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During a visit last week to a center for homeless teens, I get a phone call from someone I have not been in contact with in 30 years, saying he needs money or will be evicted. What are the chances? New essay at LA Observed explores.
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At the risk of sounding like dodo brain #92/asking a question that's been posed for a decade: do you read a daily paper online? I read plenty/link plenty. But we still get a daily paper (The Oregonian) delivered, and I still try to read the New York Times every day, in its paper form, "try" because I no longer have it delivered at home, but a copy to each of the shops. This latter is an imperfect system, in that people often steal the paper (if I catch the person who keeps taking the Sunday Magazine, I am going to give them a giant tongue lashing), or I don't feel I have the time to linger and read.
I've been traveling a lot this year, to bigger cities, NY and SF and LA. When I was in NY last week, I felt great. I felt like myself, with an endless number of museums and restaurants and places and people to interface with, if I so chose. This is another reason why Matt Davis's goodbye, Portland post resonated with me. One of Matt's commenters astutely wrote, Matt is going where there stories are, to New Orleans. (He will make his bones there, as I made mine in LA.) Portland is not a big enough city, there is too little cultural collision and too many people with thin skins here to really sink your teeth in and do serious journalism (to say nothing of local places willing to publish it). A recent example: a little nothing piece I wrote for the O, in which I quoted a local PR person, who in several emails to me had a quasi-nervous breakdown because she thought the piece did not show her in the best possible light. I did my best to explain, the piece was not about her. A long-ago example: the editor of a paper I was writing criticism for musing aloud at a staff meeting that if the paper were to run anything negative about a venue, perhaps the paper should call the night before and alert them, a suggestion that made the editor I worked directly beneath bust a nut.
Anyway, two things happened this morning: I took the time to read much of the New York Times while standing at the new stand-up bar at Ristretto Beaumont, and drove home with two thoughts: one, I want to make a bunch of money soon and buy a place in New York, where I can spend more time and where, perhaps, Tafv can live. And two, I might start reading the Times online, on a daily basis -- something, by the way, I am willing to pay for. Politically, I realize we are all supposed to stand up and screech that the web is meant to be free, god dammit, and going behind a pay-wall -- which the Times plans to do later this year -- is as antediluvian and anti-progress as it comes. But here's the thing: as a journalist, I know first-hand how decimating not having any money to support a publication is; I had four -- four! -- of my editors (at the LA Weekly, Wired, Bon Appetit and City Arts) downsized out of jobs last year in a four-month period. That's a lot of freakin' cake not coming my way, kids. Also, I don't expect to get everything I want for free. I will be on the frontlines shouting, "Huzzah!" when the web is better monetized for writing and writers, and certainly, there are individuals and larger sites that have figured out how to make the finances work through traditional channels, i.e., ads and backers. I am also in the fortunate position to still have work. But the money? Do we really want to have this conversation first thing in the morning?
While I enjoy the range afforded by reading the paper online -- the skipping, the photos, the videos -- I also know I blow off more than when I read the paper in hand, and am divided about the idea of defaulting always to My News, divided because I see this as a good thing (deeper knowledge about fewer issues) and bad (where is Pakistan, again?).So: do you read the Times or a comparable paper online, and if so, what have you gained, what have you lost? And, any tips for me?
NB: Yes, I aware there will almost certainly be no print papers within the decade.
NB: And yes, I am aware that the medium that is slowly killing journalism as we've known it has created the opportunity to have this conversation here, for which I am most grateful and which I find both fulfilling and full of infinite possibilities, yes.
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Part V about Amanda Jo Stott-Smith and her children. Part I here; II, here; III, here, IV, here
Two weeks ago, I received emails from both Ken Hadley, defense attorney for Amanda Stott-Smith, and John Casalino, the DA who is prosecuting the case against her. Both wanted to let me know Amanda would be in court that morning, for another settlement hearing. For those who have not followed the news, or the story here: Amanda is charged with aggravated murder and attempted aggravated murder, stemming from her forcing her two children off Portland's Sellwood Bridge last May 23; her son, four-year-old Eldon, drowned; his seven-year-old sister survived. The aggravated murder charges meant, if the case went to trial, Amanda would face the possibility of the death penalty.
"There probably won't be much to see," Hadley told me. I told him, I wanted to go anyway. I have been writing steadily about Amanda since May 24 of last year, but had not seen her since her last court appearance, in June. That time it had been a zoo, of cameras and reporters and people needing to meet that day's deadline. They've all been gone for months. I've stayed. I have no idea if Amanda will be in court today but I will go anyway.
I get to the courtroom a little early. There is no one there but the attorneys; an investigator, and a woman with pale red hair. We sit quietly in the courtroom, beneath magisterially high ceilings, and walls hung with oil portraits of Alexander Hamilton, of George Washington. It is so quiet, we can hear all the gears of the trucks passing five stories below. I know the investigator, casually, and say hello. I ask the woman with red hair, whom I realize is Amanda's aunt, if I may speak with her in the hall. She will not face to me; says only, "I have nothing to say to you." I tell her, I don't want to interview her; I'd only like to give her my card. "I don't want it," she says.
I go back to my row. We sit in the quiet some more. The door to the courtroom opens. Two sheriff's deputies enter, holding Amanda by the arms. She is wearing French blue pants and top, like doctors' scrubs, a bit of coral-pink peeping at her shirt collar. Her hair is past her waist, and worn in a thick braid. She passes within five feet of me, a woman who has been on my mind every day for nearly a year. She is walked past; she sees her aunt; she begins to cry. The deputies lead Amanda to a seat, on the other side of the partition, behind the defense and prosecutor's tables and in front of us. She turns once to her aunt, who quietly gives Amanda her support.
Amanda faces forward. She has chains around her waist, her ankles, her wrists, but if there is a person who does not present a flight risk, it is the 32-year-old woman before us. Her body, heavier now than it was in June, appears to be trying to hunch in on itself; she looks pitched between deflation and anxiety, and very docile. She meets my eye, briefly. There is very little room, figuratively, to transmit anything. I am doing what I have always said I want to do; what I have told Amanda in my letters I want to do: just sit with her. That's all we can do, as humans, I think, when it comes to death, or at least all we can do for a while, just sit quietly with the bereaved.
Ah, I hear it - I hear you. She is the bereaved? Yes. I believe that. More on that later.
Ken Hadley is right; very little happens. The lawyers walk in and out of judge's chambers; they confer together and separately in every possible combination. Amanda's aunt is brought to judge's chambers. I speak for 15 minutes, in low tones, with the investigator. I tell her, it's always hard for me to get certain types of information, such as medical records and previous court record. I commend the investigator's fat sheaf; I tell her, I am jealous...
"You'll get to hear a lot of this in the future," she says, and also that, I must remember, she works for the defendant, who signs off on confidential information being released.
Forty-five minutes after the hearing began, it is over; nothing, so far as I can see, has transpired. But as I walk out with Ken Hadley, I feel his heaviness and sense his distraction.
I come home and stare all afternoon at a few pages I've been trying to write. They should have taken 45 minutes. All they have to say is, "This book is about; here's the thrust, here's the outline." This, to insert into the 75-page book proposal I have written about Amanda and what happened on May 23; what happened in the micro, and the macro; what it means. A friend who read the manuscript says I need this "definitive statement of purpose," so that is what I am trying to do. And the reason it has not taken 45 minutes; the reason what I have before me is the opposite of Orwell's window pane, is that the writing keeps slipping from why everyone else should be transfixed with this story, to why I am; to why I have stayed. I keep pushing open the door, and back it springs. I see myself as inside the calla lily; it's not open yet.
In her 2008 nonfiction book, The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher, about the murder investigation of a Victorian boy Eldon Smith's age, Kate Summerscale writes:
“Perhaps this is the purpose of detective investigations, real and fictional – to transform sensation, horror and grief into a puzzle, and then to solve the puzzle, to make it go away. 'The detective story,' observed Raymond Chandler in 1949, 'is a tragedy with a happy ending.' A storybook detective starts by confronting us with a murder and ends by absolving us of it. He clears us of guilt. He relieves us of uncertainty. He removes from us the presence of death.”
To me, this seems exactly right. It is a puzzle, one that unlikely people have pieces to. Some find you and they know the most amazing and generous things. Some people have pieces and will not give them to you, because they are so wounded, they want it all to go away. And how dare you, how dare you seek to bring this all out? Haven't we had enough? Don't you realize you are hurting us? They do not say this out loud, but you hear it. I have also been told, on this blog, that I might find the grace to leave this story alone. My response to that is unwavering: is is better for this boy to have died and that no one learn anything? That people, in their impotence and rage, call Amanda "evil, pure and simple" (and much worse) and wish her dead and then walk away? Who does this help? And how have we honored anybody? So no, I don't think it is better not to examine what's happened; to not relieve of us uncertainty. I think we have had one tragedy; it ought not be compounded by never speaking of it again.
Yesterday morning, I received another email from Ken Hadley. Amanda, he said, was switching her plea, from "not guilty" to "guilty"; she would be in court a little after two; he predicted it would be a media zoo.
It is. The hall, in contrast to two weeks before, is packed, with Amanda's family, with the press; with many members of both legal teams. I watch Amanda's mother, in a pretty gray A-line skirt and black boots, her long hair loose; she looks like a schoolgirl, or perhaps someone who teaches schoolgirls. The red-haired woman is there, other family members. I approach no one. The cameras are let into the courtroom first. Then the family, then the press. Four of us are moved into a row on the other side of the partition, just behind the defense table. I sit next to the Oregonian's lead crime reporter, a woman who files something like three stories a day. I express my admiration; tell her, it's the first time the press has been back on Amanda's story since last summer.
And then, without warning, Amanda is brought in. She barely resembles the woman of two weeks earlier. Today, she looks as though she were going to a party, in a black velvet top and pants, with her hair loose and shiny. But that is not the striking difference. The striking difference is her face, which today is calm. Her face last time was blotched, and bloated. Today, she glows. Her almond eyes are at rest. I think, she's done what she needed to do, she needed to admit it.
As soon as Amanda is seated, Jason Smith and several family members and his lawyer enter. They sit just behind us. I have met them before, in a different courtroom, an encounter I might characterize as a debacle but will not write about here except to say, despite the bizarre and volatile nature of our first meeting, Jason had been cordial to me, and I appreciated it. Today, there will be no communication. It is a terrible day. I will learn, later, that he has had no contact with Amanda since she killed their son, and tried to kill their daughter. He, they, the families find themselves in a nightmare that no family can anticipate, and from which there is no waking up. There may be moving on, if in increments, and we are all grateful to hear, his daughter is doing very well. I know this from people who know her, and have told me, she is an amazing child, full of courage and friendly and beautiful. Yes.
As Amanda sits between her attorneys, as the gallery stays nearly silent, the lawyers disappear into various rooms, whisper to Amanda, to Jason, to each other. We again listen to the trucks outside; watch a tunnel of sunlight appear, brighten the floor, recede. And then it is four o'clock, and we are told to all rise.
The judge enters. Casalino explains that Amanda is changing her plea; that she is pleading guilty to Count 1, aggravated murder, which means she will serve a life sentence, with the possibility of parole after 30 years. Pleading guilty to Count 6, attempted aggravated murder, carries a sentence of ten years, five of which will be served concurrently. Casalino says that he, Jason, and the two detectives in attendance support this plea. Amanda's attorneys concur. Then it is time for the judge to ask Amanda: did she read the petition?
"Yes," says Amanda.
Is that her signature on it?
"Yes."
Did her attorneys explain the implications?
"Yes."
Does her taking of the prescription medication Abilify in any way hamper her ability to proceed?
"No."
t is determined that Amanda had made a "clear-headed, reasoned decision," and that her lawyers are proceeding with "no reservations." The judge explains to Amanda that she does not have to plead guilty and thereby give up her right to a jury trial, and the opportunity to or not to testify; that she has "rights and options." At every turn, Amanda calmly replies, she is aware of what she was doing; she knows that by pleading guilty and forgoing a trial (also, the possibility of being sentenced to death), her recourse is "very, very limited." She knows, yes.
The judge asks Amanda to rise; this, though formal sentencing will not be until next week. Amanda rises. Asked how she pleads to Count 1, she says, "I am guilty." To Count 6, "I am guilty." Her voice does not crack, she remains composed, and because she is facing away from us, I do not until the next day see, on video, that she closes her eyes when the judge recounts the date of the incident, the children's names, their ages. The judge asks, in conclusion, whether Amanda has done these things. Amanda opens her eyes. "Yeah."
And then Amanda is on her feet, being walked by a deputy to judge's chamber, she was walking right past me, taking tiny mincing steps like a geisha, and I see it is because she is wearing black shiny high-heeled sandals, the silver chains around her ankles looking like jewelry, and then she is gone.
The courtroom clears, Jason's attorney telling him as they leave, "You don't have to talk to anyone." The room empties quickly, so quickly, except for one woman in the back row, smiling as she comes towards me, and it is such an odd occurrence, to be in a courtroom on this story and have someone smiling, but I can't place the woman, perhaps because I am trying not to cry.
"It's Pati," she says, and I throw my arms around her. She is the woman who called 9-1-1 when the children landed in the water, so close to her patio. I have spoken to her many times; we have gone out with our husbands. She is part of this story, part of how I am trying to tell the story, how a story like this tentacles out and affects us all, if we let it, and how do we not let it?
By six that night, the Oregonian writer has written and posted her story. I'm amazed. But then, I know, we are writing different stories.
Today, this morning, is a hard day. I cry intermittently. I know that in the year I have spent thinking and writing about Amanda, of talking to people whose lives were impacted if not ruined by what she did, who were there that night and who knew Eldon, I have paved a way to Amanda. Not yet in person, but beyond the vale; that somehow our membranes have eclipsed. This, though what she did is to me so ghastly; just the thought of my having done this to my child when she was four, makes me feel as though the world has no floor.
And still I think, as I walk throughthe morning, look at all this space all around me, all this air, how high the sky; Amanda has none of this. She will never have it again. I walk into my bank. My banker asks, "How are you?" and I start to cry. She takes a tissue box from a shelf, which makes me wonder whether a lot of people cry in her office; she is a very sympathetic gal. And then I try to explain, that I know how horrific this story is, but how can it be better not to tell it? How can we do that? How can we let the act, Eldon's death, how Amanda got to where she did, just be put away?
"And then people don't learn anything," she says. "They just learn to hate more because they understand less."
I drive to CostCo -- because you see, my life goes on -- and I know, I know from the way she closed her eyes, that Amanda has already lived through the worst anyone can. She broke her own heart, she broke it and smashed and stood up and let the world hate her. What else can we do that she has not done to herself?
I may be a fool. I may not have the skill, or the fortitude, or the creative mind to take what I have found, and have sought, and continue to be given, and put the pieces together so that it hurts less, but I am going to try.
Part VI, here
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Wow, am I behind. There are reasons! Will be heading to New York this week for the third time in a month, also smashed in ten days in Panama, and a wound about which the less said the better, so we'll leave it at: I had a tube hanging out of me for five days. All better now, but for the Chloroquine I am still taking once a week to ward off malaria. I don't like this drug; it makes you nauseous, but worse -- and I only figured this out eight days in -- it gives you nightmares. I have, in the past ten days, dreamed of being raped, murdering a child, having to save my child from a horrific fate, and -- over and over -- having to save people from the apocalypse and/or various untenable and terrifying to life and limb situations. There are also the little annoyances, like dreaming of my husband telling me, he's just signed on with Match.com. Suffice to say, each night is fraught; I need some sleep.
But sleeplessness does give one time to read, and much of it has been very, very good. A lovely new discovery, via my friend Kate Coe, is Charles McCarry, whose "The Miernik Dossier" is espionage at its best and much more. I am so very tempted to print here the section titled, "66. From Miernik's Diary," to show you not merely tremendous writing but tremendous thinking, but it needs context. I highly recommend the book.
Also just catching up with Michael Totten's two-part interview with Christopher Hitchens, a lunch I also attended. Hitchens asked me a question, regarding the book I am writing, that proved valuable, which was, "Did she think the children would be going to heaven?"
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So we went last night to the Blazer game. It wasn't a great game -- I think the Timberwolves would have a hard time throwing the ball in the Atlantic Ocean, though they were scrappy under the basket on defense, swarming around the Blazers like a bunch of gnats. Anyway, the Blazers won, after which we and the other 20,000 attendees made for the exits, down some stairwells and, last night, back through the lower concourse on the way out.
Which is when I saw her, only from the back, but knew there would be much more to see up front. At fiirst, I thought, despite her honey-colored waist-length hair, that she was Asian. Though she was tall in her heels, perhaps 5' 9", she was slender and proprotional in a way that white girls rarely are, unless you are seeing their bones poking through the fabric of their thin t-shirts, which this girl's were not. She was just ahead of me and to the left, trying it seemed to catch up with someone. She seemed to have a destination, and as I added a half-step to see her from the front, it made me curious as to what that destination might be.
She was not Asian, but white. Her face did not bely an age, but I'd say mid-20s, maybe younger. Her boobs were very large and, according to Din, whom I had of course directed to "Look, look," seemed rather new. I saw what he meant. She carried them as though they were a new puppy she'd just gotten; she led with them, the deep V in her t-shirt allowing people to see the disproportionality of them to the rest of her build, though she worked that build well. Her designer jeans were professionally faded and had the requisite swirly appliques on the butt cheeks. She cocked that waist hard with each step. She walked as though she were on display, perhaps the only problem being that the entire crowd was walking in the same direction, and so if they'd wanted to see her in her full glory, they'd have had to turn, which was tough to do in the flow, and I saw only one man try to do so, and he looked embarrassed about it. Perhaps because we are in Portland and not Los Angeles. Perhaps because it was 40 degrees out last night and raining, and every other person at the Rose Garden was covered in Gortex and fleece, and here is this young woman in what in total might be 12 ounces of clothing, and she, too, is walking outside. Like when I was 16 and did not want to cover up my cute New Years Eve dress and so would go out in New York City for the night without a jacket, despite it being 8 degrees.
The woman was not alone. She had caught up with, though I did not see exactly when, a man, perhaps 40. He had odd hair. It was curly like a cocker spaniel's. It looked like a pancake of hair molded to his head. His build was simply wrong. Just like you would be able to look at the woman and even if you had no idea such a thing as a boob job existed, something in your DNA would tell you, something's off, well, the man had this going on. His shoulders were both too broad and flabby. His pants were bad. He looked blockish, and while he and the young woman walked together, one could detect nothing going on between them. They each were living in their own heads, he seemed to glower slightly, she was smiling through a great deal of make-up. I can't say whether she was pretty.
And then Din and I were out in the street, walking toward the car, and I don't remember what, but we cracked a few jokes about the woman and her enormous tits, and the man and his surly weirdness, and then we were in the car and driving to the store and I felt bad. I felt, as I often do when I see people who've had extensive cosmetic surgery, that it was sort of tragic. That -- let's stick with the woman -- in the maze that was this woman's life, she'd made choices, and each choice had let her to where she is now, a choice where she's invested in these boobs in order to be more valuable, to get more love, to feel more attractive, to be worthy. But to most people, she is not. But what can she do now? Din said, well, honey, she's probably not the smartest gal, if these are the choices she made, and I said, sure, but now her insecurity or whatever it was that led her to this choice, greets her each time she looks in the mirror, every time she gets dressed. She will carry around her armor. But for whose army does she get to fight (besides for intellectual pervs like me)? Who will be doing the love and valuing? The guy she was with reminded me of no one so much as the man who told me he had the biggest dick in the world. Is he who would take care of her? Is he who she did it for? Would he now work her? Would she work him? This last is possible, but not in this case. I did not foresee good things for her. I foresaw a lot of work on her back.
I wrote a whole memoir about this, about Los Angeles, where these sorts of casualities compose half the scenery, and where you understand these folks have their own legitimate power. I'm never going to publish that memoir, but because I realize mentioning I know the man who told me, he had the world's biggest dick is provocative, I offer a chapter. Happy Sunday.
The Biggest Dick in the World
In 1988, I still believed my ticket to stardom would arrive in a big car soon after I arrived in Los Angeles. It did not. Nor was it in the Porsche 911 I found myself stepping into one evening, a car that belonged to a man I was told had the biggest dick in the world. Though he told me this himself, I’d first heard it from my sister-in-law. Sandra was a northern Italian girl with Gina Lollobrigida curls and a gap between her front teeth. She and my brother married for love, but she also needed a green card and, well, she often strayed. She was more attentive to my wanting to be an actress, and told me she’d met a man—let’s call him Hal—who was casting a film. He’d liked her look and asked her to audition, which she had, though not because she an actress and or had any ambitions to act. Then why did she audition? Because she was a pretty twenty-five-year-old to whom someone said, “I want you in my movie.” While this might cause someone to scratch her head in Schenectady, in Hollywood, it’s axiomatic that you go.
“I told him about you,” Sandra said. “He wants to meet you.”
I was, at this point, reading screenplays for a living. I was twenty-eight years old, had no agent, no acting prospects, and was nursing an infant. I will not paint myself as more gullible than I was; I knew Hal’s movie was probably a scam, but what did I have to lose by meeting the guy?
“He’s a Vietnam War hero,” Sandra added, as she kissed me goodbye on each cheek. “Oh, and he’s supposed to have the biggest dick in the world.”
Uh, well, okay.
When I told my boyfriend Tim I was going to meet a film director about a part and, oh, heh heh, Sandra said he’s supposed to have the biggest dick in the world, he gave me the look that said, you know what you’re walking into, don’t you? I told him, I’d be fine.
I showed up to meet Hal as scheduled. His West Hollywood office was a legit-looking series of rooms decorated with brightly illustrated Rambo-esque posters, different shots of a he-man running through a flaming napalmed jungle, a bandoleer across his shirtless chest, a small Vietnamese child under each arm. An elderly man whose head trembled in what looked to be a painful way sat at the reception desk. He told me Hal would be with me a minute, then shuffled off to another room, never to be seen again.
Hal appeared shortly. Though he was probably in his forties, it was hard to tell, as his head had the quality of a big blob of pizza dough, topped with a few strands of colorless hair. He skin was extremely pale, and his body was pure flab, with petals of soft fat overhanging his groin, and thick legs encased in shapeless blue slacks with a cheap sheen. He was friendly, though, as he gave me a tour of the office.
“These posters,” he said, pointing to bandoleer man, “are of a docudrama about my heroics in Vietnam.” His exhalation was heavy on the humility. “I single-handedly saved my entire platoon, plus a bunch of villagers.”
The tour continued. He showed me wall-mounted photos of the actor Rod Steiger, spot-lit on a dark stage.
“He’s reading from my life story,” Hal said.
Hal’s face, which slumped on the right side, was too close to mine as I leaned in to get a read on the Steiger photos. They looked doctored, as did the shots of Hal with Steiger. Meanwhile, Hal told me how attractive I was, and we should continue talking about the project over dinner.
Dinner?
The traffic was whizzing down La Cienega Boulevard when Hal suggested we take his car, the above-mentioned Porsche. I had no illusions as we drove south; I was certain the project was complete nonsense, but I was not scared and so settled in for the ride.
Hal pulled into the circular parking lot of a tacky, expensive Italian restaurant called something like Casa Romano. The valet parkers knew Hal by name, as did the maitre d’, who ushered us to a circular booth, where I was made a big fuss over, and where it was obvious to me I was girl #178 to have been wined and dined at this very table; to be disingenuously slavered over by an unctuous waiter with a fake Italian accent, who for dessert brought me a complimentary slice of spumoni that he -- whoops! -- accidentally dropped in my lap. I didn’t flinch when the plastic ice cream hit me, which I saw put the spook to the waiter, who looked at Hal for direction.
“Heh, she’s sharp,” Hal said, his right cheek drooping now nearly to his collar.
We rode back to the office in silence. He said he wanted to give me a screenplay; why didn’t I come up for a second? As he handed me the script, three Polaroids fell out. They were blurry, but appeared to be of Hal sitting on a bed bending over a vacuum cleaner hose.
“Maybe your sister-in-law told you that I have a twenty-six-inch cock,” he said, and nudged me down on the vinyl sofa. I pushed him off and said I had to go.
Once home, I was as nauseated as if I’d spent twelve hours on a Tilt-a-Whirl.
“You knew what you were in for, Nanny,” Tim said, and went to bed.
I could not sleep. I felt as though I had pure poison in me, and the only way to get it out was to write, a dense three-page letter to Hal telling him in gothic detail just how revolting he was. It was a great letter, very purgative. I read it to Tim at five in the morning, while nursing our daughter.
“You know,” Tim said. “You don’t have to actually send it.”
He was right. I wrote, “Thanks for dinner, here’s your script back,” and had it on Hal’s doorstep by six.
I called Sandra. “The guy is a pig and fraud,” I told her.
“Ma-donna,” she said, sounding chagrined. “And I don’t think his dick is even real.”
No… she hadn’t…
“Si, I did,” she said, when she’d “auditioned.” She said Hal had gone into the bathroom, and come out with some sort of floppy thing she couldn’t make out in the dark. But, I asked her, was it a dick? She didn’t know, only that it lay on the bed like a dead thing before he could get it inside her.
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You want to hear how cool Ryan Biornstad [blue vest], singer/guitarist/keyboardist of the band PYRAMIDD, formerly Starfucker, and current barista at Ristretto Roasters is? I worked with him ALL YESTERDAY MORNING, the day there was an article about his band changing its name ON THE FRONT PAGE OF THE NEWSPAPER [note: for reasons unknown, NOT on the Oregonian website yet], and he said not one word about it, not one little peep. Whereas when I have an article on the front page of the paper, I ANNOUNCE IT WITH GREAT FREQUENCY, while trying to appear humble as I BREAK OUT THE BASS DRUM and (boom!) once again slip in that I have an article on the front page of the motherfucking paper!
Ryan didn't say a word.
Anyway, the band is great and getting very successful (not that this equals success but: one of their songs is now running on a Target commercial; yeah, you know you've heard it), and they really did run into trouble when called Starfucker, people not writing about them or booking them. I think this is idiotic, but it was a fact. Ryan and I talked about it a bunch of times; talked about his impatience with having to come up with a new name. Not that he was opposed, just, there were so many other things he'd rather be doing.
Including going on tour again next month, this time in Europe. We adore Ryan, adore adore adore. Yay PYRAMIDD or whatever you're called xxx
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My friend Gretchen Rubin's new book, The Happiness Project, is available for pre-order. I haven't spent a lot of time on her Happiness Project website, but each time I do, I either nod my head; think what a wonderful thing she's doing; cry, recommit to what it is I'm trying to do, or all of the above. It all seems so simple, doesn't it?
Gretchen likes lists. So do I. One of hers, below.
Here are my Secrets of Adulthood. Although these items may not seem particularly profound, each one was a revelation when I finally figured it out:
The days are long, but the years are short.
Someplace, keep an empty shelf.
Turning the computer on and off a few times often fixes a glitch.
It's okay to ask for help.
You can choose what you do; you can't choose what you LIKE to do.
Happiness doesn't always make you feel happy.
What you do EVERY DAY matters more than what you do ONCE IN A WHILE.
You don't have to be good at everything.
Soap and water removes most stains.
It's important to be nice to EVERYONE.
You know as much as most people.
Over-the-counter medicines are very effective.
Eat better, eat less, exercise more.
What's fun for other people may not be fun for you -- and vice versa.
People actually prefer that you buy wedding gifts off their registry.
Houseplants and photo albums are a lot of trouble.
If you're not failing, you're not trying hard enough.
No deposit, no return.
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Sometimes it's an honor and a pleasure to write a story, because the people you're writing about are so darn friendly. Such was the case last month with my meeting with Fred Oldfield, up in Tacoma. Fred's 91, painting a painting a week, as he has for the past 75 years, mostly scenes from memory, of when he crossed the Northwest with his family by covered wagon, was hired out at 15 to pick potatoes (ten tons a day!), and barnstormed up in Alaska to make a buck. My profile of Fred appears on the cover of the August issue of City Arts magazine. The copy is not online, so here's a PDF: Download Cowboypainter
The photos in the piece are amazing, but since I am too dorky to figure out how to properly embed the story here, below is one I took. Is he a handsome man or what? We should all be as vital and lovely at 91.
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Reading Walter Cronkite's obituary in today's NY Times, I was delighted to learn that, amongst his many accomplishments, was his unwillingness to put up with bad grammar:
As someone driven to distraction by the mangling of grammar (mis- and creative spellings, I am OK with; language, after all, is labile. But "it's" for "its"? No), I adore this.
I can't say I have the sorts of memories of Cronkite that I am hearing recalled today; I was too young to see him broadcast Kennedy's death, and though I remember Martin Luther King's, what I most see is my mother crying, and earlier, watching the race riots on TV, fire hoses being turned on young black people in the streets (of Alabama, I think) at night, the force pinning them to a building, and my thinking, how is this possible? How can they do this? I remember RFK being assassinated, and the moon landings, and Kent State, and Woodstock, and the Nixon/Humphrey election, all of which happened before I was ten years old. And of course the Viet Nam War, from which my uncle, a 22-year-old Marine, came home without his legs and eight of his fingers. This is a lot of news in a few years.
I see I have detoured from the title of this post. But I have been thinking how, Cronkite was the person who delivered all this news, even if I don't recall the moments he told it, I do recall him always being there. He was the man who told you what was happening. Very steady. I don't think our children have this, unless it's Jon Stewart, and then we're not really talking about the same thing, are we.
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My lunch with so very nice, funny and talented clothing designer Adam Arnold published today. A clip:
MIX: How long have you been sewing and did you know it would lead to a career?
AA: I started sewing 20 years ago. I grew up in Vancouver; I was living in my parents' basement and I would go out every night dancing. I'd get up in the morning and think who I wanted to be that night. This was the early '90s, lots of glitter and disco. People would see what I was wearing and say, "Wow, you should be a clothing designer!"
MIX: The clothes you design for men and women are pretty far from disco. The lines are so clean, so functional. They look expensive and yet they do not shout, ever.
AA: Good design is something that fits into your life.
It doesn't draw attention to itself, except that it's made well and it
fits you. How's your turkey sandwich?
MIX: It's good. I especially like that the French
dressing on the salad is the orange kind. You so rarely see that
anymore. And what are you doing with your fries?
AA: Well, I put stripes of mustard on the ketchup, and then I roll the French fry lengthwise. [He holds up a red-and-yellow striped fry.]
In other news, I am back in Portland since Monday night, drinking French wine for Bastille Day at Carafe, with Troy MacLarty and his pal Shannon, who is making Portland's best pomme frites bar none over at Laurelhurst Market. And then, last night, sitting in the beautiful, peaceful Southeast Portland yard of our great friends Josh and Heather. He grilled some steak and jalapenos, the latter of which let us just say caused a good deal of crying and coughing all around, an apoplexy only a few shots of good rum could fix. Then we sleep like babies and wake up in the sunshine. This entire summer feels, to me, like a gimme, as though I have been afforded this beautiful time as a gift.
We have two trips planned. First up: Panama in January. All suggestions welcome, and yes Brom, we will be seeing you xx
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