Archive for August, 2008

i have a dream…

that Obama will win the presidency.

Wow, watching last night’s speech was something else. If there is anyone who says Obama cannot lead, they are just full of it. He had the crowd eating out of his hand, and if he had asked them to get out of their seats and take on John McCain personally, they would have done it. He is an exceptional orator, and while the Republicans love to point out how that is just a bunch of hot air, they forget other exceptional orators that have been elected President: Lincoln. FDR. Even their own Ronald Reagan. All of these men were able to stir people to action because of their ability to motivate others to their cause. The President cannot do everything, he needs to lead and inspire his team. I have full confidence that Obama will do just that.

I was so struck by the fact that it was 45 years ago that Dr King made his famous speech–would he have dreamed that 45 years later–to the day–a black man would be in serious competition for the white house? What a marvelous fulfillment of the promise he felt for his people. It is sad that it took so long, but I think he would be pleased. Especially by the fact that white people are voting for a black man–they are not judging him by the color of his skin, but by his character. Yes, there are still racist assholes out there, and I worry their votes will affect the outcome of the election, but I hope that the good in most people will triumph over the miserable few.

what makes a good music store

 

I don’t want to call it a “record store”, because it sells so much more. But that is what I knew it as. One of them still survives–and thrives–on the east side of Cleveland. I spent more hours here during my teens and twenties. The owner, a huge Paul McCartney fan like myself, always had the most incredible selection. Whatever you wanted, he would get it. Back before the internet, that was something in itself.

But what have we lost in buying music over the web? Mostly, the socializing with others who shared your passion. I met more Beatles fans in that place. The conversation usually went something like “Have you heard [obscure bootleg album name]?” “No, where did you get that?” and off you would go, in search of music that until five minutes ago, you didn’t even know existed, but now you needed. 

Of course, like all good 1970s era record shops, they sold all the stuff you had to have to properly listen to the music of the time: black light posters, incense, and t-shirts. They probably sold roach clips and water pipes at one time, most of these places did. But the best thing about the store was the large selection of “imports”–a code word for bootlegs. For a Beatles fan, these were the holy grail of records. In those wonderful pre-RIAA days, fans did not care what the suits thought. They were squares who just wanted to keep you down and silence artistic expression. They probably hated the music, too. We cared not what they said and bought the records anyway. This place was my main supplier.

This store still sells vinyl, which as any music lover knows, is superior to the throwaway cd in its flimsy case. The incense, t-shirts and posters are still for sale, along with bins and bins of cds and even cassette tapes. I still visit them when I go home, just to pick up an “import” for old-times sake, even though I can easily find them on the internet. The internet doesn’t have the owner, his love for music or an old Abbey Road poster on the wall.

i am a dumbass magnet

I am beginning to think I have a target painted on my car. Yes, for the fourth time this year, I have been involved in a car accident! Two were small dents (one of which was my fault, I backed into a pole in a parking garage. The other was a freak thing where an ambulance attendant (dumbass #1) did not secure the wheels on his gurney and it rolled into my car door). A much more serious one happened back in January, when, three days after picking my car up from the body shop after the pole incident, a woman (major dumbass #2) turned left in front of me and totalled my purple PT Cruiser. My knee has finally healed. I am still having bad dreams from that accident and still going through arbitration with the insurance company.

So yesterday, I am driving my new PT Cruiser through a parking lot and Dumbass #3 pulls out and just slams into the side of my car. Of course, the kid is driving a big fat monster SUV with tow hooks on the front of it. Those tow hooks rip into my chrome wheel (and my fender), bending it so the car is not drivable. WTF do people need that shit on their car for? I asked him and he had no idea (”they just came with the car, man, I dunno”). SUV drivers are so invariably assholes on the road–they expect everyone else to get out of their way or suffer the consequences.

I feel so depressed about this–I work hard to have a nice car, pay out the wazoo for insurance, and dumbasses keep finding me.

1970s fashion was uh… not so cool

 

So check out this page from the 1974 Sears catalogue. I was twelve years old that year and in 7th grade and I thought these fashions were HOT. Yes, I did–I actually owned that very pair of shoes and those blue plaid pants, which if I remember correctly, were very itchy in their magnificent petroleum product way. I did not have the bodysuit, however; even I knew that was a fashion disaster in the making. I can remember girls who did though, and how they would be in the bathroom stall at school, trying to snap the crotches and failing as the thing sprang up to their necks like a crazed window shade. Gawd, I can’t believe I dressed like this!

Don’t you just love the Lemon Frog logo? How hip. How cool and so very with it. Note the bubbly green type–taken straight from that black light Haight-Ashbury concert poster hanging on your wall. Sears was really against The Man and very Anti-Establishment–but shhhh, your parents don’t know that. See how cool we are?  Lemon frogs are like strawberry alarm clocks and plasticine porters with looking glass ties but better, ’cause you can lick one and get high.