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6^WD 1Z 3L337!

I’m sorry, but I’m not sure how comfortable I am with a blog written in ersatz h^x0r which devotes so much space to praising the Christian deity.

From The Vaults: Vacation Diary August 1999, San Francisco

Crappy motel. Proof positive that the “sani-bands” on toilets mean nothing: I pull it off our room’s toilet cover and find drops of urine all over the seat. Hotel’s neon sign is right outside our window. Trolley goes by every ten minutes or so and the Patel Motel Cartel is having a family reunion next door. (Next door? Downstairs? Upstairs? The fact that the sound comes through every wall lends to our feeling of powerlessness against the sound and the general bad vibe.) Mom just called the main office, and the noise was louder in the background of the call… the owner said, “I jussel emma Kweitown, mam.”

Everyone but me is talking about going someplace else tomorrow night. I, meanwhile, am enjoying the fact that the exact same print hangs over each bed… Man, I hope I’m not getting anything negative from the shower, which smells like egg-drop soup.

Ah, travel. Budget-style.

…Mom made a comment about how it’s hard to know what kind of neighborhood you’re in in a foreign place… that hitched itself somehow to some thoughts about the comprehensible universe of Poly and Pasadena… how it strikes me nowadays that there are so many people out there, oddly in spite of my having grown up in an area with millions of people… was I just used to seeing as scenery anyone who wasn’t a “useful” person? Is this vertiginous sense of the expanding world a part of growing up? Or did I just think that everyone would eventually fall into some sensible slot? (with my strong sense of US and THEM in earlier years, I guess they mostly did…)

Detritus: The Man Under The Marine Layer In The Coco Helado Suit

I’ve finally brought All Mirth No Matter Productions, my ridiculous little fantasy about producing short videos, to life. Currently Internet Explorer doesn’t read the page right, so you won’t get the video loading in the right frame like it’s supposed to. It will load in another window you may not see right away, and take a while. There’s not much up yet, but I just resolved some technical difficulties with Final Cut and should be using it to re-produce my inauguration piece soon, the Beanie Baby Liberation Front Sketch is still in production, and I just edited together a video I did with the little kids Jen lives with in Seattle, so there should be more soon.

Unbelievable smog today in NYC, the kind we Angelenos call “marine layer” and the kind New Yorkers like to claim only exists in LA. It was definitely marine layer, though, hovering over Central Park, where people were still jogging despite the fact you couldn’t see three yards ahead of you. These people don’t understand SigAlerts. Regardless, there I was out in the sun at 2:30 p.m. (god bless my new job!) and it was balmy, so I bought a coquito from the helado man and petted the carriage horses at the south end of the Park until my hands were stinky and I got to the subway and went home.

I live in New York, and yet I still haven’t seen David Byrne (that link’s a movie, but it’s him playing Sessions at West 54th in an icecream suit and playing his guitar like an agoraphobic whiteman wailing from the Great Plains — or like the voice of the last person left in the city who isn’t screaming — worth the download).

Things I thought today: Given a finite amount of time, I invariably waste it. Witness Hampshire (I majored in what?) and this afternoon (how did I end up watching Ally McBeal?) Knowing that, I thought maybe it’s better that I don’t know when I’m going to die, or I might end up doing nothing. (Faulty logic?)

Detritus: “um, Whatcha eatin’?” “CHHHALK!”

Things of note: First of all, y’all Cali-haytas can step. If y’all still don’t know why to like California, my sista take yo a$s to schoo. Captures the character of the local biome succinctly and vividly.

Nextly, check out Ariel’s art. Nothin else like it nowhere. I hope she keeps arting in some way; it would be a d^mned shame if she didn’t.

Nextly, it would appear Jhonen Vasquez has landed himself a cartoon on a pustulent Viacom-owned channel which will remain nameless. The irises are square, the expressions are strained, it’s still classic Jhonen and I hope corporatalia hasn’t kicked the sh!t out of his sense of humor. Do you realize how wrong this is, though? The creator of Johnny the Homicidal Maniac is p!mpin’ for N**kelodeon? There hasn’t been a worse mismatch since they signed Pee Wee Herman up for a Saturday morning show.

You know, the variety of Black English Vernacular spoken in the Bronx is really punchy, much cleaner than the ivory-tower jargon I marinated in. I’m going to use it more often. By doing so I don’t ever mean to denigrate the people as created it; it’s simply a more powerful, more efficient way of talking.

Stupid Newswire Articles #2034

Clinton buys a Cuban cigar in a London airport. His other purchase, a tie with frogs on it, warrants Reuters attention. And the continued embargo against Cuba? And Castro’s policies, benevolent and malevolent?! What do you have to do to get attention in this g0dd^mn media sinkhole?!

I had a surreal Castro experience today. I was engrossed in some paperwork, sitting in on a class about HIV taught by my new boss, when I got the vague impression someone had asked about Castro’s policy of quarantining people with HIV. Before I really knew what was going on, my boss’s voice was aimed in my direction, and he was saying something like, “Well, some of us look more kindly on Castro’s policies than others…” I looked up, he grinned at me, the largely immigrant class of city workers ruffled a little. What had I said — I wanted to visit Cuba, I wanted to know more about Cuba’s surprisingly successful biomed industry? sheesh.

The Bearer of Bad News

Sometimes I feel I have been cursed with a long, slow adolescence. Some days I feel my body has been put together wrong, like my awkwardness is genetic. Broadcast without my ability to help it.

At my new job, where I manage administrivia for a class of city social workers, I was required to call a student out of class and relay to him that there was a family emergency. My boss relayed the message from his cel phone; he was not going to be able to tell the student, and he didn’t tell me the nature of the emergency over the phone. For a moment I panicked. I have never been called upon to be the sole carrier of really bad news before. I frantically cast about thinking of someone else who could do it. I didn’t think I would be sensitive enough.

To my relief this was not unexpected news to the student in question, a soft-spoken, solid man who pulled himself out of the class and followed me down the hall to the phone. He told me both his parents, who lived far away in another country, were very sick. I murmured condolences with what I hoped would not be read as feigned concern. I did feel awful.

He called his supervisor. He had some difficulty reaching her, so he left the office saying he would return to call in a few minutes. I stayed glued to some paperwork I was doing, unable to really process it but worried I would seem nosy if I was there listening and not doing something else. I scanned the page over and over, aimlessly waving my pen above it. I thought I should surreptitiously replace the chair he’d been sitting in to use the phone with the more comfortable chair I was occupying. He came back to receive the news. I found myself twisting my hands. His father had died, and I was hearing about it from his end of the conversation. His rich voice went hoarse. Only then did I realize that the socially appropriate thing to do would have been to leave him alone while he made the call, but I was trapped with him between me and the door. To get out at that point I would have had to push past him, or ask him to get up.

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One thing I have learned from my interactions with people from minority groups is that no matter how bad I feel about a given social exchange, I should consider how much worse the exchange may feel to them. It never occurs to me until after the fact.

Shameless Self-Promotion/ Shameless Self-Congratulation

the writer’s dance

I have (I think, in retrospect) committed a horrible faux pas and posted an entire story as a comment on Kuro5hin in response to this story. It was something I’d been meaning to post to my site. arrrgh… never posted to Kuro5hin before, what a way to start. :PPP

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So after a day of being up on K5 the post is now the highest-rated in response to the article :D! It’s even more highly rated than a post by the founder of the site (ok, so I admit his rating of my post, one of three, is part of why my rating was so high.)

whoopee… something new for my ego to get tied up in. (Better than it getting tied up in my app for an internship at Harper’s; I got turned down, tacked the rejection letter to my door and moped for a weekend.)

Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen

Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen are a brand. Let’s just admit it, all right? Not people, a brand. Thanks to the reporter who stated the obvious in this article about their new magazine. It’s called marykateandashley magazine. Clever, right? Did you know that the brand promoted by these horrible humanlike by-products of the television industry includes a cartridge which will turn your Game Boy into a day planner? Did you know that these terrible sirens are enticing children to do things which normally make children run screaming in fear, like taking cruises to Stockholm? Did you know they like shoes? Oh, stop already, I’ve had enough. How long until we hear that these scrawny chicken-birds are posing underage for P1ayb0y, and are reminded with a creepy-crawly feeling up our spines of the first time we saw them gurgle and coo at the camera on Full House?

Just so you don’t get the wrong idea and think that being a twin involves having some horrible genetic defect that makes you want to turn yourself into an advertising device, I want to remind you that I have twin sisters who are perfectly normal.

Vinyl Causes Cancer

Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman, writing for the Corporate Predators mailing list, noted in their latest column that tonight PBS will show an exposé detailing the chemical industry’s silence about vinyl, which they have known since the 1950s is a cancer-causing substance.

More interesting to those of you who are smoking-gun wonks will be the more than 35,000 documents that will be released on this site tomorrow morning, primary-source evidence that Union Carbide, Dow Chemical, and others did indeed know vinyl is a carcinogen, and tried to keep it on the down-low.

no more vinyl pants for you!

Found Documents: Among Other Things

Cleaned up my files today. “Files” being a wicker basket of crap, four plastic in/outboxes of crap, and the dust-bunny-riddled piles of crap all over my floor.

Among the things I filed were the following:

the above Bazooka Joe comic;

a torn out page from a day planner, which I had found tucked in a library copy of the Odyssey and which read in part “Library: Check for Unibomber/ Get Video for history” and which accompanied a now-lost card or flyer for a prison rehab job service;

at least two fragments of cardboard torn from maxi pad boxes with the email addresses of the incarcerated of the April 15th police brutality rally, remnants of my failed attempt to facilitate our release;

a notebook with a frail brown leather cover stamped with the word “THINK” in the center and “G.B. ANDREWS” in the lower corner (my grandpa’s; I do not intend to mar it with further use);

a flyer for my favorite ballroom teacher’s upcoming show “Cool” (Sunday, April 1st at the Kraine Theatre at 8:00 p.m., call (917) 568-8766 for tickets if you have any sense and go go GO, he is a genius), in which for some reason he’s billed as “Chicago Louie;”

the quote “… PR Men, whose purpose it is to corruppt natural relationships for the purpose of making $,” which I (perhaps mistakenly) attributed to an Argentine writer named Marcos Aquinas;

a spiral notebook of interview notes from my never-published article on last year’s Geek Pride Festival, recording among other things an announcement from the festival organizer: “Folks, please don’t hack the network and take it down… This is IN NO WAY to be construed as a challenge” (he later called this the “Don’t Take The Brown Acid” plea for this zeitgeist);

half a dozen rub-on tattoos from the awful PBS cartoon “Dragon Tales;”

and a flashcard from my time in Sicily which says “Mi chiamo/ KEE-AHMO,” on one side and, on the other, “UMass students: ‘Tacobelle’ is all one word. It means Mexican Food. Also Cheap Food.” (I am pained that I don’t remember if this is my line or someone else’s).

If squirrels kept file systems, you’d find caches of manila folders labelled “DO,” “Receipts Early NYC,” “Stickers, Propaganda, and Mailable Art,” and “AFTASCHOO” — in other words, files just like mine — under every tree with the acorns. I am not a good filer. I use a perfectly orderly system; it’s just that I feel more compelled to keep things like the nitpicky handwritten letters from my landlady about how I am misusing the dish drying rack than I am to keep good files of utility bills, loan payments, taxes, and receipts. It also takes about three months for me to get any given scrap into the right file.

I feel terribly nervous about it. I was encouraged to keep a ledger of my expenses from the time I was six, and ever since I decided that recording each penny I found on the sidewalk was ridiculous and stopped, I’ve felt guilty. I look at a copy of my bank statement that has fallen from a chair onto the floor and been moved around under piles of clothes for weeks, and I hear my last boss’s cronelike voice telling me I should never let a piece of paper pass through my hands more than once.

The worst file is the one I think of as my “memento file.” The busted stub of the gourd rattle I broke in a vigorous moment at the Unpermitted Parade last December is likely to end up in this file. So are about a dozen nametages from IMCs where I have worked and the Apple “Think Different” ad with a picture of Cesar Chavez. Anything and everything can go in the Memento File, even things that aren’t flat, which means I end up not with filing cabinets of nice flat papers, but boxes and bags of wadded-up detritus which may not ever be of any use to me.

The one thing that didn’t go into a file today was the rejection letter I just received in the mail from Harper’s Magazine. I didn’t get the internship. (As far as I can tell they’re not even willing to consider me as an intern in a less competitive season than summer.) I did file four or five documents I had wanted to use in my internship application, but I didn’t find them in time to send it out. I also filed four or five letters to friends and family members which I’d never sent.

This, then, is the crux of it. I want to go to graduate school in anthropology or social science or some field where I can pore over documents and catch the telling details of human life. Right now, my natural tendency to do these things has got me so busy catching up with my own mess that I don’t have the time to send in an application.

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Worst Associated Press story ever.