shuttlecock

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Childhood can be a tricky subject to write about.  There are some stories that are great, but they may not necessarily be the kind of thing you’d want everyone to know about.  Either that or they involve people who you may still be friends with, who may not be too thrilled about having those stories told.

Maybe there are ‘secret’ stories that nobody else ever knew about, like the first time you pulled your pants down with someone, or the first time someone touched you in an intimate way, but you were still young enough that it never occurred to you to go any further.  These are the kind of things my friend and I were talking about in a phone conversation today, and we were laughing like hyenas the entire time.  Since then, I started compiling a list of stories, so that I can be thinking about how to tell them in a way that isn’t just gratuitously prurient. . .or TMI.

Here’s one that should be a good sort of segue.  If you’re reading at work, or if R-rated subject matter isn’t something that interests you for whatever reason, I invite you to stop reading now, because this entry is about to take a distinct turn for the worse.

My dad used to collect porno magazines, and he had a few books as well.  He made no secret about it, and he kept them all catalogued in boxes in the bedroom.  My parents also owned the book The Joy of Sex, and as a matter of fact, I don’t remember them making a big deal about it if my little brother or I snuck a peek at that kind of stuff occasionally.  I guess their feeling was that the more we learned on our own, the less they’d have to actually teach us themselves.

My dad mostly gravitated toward soft-core stuff like Playboy, but he had a few issues of Hustler floating around, as well as a couple of harder things like High Society, all of which was not a big deal to my brother and me.  He had one that we both distinctly remember, though, which was called Shuttlecock.  The idea behind this one was that a man and a woman would be in their yard playing badminton, and before long their clothes would start coming off, by which time they’d start getting it on.  My brother and I wouldn’t have thought twice about this magazine either, ordinarily, were it not for the hilarious captions that were on a few of the full-page pictures.  They were sayings such as, ‘They would fuck for a while, then she would suck his enormous cock.’ That kind of stuff completely cracked us up.  I remember asking, as we were looking at the magazine, “Is this supposed to be sexy?”  I’ve tried to find pictures of that for a while now, because I thought it would be funny to send to my brother, but so far I’ve come up empty-handed.

My dad also had a book in his night stand [Edit:  I just now remembered the name of it:  Pissing in the Snow] that was full of antiquated naughty stories and songs.  For example, there was one about a guy who would ride around town in his horse-drawn carriage and pick up women he saw on the street.  They were just bizarre, and we couldn’t figure out A) why our dad was into them, and B) why anybody would find them arousing.  I also remember a golf-related book that was called Dead Solid Perfect [I can’t believe I remember these names!], that involved a lot of swearing and sex.   It also prominently featured these brothers who would dress like nuns, unzip their habits and pee in whichever conspicuous location they found themselves.  They’d also stop people on the street and say, “Can you point me in the direction of the nearest bar?  I’m just aching to get a hold of a nice warm dick.”  So. . .um. . .yeah.

The worst and funniest occurrence happened when I was about fourteen, long after my parents had split up, and my dad had remarried.  LittleBrother and I were visiting for the summer, and we had a friend over.  We wanted to show the antiquated naughty book to our friend, so we walked into the bedroom and said, “You have to see this.  It’s right in his night stand.  Wait. . .what’s this?  Oh, pictures.  Pictures of Dad. . .and that’s our. . .stepmom. . .AAAAAUGH!”   We had inadvertently stumbled onto their stash of polaroids, and the images burned themselves into our impressionable little brains in a way that the magazines never could.  I wish there was a way to excise them, because seeing explicit pictures of your parents having sex is too much to process.

To this day, neither of us is into porn.  I can’t speak for my brother, but I know that I can’t help but think of dumb stuff like Shuttlecock every time I think of porn, and it just makes me laugh.

The moral of all this, I suppose, is that if you have kids and you have porn, you have to either get rid of one or the other.  I’m assuming that unless you have a serious problem, you’ll choose to get rid of the porn.  If you have it around, the kids will find it, no matter where you think you’ve hidden it.  Also, it’s probably not the greatest idea to take pictures of yourselves and leave copies of them in an easily accessible place.

Hopefully this was a good read, and hopefully it falls within the parameters that I set for this little endeavor.  I’ll keep thinking of more stories that I feel I can share.  In the meantime, for God’s sake, keep the porno away from the kids.

sitting here thinking about the Holocaust

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A number of years ago, I had a cushy and surprisingly well-paid data entry job during which, once we reached a certain level of so-called proficiency, we were allowed to listen to headphones while we typed away.  Many of us listened to NPR and audio books, and many of us also became hooked on the radio show LoveLine.

A handful of us were undeniable super fans, and we would go home and record the show for posterity.  I taped it for years, as a matter of fact, and I still have a box of cassettes floating around that one day may find its way to one of the many online archivers.  One of my fellow super fans (we’re still close friends) and I recently sent off a bunch of tapes to the proprietors of one such site, so we did our part to give back to the LoveLine community that had done so much for us.

If you’re not familiar with the show, it’s basically a relationship and medical advice show, with a comedy format.  Dr. Drew Pinsky is a board-certified physician and an addiction medicine specialist (and probably has acquired more titles since then), and Adam Carolla is a comedian and television writer with many years of psychotherapy under his belt.  LoveLine was where Adam got his start, actually, and in the early years of his tenure on the show, he was very hungry and eager to become a presence in the entertainment world.  These were some of my (and many other peoples’ as well) favorite years of LoveLine.  There have been other hosts before and since Adam, but his perfect blend of comedy, street smarts, and actual therapeutic experience brought a level of depth to the show that I’ve found lacking in the other hosts the show has had, who are comedians but who lack psychological knowledge, so they have to make their wisecracks and then metaphorically hand the microphone back over to Dr. Drew, who will dole out the ‘serious’ advice.  To be fair to the show’s current incarnation and co-host, I haven’t listened with any regularity for a while now, so it’s entirely possible that the show is back on a stellar track again and I’m just unaware of it.

The great thing about Adam and Drew’s dynamic was the fact that they came from completely opposite backgrounds; Dr. Drew from a life of privilege and prep school to an Ivy League education and a residency program at USC, and Adam from an unhappy home life and a string of construction jobs while attempting to break into the stand-up comedy arena.  Adam had even listened to Loveline as a younger adult, because Drew had co-hosted the show with other people since 1984 or something, so Adam was already very familiar with it by the time he joined the show in 1995, when it went national.

The format of LoveLine is that in addition to advice, they will invite celebrities to be on the show to promote their current endeavors, as well as to join in and give (hopefully) good advice.   It was always especially good when the guests were either insightful and genuine, funny and quick-witted, or just plain outrageous.  Some of my favorite guests include the masterful David Alan Grier, the talented and hilarious Zappa brothers, the punk band Pennywise (one of the members got drunk and projectile-vomited all around the studio), and I seem to remember a band called Orbit (where are they now?) who were particularly good on the show, and the band Better Than Ezra were even repeat guests.

This is all well and good, I can feel you thinking, but what does it have to do with the Holocaust?

Well, funny you should ask.

Actor and comedian Tom Arnold was a regular guest on the show, and during one of his visits a girl called in who was a phone-sex operator.  The problem she was having is that her callers were ‘getting off’ too quickly, thereby ending the call, and she wasn’t making as much money as she would if the calls were longer, so she was looking for advice on how to steer the calls to stretch them out.  Adam suggested that during her conversations, she should attempt to work in references to war atrocities, or terminal diseases, and that should do the trick.  He led her through a role-playing scenario in which she played herself and he played the caller.  After a rocky start, they decided how the the conversation should flow, and it went something like this:

“Hi, I’m Sugar.”

“Hey there, Sugar, this is Ace.”

“Hey, Ace!”

“What are you wearing?”

She delivered the coup de grace in her sultriest voice.  “Oh, I’m wearing a nice black lace bra and panties.  Oooohhh.  I’m just sitting here thinking about the Holocaust right now.”

Everyone in the studio fell over laughing, and Adam continued to riff on the joke, purring in his own ‘sexy’ voice, “Oh yeaaaah.  Burn those Jews. . .gas ’em in the showers, baby, yeah.”

It was such a brilliant and funny call, and has gone down as one of the all-time classics of the LoveLine lexicon.  The laughter that follows it, which is so out of control that they decide to halt the show and take a commercial break while they regain their composure, is really infectious too.  The phrase “I’m just sitting here thinking about the Holocaust” has become a staple answer between myself and a handful of friends who are in the know, whenever one of us will ask what the other is up to.

If you’re interested, I actually found an mp3 of the call in question and you can listen to it here.   There is also a huge and well-organized online LoveLine archive which you can find and enjoy here.  Another great one is located here.

Mahalo.

I’m kind of an a-hole

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The other day, I did something I would never normally do; I used my little video camera during a recording session.  I was working with two guys who have been long-time friends and collaborators, a bassist/singer and a guitarist.  The bassist was up here visiting from the Beast (my personal favorite nickname for the East Bay of California), so they wanted to collaborate on a couple of song ideas together.  I owed the guitarist a recording favor, so that’s how I got involved.

The guys were both so intense and animated (the singer, especially) that my arm reached for my camera before I even knew what it was doing.  I took a few other videos before this one, actually (by this time I had their approval), but this is definitely my favorite.  I promise you that he was not doing this for the camera, or for the open windows, or for my benefit; it was absolutely his megalomania personality and energy shining through.

Enjoy this while you can.  If I end up feeling even more like an unprofessional a-hole later, I may decide to take it down, but for now I just felt I should let you behind one scene of the recording process.

birthday present

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My birthday is coming up in about a month, and it’s one of the Big Ones.  I’m not particularly worried about it, especially since my life improved so much after the last Big One, but we’ll see how I feel after it’s happened and the dust has settled.

One of my friends called the other day and talked about my upcoming birthday, as well as the state of my love life, which has remained dormant for quite some time now, with the occasional dates here and there.  “If some of us chipped in to get you a prostitute for your birthday, would you be happy about that?”

I burst out laughing.  “No.”

“What if she was a really nice prostitute?”

“No.”

“Like maybe fifty bucks?”

“No.  I’m worth way more that that!  That’s not a ‘nice’ prostitute, by the way.”

“What if I got a bunch of people to contribute, and we came up with like fifteen hundred bucks?”

“I’d just ask you guys to give me the money.”  We both laughed.  “That could go a long way.  I could get a really good cello bow or something.”

Like I said, it’s still a month or so away, and choice of present not withstanding, at least he remembered it’s coming up, so I guess we’ll see what I have in store for me.  My last few birthdays have been really awesome ‘birthweeks’ of extended celebration, and I have good reason to believe that this one may be especially big.

Just to be on the safe side, though, I’d better start watching my doorstep for prostitutes.

the unicorn code

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1. Unicorns never cheat.
2. Unicorns always lend a helping hand.
3. Unicorns don’t talk to strangers.
4. Unicorns respect the Earth.
5. Unicorns are never late.
6. Unicorns aren’t conceited.
7. Unicorns don’t judge people.
8. Unicorns always give 100%.
9. Unicorns graze on peace and love.
10. Unicorns don’t do drugs.

How in the world did the universe make sure that I would stumble across this?