was on my way to botch volleyball. What’s worse, I didn’t exactly set myself up for success. As we drove to the bar, I accepted a sample of something that rhymes with “deed” and “banabis.” I’ve since learned that this choice does not help my anxiety in busy public settings, but at the time I was collecting data for that rather long experiment. 


So, my mind was swarming more so than soothed as we entered the Press Box. We met up with our teammates. The place was packed. I felt claustrophobic, and yet I wanted a beer, so I did that awful squirm-move to fit between two frowning barflies on stools. I had the nervous face of a man the bartender will always serve last. Mercifully, I got my beer, my sad lil’ pacifier. I turned around and cringed as a Luke Bryan song blared on the jukebox. I hate to shout to be heard, so my social skills went to hell. V-ball was off to a rough start.


Our group moved to the sand volleyball court, where the open space gave me relief. I looked through the net and didn’t recognize anyone on the other team. I’m a lot more shy around strangers, so that meant I’d be having no fun doing the Trash Talker bit. Dammit. 


There was also a referee perched in one of those tall, high-and-mighty stands. That was different from The Shop too. The ref was a thin blonde in a baggy Wisconsin Badgers sweatshirt. She wore a stone-faced expression, and with my stoned brain, I had visions of Medusa turning a man into rock. I even waved at her with a bashful half-smile, like “I get that you’re more than a judge, you’re a human being too,” to no avail. Judges gotta judge; they don’t gotta smile. 


We took our spots on the court. I dug my bare feet into the lukewarm sand, gnarling the grains anxiously with my toes. The game started. 


Suddenly, a spinning white sphere arched over the net to me. I got in position, made a “V” with my outstretched arms, and did my typical thrust-up to loft the ball back to the other team. 


The ref blew her whistle: “Shhreeeeet!”


“Lifting!” she said. Whatever the hell that meant, the opposition got a point. 


“Lifting?” I said. “What does that mean?” 


The ref turned her head away. The folks on the other side of the net seemed to take my question like it was good news. 


My friend Ophelia tried to help. She said to me, “She’s basically saying… just don’t punch it up so much.” 


“But I got it over the net that way,” I said. “Like, isn’t that the point of the game?” 


Ophelia tilted her head and bit her lip. She gave me a “yes and no, you’re smart but dumb, I feel for you but now we’re gonna lose” kind of a look.  


“Just try to make your hands more steady,” she said. 


I guess that was good advice. 


But it was never gonna fucking happen. 


When the ball next found its way to me, I thumped it up and over. It was all instinct, desire, and a refusal to listen, baby. 


Shhreeeeet!” the whistle shrieked. 


“Lifting!” cried the worst living thing in the universe.  


Dude!” I said helplessly. 


We kept losing points to me and that judgey whistle. Ian came up to me in an effort to explain the rule. 


“Thanks, man,” I said. 


“So, do you get it?” he asked. 


“No.” 


In 2023, I just did an online search on the subject. Here’s what I found in a section titled: 


“Avoiding the Dreaded Lift.” 


Dreaded! Because it’s not a fun and relaxing game of V-ball without a sense of soul-torturing dread. 


“Being called for a lift can be frustrating and embarrassing.”


I’m pretty sure the author was at the Press Box that night watching me.


“But it can be avoided using proper mechanics anytime you’re touching the ball. Proper defensive posture, passing platforms, and setting hand placement can prevent most lift calls from ever occurring.” 


Proper mechanics?! Are we fixing a car for the King of England or are we trying to get a ball over a damn net?


“Focusing on strength training can also prevent the movements made out of weakness that result in a lift.”


OK, let’s stop there. I didn’t come to this “What is Lifting?” page to be insulted. Weakness. Lifters are notorious for their weakness. Ouch. Look, I do have thin, bony wrists. My wrists are six-and-half inches around, so maybe I do need a little extra oomph at the point of impacting a V-ball. 


But I still gotta love myself and I don’t need to feel inferior because of this stupid game people only watch for the hot bikini butts.  


Back on the court, I was being targeted as the weak link by the opposition. They were pointing at me, as if to say, “There he is. The guy who sucks. Found him again.” 


What happened next was my most positive play of the match, as far as influencing the score goes. It was the enemy’s serve, and because of me, our team regained the serve. 


But, there are more details to add. 


As usual, the flyin’ Wilson came towards me. I was in the back corner, and soon realized it might land out of bounds. In a second, I glanced down, spotted the boundary line, looked up, and assessed that Wilson was going to barely land out of bounds. I was delighted to know I was not going to touch the ball and risk being whistled this time. I let it go. 


And the ball drilled a kid in the face. The boy was only five or six. He hollered in pain. Tears welled in his eyes. He gave me a look meant for a monster. 


“Jesse!” a woman screamed. 


It was his mother. She must have been among the small crowd of spectators at one of the tables behind us, and apparently she let her son roam. The mom ran to the boy in distress and swept him into her arms to console him. 


Jesse’s gaze made me feel like a monster, while his mom’s gaze made me feel like a monster who would soon be set on fire for child abuse. The scorn in her stink-eye may have caused stink waves of shame to radiate from my body—I’m not sure. 


I could have returned the favor of pointing a finger at someone on the other side of the net—some tall asshole in a Brewers shirt who had turned away to twiddle his thumbs, the man who launched the flyin’ Wilson that hit the kid in the face—but I didn’t. At that point I was so wrecked with failure and guilt that I could only apologize. 


“Sorry!” I said. “Ooh, yeah… Sorry. Look, I’m sorry.” 


The angry mom and sobbing boy gave no reply. They only stared at me, then she slowly made her way out of the volleyball area, back towards the main bar. 


We were only halfway through losing that match. A few more whistles for lifting were going to ring out that night. 


Cal broke the stunned silence. He burst out laughing. 


“Holy shit!” he chuckled. 


A few others joined him. Somewhere between 20 minutes and 20 hours later, the most humiliating game of bar league volleyball ever played was over. 


I didn’t speak until the car ride home. Devastated in the backseat, I had to clear the air. 


“So here’s the thing with lifting…” I said. “I still don’t get it.”



Saturday, March 25, 2023

So It's Come to This: Honorable Mentions



I had a birthday recently, and my best friend gave me the most fantastic present. It's a Nintendo mini that includes every game in the NES library. Every game has four save slots, making it a lot more possible for a B- level gamer like me to conquer Nintendo-hard classics like Ninja Gaiden and Adventure Island. Dudes, the Castlevania trilogy--wow, this is euphoric. A few days ago I beat the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Now I know this triumph, which had eluded me since 1989, and I'm putting it on my goddamn resume. 

I mention this because at my birthday party, my best friend heard about the top 40 lists I had made to neurotically honor the occasion. He read the preface, noted the exclusion of Honorable Mentions, and said, "No, I disagree. I think you should include Honorable Mentions." 

Which would totally ruin the number structure of the lists to commemorate 40 years of Nick Olig life. 

But again, this gift was outstanding. Like, later today, if I'm feeling cute, I'm gonna fire up Double Dragon II, and at long last get past those damn vanishing platforms on Mission 6--even if it takes 50 tries--and I owe that to my best friend. Was he just being contrarian because he knows he can get away with it? Maybe, but it doesn't matter. If my best friend is clamoring for some Honorable Mentions, taking into account the ultimate birthday present, knowing that we both know none of this matters, then so be it. I'm lifting up the velvet rope and allowing HMs into the club. 

So, in this entirely different entry which must always be kept separate from the official top 40 lists (keeping in mind that none of this matters), here are some Honorable Mentions of bands, movies, books, and video games. 

Bands/ Singers

Deftones, Vampire Weekend, A Tribe Called Quest, Daft Punk, Beach Boys, Elliott Smith, Green Day (before that awful song "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"), Weezer (95% blue and Pinkerton, cliched but true), My Morning Jacket, John Prine, Hum, Pixies (it took so long for me to get into them but they're great and they influenced some of my favorite bands). 

Movies

A Beautiful Mind, Matchstick Men, Stranger Than Fiction, Tommy Boy, La Bamba, Spaceballs, American Hustle; Everything, Everywhere, All at Once; The Life Aquatic, Nope, The Menu, As Good As It Gets (hot take: Nicolas Cage in Matchstick Men portrays someone suffering from OCD more expertly than Jack Nicholson in As Good AIG.) 

Books

Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque by Joyce Carol Oates, Beastie Boys Book by Diamond and Horovitz, The Beatles: The Biography by Bob Spitz, Born Standing Up by Steve Martin, Born on the Fourth of July by Ron Kovic, Ordinary People by Judith Guest, A River Runs Through It by Norman Maclean, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test by Tom Wolfe (his writing style is cringey but the story he tells is a fascinating piece of drugged-out history), 'Salem's Lot by Stephen King, Hell's Angels by Hunter S Thompson (Hunter was such a charmer and a virtuoso that he made me love a book about motorcycles and biker gangs, stuff I'm not into at all--that's what a great writer can do--I love that man), Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams 

Video Games

Mariokart: Double Dash- Nintendo Gamecube, Tiger Woods Golf '04- XBox (Shoutout to my college roommate Pat, who usually beat me in this one, I miss your musk--haha), God of War- Playstation 2 (I'm a retro fucking weirdo but basically any God of War game is great, the combat is like a beautiful, brutal ballet), TMNT1- Nintendo, Duck Tales- NES, Mortal Kombat II- Super Nintendo, Tecmo Super Bowl III: Final Edition- SNES, Contra III: Alien Wars- SNES, WCW/ NWO Revenge- Nintendo 64, NFL Blitz-N64. 

More of a Rambling Man than a Simple Man

 I turned 40 and time hit me like a jolt on a roller coaster. It's exciting, in a way. And it makes me wanna throw up. My mind is insisting I can put it into words, but then it feels like describing a dream with pinpoint accuracy, hooked up to a lie detector and sweating bullets. It's absurd, like asking a cloud to kindly get inside this balloon I got. 

But what I am capable of at the moment is rambling. I'm 40 and I'm a man, a rambling man who rambles on to compete in this year's Royal Ramble. Where I'm gonna throw 29 other ramblers over the top rope. 

See, that was a ramble. 

***

Of all the outlooks one could have on life, I think the one that irritates me most is when someone says, "Nobody is happy." It's such a weak-ass give-up move. Which is not to say that I am living proof of happiness right now--I'm not--but I personally have known pure happiness as both a child and adult. In adulthood, it's been fleeting, yeah, and taking care of myself has been so hard that it's been very hard to sustain relationships because I also try to take care of someone else, and that's just been borderline impossible for me for the most part... But I have enjoyed pure happiness in the last five years. It lasted about five months, but hey, I'll take it. So when it comes to waving that sad little white flag and fucking tapping out and going, "Welp, no one is happy, so this is fine," fuck that. You don't get to put guaranteed misery on me. That's on you Brah. 

Why do we shut our brains off to the tangible science of what is happening to our planet? Like, it makes someone a hippie or they're somehow delusional or melodramatic to be concerned about what people much smarter than the average human are calling a "climate crisis" or "existential threat"? Melting ice caps is a thing. Not a made-up thing, a thing. We need cleaner energy for fuck's sake. Big Oil sucks. Diesel is stupid. The sun and wind are awesome, undervalued because of corporate greed. To have a chance of minimizing the damage, long term, for real. This is a bad habit of humans polluting their home planet without really addressing the consequences. There are consequences. And that's why we shield our eyes from science sometimes. The damage humanity has compiled is so grim. 

Memes are overrated. People identify as funny or thoughtful by showing what someone else created. I have indeed meme'd, but it's a lot more rewarding to post my own attempts at jokes and insight. I'd rather fail with my own words than see that a meme I found is doing well in the likes category. Memes are the cheapest form of art. At best, they're pennies, compared to a great film, book, record, show, painting, etc. Real art is worth a solid dollar compared to cheap-ass penny memes.

Y'all say "literally" too much. It's the most overused word on the planet. Almost everything that happens happens in a literal sense. There is no need to clarify. I know I might sound like a pretentious grammar snob on the spectrum here, but it's true. I saw a reel about cute dogs with the preface "You will literally die when you see these adorable dogs." That's poor, misleading language. You will figuratively die when you see adorable dogs. A literal death means viewing cute dogs will stop your heart from beating. Next stop, the morgue. For more about "literally" making me cringe, read the next paragraph. 

"I literally went to the Kwik Trip. I was so low on gas, literally on "E." I filled up the tank until it was literally full. But then guess who I saw? It was literally my high school science teacher. My head literally exploded. I said to him, 'I haven't seen you in literally 10 years!'" If you remove a certain shitty adverb from that story, get this: It gets the exact same point across. And it's more concise and less annoying. Grrr. 

^I feel like if I was more outspoken about certain things that bug me, people would like me less. I'd be lonelier, more alienated. And I already feel that way too much for comfort. So I keep a lot of it to myself, except when I write. Then I have the freedom to gripe. Ironically, I am alone when I write. And I like it that way. 

^Being alone helps me enjoy silence. This world gets so noisy I can barely think or do basic things. Ever since I was a kid, when I heard a motorcycle drive through the neighborhood, my instinctive thought is pleading Please shut up! I've always been sensitive to obnoxious noises that disrupt the beautiful quiet we can experience. 

At the same time, I love music. And if it's really loud, well, that's not necessarily a deal-breaker. To hell with motorcycles though. I've never been a cool guy because I can't stand them. No regrets there. 

I don't want to be alone, but it keeps happening. Somehow I'm just bad at sustaining long-term relationships with women. It's been an ongoing pain and emptiness that I've struggled with for most of my adult life. I've failed with women so many times that it's hard to stay hopeful and keep trying. I had one woman in my life that I wanted to see, hear, smell, and touch everyday for as long as I lived. She dumped me after like 7 months. That was almost 4 years ago. Memories of regret still haunt me. I could have done more. I could have communicated better, been more assertive. I don't know if I'll ever feel so much emotion for anyone else. Still, the worst narrative my life could have played out would be if I never met her. I don't believe in the Eternal Sunshine solution. I would come home from work, see her curled up on the couch at midnight. I'd wake her up gently and say, "Hey, beautiful." And she'd be in an adorable fog and reply, "Hey, handsome." We'd tell each other about our days, then we'd go to bed. Every day was good for me when we had that together. Every problem was fine. Living with depression and anxiety was fine. "Hey, beautiful," "Hey, handsome" made it all OK. 

I know I can be confident and charismatic, even a good leader. I think I'll get one or two more real opportunities, and I'll just have to step up. Getting out of a long slump is something one needs to work on every day. There are no shortcuts. There is no magic aside from love, and love can be heartbreaking. 

If you read "Dreams about Dad," I got the perfect ending with Bill... At the same time, it's sad to realize that that means I never have to dream about him again. Best case scenario, I'll see him in the afterlife and give him a hug. Eventually we'll stop crying and get caught up on the Packers. "I know, Rodgers got to be such a diva. Great player, but full of drama. Just like Favre. Is Bart Starr up here? He seems cool." Worst case scenario is a blank screen, and I have no consciousness to be aware of it. How boring is that? I like the imagination of believing in God and Heaven, even though it's downright silly. 






Friday, March 3, 2023

Top 40 Lists



As I count down to 40, I don't want to dwell on the downside, but once in a while the passing of time gives me the blues. This winter, I’ve had to rally the troops. And by troops, I mean the endorphins in my brain. Those brave endorphin boys have been battling their hearts out while I wrap my head around being on this planet for almost four decades. Wowza

I have fun with it though. I can laugh at myself. It's just hard to find that right balance of comedy and drama in this life, ya know?

I look like a werewolf did it with a skeleton. I'm finding gray hairs in places that are terrifying. If this were the Middle Ages, I'd be dead by now. I'm so old I remember Atari and Anthony Michael freaking Hall. I mean, what the hell? It feels good to laugh about it.

Another way that I rallied the troops was by making these lists. It's kinda weird, but I enjoy messing around in a notebook, focusing on a list. My brain feels like it's just chilling on a nice round of Tetris or a word or puzzle game. The only downside to nerding out on a list is that I'm not using that time to work on stories/ actually get real shit done, in a literal sense, in the real world.


But like I said, I don't want to dwell on the downside.


So, fixating on these lists was a big win for my OCD. For God's sake, I scrutinized the exact order of a bunch of shit that doesn't really matter. But I know where to draw the line, and that's at Honorable Mentions. Picture me as a no-nonsense bouncer wagging my finger to Honorable Mentions tryna enter the club... Alright, that was fun.


Nick's OCD checking out these lists. 

Whoever reads this, I hope you get at least one recommendation that makes your life very slightly more worthwhile. (I mean, a lot more enjoyable would be nice but we gotta manage our expectations.) Best case scenario, my opinion has a positive impact. Which is another way of saying someone gives a shit.

In doing this project, I realized I want to read more books by women and watch more movies by black directors and, you know, grow as a human being and support the art made by people that are different from me. Don't get me wrong, I stand by my ridiculous lists 1,000%, but Holy White Dudes. Just, white dudes, everywhere. Many of them ranging in age from old to dead. The Babe Ruth New York Yankees of history.


It clicked that I have more to learn from women and people of color and so on. I think it's only gonna take a half-century for me to show those signs of growth. Fingers crossed, anyway.


These are the top 40s of my favorite bands, movies, books, and video games. Don't ask for Honorable Mentions cuz they've been bounced.

With a love that will echo through the ages,*

Nick


Bands/ Singers


40.) Foo Fighters

39.) Blur

38.) Outkast

37.) Prince

36.) Queen

35.) Black Sabbath

34.) Tame Impala

33.) Smashing Pumpkins

32.) Talking Heads

31.) Creedence Clearwater Revival 

30.) Neil Young 

29.) Bjork 

28.) Sheryl Crow

27.) Van Halen

26.) The Replacements

25.) Jawbreaker

24.) Rage Against the Machine

23.) Queens of the Stone Age

22.) Modest Mouse

21.) Johnny Cash

20.) Bob Dylan

19.) Mac Miller

18.) The Rolling Stones

17.) The Ramones

16.) Pearl Jam

15.) Pink Floyd

14.) The Strokes

13.) Cake

12.) The Clash

11.) The White Stripes

10.) Fiona Apple

9.) Spoon

8.) Jimi Hendrix

7.) Beastie Boys

6.) Nirvana 

5.) Led Zeppelin

4.) David Bowie

3.) Beck

2.) Radiohead

1.) The Beatles


Movies


40.) Silver Linings Playbook

39.) The Wrestler

38.) Stand by Me

37.) Aliens

36.) Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

35.) Superbad

34.) Borat

33.) Scent of a Woman

32.) Austin Powers

31.) The Sixth Sense

30.) Terminator 2

29.) Office Space

28.) The Dark Knight

27.) The Prestige

26.) Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

25.) Best in Show

24.) This Is Spinal Tap

23.) Night of the Hunter

22.) Shaun of the Dead

21.) Dumb and Dumber

20.) Naked Gun

19.) No Country for Old Men

18.) Die Hard

17.) Toy Story

16.) The Empire Strikes Back

15.) Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

14.) Fargo

13.) Kill Bill

12.) The Truman Show

11.) The Shining

10.) Napoleon Dynamite

9.) The Shawshank Redemption

8.) Jaws

7.) Alien

6.) Pulp Fiction

5.) Goodfellas 

4.) The Royal Tenenbaums

3.) The Big Lebowski

2.) The Godfather

1.) The Godfather part 2


Books


40.) Dream Team: Michael, Magic, Larry...- Jack McCallum

39.) The Universe in a Nutshell- Stephen Hawking

38.) When Will Jesus Bring the Pork Chops?- George Carlin

37.) The Road- Cormac McCarthy

36.) Life- Keith Richards

35.) The Sirens of Titan- Kurt Vonnegut

34.) Siddhartha- Herman Hesse

33.) Black Dogs- Ian McEwan

32.) Eating the Dinosaur- Chuck Klosterman

31.) The Hunger Games- Suzanna Collins

30.) Of Mice and Men- John Steinbeck

29.) Catch 22- Joseph Heller

28.) Cat’s Cradle- KV

27.) Moneyball- Michael Lewis

26.) Me Talk Pretty One Day- David Sedaris

25.) The Godfather- Mario Puzo

24.) One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest- Ken Kesey

23.) Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ‘72- Hunter S Thompson

22.) A Song of Ice and Fire: Game of Thrones- George RR Martin

21.) Based on a True Story- Norm MacDonald

20.) Animal Farm- George Orwell

19.) In Cold Blood- Truman Capote

18.) Winesburg, Ohio- Sherwood Anderson

17.) The Martian- Adam Weir

16.) Life of Pi- Yann Martel

15.) The Green Mile- Stephen King

14.) To Kill a Mockingbird- Harper Lee

13.) Lamb, the Gospel According to Biff- Christopher Moore

12.) The Giver- Lois Lowry

11.) The Catcher in the Rye- JDS 

10.) Omnibus- Roald Dahl

9.) Cathedral- Raymond Carver

8.) Different Seasons- Stephen King

7.) Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs- Chuck Klosterman

6.) Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas- Hunter S Thompson

5.) Nine Stories- JD Salinger

4.) The Great Gatspy- F Scott Fitzgerald

3.) Slaughterhouse 5- KV

2.) Mother Night- Kurt Vonnegut

1.) East of Eden- John  Steinbeck


Video Games


(Oh no, he's writing again.)

Getting back to the matter of growth, I'm a sucker when it comes to the nostalgia of video games. I'm just an old soul with an old school Nintendo. The question is, is nostalgia compatible with growth? And well, I think a little bit of admiration-for-the past is OK, but it's more important to take a leap of faith into uncharted adventures. My note to self goes like this: play some newer shit for the top 50. I realize that games in 2023 are skull-crushingly awesome, it's just that I could legit play these 40 games forever.


40.) Castlevania- Nintendo

39.) NBA Live '95- Super Nintendo

38.) Perfect Dark- Nintendo 64

37.) X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse- Playstation 2

36.) Return of the Jedi- SNES

35.) Super Smash Bros- N64

34.) Overwatch- Playstation 4

33.) TMNT Arcade Game- Nintendo

32.) Castlevania IV- SNES

31.) Earthbound- SNES

30.) Super Metroid- SNES

29.) Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time- SNES

28.) Legend of Zelda- NES

27.) Castlevania: Symphony of the Night- Playstation

26.) Silent Hill- PS1

25.) Super Punchout- SNES

24.) Street Fighter II Turbo- SNES

23.) Metal Gear Solid: Sons of Liberty- PS2

22.) Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time- N64

21.) Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past- SNES

20.) Resident Evil- PS1

19.) Grand Theft Auto: Vice City- PS2

18.) Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy’s Kong Quest- SNES

17.) Starfox 64- N64

16.) Goldeneye 007- N64

15.) Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3- PS2

14.) Super Mario All Stars- SNES

13.) Madden ‘10- PS2

12.) Ken Griffey Jr. Presents Major League Baseball- SNES

11.) X-Men 2: The Clone Wars- Sega

10.) Resident Evil 2- PS1

9.) Super Mario World- SNES

8.) Mariokart 64- N64

7.) Zombies Ate My Neighbors- SNES

6.) WWF No Mercy- N64

5.) NBA Jam- SNES

4.) Donkey Kong Country- SNES

3.) Super Mario 64- N64

2.) Tecmo Super Bowl-NES

1.) Resident Evil 4- PS2/ Gamecube


*Homer says that on The Simpsons.