Musings on the Most Ridiculous Band I Can't Stop Listening To

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Transcript Of Tomorrow’s White House Press Conference…Today!

“All right, everyone, settle down. Settle down. Jim Acosta, stop taking selfies and have a seat. Y’all should be happy. We’re doin’ this one on camera.”

“Yeah, but Sarah: you’re standing behind a curtain.”

“This is how this works from now on. Jus’ lay back an’ accept it, sugar.  Ah got me a monitor back here, so Ah c’n see you. Haberman, stop pickin’ your nose.”

“I was not picking my nose.”

“You was knuckle-deep up in there.”

“Not true.”

“Before we get started, Ah have a prepared statement that was not written by me which Ah will read but did not write. Okay, then.

“Ahem.

“The fake, failing New York is fake and failing. James Comey, who is probably a murderer, is an illegal leaker and his wife is a dog. Disgusting family, just horrible and I hear he’s a bad tipper from many, many people.

“The G20 meeting was so beautiful. Angela Merkel told me that Germany would pay for the wall, and I will visit France very, very soon and it will be so wonderful. Why don’t they put some condos in the Eiffel Tower? Just sits there empty! Dumb!

“No Russia, no Russia.

“Ahem.

“Ah will now take questions, and by that Ah do not mean ‘answer questions,’ but Ah will sure as shootin’ take ’em. Major?”

“Yes, Sarah, my question is about the meeting between Donald Trump, Jr., and a Russian operative in Trump Tower last June. He was apparently told in advance that the meeting was regarding information about the Clinton campaign.”

“Uh-huh?”

“Any comment?”

“You’ll have to direct that question to my lawyer.”

“Wait, the Press Secretary has a lawyer now?”

“The White House now has more lawyers than staffers. We’re thinking about building a new parking lot. Jonathan?”

“The other day, the President tweeted out that the United States would partner with Russia to create a cybersecurity task force, and then 12 hours later called it off. What was that all about?”

“Well, y’ever accept dinner plans, an’ then later you’re all ‘Ugh, Ah don’ wanna go’ an’ you call back an’ cancel? It’s like that.”

“What?”

“President Trump has so much on his plate. He just negotiated a ceasefire in Syria an’ saved so many beautiful babies, but none o’ y’all are talkin’ about that!”

PHONE NOTIFICATION NOISE

“Oops. War in Syria’s back on. Win some, lose some. April?”

“Sarah, the White House has consistently and strenuously denied that there were any meetings between the campaign and the Russians, but now it turns out that there was at least one. Were there any more?”

“There was no collusion.”

“That wasn’t the question I asked.”

“No sandwiches were served at the meeting.”

“Again: I did not ask that.”

“Red Sox 7, Angels 2.”

“I wasn’t–”

“Wonderful practicin’ democracy with you. Matthew?”

“Was President Trump aware of the meeting?”

“Absolutely not.”

PHONE NOTIFICATION NOISE

“Sarah, the president just tweeted–and I quote–I set up the meeting with my idiot son so we could be friends with Russia and start adopting their beautiful babies again! Democrats hate babies! Any comment?”

“Maggie Haberman is picking her nose again. Everybody look at her.”

“I am not!”

“Sarah?”

“Sarah?”

“Thrush, go look behind the curtain.”

“Fuck you, nosepicker. You do it.”

“Oh, fine.”

“Holy shit, there’s a trap door.”

Donald Trump, Jr., Continues To Meet With His Attorney

“Okay, let’s practice this again. I’m going to play a reporter for the New York Times.”

“Can I be Batman?”

“What?”

“Are we not playing make-believe?”

“No, Junior. This is all very serious.”

“Oh, okay.”

“So. We’re going to pretend that I’m a reporter, and you are you.”

“I don’t have to pretend to be me.”

“Great. So. Are you paying attention?”

“This is a nice office.”

“Junior!”

“Don’t hit me, Dad! Oh, sorry. I just do that. Okay. What are we doing?”

“I’m a reporter.”

“Oh, hi! I met with the Russians!”

“NO! Goddammit, Junior.”

INTERCOM TURNING-ON NOISE

“Mrs. Woods–”

“I’m not bringing you your pistol, and that’s it.”

“Fuck you, too, Mrs. Woods.”

INTERCOM TURNING-OFF NOISE

“Okay, let’s try again. We’re going to pretend that I am a reporter.”

“Ha ha, you’re poor.”

“Right, great. Now: I call you on the phone.”

“Do I pick up?”

“You’d have to for this scenario to progress.”

“I can make my hands look like a duck.”

“Junior, concentrate.”

“I am! You think making a duck is easy?”

“Pick up your phone and pretend I’m calling you!”

“Bukka-dooka-dukka-dooka.”

“Bukka-dooka-dukka-dooka.”

“Are you making the iPhone noise, Junior?”

“Yeah, did you hear how good I do it?”

“Answer the phone.”

“Hellooooo?”

“Hi, Junior. My name is–”

“Oh, nooooo. My name is Mrs. Secretary. I’m a laaaaaady.”

“Is Junior there?’

“Let me check. Oh, Donald JUUUUUUUnior! Donald JUUUUUUnior!”

“He might be in the bathroom.”

“ANSWER THE PHONE, JUNIOR!”

“You’re on with Don.”

“Great. Okay. So. I am a reporter.”

“What’s your name?”

“It doesn’t matter.”

“Tell that to the guy who monograms your shirts.”

“Jenkins. My name is Reporter Jenkins–”

“That’s my lawyer’s name!”

“–and I am calling to ask about your meeting with Russia.”

“Which one?”

“Holy SHIT, is that the wrong answer.”

“There were a lot. Dinners, too.”

INTERCOM TURNING-ON NOISE

“Mrs. Woods, I want you to type up my resignation letter.”

“And I want you to leave your wife and marry me. Live with disappointment.”

“Timing, woman!”

INTERCOM TURNING-OFF NOISE

“Who is that on the intercom? Is it the Russians? They’re great.”

“Junior, you need to listen to me carefully. You must stop speaking to anyone. You must make no statements at all to anyone.”

“I have to ask again–”

“Yes, you can order from waiters.”

“–what about wait…okay, good. I love restaurants.”

“Yeah? That’s great. Which one’s your favorite?”

“Russian Tea Room.”

“We’re going to need to double the retainer.”

“Okay.”

“In fact, why don’t you just leave us your credit card?”

“Here’s my wallet. Just pick one.”

“Wonderful.”

Donald Trump, Jr. Meets With An Attorney

“Come in, Junior. You’re three hours late.”

“I got lost on the way over, and then in the elevator. Then my shoelace came undone and Eric wasn’t there to retie it, so I cried for a little while.”

“Greeeeeeat. Let’s get started. My name’s Mr. Jenkins, and you want to hire me to be your attorney.”

“Oh, no. I don’t need an attorney. I need a lawyer.”

“They’re synonyms.”

“No, thank you. I’m not hungry.”

“Let’s start again.”

“Should I walk back outside?”

“No, you’ll get lost in the hall.”

“I totally got lost in the hall. There’s so many doors!”

“Mr. Trump–”

“SHIT! My dad’s here!?”

“–what we need to–no. No, I was referring to you.”

“Oh. No one calls me Mr. Trump.”

“I’m shocked.”

“Are these mints?”

“Those are pens, Junior.”

“Okay, cool.”

PEN-EATING NOISE

“Which means you can’t eat them.”

“Well, you should have said that.”

“Can we get down to business, please?”

“Sure. What does my father owe you?”

“A moment’s peace. But this is not about that yet. We need to talk about you, Junior.”

“My favorite color is blue, and I like humpback whales the best.”

“Don’t start sharing just yet.”

“Oh, I don’t share.”

“Wonderful. Junior, if I’m going to take this case, then you need to stop talking to the media.”

“Even the fake media?”

“Yes.”

“But if they’re fake media, then they’re not really media, are they? So I can talk to them?”

“No! You can’t discuss anything with anyone but your lawyer.”

“Anything?”

“Nothing!”

“Does this mean my wife has to order for me in restaurants?”

“You can talk to waiters, Junior.”

“What if they ask me about Russia?”

“Why would a waiter ask you about Russia?”

“Salad dressing?”

INTERCOM-TURNING-ON NOISE

“Mrs. Woods, can you bring me some Advil?”

“Two?”

“Bring the whole bottle, please.”

INTERCOM-TURNING-OFF NOISE

“Junior, you cannot talk to the newspapers. You cannot talk to the teevee stations. You cannot tweet.”

“What if I have a really dank meme?”

“Okay, I’m a serious human being, so I have no fucking idea what that means. You must not comment in public on anything related to the Russia investigation.”

“No Russia, no Russia.”

“That’s not actually a legal defense.”

“Do I need to say it three times to make it official?”

INTERCOM-TURNING-ON NOISE

“Mrs. Woods, can you also bring me my special coffee?”

“It’s 11 in the morning, sir.”

“Did I stutter, woman?”

INTERCOM-TURNING-OFF NOISE

“Are you on your phone?”

“Met this hot chick on Tinder. Nyt Imes. What kind of name is that?”

“It’s not a name. You’re talking to the New York Times.”

“Oh. But they’re fake news.”

“Uh-huh. What did you just say to them?”

“I didn’t say anything.”

“Oh, good.”

“I just sent some pics from that meeting I had with that Russian chick. My hair looks great.”

“You sent pictures of your treasonous meeting with the Kremlin operative to the New York fucking Times?”

“I didn’t understand several of the words in that sentence.”

“Give me your phone, jackass.”

“Joke’s on you. Passcode, sucker.”

SIX-NINE-SIX-NINE DEPRESSING NOISE

“How did you know!?”

“Jesus.”

“Are you a wizard? If I ask, you have to tell me. That’s the law.”

“Yes, Junior. I’m a wizard.”

“Woooooow.”

“Right. Y’know, before we discuss anything else, let’s talk about your retainer.”

“I accidentally threw it away in middle school.”

“I should have been a doctor.”

“Me, too.”

Eighteen Thoughts About Los Angeles

ONE

I had a meeting, because when you live in Los Angeles, you have meetings. I had not been in town for very long, and I referred to the street I had taken as Sepul-VAY-da. Everyone laughed at me.

TWO

Before I had any friends in the city, I would drive around at night. There was no internet, or at least I did not have access to it, and so you would have to leave your house if you felt lonely. I had a Chevy Corsica which was terrible and I would drive east on Hollywood out to Western. There was a mud wrestling joint there called the Hollywood Tropicana that I never went in. Lack of courage or lack or interest. Lack of funds, too.

There was a video arcade on Western. I went in there and played the game where you get to shoot people with a sniper rifle. What fun is shooting aliens or zombies or werewolfs? I like shooting people.

THREE

My first apartment was #706 1748 N. Orange Drive. The building was called The Madison, and it was 12 stories tall, which is very tall for Hollywood. There are 40 and 50 story buildings in downtown, but most of Hollywood is two and three stories high.

(I had to live in Hollywood. I was 23 and from New Jersey. Where else could I live? What would be the point in driving cross-country unless you could live in Hollywood?)

The man who ran the building was named Bert, and he wore a suit to his office in the lobby of the building which was in between the elevators and the front door. When I was late with the rent, I would sneak out through the parking garage. I was late with the rent a lot.

The reason there aren’t many tall buildings in Hollywood is because there shouldn’t be. The earth quakes occasionally. I was with a woman named Michelle for my first earthquake. It was very late, and she was tied up on my futon. We had rented a Playstation from Blockbuster and bought some cocaine, and after we ran out of cocaine I tied her up on my futon.

This was a consensual binding, mind you.

The door started banging back and forth like someone was trying to get in, and we both became wide-eyed. I ran to the door, still hard. Looked through the peep. No one. The real shaking started, and she yelled at me to untie her.

I still feel lousy for laughing.

FOUR

Mah Huang was legal back then. Delicious shit. It came in tinctures from the health store, pure herbal Chinese speed, with a black rubber stopper that you could suck up the rust-colored liquid and squirt it into a shot glass and drink with water. Hamburger patty in the morning. Chicken Caesar salad at night. Easy way to get down to 140.

Doesn’t matter. Always someone something-er in Los Angeles. Prettier, funnier, skinnier.

That’s what everyone in Los Angeles tells themselves, anyway.

FIVE

Theresa came out to visit me. We met in Jersey and dated in Boston, and I should have married her. I used to fuck up and make her break up with me so I could pitch pennies at her window in Cambridge and talk my way back into her bed.

We fucked and slept on the futon on the floor. She left after a day-and-a-half. I was strung out on pills and my head was swaying.

Brian was the guy I got pot from. He had vicodin, too, and valium and xanax. I bought them all. The vicodin was my favorite, smiley and scratchy, and the other pills were lovely and relaxing; I would take a barbell to sleep and listen to the same Miles Davis record every night on honking big headphones with a curly extension cord connecting them to my stereo across the room.

I don’t remember much of her stay. I’m sure I could not keep up a conversation or a hard-on.

She married a guy I know. Two kids.

SIX

Canter’s is on Fairfax. There’s Jerry’s Deli in the Valley, and Nate & Al’s in Beverly Hills, but Hollywood residents go to Canter’s on Fairfax. After two in the morning, which was Last Call, everyone in the restaurant was drunk but there were rarely fights. No one wanted to get 86’ed from Canter’s. Your agent would hear about it.

The waitresses were battleships.

There were phones at some booths, princess models screwed into the wall where the jukebox should be, and you could call your reprobate friends or your drug dealer or your bass player. You could not make long-distance calls, no matter how clever you were.

Canter’s serves chicken-in-a-pot, which is exactly what it sounds like. Take a chicken, simmer the fucker alongside some potatoes and carrots and whatnot, serve. You have to rip the chicken apart yourself, but it is very tender and so it is easy. There is a basket of bread on the table fit for dunking in the broth.

Pickles, too.

SEVEN

I had a pair of leather pants. They cost $220, and I bought them on Melrose Avenue. I was skinny enough so my ribs showed, and no ass whatsoever. The Army/Navy store on Hollywood sold olive-green shirts with bullseyes on them like the tail markings of a British Spitfire, so I bought five of them in size S and they clung to my starved arms. Rings, too, and a watch with a thick wrist-flap made of leather, also.

My hair came down to my shoulders and I wore a pair of aviator sunglasses I had bought at a gas station.

O, Lord, bless me for the mess I was in my twenties.

EIGHT .

And may He bless you, too.

NINE

Nancy and I were fucking in my bedroom on Gardner Street, and we were vocal fuckers. We would update each other on the state of our orgasms, and cheer one another on. She was pale and had a plump ass and a waxed pussy. Straight blonde hair. She was a production assistant.

The windows were open, and when we finished there was cheering from the sidewalk below. A man and a woman. They had been listening to us. We laughed, and then we smoked a cigarette, and then we fucked again.

TEN

1200 North Gardner is right above Santa Monica Boulevard and a couple blocks below Sunset. West Hollywood slopes up from Beverly Boulevard to the Hills. It is easier to go down. There is a 7-11 at the intersection, and the Astro Burger, and Hunter’s. Hunter’s is a transvestite bar with black-and-white awnings. It is closed when I move in to the neighborhood, and does not ever open. No one buys the property and the black-and-white awnings remain. The bar is its own ghost.

There are Russian repair shops on Santa Monica, and a porno theater named the Pussycat. I applied for a job there, and did not get a call.

ELEVEN

Fini was next after Nancy. She had curly blonde hair, and she was short with very big tits that she wore tight, ironic tee-shirts to emphasize. Instead of a purse, she carried a metal lunch box with Spider-Man on it. I had run into her once or twice, and then we talked all evening at the bar at the World-Famous Hollywood Improv on Melrose. She said “Good night” and then came back and asked me something else–she had already given me her number–and then left again.

My friend John, who was older than me and had been to Vietnam and been married several times, said,

“You know she wants to fuck you, right?”

I didn’t.

It was nice of him to tell me.

TWELVE

I wrote a few screenplays in Los Angeles. You could be evicted from your apartment if you weren’t working on a screenplay, so I wrote a few. They were shit.

There’s nothing I can’t do better than 20-year-old me.

THIRTEEN

Los Angeles was at the vanguard of ‘No-Smoking’ rules, and it was forbidden even in bars. Still, after midnight, the bartenders would break out the ashtrays and all the drunks would gladly light up at the bar instead of walking outside every few minutes.

They were cheap, though. West Hollywood had smoke shops which were actual smoke shops and not just head shops mislabeled. There were always deals in them, too. Marlboro Mediums two-for-one. $2.40. The guys behind the counter were sketchy and foreign, and the store was certainly a front for something-or-other, but still: two-for one Marlboros.

FOURTEEN

The first time, I used twine. I do not know why I had a ball of twine, but I did, and I wrapped it around my left bicep twice and put the rope in my mouth and pulled.

FIFTEEN

The best thing about going to movies in the afternoons is that there’s no one in the auditorium except for fuckups like yourself, and so you can move around and laugh and talk back to the screen without fear of reproach. In a full screening, there’s an expectation of silence and morbidity; at 2:00 in the afternoon, all seven people in the theater are fucked up and weird and jobless and there is a certain détente.

The New Beverly Cinema was a revival theater, and it showed art films and documentaries. I befriended a pimp in a sky-blue suit there once. I saw The Filth and the Fury there twice.

SIXTEEN

Nancy hated Fini. They knew each other. She held my jaw with both hands and held her head straight with mine and said,

“She’s a fucking retard.”

Nancy had blue eyes too large for her face and straight blonde hair. Fini had curly blonde hair and her eyes disappeared when she smiled. I took her to the World-Famous Hollywood Improv on Melrose and we sat at the bar drinking red wine. Brown liquors are bad for you, but red wine is the color of blood and therefore holy and so were drinking red wine. She was wearing a very tight tee-shirt, and she had very big tits.

Nancy was there, too. I don’t know why, I don’t remember. We caught each other’s eye, and I drank red wine with Fini some more. My cock was hard, and we drank red wine, and Dionne Warwick was singing.

Do You Know The Way To San Jose?

Gonna piss, I said to Fini.

There was a small theater connected to the World-Famous Hollywood Improv. One-man shows and whatnot. Stage, soundboard, audience. Small theater. There were bathrooms backstage, and Nancy was standing in front of one. I followed her in and she turned around and kissed me angry and grabbed me by the back of my neck; I gathered up her ass in both hands and lifted her onto the vanity. She unclasped her jeans herself, and I was out of mine, too, and hard and in her fucking her against the cheap dryboard wall.

Neither of our pants were off, just puddled at our ankles. I came in her, and she kissed the place where my neck meets my ear. Right behind the lobe.

I wore 501’s at the time, so I buttoned up my fly and went back to Fini at the bar.

I’d never felt more manly than when I was lying to her.

SEVENTEEN

I was back to 140 pounds again. Crystal meth will do that to you. I was wearing shorts that I had cut from cargo pants and long-sleeved shirts; I would hold up my shorts because I did not have a belt. I desperately needed a haircut.

All of these problems could be cured with a needle.

Or put off for several hours.

EIGHTEEN

The sun comes up early in The Madison when your curtains are busted and you are strung out on pills. The windows point east and the view is of the Yamashiro restaurant and the Hollywood Sign, The sun lives in the east, and when your curtains are busted there is no defense against her but pills.

Eventually, the sun wins. She’s a motherfucker that way.

The sun always comes up in Los Angeles, even if you are not there.

More Partial Transcript From The G20 Dinner

“Justy!”

“Dammit, he saw me.”

“Justy, come here and sit with me. Bring your meatloaf. Come sit by me. I’m the best president here.”

“Oookay.”

“Were you trying to blend into the drapes? People keep doing that to me. Tell me I’m not under investigation.”

“Not in Canada, I don’t think.”

“Everyone heard Justy! I’m innocent of everything!”

“Even if I had the authority to say that, I didn’t say that.”

“You met Macaroni yet? Almost as handsome as we are, but not as tall.”

“We?”

“According to the Electoral College, I am the handsomest president since Kennedy. Many people say more handsome than Kennedy, but I haven’t been shot. I like presidents that don’t get shot.”

“Are you okay?”

“I know that guy. The Chinaman. Hey, Xi! Xi! You eating the meatloaf?”

“没有人在桌子上可以相信你是多么愚蠢.”

“Great , great, yes. You and me have to make some great deals, we sit down, you and me, very quickly this deal is gonna get done. All the people are gonna be happy. American, Chinese, and it’s gonna something that many people are very excited about.”

“坐在桌子上羞辱我的祖先.”

“Did you say ‘Sit on the table and humiliate my ancestors?'”

“Google翻译不是很好.”

“Great, okay, we’ll get a deal going, wonderful. Justy, tell me about the meatloaf. Is it wonderful?”

“I suppose. It’s meatloaf.”

“You cant get that in stores. Maybe I should sell it. Justy, could I pass a law saying that people had to buy Trumploaf?”

“You’ve already named it?”

“And trademarked it.”

“In all markets including Russia.”

“GUY LEFLEUR! Where did you two come from?”

“My sons Eric and the one I hate are always with me.”

POOF!

FLAPFLAPFLAPFLAP

“Did they just turn into bats and fly away?”

“Yeah, they do that. The best bats you’ve ever seen. Hey, Vladimir!”

“Vhat did you call me?”

“President Putin! President Putin. Sorry, sorry, President Putin.”

“Da. Vhat you vant?”

“As you know because of your great intelligence and cunning, many disgusting people in my country have been on lying witch hunts accusing you of terrible, horrible things that are not true.”

“Really? I had not heard.”

“Oh, yeah. Awful things. They say you meddled in the election, and I tell them: no meddle, no meddle.”

“You repeat.”

“You have to with these journalists. Very dumb and very fake. They make things up, and they are getting in the way of me making America great again. Dumb, dumb people. You know anybody just so dumb that they don’t understand reality?”

“Da. I know man this dumb.”

“Okay, so let’s get this out of the way. In front of all these presidents who are not as beloved as you and me, I’m gonna ask you a question.”

“Okay.”

“Did you interfere in our election?”

“Nyeeeeeet.”

“Promise?”

“Da.”

“Pinky swear?”

“I do nyet know vhat pinky svear is.”

“That’s good enough for me. I mean, did you all hear him? Very, very truthful man, and I know a little about the truth because I have never lied. There have been times when it hurt me to tell the truth, but I did because of my character, which is very great. Hey, Xi! Did you hear him?”

“二十一世纪将属于中国.”

“Great, great, the best.”

A Partial Transcript Of The G20 Dinner

“Angela will have the meatloaf.”

“Nein, Herr Fuhr–uhm, Mister President. I do not vant zee meatloaf.”

“Listen, Angela, if you were at all hot, I would tell you to get a salad. But you’re a mess, so what harm’s the meatloaf gonna do? You’ll love it, I brought it from home, the most beautiful meatloaf you’ve ever seen. If Hillary was here, you wouldn’t get meatloaf.”

“Don’t remind me.”

“Did I hear you say something about John Podesta?’

“Nein.”

ILL-FITTING SUIT PATTING NOISE

“Dammit, where’s my twitter? Did Jared take my twitter? Angela, do you have a twitter?”

“Vas ist ein twitter?”

“A twitter. It’s a rectangle that you hate into.”

“Nein.”

“Bored. Bored. No one’s paying attention to me.

TINKTINKTINK

“Everyone pay attention to me. I didn’t learn any of your names, so let’s go around the table and introduce ourselves. I’ll start because I’m the president. Hello, I’m the president. Hillary’s not, and I am. Obama said many, many terrible things about all of you. Personal things, disgusting things. He said all the women were bleeding out of their whatevers, and the men were all losers. Especially you, President Putin. The most terrible things.”

“Da.”

“Maybe you should do something about that. Take care of the problem.”

“Jesus, Donald, nyet out loud.”

“Okay, great, great, you look very handsome and strong. Okay, let’s start with the intros. You, mouse face.”

“Are you speaking to me, Mr. President?”

“Who else has a face like a mouse? No one. President Putin doesn’t, he’s got a face like a lion.”

“Da, lion.”

“C’mon, c’mon. Who are you?”

“Um, Theresa May. Prime Minister of the UK.”

“Prime Minister? I’m President. Do I outrank you?”

“That’s not how it works.”

“Details, shmetails. Okay, next: you look familiar.”

“Enrique Nieto. We’ve met on several occasion.”

“No, I think you’re the head valet at Mar-A-Lago.”

“You think this because you are un racisto.”

“I don’t speak valet. Next: black guy.”

“I am not black. I am African. My name is Jacob Zuma.”

“What’s happening in the inner-cities is terrible. Listen, Zoomy, get up so my beautiful daughter Ivanka can sit down, okay?”

“I most certainly will not get–”

JUDO KICK

“Thank you, President Putin.”

“Da.”

“Very strong.”

“Is time for meatloaf.”

“Did you order meatloaf?”

“Nyet. I vill eat yours.”

“Wonderful, wonderful.”

A Friendship, Deepened

“I like that sweater.”

“It breathes.”

“Looks it. Nordstrom’s?

“No. My wife Regina makes all of our clothes.”

“Really?”

“All Canadian women make their family’s clothing. It’s really tough on the wives of Mounties.”

“The tunics.”

“Yeah. Those things require master tailors. Plus, you have to kill the beavers for the hats.”

“Sure. How do you kill a beaver?”

“Disappoint it until alcoholism sets in.”

“I’m learning a lot, Dave.”

“David.”

“What’s the weirdest thing in The Vault?”

“TC.”

“Huh?”

“He sleeps there sometimes.”

“Oh.”

“Y’know, Amir, I don’t know much about you. What is your background?”

“Right now, a mirror.”

“Ancestors and all.”

“My parents, Zev and Bev Bar-Lev met in the Israeli Navy.”

“Israel has a navy?”

“It’s mostly arguing about where to eat in a rowboat.”

“Okay.”

“Heavily-armed waterskiing.”

“In speedos.”

“Camouflage speedos, yeah. My parents were heroes. They were at Entebbe.”

“Your parents participated in the Raid on Entebbe?”

“They were in a canoe just a mile away.”

“Wow.”

“If every single other mode of transportation failed, then it was up to them.”

“I’m impressed.”

“My dad saved his paddle. Family heirloom. Circumcised my boys on it.”

“It’s those links to the past that make us human.”

“You said it, Dave.”

“David. Hey, that little weirdo still bothering you?”

“Thinking about the Grateful Dead?”

“Yeah, whatever the fuck he calls himself.”

“Dude. He’s the worst.”

“I told you not to engage.”

“He won’t stop pitching terrible ideas. Last one was that we should do a movie starring porn stars that features full penetration.”

“That’s just called porn.”

“I told him that. He started in with Brancusi and the difference between intent and ‘intent.'”

“What does that even mean?”

“No idea. The next one was ‘Hotel Rwanda, but a musical.'”

“That’s distasteful.”

“He wrote some songs.”

“Really?”

“Toot-Toot-Tutsi, Goodbye.”

“Wow.”

“It’s a nightmare.”

“You can always flee to Canada. You can sleep on our davenport.”

“I’ll keep it in mind.”

“Regina can always make more clothes.”

A Conversation With Billy That Goes Just How You’d Assume

Hey, Billy. Whatcha doing?

“I think I’m a Big Brother now or something.”

No.

“Helping out an underprivileged kid from the inner-city.”

No.

“No?”

No.

“Am I being mugged?”

Jesus, man.

“World’s changing, Ass. Used to be you had to be white to be a Grateful Dead. Or at least Mexican. Now there’s a pretty chick, a black guy, and a Jew!”

First off: that is not a pretty chick, it’s John Mayer.

“Tell that to my boner.”

Second: his name is Oteil.

“Oteil’s not a Jewish name.”

The black guy!

“Makes sense. Jewish guys are named Schmucky or Lumpberg or Amir.”

Or Mickey. Mickey’s the Jew.

“Yeah? Thanks for telling me.”

BEEP BOP BEEP

What is that?

“Updating my Jew files on the ol’ Apple Watch.”

Why?

“Because it’s 2017. What am I supposed to do, write it down like a caveman?”

We’re done.

Home Is Where They Have To Take You In

Manfred Pierce was in the Navy. Served on the USS Dextrous during the Korean War, which was an Auk-class minesweeper that was recommissioned from World War II. Ship took some shelling from the Communist artillery, and Manfred received several medals. He had them framed, and hung them over the bar when he opened the Wayside Inn. New customers would invariably say something about the medals, and Manfred would invariably respond,

“I loved the Navy. Most sex I’ve ever had.”

And then he’d buy them their first drink, and maybe the second if they were cute.

The first Wayside Inn burned down in 1871 with 38 souls inside. Miss Valentine, who owned the place and all the people who worked there, was buried beneath a tombstone imported from Back East; chiselled seraphim and cherubim and an epithet in italics declaring her The Linchpin of Civilization. The courthouse was named after her, too. A dozen whores died in the fire. They were chucked into the mass grave in the southwestern corner of the Verdance, and seven of them were so unimportant that no one wrote down their last names. Piano player named Ace Cooley burned, also, and so did eight miners and four goons and an advance man from a consortium. Four gamblers, and a poker dealer, and two men who owned a hardware concern, and five men who were not identified but were prayed over by the Reverend Busybody Tyndale, and noted in his diary that is the only first-hand source of the Wayside Fire and currently resides in the Special Collection of Spants Library.

The new Wayside Inn was on Sylvester Street, and it did not have a sign at first. It didn’t have running water at first, either, just a cheap plywood bar with soapy buckets behind it and a dance floor you shouldn’t dance on, and mismatched stools and chairs and tables. A jukebox that took dimes when all the other jukeboxes in the neighborhood took nickels. Sometimes, customers wouldn’t work up the nerve to come in, just walk around the block a few times and go home, jerk off, cry.

Little Aleppo is a neighborhood in America, and America is full of mean motherfuckers, and so it was illegal to be a faggot in 1968 and it was illegal to be a dyke, too.

Strangely enough, these laws did not put an end to homosexuality.

Orphic Mystery was going to name herself Eleusinian Mystery, but it was too hard to spell. Her driver’s license said she was a 6’4″, 130 pound man named Thomas Andrew Mold, but a license is a government-issued document and Orphic didn’t trust the government. Shit, they had tried to draft her, send her to Vietnam! How could you trust anyone like that? (The draft board sent Tom Mold the letter, but Orphic Mystery showed up at the recruiting office and was quickly sent home; Tom Mold received no more letters from the draft board.) She wanted to protest the war, and tried to march with the hippies. They called her the same names that the hard-hats beating up the hippies called her. Hippies were for free love, but only for a specific definition of “free.”

The first time she went to the Wayside, she changed in the bathroom of the Victory Diner. Jeans and tee-shirt go in the bag, orange-and-yellow mod dress came out. She painted her nails sitting on the toilet, and then the white high-heels she had rented a P.O box to order. There was no place to buy size-13 women’s shoes in Little Aleppo at the time, and she still lived with her parents so the package couldn’t come to the house. Orphic kept the shoes with her at all times: in her bag or in her locker at Paul Bunyan High. The clothes she hid at home in the drop ceiling in her closet, but those could be explained.

“Girlfriend left them here, Dad. I hid them so you wouldn’t know we were sleeping together.”

Orphic’s father would have loved to hear that lie, would have leapt to believe it.

But size 13 high heels?

Orphic Mystery’s dress had fringes on it like a go-go dancer, and a blonde wig with a flip ‘do. Her makeup was a mess, and she tottered out of the bathroom of the Victory Diner so nervous she couldn’t swallow, and did not make eye contact with anyone. Out the door and south on the Main Drag for two blocks. More tottering. She had practiced in her house when her parents were out, and was vaguely proficient at carpets and hardwood floors, but she had never walked on the crumbly and uneven sidewalk before in heels. She was tall and skinny and wobbly: she looked like a newborn giraffe that had been drinking tequila all morning. Orphic had never drank tequila before; she was sixteen.

East on Sylvester and a half-a-block down. Long half-a-block. Couples on stoops that stared, and a shout from across the street. Orphic wanted to step out of her heels and run, but she didn’t, and finally there was the Wayside Inn on the south side of the street across from the Wash ‘N Slosh.

It was dark out, but it was darker in the Wayside–the jukebox was the only light–and Orphic Mystery went to the bar where Manfred Pierce was working and said,

“Hello.”

And Manfred smiled and said,

“Hello, beautiful.”

When he asked her what she wanted, she didn’t know and so he made her a whiskey sour, because whiskey sours do not taste like alcohol and so people too young to be drinking alcohol like them.

The bar was not busy, so he had time to talk to Orphic for most of the night. It was the first conversation she could remember having where she did not tell one lie or leave anything out. Manfred introduced her around. Kisses and hugs. A woman in a suit named Phillipa Humber shared a joint with her, and she made out with a guy who called himself the Living Hamper. James Brown and Tommy Amici were on the jukebox, and Orphic Mystery was on the dance floor dancing with no one in particular and the entire world; she never wanted to go home, and she didn’t get a chance that night because the LAPD (No, Not That One) stormed in and arrested everyone they saw. The cops tore her wig off, and one swung his foot into hers and broke the heel on her shoe, and one called her freak and two called her faggot, and she was chucked in the back of the wagon with the rest of the Wayside’s customers with whom she had been having such a lovely time only moments before. It was not as much of a party in the paddy wagon. Perhaps it was the lighting.

Her parents picked her up at the jail, and threw her out of the house.

Orphic Mystery went back to the Wayside Inn because she had nowhere else to go, and Manfred Pierce took her in. He had a house on Fantic Street that was never without a runaway or two; Manfred collected stray animals and people. When Orphic moved in, there were two cats, two dogs, and two teenagers. There was also a turtle named Myrtle. She slept on the couch for a while, and thought about cruelty. You’re supposed to learn about cruelty a little at a time, but some people get the crash course.

The Cenotaph had printed the names of all those busted in the Wayside. They always did, because it was news and journalists are nothing if not objective.

To her credit, Orphic tried to go back to school. She made it to third period.

Her neighborhood had told her she was illegal, the cops arrested her, the media fucked her, her school slapped and cursed at her, and her parents disowned her.

Everyone in the Wayside was a peach, though. Finster Tabb was a retired high school teacher, and he helped her get her GED; Steppy Alouette came from money, and she gave her some; Manfred Pierce owned the place, kinda, and he gave her a job.

Sixteen year olds shouldn’t be working at bars, sure, and if it were a legal establishment, she wouldn’t have. But the Wayside Inn did not belong to Manfred Pierce, not really. It was actually owned by several large gentlemen who had never set foot in the place. There was no liquor license–a liquor license would be pulled if the proprietor was allowing wanton homosexuality in the establishment–and all the power came from an extension cord extruding from the barbershop next door. A teenager working there was the least of the Wayside’s problems.

So Orphic Mystery worked at the Wayside for a couple years. She got her own place, and learned how to do her makeup, and ordered shoes directly to her home. It was a big world, though, and she wanted to see it. New York, especially. She had never been to New York

It was 1968, and Barbarella was playing at The Tahitian. Orphic loved it, and Finster Tabb thought it was vulgar. They were on their way to the Wayside for a drink. He was wearing grey slacks and a blue vee-neck sweater; she was wearing a red-and-white baby doll dress, and she walked expertly in her blue high heels. Orphic towered over Finster, and they debated the film.

“Hey, faggot!”

That was from a stoop, from the fattest of three men sitting on the stoop. Orphic didn’t turn around. She had turned around before, and wound up with black eyes and broken fingers. Just keep walking and–besides–we are on the Main Drag and there are many people around and nothing bad could happen in a crowd as long as you stay under the streetlights but this was not true because the fattest one of the three men rushed up behind Orphic Mystery and cracked her skull open with a length of rebar; the other two were laughing and pushed Finster into a mailbox very hard so he broke three ribs.

Orphic Mystery lay on the sidewalk of the Main Drag making a small noise like muuuuh muuuuh, and then her pupils dilated and she didn’t make any more noises. She was 18 years old, and one of her blue high heels had come off and she had pissed and shit herself.

The three men ran off.

Everyone saw them.

Everyone knew their names.

No charges were filed.

The Wayside Inn was full to bursting that night, and the dance floor was crying and there was grief-fucking going on in the bathrooms; Finster Tabb was taped up and being fed drinks in the corner. The jukebox was the only light, and charged a dime while the other jukeboxes in the neighborhood charged a nickel. Sam Cooke was singing. He was telling the operator to put his baby on the phone, and the band was following him, and the door to Sylvester Street was closed shut real tight and no one could come in, this was a sacred place and FUCK YOU how fucking dare you treat us like this just keep the door closed and the jukebox blaring Sam Cooke and things are fine things are fine and boats are not to be rocked and you will be a coward until you’re buried in your grave and you’ll take the fucking you coward and standing up is for giraffes standing up is for giraffes, and we’re just faggots and dykes with a dead child in our arms and we will sit here and take what we are given.

And then the cops raided the place.

This was a tactical error.

All those faggots, all those dykes, all those American men and women did not discuss nor did they plan and nor did they assess the fucking situation: they threw tables and picked up chairs and smacked cops on their heads just like Orphic was hit, but they showed mercy unlike her murderers, and when reinforcements came, they charged out and tackled anyone in a uniform.

The Wayside Riots lasted two nights. On the first, all the homosexuals of the neighborhood came out to fight; on the second, the entire neighborhood came out. The locals were not in favor of gay rights–Little Aleppo was no more progressive than anywhere else in America. in 1968–but they instinctively took the opposing position to the cops. The LAPD (No, Not That One) retreated after a deal was struck: Manfred Pierce would be arrested for something or other, and the charges dropped. His regulars met him at the jailhouse.

The Cenotaph ran a picture of Orphic Mystery dead on the sidewalk of the Main Drag; she looked very young. The photo won several awards. Manfred Pierce sued the Town Fathers, and eventually became one. The Wayside Inn is still there, and there’s a plaque commemorating the riots. Locals stream in and out, and 16-year-olds are no longer allowed in because it is a legitimate establishment that sponsors a Little League team and follows the rules. Over the bar, there is a silhouette box with medals from a forgotten war and a photograph of a tall woman with her friends, and the old man behind the bar will welcome you in, no matter who you are and what you’ve done, and buy you your first drink–and second if you’re cute–in Little Aleppo, which is a neighborhood in America.

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