Winehouse to Boyle: Get a Grip on Yourself!

LONDON.  On the heels of a report in USMagazine that plain-Jane singing sensation Susan Boyle had twice cursed at fellow guests at the Wembley Plaza Hotel, neo-soul singer Amy Winehouse urged the 48-year-old to go into rehab.

Boyle:  “You can shove it up a place where the sun don’t shine, as long as that place isn’t one that’s mine!”

“You can’t just drop the F-bomb on total strangers in a world-class city like London,” Winehouse said in a post on her blog.  “That’s my job.”

Winehouse:  “You’ve really got to go to rehab, girl, or take a truckload of drugs . . .”

Boyle has previously been forced to retract her claim that she’d never been kissed after Malcolm Lowry, author of Under the Volcano, disclosed in a posthumous book that the two had spent a decadent weekend in Tijuana, Mexico, emerging from a squalid bedroom only long enough to drink shots of tequila and eat refried beans.  “Susan was the best lay I ever had,” Lowry said in detailed notes he kept of their love trysts.  “When she was completely satisfied, she’d sing a song from an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, like ‘Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina’.”

Dramatic transformation from frumpy look with glasses, to frumpy look with contacts.

Boyle won the hearts of millions when she surprised viewers of “Britain’s Got Talent” with her rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream” from Les Miserables.  “I thought that was a novel by Victor Hugo,” the previously-harsh judge Simon Cowell said.  “Nobody told me there was a CD in the back!”

Winehouse is the dissolute white female vocalist whose imitations of black girl group singers of the 50′s are a hit with white listeners.  “Susan should not try to be someone she’s not,” Winehouse said as she applied do-it-yourself caulking to her crumbling septum.

Your Guide to Fenway Park Fun!

Fenway Park–home of the Boston Red Sox–is a national treasure.  How do I know?  Because no other major league stadium has been immortalized in a snappy three-word catchphrase by a major American novelist, as John Updike did when he hung the tag “lyric little bandbox” on the place.  Stick that in your Oxford Anthology of American Literature, pal!

John Updike, bullpen coach of the 2004 World Champion Red Sox

And yet Fenway’s mystique is a two-edged sword, a Scylla and Charybdis, an Abbott and Costello.  Just as the place radiates the charm of your 97-year-old uncle, its furniture, fixtures and equipment have outlived their useful lives, like your uncle’s eyes, memory and bladder.  Here are some tips to help you get the most from your day at the oldest of all current major league stadiums:

Seeing-eye single through Scylla and Charybdis

People Were Apparently Skinnier in 1912:  The seats at Fenway were designed for a different time, when a dollar bought a bagful of groceries, but most people only had a nickel.  Fenway’s seats are the narrowest in the major leagues, so you will want to fast for two days before attending a game, the better to slip under the flapping love handles of the fat fan seated next to you.

All Roads Lead to Rome, But Some Aisles Go Nowhere.  By a weird inversion of the laws of physics, Fenway has aisles that lead to–nowhere.  Many parents have been lost when they leave their kids to go get hot dogs, admonishing them (the kids, not the hot dogs) not to talk to strangers, only to find themselves trapped in a Bermuda Triangle surrounded by fans from Swansea, Seekonk and Scituate saying things like “I hod to loff”.  Be sure and bring dental x-rays of your kids’ teeth for positive identification when you are finally reunited.

A classic!

Take a Leak the Babe Ruth way!  Fenway’s restrooms have been lovingly maintained in the early twentieth-century style that is now reproduced at great expense in Restoration Hardware catalogs.  Maintenance crews preserve the historical patina of les toilettes by cleaning them once every twentieth century,whether they need it or not.  To get a sense of the ambiance of Fenway’s few and far between salles de bain, complete this simile, the apercu of a long-time Red Sox fan.  “Hey–this place smells like my old lady’s: (a) cologne, (b) armpit, (c) (other body part).”  See page 43 for answer.

 

Yankees and Red Sox fans exchange addresses in the hope of becoming Pen Pals.

Get in a Fight:  Everybody knows baseball is the most boring of the four major sports groups.  What better way to liven up a day at the game than to borrow from the fifth or sixth major sport, boxing!  Your fellow fans will appreciate the diversion you create from a scoreless pitcher’s duel or double-digit pounding when the wind is blowing out.  No less a military strategist that Sun Tzu, author of The Art of War, first laid down the fundamental rule of bleacher fighting:  “Fight downhill.”  Always punch the guy in the row in front of you, never punch the guy in the row behind you.

When Somebody Throws Something, Duck:  There are numerous security guards stationed throughout the park, ready to watch the game from their privileged vantage points while the Fenway Faithful spill beer on you.  When you get the attention of a uniformed usher, be sure and tip him for wiping off your seat!

Grandfathers of the Jazz Clarinet

It is hard to believe now, but seventy years ago the functional equivalent of the superstars of rock guitar were–clarinet players.  Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw and Woody Herman were the Hendrix, Clapton and Allman of their day, and young boys eagerly subjected themselves to clarinet lessons in the hope of someday serenading swooning bobby soxers standing at the edge of a bandstand.

Benny Goodman

The white stars of swing clarinet were preceded by an earlier generation of African-American clarinetists whose contributions to the development of the instrument are now largely forgotten when the so-called “Big Band” era that made wealthy men of Goodman and other later greats is discussed.

Johnny Dodds, painting by R. Crumb

Johnny Dodds, born in 1892 in New Orleans, was the first.  He is heard on the Louis Armstrong Hot Five and Hot Seven records and, while not quite a soloist of Armstrong’s calibre (who is?), his unadorned melodic inventions and strong tone in both upper and lower registers created a mold for profitable use by those who would take up the instrument after him.

Louis Armstrong’s Hot Five

Next came Sidney Bechet, born in 1897 in New Orleans, a protean figure whose forceful sound and apparently inexhaustible store of musical ideas made him the first jazz soloist (beating Armstrong by a few months) to be noted as such.  Known for his powerful vibrato (which annoyed as many as it attracted), Bechet made his recording debut with Clarence Williams in 1923, played occasionally with Armstrong, and joined an early edition of Duke Ellington’s orchestra.  For the most part, however, his ego was too big to share the stage with other soloists, and he lived the life of a jazz maverick, traveling in Europe and missing out on the swing boom of the 30′s until 1938, when his recording of Gershwin’s “Summertime” was a hit for Hugues Panassie, leading to a contract with RCA’s Bluebird label.

Sidney Bechet

Bechet was two years younger than Jimmy Noone, another New Orleans native, but he instructed his elder, who rebelled against his instructor’s teachings at least as far as vibrato was concerned, developing a smooth tone that was adopted by the white players of the swing era.

Jimmy Noone, center, with Baby Dodds on drums, and Roy Eldridge on trumpet, Three Deuces Club, Chicago, 1940

Noone moved to Chicago in 1917 and worked there steadily through the 1930s, first with Freddie Keppard’s Creole Band, then King Oliver, then Doc Cook’s Dreamland Orchestra. 

Earl Hines

Noone began to lead a band in 1928 at the Apex Club that featured Earl Hines, and together they recorded for Vocalion, including an early version of ”Sweet Lorraine” (which became Noone’s theme song) and “Four or Five Times”, a genial but ribald number on which the vocally-challenged Noone duets with Hines to amusing effect.  “Four or five times,” they sing, “there is delight, to doing things right, four or five times.”  Contrast that with the sappy and sentimental “Three Times a Lady” recorded by Lionel Richie, and you will agree that not all modern developments represent progress.

Raymond Carver, Poet of the Short Story

Today is the 71st anniversary of Raymond Carver’s birth.  Carver, who died at the age of 50 in 1988, was a writer who produced poems that were like short stories, and short stories that were like poems.  He probably didn’t lengthen his time by the heavy drinking that he indulged in until the last decade of his life, when he seemed to find peace.

Carver grew up in a working-class home in Washington; his father was an alcoholic mill worker, his mother a sometimes waitress and retail clerk.  He was married in 1957 at the age of 19 to a 16-year-old girl.  They had a daughter six months later and a son the next year.  Carver worked as a janitor, sawmill laborer, library assistant and delivery man.  His wife worked as a waitress, teacher, salesperson and administrative assistant.

As a boy he had been an avid reader of Mickey Spillane mysteries and outdoors magazines.  He became interested in writing in his twenties and began to take creative writing courses; he eventually received a bachelor’s degree from Humboldt State College in California.  With a degree, he was hired as a textbook editor, the first job he’d ever had that allowed him to work with words; he was fired after three years as his writing style was understandably unsuited to the genre of the science textbook.

Carver’s writing didn’t appear in print until he was in his thirties, and then under the humble auspices of a college literary club.  Carver’s first short story collection, Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?, was published in 1976, when he was thirty-eight.  It struck many readers as spare and unfinished, like the interior of the hunting and fishing cabins he had spent much time in over the years.  Some critics stuck the “minimalist” label on him, but there is some dispute as to whether the style was truly his, or imposed upon him by Gordon Lish, his editor at the time.  Carver’s second wife, the poet Tess Gallagher, is currently attempting to republish the stories collected in What We Talk About When We Talk About Love in their original, unedited form, an effort that the publisher is resisting.

 

Raymond Carver and Tess Gallagher

I heard Carver read once before he died, in 1981 when What We Talk About was first published.  He had an unimposing presence, better suited to the many low-wage jobs he’d held over the years than the mantle of literary lion, compared to Hemingway and Chekhov, that he assumed at the end of his life.  He had a faint voice and autographed copies of his second collection without ceremony, as if he were still somewhat surprised to find that, after all the years of scuffling, he’d produced something that a roomful of admirers at the other end of the continent in Boston would turn out for.

In an interview, Carver was once asked how he found time and the will to write during his years of obscurity, when he had to work long hours to make ends meet.  His response was that he would take scraps of paper and a pencil with him wherever he went, and would use every spare moment–waiting for his wash in a laundromat is one example I recall–to write something, if only the thoughts running through his head, or an inchoate idea for a short story he was trying to shape.

Carver is buried in Port Angeles, Washington.  Two poems are inscribed on his head stone, Gravy and the following, Late Fragment:

And did you get what

you wanted from this life, even so?

I did.

And what did you want?

To call myself beloved, to feel myself

beloved on the earth.

Declaring Himself Liberated, Bush Will Dance on “Ellen”

CRAWFORD, Texas.  After declaring himself “liberated” from the burdens of his two-term presidency last week at a high school graduation ceremony in New Mexico, former President George W. Bush today mapped out a plan for personal growth that includes an appearance on “Ellen”, the talk show hosted by lesbian comedian Ellen DeGeneres.

“So that’s my commencement speech.  I will now distribute the malt liquor so many of you asked me to buy.”

“If I had to pick out the saddest day of my life, I guess it would have to be when I heard she’d gone over to the gay side,” Bush mused on his screened-in back porch.  “We used to watch her sitcom and just laugh our heads off, and all of a sudden every joke had some lesbo twist to it.”

Cast of “Ellen”

Bush said he has come to accept DeGeneres for who she is, and has been practicing the “Cotton Eyed Joe”, a popular “spoke” line dance in Texas.  “I’m gonna nail it, you watch,” Bush said with his trademark smile-smirk, referring to the portion of the show when DeGeneres asks a guest to dance with her.  During the 2008 presidential campaign Democratic nominee Barack Obama performed a stiff huckle-buck with DeGeneres, causing him to lose votes in many inner-city precincts.

Cotton Eyed Joe

In addition to his terpsichorean skills, Bush’s liberation has resulted in a “Mission Accomplished” tattoo on his left bicep, and a new Toro riding mower.  “I wanted to get a big Harley,” Bush told reporters whom he asked to get off his newly-seeded lawn, “but Laura said to take things slow.”

White Supremacists Have Second Thoughts as Biden Gaffes Pile Up

WASHINGTON, D.C.   An upsurge in white supremacist activity following the inauguration of Barack Obama as America’s first president of African descent appears to have abated as leaders of racist groups take a closer look at the intelligence and public statements of Vice President Joseph Biden.

“I’m not like politicians who are not as dumb as they look.”

“We may have miscalculated,” said Byron Dorgantz, president of the Pillar of Fire, a group that believes civilization reached its apogee with the initial broadcast of the Sonny Tufts Show in Atlanta, Georgia.  “It appears there’s one white man who’s mentally inferior to Obama–Joe Biden.”

White supremacist couple, doing “White Cupcake” dance.

“White supremacy” is a generic term applied to a cross-section of political groups that believe in, and promote policies in furtherance of, the alleged superiority of white people to those of other races.  Biden is white, but has consistently underperformed when compared to politicians of mixed or non-white race.

“Go ahead, test me:  How many fingers am I holding up?”

“Joe Biden is every multiculturalists dream,” complained Eric Schlosser, a grand vizier of the Armageddon Patrol.  “You wouldn’t want him to marry your daughter if you wanted your grandkids to get into a good college.”

“Biden isn’t really white!  Biden isn’t really white!”

Biden attended college at the University of Delaware, where he ranked 506th out of 688 in his class.  His only “A” grade was in physical education.  Biden was accused of plagiarism at the Syracuse University College of Law, which he described as “the biggest bore in the world,” and subsequently when he ran for president in 1988.  He finished 76th out of a class of 85 in law school, a ranking which he continues to maintain put him in the top half of his class.

“Must look serious.  Can’t fall asleep while articulate guy is talking.”

“‘Half’ is such an amorphous concept,” Biden said in a news conference to address charges of intellectual inferiority.  “Do you mean left half, right half–which?”

“Do you mind if I borrow your Psych notes?”

The growing disenchantment with Biden as a potential successor to Obama is believed to be a positive development by the Secret Service, the federal agency that protects the President.  “White supremacists may be dumb,” said Special Agent Tyson Warner, “but they ain’t crazy.”

Cheney: Spanish Inquisition Produced Valuable Information

WASHINGTON.  Former Vice President Dick Cheney took on a new adversary yesterday, calling on Pope Benedict XVI to release documents to support his contention that the Spanish Inquisition produced valuable information through torture.

Cheney:  “Yes, I’m irritating–but I’m irritating you!”

“The Spanish Inquisition used torture effectively, including waterboarding,” Cheney said in a speech to the Association of American Thumbscrew Manufacturers, a trade group.  “Without torture, we would still be in the Dark Ages and wouldn’t know that the earth revolves around the sun.”

Waterboarding in Spanish Inquisition:  “This is gonna hurt you more than it hurts me.”

The Spanish Inquisition was an ecclesiastical tribunal established by monarchs Ferdinand II and Isabela I to maintain orthodoxy among baptized Catholics.  Things got out of hand when a barrel of sacramental wine was tapped, and the body became an equal-opportunity oppressor of Jews, Muslims, Rastafarians and Shriners.

 

“Step on it–here comes the Spanish Inquisition!”

Cheney has maintained that secret documents within archives at the Vatican support his claim that torture is used frequently and effectively throughout the world by civilized nations and big brothers of younger siblings.  “What’s Indian sunburn but torture by another name?” Cheney asked rhetorically, referring to the physical trauma inflicted by twisting the skin of another’s arm in opposite directions.

Tigger administers a noogie:  Does the UN know about this?

The Pope addressed Cheney’s allegations in his weekly encyclical and wrap-up of sports highlights.  “I donta know where-a Cheney comes uppa with this stuff,” the German Pope said in the bogus Italian accent he is required to use as head of the Roman Catholic church.  “Everybody knows the sun revolves around the earth.”

Chip Clip Voted Most Important Advance of 20th Century

WASHINGTON, D.C.  The National Academy of Science today released a poll indicating that a majority of its members consider the Chip Clip, a device for keeping chips and snack foods fresh, to be the most significant technological development of the 20th century.

 

Chip Clips

“The twentieth century was a time of tremendous innovation, what with the computer, the atomic bomb and the telephone answering machine,” said Dr. Nelson Donelan, president of the organization, “but none has had anywhere near the impact on snack food freshness that the Chip Clip has.”

 

Salad Shooter:  A disappointing second place.

A chip clip works by creating a seal that prevents oxygen, an odorless and tasteless gas, from spoiling the contents of a cellophane bag.  “Sure we can save millions of lives through vaccinations,” noted Donelan, “but billions of people around the globe enjoy tasty, crisp chips and snack foods.”

UN General Assembly:  “What’s with the vegetables–we want chips!” 

Voting for the prize was to have been completed in 2008, but a final decision was delayed due to protests by supporters of the Salad Shooter, a device for slicing vegetables.  “The Salad Shooter creates thinly-sliced produce that can be used for salads, garnishes or cruditees,” noted UN Under Assistant Secretary for Nutrition Eve-Elise Gerard.  “If there were any justice in the world–which there is not–the Salad Shooter would have won.”

Sub-Saharan hunting lodge:  “These chips are fresh!”

The Chip Clip’s utility is greatest in latitudes where high temperatures and humidity cause chips to become stale and limp, such as sub-Saharan Africa.  Rioting often breaks out at teen dances and hunting lodges in equatorial regions when snack foods lose their freshness.

“They said the nachos were stale.”

The prize consists of a $1 million cash award, which will be shared by the three co-inventors Aaron Garland, Charles Warner and Ellis Chalmers, along with the inevitable attention that top science awards bring from supermodels.

“By jove, I believe we have created an impermeable seal!”

“You would not believe the invitations we are getting since we won,” Chalmers said with excitement, spittle forming at his lips.  “I get first dibs because my last name comes first in the alphabet.”

Supermodels for science.

As for the women, they said they were more interested in scientific innovation than the lifestyle that the prize money could afford them.  “I fall in love with a man’s mind, not his wallet,” said Brigitte per Watteau, a 6′ 1″ Swede with blue eyes and shoulder-length blonde hair.  “Although money helps, especially if you are a dweeby little science nerd.”

For Some Men, Lack of Catch is Getting Fishy

CHEATHAM, Mass.  “This town,” says Charlie “Paz” diPasquale as he surveys boats at anchor in the harbor here, “is a quaint little drinking village with a fishing problem.”  His companions, commercial fishermen all, laugh and sip at their beers, having knocked off for the day at noon because “the fish ain’t worth it,” according to Lenny Riznanski.

 

Cheatham, Mass.

Back home, Riznanski’s wife Evelyn says she’d like to take her first vacation in years from her waitressing job, but can’t afford to.  “He never seems to catch anything,” she says of her husband.  “If he was on vacation, I don’t think I could tell the difference,” she adds, given his indifferent work habits.

Caesar salad, sans anchovies.

The fishermen of Cheatham say they are victims of America’s changing tastes; where once a Caesar salad would contain five or six fresh anchovies, the emergence of variations such as the chicken Caesar and the Mexican caesar means that demand for anchovies is low, depressing prices.

“This one’s too big–throw him back.”

“Why should I risk my neck over a bunch of skimpy little fish that won’t buy me a beer and a pack of cigarettes when I get back on dry land?” asks diPasquale.  “It’s frustrating, but that’s life I guess.”

“Get on that boat and go fishing–or no sex for you!”

But the women of Cheatham don’t suffer from the same sense of resignation.  They’ve organized a “Don’t Hold the Anchovies!” drive in the hopes of reviving America’s taste for the small, herring-like carnivorous fish.

“Who wants to have anchovy breath?”

“We took a lesson from PETA, then reversed it,” says Ellie diPasquale, referring to the animal rights group whose confrontational tactics have caused some women to hesitate before buying fur products.  “We go right up to these bony-ass babes eating their luncheon salads and say ‘Hey–what’s with the no anchovies?’”

Anchovies–dig in!

But the men of Cheatham say the solution to the problem isn’t that simple.  “Have you ever tried to get a worm on a hook small enough for an anchovy’s mouth?” asks Mike Webb, who supplements his meager fishing income with unemployment in the off-season.  “By the time you finish, it’s time to come home for dinner.”

Jerry Lemuel, a marine biologist from the nearby Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute sitting at the next table, can’t help overhearing and interrupts with a question.  “You know,” he says, “that anchovies are found off the west coast of the U.S., but not the east?”

The “fishermen” confer for a moment before responding.  “That’s our story,” says Webb, “and we’re sticking to it.”

The Last Game

Don’t come ’round here looking for the fresh, clean, family-friendly content this site is known for this afternoon.  I’m taking off at 3:30 to watch my kid pitch what may be the final start of his high school career.  He will take the mound today with a 3-0 record and three home runs last week alone!  He hit them, I mean; he didn’t give them up.

It’s an occasion that causes normally hard-bitten sports writers–and Boston has them by the pallet-load–to turn sentimental and wax rhapsodic.  I have to say, now that I’m in their shoes, I can’t blame them.  My kid didn’t get a scholarship and will thus try to walk on when he gets to college, but he may never play another competitive game.

Premature babi–hey, who gave them Sprite, the refreshing lemon-lime soft drink?

He’s 6’2″ and weighs 165 pounds, but when he came into this world, the prospects that he would ever develop into such a strapping young man were slim.  He was born a month premature; for an infant boy, that means his lungs were dangerously underdeveloped.

“Is there anything you can do about it?” I asked the doctor who delivered him. 

“We recommend that they go on drugs right away,” she replied.

“What kind of drugs?” my wife asked nervously.

“Steroids,” the doctor said.

Jose Canseco:  He, uh, does a lot of push-ups.

I looked at my wife, and I could tell she was with me 100%.  “Go ahead,” I said, “Double the normal dosage.”

Thanks to the miracles of modern science, my boy was out of the incubator in a few days, but we kept him on the medication.  No point in taking chances when a kid’s lungs are at risk.

It paid off, let me tell you.  By the time he started T-ball he was hitting tape-measure shots, 565-foot home runs over everything.  Eventually, we lowered the dosage as the ‘roid-rage fines began to get expensive.  I’ll never forget the look on the face of the teenaged umpire who called him out on a ball that just barely grazed the outside corner of the plate.  My kid chased him back to his crappy Honda Civic and flipped it over–at the age of 10!  That’s the kind of upper-body strength you need to hit with power to the opposite field.

As any parent of a young athlete will tell you, a lot of sacrifice goes into the making of a kid who can play at the Division I level.  There was the $45 per half hour hitting coach, the pseudo-religious earrings a la Barry Bonds, the heavy chains that look like they could have been lifted off the neck of a Rottweiler, or an investment banker’s second wife.  But it’s all part of the great American tradition of baseball.  

“I don’t really like you, but I’m 0 for 21 in June.”

I don’t mean to suggest that my kid’s career has been one long home run trot around the basepaths.  Like any baseball player, he’s had his ups and downs.  I remember when he was 11 and started the season 0-for-June for the Orthwein Insurance Agency A’s.  One night I heard him sobbing to himself as I walked past his bedroom.

“What’s the matter, kiddo?” I asked as I sat down beside him and tousled his hair.

“I’ve lost it, dad,” he said through his sobs.  “My career is over.”

“No it’s not,” I said reassuringly.  “You’re just going through a dry spell.”

He calmed down a bit.  “You think so?” he asked.

“Sure.  What you need is a slumpbuster!”

“What’s that?”

“Well, it’s a girl who you might not really like as a friend because she hasn’t got the greatest personal hygiene or something, but you, uh, decide to . . . to spend some time with her to change your luck.”

He was silent for a moment.  “So somebody like Susan van de Kamp?”

“Is that the chubby girl in your class who’s always wearing her Little Dutch Girl outfit to school on Show ‘n Tell Day?”

“That’s her,” he said.  “She picks her butt in line to the cafeteria.”

My eyes misted over.  “She sounds perfect.  Why don’t you give her a whirl.”

“Like how?”

There are some things you can’t coach, but I gave it a try.  “You do something to make her think you like her.”

“What do the big-leaguers do?” he asked me.

“They, uh, invite them over to spend the night, sort of like you and Timmy Salmon last Friday.”

“Yuk!” he said, clearly repulsed by the thought.

“Don’t worry,” I said.  “At the Little League level, all you have to do is throw a spit ball at her.”

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