THERE IS A CAT ON ME.
Annals of Childhood: My Swinging 70s
I’ve previously written about the Decade of Brown as a cultural phenomenon, and more recently about the Big Kids and their heavy metal lives. The parents are their own story.
My own parents were the identified weirdos in the community. Our family was politically left, pacifist, intellectual, and artistic. And we all had big noses. One friendly neighbor said to my mother over a cup of coffee “Ann, you’re really nice people. But you’re not like the others.” Even in the corduroy 1970s, our corner of Orange County was lily-white, right-wing, know-nothing, and kinda stupid. As registered democrats who didn’t go to church and drove a Volvo, my parents were clearly alien.
The 70s were also the decade of divorce, though. More than half of my friends had split families in elementary school. They’d talk about their weekends with Dad, or how Dad and Mom were fighting about the house or the dog. A lot of them got pretty badly stressed by it. I particularly remember a couple of boys who, after their father left, became very combative and tried to ascend to alpha dog by shoving the other boys and challenging us to fights.
Going to their houses was odd too. You weren’t supposed to mention the dad when the mom was around, and a few of the houses had dad’s den preserved as he’d left it because either removing it or using it was too painful. When the mom said “your father…” to the kid there was ice hanging in the air. Being with a friend at the dad’s house was even weirder. Dad usually lived in a smaller place or in an unconventional kind of housing like the Balboa Bay Club or a boat or some condo tower. He’d be in full weekend dad mode trying to provide entertainment for junior and his friends, which was cool, but there was clearly some panic going on there.
And then there was the sex problem. This was the disco era, and the divorced moms and dads were dating like crazy. I’d be over at someone’s house and realize that the mustachioed, nervous Tom Selleck looking guy this week was different from the last one, and that he wasn’t addressed as a dad but as “Tim” or “mom’s friend”. Tim and mom would stand 5 feet apart when the kids were around, and Tim also had a habit of bringing gifts or candy and smiling in a terrified way at us.
The dads’ girlfriends were disco hoochie mamas mostly, and terrified of children. They’d totter around in heels and short skirts grinning at us and making inane small talk for the minimum possible time before vanishing. They were all very tan and wore lots of jewelry. Sometimes girlfriend and dad would go in a room and close the door and have really loud arguments.
The weirdest part of the divorced households was that the adults would just disappear. Mom or Dad and their life mate du jour would flit off for a precious weekend afternoon together leaving us kids to our own devices. I’m surprised that we didn’t manage to burn down any houses or kill any pets. We did break at least one major appliance that I remember.
Finally, drugs. My own parents were of the pre rock ‘n’ roll generation, and having seen a friend melt his head in very early LSD experimentation, they were anti-drug. Anything more than a glass of wine with dinner was a bad idea in our house. But it was pretty clear that Disco Dad and Saturday Night Mom didn’t live that way. I was fascinated by the sight of “responsible adults” being clearly high, or clumsily trying to hide paraphernalia or pills from us.
I think a lot of my cynicism comes from the huge contrast between the reactionary moral and political attitudes of the adults around me and their own behavior. My parents, the distrusted lefty secular humanist eggheads, had a stable and nurturing family and worked out their problems. And they were sober and didn’t go out on Saturday night and leave me at home with a TV dinner. Meanwhile, the local Elmer Gantrys and Dimmesdales were popping disco biscuits, partner-swapping, and shaking their butts to Peaches & Herb while Junior at home was finding their weed stash.
The Ice Storm was like a documentary about my friends’ families growing up.
Of course, now these conflicted right-wing hedonists are running the country. It explains a lot.
There’s Something About Timmy
As a friend and fellow reviewer said about Soul Man almost 20 years ago, this shit ain’t funny.
Special Olympics collaborate with Farrelly brothers on new movie
“Black humor” is redundant
- Courtney sells some of Kurt’s songs to… wait for it… Oh don’t worry. It’s a good thing. edit:The paper is a tabloid, sometimes makes shit up. Story not yet found elsewhere. Great legend if it’s fake, though!
- Movies come to life as giant jellyfish attack Japan. Wearing tights can be an effective defense. Students have succeed in turning them into tofu.
- Today’s Woot deal is a really good bread machine for $75, shipped. Go now buy.
- Tulane is hacking itself to pieces after Katrina. WSJ story here may require registration. Short version: They’re axing 22 programs of study and firing 53 professors and a third of their medical school faculty. Bye bye university.
- The data on Tylenol just gets worse and worse. Now it seems that you can poison yourself with 20 pills a day. I bet a lot of neurotic people do that much Tylenol.
From Spy Magazine, 1992
I grabbed this from an online archive of the magazine. Spy was the Onion and the Daily Show of the 1980s and early 1990s. This was one of my favorite bits and I’m glad to see it again.
Women in Love: Spy’s Pocket Guide to the Best-sellers
Ivana Trump, Woman of Letters – In her novel, For Love Alone, Ivana Trump tells the story of Katrinka Graham, a plucky Czech skiert who emigrates to America and marries the rich and powerful Adam Graham. A roman à clef? No way – Katrinka is beautiful without benefit of plastic surgery, and Adam is not a bullying blowhard. Here’s how Ivana captures Katrinka’s thoughts at certain dramatic moments:
- On skiing over the Czech border to freedom: “Ayiiiiii!”
- When consoling a friend on her troublesome love life: “Ay yi yi.”
- On meeting the long-lost son she gave up at birth: “Ay yi yi yi.”
- When finally divorced from Adam: “Ay yi yi yi.”
- On hearing her friend is deserting her husband: “Ay yi yi yi.”
- When she is offered a rich chocolate dessert: “Ay yi yi yi.”
Enrique, Hans, and Andrew also had little lambs but this was not recorded at the time.
- I missed this on Pro-Med, but Aetiology caught it: Starving Miskito natives in Nicaragua are getting an inexplicable psychosis called “Grisis Signis”. From my own point of view, being in a famine-stricken region due to a plague of rats would be enough reason to go nuts with a machete. Fascinating story, though.
- The classic Tommy Seebach “Apache” video has at least two remixes
- Oops. Just because he’s an environmental activist doesn’t mean he burned all the SUVs.
- Shades of the hashishim: Guerillas in Iraq may be hopping themselves up with military hallucinogens. That sure would help if you were a suicide bomber. It’s easier to be an asshole when you’re high, too. Chris Hedges’ account of the Bosnia war shows that hardcore murderers about to commit genocide always got really drunk first.
- tuliphead alerts us to important tips on how to be a rock star guitar god. genericus please take note.
- trinnit points out your new IM buddy problem: lol its not a virus lol im ur pal lol ur scrood sux 2 be u.
- Hey ranai, what do you think of this Celebrity Caricature Finder? Seems like it might piss off you guys by harvesting stuff, but it’s a fun toy.
- San Francisco cheese mongers and other cheesy friends, beware of morons who think you have cocaine. (Thanks, vark!)
- Let’s deconstruct Christmas music. It’s got to beat listening to the stuff.
a babel into the void
If eye of the list “of the amis,”, that it has this in this service, that is tests smooth-to love. She is people, admits to the year in the person. Others are new the acquaintance 0ccasional or friends, the V in the first place in the Internet, exact of you that the screw gushes on one changed cliff of left of the position. And it has then of you that I probably do not satisfy never, possibly, because it is distant characterizes he saws that therefore or their screw is various, than is not probable we with the part of the same zone. Which entire it in the common distance of the earth must, is clay/tone. The Internet can form a lot, in order to limit the world, but of a specific sense the zones do not become between we. To fine the fifteen years the friends from this new sense have earned the dozen, but too much so that they were only under, than always. Task that is does not originate them. It is of the crystal – to face the density and not of the face. It wants slowly to times that it could give the return to the distraction and to the stay of the better acquaintance and, of the idealizada before this entire communication.
Don’t mention the Moon
It’s starting…
Sung to the tune of ELO’s “Evil Woman” no doubt
While looking up the phrase “creepy space mormons” on the interweb because genericus had used it but he was asleep and I wondered if he originated it. Whew. Anyway, while doing that, I found it not, but instead found a really fucking weirdass text ad, which is below. You’re welcome.
