Enthusiasts, if the words Martin Amis goes to a Trump rally in Ohio don’t fill your heart with glee, then I severely misjudged you. Go read.
Musings on the Most Ridiculous Band I Can't Stop Listening To
Enthusiasts, if the words Martin Amis goes to a Trump rally in Ohio don’t fill your heart with glee, then I severely misjudged you. Go read.

Precarious?
“Yo.”
You got the Time Sheath on you?
“Yup.”
Can you go 20 minutes into the future and see if that speaker falls on those two kids and kills them?
“Sure.”
…
“It does.”
Thought so.
Europeans were not introduced to coffee until the 17th century, which makes their accomplishments prior to that far more notable. Building the cathedral of Notre Dame is impressive, but doing it without coffee is heroic. And that’s disregarding the labor, hauling the stones and hoisting the beams: how did they draw up the blueprints without it? That is tedious, fidgety, erase-and-start-again type work; it is coffee work. Novelists and poets drink wine, but draftsmen and engineers drink coffee. The car you drive, the house you fuck in, all your gadgety gadgets: products of coffee, every one.
The Victory Diner served it too hot, poured by waitresses who called you hon; the milk came from a battered creamer and the packets of sugar were already at the table when you sat down, and the packets of non-sugar, too. Or you could get it to-go in a thick paper cup adorned with Hellenism. Blue with a white lip and bottom, and circumscripted with buttfuckers in Phrygian caps. Farmer’s Market, which was a bodega with a dodgy produce selection, still had styrofoam cups topped with flimsy plastic lids. “Bad for the environment,” Little Aleppians would say, and “Someone should ban those” as they enjoyed the material’s thermal properties. Nero’s, which was on the Upside, served a Turkish blend in demitasse cups after dinner; Seafood & Spaghetti, which was on the Downside, served a product called Joe!, which tasted almost mostly like coffee, in shoplifted mugs that the customers brought with them.
Mundy’s was your best bet. It was the only place in the neighborhood that did not view coffee as commodity, as fungible, as means to jittery end. There were beans of both the Arabica and Robusta variety; there were also Madagascara beans, too, which had been passed through the digestive system of a ring-tailed lemur. Various espressi could be produced. Cappuccino and frappuccino; sappuccino contained a shot of maple syrup. Bitter Americanos, sweet Cubanos, forgettable Belgianos. There were iced concoctions that combined sugar and caffeine in delicious and expensive ways. Mundy’s did not have a liquor license, but a raised eyebrow and two bucks would give your drink a brogue.
Unless you called it a coffee shop.
“Coffee shop? Coffee shop? Do you see donuts and formica? Are we in an Edward Hopper painting? Does the chipped porcelain tell you stories of lost love?”
Mundial Proft, who was known as Mundy, was particular about language.
“This is a coffeehouse. As in the place that gave birth to the Enlightenment, and America. Coffee shops give birth to bad poems and stab wounds.”
And then she’d throw you out. Don’t call it a coffee shop.
The coffeehouse was a half-block east of the Main Drag across Spants Street from Harper College. The road used to be known as Picador Way, but was renamed to honor the long-time Dean and his wife after they passed away. A Harper alum, Mundy was all in favor of it–some of the organizing meetings about getting the name changed were held at her place–she loved the Dean and his wife Molly just as much as anyone. She was, however, not fond of saying “Spants Street.” The phrase didn’t roll off the tongue so much as bounce off the teeth. She liked the sign. High up on a lamppost overlooking the intersection with yellow letters on a blue background. Officially, the colors were gold and cerulean, but Little Aleppians knew gold and blue when they saw them.
By mid-morning, the newspapers would be piled up on the long shelf by the door. Early birds are whirleybirds; they gotta know everything, they’re a part of the action; real hard charger types. Mundy thought of them as the overly-employed. This group purchased the newspapers. Hours later, pajama’d students and adults with no visible means of support would stumble in to sit over lattes for an hour. This group read the newspapers. It was the circle of life. The gambling gazette, and the international broadsheet, and the daily pamphlet in which Hollywood sniped at one another, and the sports digest, and USA Today. No one knew who brought USA Today–the Broadside Newsstand did not even carry it–but it appeared every day when Mundy wasn’t looking. She tossed it in the trash when she saw it. She felt the colored graphs mocked her.
On the other side of the door was a triangular stage. It was only six inches off the ground, more of a symbolic platform than a literal one. When you stood on it, people treated you like you were on stage, and that was good enough. It was Open Mic Night every Monday–Mondays at Mundy’s, the show was called–and it was the openest mic in the neighborhood. Flautists and poets and Balancin’ Phil, the Man Who Rarely If Ever Toppled Over. (Phil was a genius. He could not fall down for hours, man.) Tap dancing was infrequent, but expected. A variety of nudities had been displayed: artistic, aggressive, accidental. No one won and no one lost; it was not a talent contest, it was Open Mic Night.
Communists met at the corner table every Friday at four, until they had an internal schism and then met Tuesdays at five and Fridays at four. The Flat Earth Society also had a regular table, one that they quickly came to believe was spherical. Students for a Year-Round Carnival often gathered to share a drink and say, “Dude, imagine you could ride the Cyclotron anytime you wanted” to each other; they would bring their own cotton candy with them. Outside food was not permitted, but Mundy would let it slide if they gave her some. The Melchiorites met Thursdays in the afternoon. They were pale and plainly hiding wings underneath the trench coats they would not remove. Mundy left the Melchiorites alone. Two old men, neither of whom were Rappaport, played chess under a large painting that had its price tag affixed to its corner.
All the art was for sale. Ridiculous prices. A grand for the cubist rendering of a pair of swinging testicles. Eight hundred bucks for the brown splotches fighting the purple lines. Twenty thousand–no kidding–for a canvas with a thin layer of rose paint covering it entitled “Painting #41.” Those were the asking prices. Offer $50, and you could own yourself some art. Mundy would fill in the space on the wall with another local’s painting and make up a silly price for it, too.
The music would scandalize none, and tantalize fewer.
None of the chairs matched, not one, which the math department of Harper College had determined was statistically impossible. There were only so many kinds of chair, they told Mundy. She shrugged. Our findings, they said, have been reviewed by our peers. Mundy shrugged again, and asked if they were going to order anything or just stand around arguing with reality. We are mathematicians, they responded; we can do both at the same time.
In the afternoons, the writers came in. Filthy little beasts, Mundy thought. Self-obsessed hunchbacks worrying themselves bald over where to put the commas. What’s worse: they were lingerers. Buy a cookie at two and still sitting there at five. The price for giving people a place to stay is that sometimes they stayed there. The Frantic Month of Junior Lapps, which was turned into a hit movie, was written at that table right there. Shake It Like Sunday, which was the impetus behind four lawsuits and two murders, was written over there. Several poets had threatened suicide at that table.
First dates, too, and sometimes people would come in to read their divorce papers over a cappuccino. Men who had lost their jobs and could not tell their wives would sit quietly all day, buying something small every hour, on the hour, in cash. The friendless would come in to sit near others’ conversations. Actors read their sides and con men put up fronts. Itinerant bandleaders wandered in with trombones and cornets to sell. Great debates broke out, and incredibly stupid ones. The baristas were either not speaking to one another or fucking; there was no middle ground.
One day, a boy with curly hair came in with a guitar. He didn’t have a strap for it; he stole a matchbook, ripped off the cover, bent it double to make a pick. His voice was too old for his body–he sang from his asshole–and he kept his eyes closed most of the time. No one got the name of the song, but it was about death and ice cream. It had a hell of a chorus. When he was finished, all the girls wanted to fuck him. The boys, too, but they would deny it. The boy with the curly hair had his knee perched up on a stool and his guitar resting on his thigh, and the applause came towards him. He dodged some of it. Then he played Louie Louie.
Revolution was always in the air at Mundy’s coffeehouse, but it never seemed to land.
Mundial Proft, who was known as Mundy, had always wanted a coffeehouse. An open-door kind of place. A say what you want kind of place. With big steaming machinery that hissed and popped and spit out caffeinated beverages and a little stage in the corner. Everybody’s got a dream. She used to have a husband with a mustache and a temper and a great big life insurance policy, and now she had a coffeehouse with a little stage in the corner on Spants Street, which is right off the Main Drag in Little Aleppo, which is a neighborhood in America.
CELL PHONE NOISE
“Ugh. Ugh. Ugh ugh ugh. Three in the fucking morning. Every time. None of them sleep. What?”
“Uh, hi. Aeroflot? I need a plane ticket. Preferably to Moscow, but Ukraine or Belarus will do, too. Whichever flight leaves first. I’m a Caviar-Level member.”
“This isn’t Aeroflot, Manafort. You called Maggie Haberman.”
“From the Times?”
“Yup.”
…
“Well, shit, it’s not like I could be in any more trouble at this point.”
“Skipping town, Paul?”
“Absolutely not. Just wanted to get in a little weekend vacation.”
“In Belarus?”
“Or Qatar.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Maybe Morocco.”
“Why Morocco, Paul?”
“The waters.”
“Not the fact that it has no extradition treaty with the US?”
“Does it not? I had no idea. Wow. You journalists sure are smart cookies.”
“Cut the shit, Manafort.”
“I can’t go to jail, Maggie. I’m used to the finer things in life, like not being anally raped.”
“I hate these phone calls.”
“This is a witch hunt, that’s what it is. All I did was secretly accept payoffs from a foreign country to influence American government officials. That’s not a crime.”
“It totally is. It might be several crimes, in fact.”
“Oh, what do I know about the law? I’m just a small-town international lobbyist.”
“You work for dictators.”
“Hey, everyone’s got a tough boss.”
“No, not metaphorical dictators. You work for literal tyrants who have their enemies tortured and killed.”
“Yes, but I never sexually harassed anyone. I think that counts for something this week.”
“It doesn’t.”
“Probably not. Maggie, this ain’t looking good. Mueller’s got everything. He never stops. He never sleeps. He’s like the shark from Jaws, but taller. Maybe I could jam a scuba tank in his mouth and blow him up.”
“That won’t work.”
“Have you seen his mouth? It’s really big.”
“Still.”
“Jesus, I’m gonna get hosed. Why’d I get involved with these amateurs? That little fucking Kushner kid is gonna send me to jail. You know he came up with a money laundering scheme?”
“Kushner? What was it?”
“He said we should take the money, convert it into change, then bring it down to the Coinstar machine at the supermarket.”
“That sounds like Kushner.”
“Stupidest people you’ve ever met. Don Junior used to text me. ‘Hey, it’s Junior. How’s the collusion coming?’ I am screwed.”
“Yup.”
“I’m considering throwing myself on the mercy of the court. I mean: it is my first offense.”
“I don’t think ‘first offense’ means anything when the offense is treason.”
“My lawyer says I might get probation.”
“Who’s your lawyer?”
“Lisa Bloom.”
“You should get a new lawyer.”
“Probably. Hey, Maggie? Buddy?”
“Not your buddy.”
“You got an extra passport laying around?”
“I’m hanging up the phone.”
“Okay. Listen, don’t tell anyone about this call, okay?”
CLICK
“No dice, Mr. Manafort. You called down the thunder and now you’re getting the lightning.”
“Who is that?”
“This is Robert Mueller. I’ve been tapping Mrs. Haberman’s phone for months.”
“Shit.”
“What!?”
“I’m everywhere, Mr. Manafort. You attempt to leave the country and I will know.”
CLICK
“That guy’s good.”
“I’m going to jail.”
“Looks that way.”
“I’ll give you three million dollars in change to drive me to Bolivia.”
DIAL TONE NOISE EVEN THOUGH PHONES NO LONGER MAKE THAT NOISE

Hey, Pope Francis. Whatcha doing?
“I’m-a watchin’ da teevee. Second season of-a Stranger Things don’t make-a no sense. Is-a no scary.”
I think you’re actually talking to astronauts, Your Holiness.
“Si, si. I make-a da joke.”
You’re a funny Pope.
“Not like-a Clement XIII. Hands-a down, da funniest Pope-a.”
When was he Pope?
“In-a da 1760’s. They’re still-a talkin’ about him here. Made-a da big impression. He knew all-a da jokes. When-a da nuns would leave-a da room, he would-a work blue. And-a he could dance. Real-a triple threat, Clement XIII.”
Sure. So what’s the best part of being Pope?
“I like-a dis part. Talkin’ to-a da people. They got-a da hope in-a their hearts. Is-a nice. Make-a me happy.”
That’s an encouraging answer.
“And I like-a da Vatican gym.”
Is it nice?
“You gotta see dis place. Is-a swanky. Towel service is-a free. Got-a da juice bar where they make-a da smoothies. They taste-a so good, but-a they good for you, too. Is-a da best of both-a da worlds.”
Sounds pretty sweet.
“I do-a da hot yoga. Lift-a da weight. Take-a da shvitz. Sometimes, I sit on-a da bike and watch-a my stories. Is-a so boring otherwise.”
Cardio is a chore.
“I don’t-a look at-a da clock. I put-a da towel over it.”
Then how do you know how long you’ve done?
“When-a da second Judge-a Judy episode is-a over, so is-a my ride.”
You’re a fan of Judge Judy, Your Holiness?
“Si, si. Love-a da Judge-a Judy. She don’t take-a no crap. I wish I could-a hire her to be-a da canonization judge.”
The canonization judge?
“Si. Before-a you become-a da saint, there’s-a da trial. Got-a someone arguing-a for you, and-a someone against. Is-a where da phrase ‘Devil’s advocate’ comes from.”
I learned something today.
“And-a it takes forever. With-a da back and forth. Judge-a Judy? She’d-a be done in eight minutes. She-a say, ‘You, you gonna be-a da saint. You, you gonna no be-a da saint.’ We could-a be home by lunch.”
She is efficient.
“And-a she says the stuff. I love-a da stuff she-a say. ‘Don’t-a poop on my lawn and-a tell me da ice cream truck came-a by.’ That sort-a da thing.”
I agree, Pope Francis, but I think you have to keep up appearances. And, besides: Judge Judy is Jewish.
“So was-a da Jesus.”
True.

Hey, Bobby. Whatcha doing?
“Rando time. Gotta get it in, or you get out of practice. Then, you know, you go back on tour and you got no idea how to handle ’em.”
Just pretend to be nice.
“You have no idea how much work that takes.”
True. Hey, today is a special anniversary.
“Ah, dammit. My wife–”
Natasha Monster.
“–is gonna kill me.”
Not your anniversary, Bobby.
“Oh, good.”
On this date in 1984 was the very first official Taper’s Section.
“Ah. Huh, yeah. Portentous day. Went much better than the previous evening.”
What happened?
“Well, uh, we tried to introduce the Taper’s Section. But somebody made a typing error on the memo and things turned out poorly for everyone.”
How bad could a type be?
“Raper’s Section.”
Wow.
“The situation got out of hand almost immediately.”
Sure.
“And, you know, just because you have a Raper’s Section doesn’t mean the rapers are gonna stay there. Those folks don’t follow rules.”
They do not, no.
“Had to send the crew up there with some pool cues.”
Very few problems a large man with a pool cue can’t solve.
“That’s what I’ve come to find out, yeah. Anyway, the next night everything was spelled right and, you know, a tradition was born.”
Bobby, God bless ya, but that’s a terrible story.
“That’s why I never told it to you before.”
Good point.

Happy anniversary, tapirs! On this date in Grateful Dead history in 1984, the Dead set aside a special section at their Berkeley Community Theater show just for tapirs, starting a jam band tradition that lasts until this very day. Good job, Grateful Dead!
Ahem.
Yes?
Tapers. With an e.
What now?
It was the Taper’s Section. For human beings recording the show. Not tapirs.
Tapers?
Yes.
Those pale nerds with all the gadgets who like shushing people?
Yes.
…
Never mind.

“Absolutely not, General.”
“You’ll be dazzled by her, Jenkins.”
“Nope.”
“Ahem.”
“Nope, sir”
“Balderdash. You’re a cook, Jenkins. And over every meal you prepare, you sprinkle a dash of balder.”
“Sir, what is an ‘Abibiman Nsoroma’?”
“Abillabong Nsurance.”
“Can we take as read the part where you humorously mispronounce the words two or three times?”
“I suppose.”
“What does that phrase mean, sir?”
“Summertime Master of the Burning Fire that Eats Sin with Great Big Teeth and Magic Sword.”
“I don’t think it does, sir.”
“Are you accusing an officer of lying, Jenkins?”
“No, sir. For a lie to exist, intent must factor in. I have no way of knowing the intent of your statement, so I have no grounds upon which to call it a lie. However, I will say that the statement you gave was anti-factual.”
“You’re saying we should blame the statement?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Capital idea. Take the statement outside and have it shot.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Abyssianian Nsurrection means whatever it means. It belongs to the U.S. Army now.”
“I suppose you’ve given it–”
“She’s called the Screamin’ Mimi.”
“–a new name. Yes, sir. Excellent choice. From what weird foreign place did you acquire this deathtrap, General?”
“An ally of the United States. Except for Maine. They’ve broken off diplomatic relationships with Maine. There was an incident at a Portland discotheque.”
“Anything else you remember?”
“Winter was much colder when I was a child.”
“About where you got this thing from, sir.”
“Dammit, man, don’t interrupt an officer when he’s having a reverie!”
“I apologize, sir.”
“Mimi came from somewhere. She came from where she came from. Back down, young man. That’s an order.”
“You bought it off the internet, didn’t you, sir?
“I did, yes.”
“Is that within regulations?”
“Oh God, no, but I don’t know if you’ve noticed: a bit of a free-for-all situation going on right now. I struck while the iron is hot.”
“You got drunk and ordered the means of my death off Ebay.”
“Both statements are correct, Jenkins. Mine in a metaphorical sense, yours in a literal one. Now stop dilly-dallying. I forbid both the dilly and the dally.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Obviously, shilly-shallying is also off the table.”
“Obviously, sir. A question.”
“Quick one.”
“Are those bottle rockets?”
“No better friend to a soldier than a bottle rocket. Eisenhower said that.”
“If you say so, sir. What do they do, sir?”
“Jenkins, do you possess a brain or have you just a lump bit atop the stalk? If I were to put it in lollipop terms: a normal brain sitting on the vertebra and spinal cord would be a Tootsie Roll or perhaps a Blow Pop. Excellent lollipop, the Blow.”
“Yes, sir.”
“But your brain would more resemble a Dum-Dum. Those stubby, sad candies that unhappy families hand out for Halloween.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Open up the wrapper and there’s a dollop of disappointment inside.”
“Yes, sir.”
“The bottle rockets are there to startle the enemy. You’ll sneak up on him in his hut, or dojo, or condo. Whatever the hell the enemy around here lives in is called. And then FEEEEEEE you fire those beautiful babies off. Scare the bejeebus out of ’em.”
“Sir, it’s a helicopter. It makes a lot of noise. They would have heard me already.”
“No, Jenkins. Stealth.”
“No, sir.”
“Yes. Stealth. It was in the product description. There’s a Whisper Mode. There was a picture of the button and everything.”
“This suicide machine does not have any stealth capabilities, sir.”
“You didn’t see this button, Jenkins. It was a big red square and it had the shield over it that you have to flip up. It was an impressive button. I saluted it.”
“Sir.”
“And I’m a general, Jenkins. I only have to salute a hundred people at this point. You see, son, the military’s a game. You advance by reducing the number of people you have to salute. Guy who wins only has to salute the president. I might go days without seeing anybody I had to snap one off to. It’s so freeing. I wish you could know what it was like to feel that kind of eternity on your skin.”
“Sir.”
“Perhaps it doesn’t have stealth capabilities per se, but it certainly can be described as stealthy. It’s painted a very stealthy color. Dammit, boy, why am I arguing with you? You have to salute everyone! Now, just get in the Sreamin’ Mimi and hit the sky.”
“If you would issue me one further indulgence, General, and allow one last question.”
“I’m standing on the verge of blasting your eyes, Jenkins.”
“Yes, sir. The rocket launcher behind the canopy.”
“The one that shall soon be pointing directly at your head?”
“That one, sir.”
“Mm. What about it?”
“It’s pointing directly at my head.”
“Oh, yes.”
“Any particular reason?”
“This is to frighten the enemy. Make him believe you’ve gone mad. ‘My god’ the enemy will say. “He’s pointing missiles at his own head!’ Can you imagine that, Jenkins? The wild fear you’ll induce in the native! He will scatter and tell stories of your hideous bravery. It’s a game-winner.”
“Is it, sir?”
“Oh, yes. Provided you softened them up with the bottle rockets first, obviously.”
“Sir, I’m not getting in this mutant scrapheap.”
“Yes, you are. You’re going to go out there and win the war this afternoon. Hup to it. Hup hup.”
“Why can’t we just use drones?”
“Spent the drone money on this baby.”
“All of it?”
“And prostitutes.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And drugs for the prostitutes.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And me. I enjoyed the drugs, as well. So: the money is gone and the Mimi remains. You fight the war you’re given, not the war you want. Now get in.”
“Just a short flight.”
“Hup hup.”

Yes, of course this is a worthwhile cause, and obviously it’s admirable of Dead & Company to do it–Oteil even canceled a show in New York with his band for this gig–and no one would argue that everyone’s heart isn’t in the right place.
That said, how the unbelievable fuck is Rancid’s name as big as D&C’s? And, yes, I know that their names take up the same amount of space and Rancid has fewer letters in their name so it just appears bigger, but this isn’t about facts: it’s show biz. Or principle. Either one, whichever you like better.
Second question: what is a “G-Eazy” and how does it possibly get the same billing as Metallica? I will now break my sacred vow of Without Research to pin down the identity of this so-called “G,” who flounces about with such “eaze.”
…
Oh, God, it’s a white rapper. And–what the fucking fuck–his first album came out in 2014 and didn’t even go gold.
This cannot stand. I object on behalf of the Grateful Dead community, and also the community of people who liked the first three Metallica records. I object in the name of Dave Matthews’ cargo shorts. This here is some LiveNation bullshit and none of you should take it lying down.
Thanks, Obama.
Microdosing, Enthusiasts! It’s the wave of the future! Well, okay, not a wave; more like a barely perceptible ripple in the water that may or may not be there depending on several factors such as which way the light’s facing and whether or not you wanted to see the ripple in the first place, but you get my point. The future! It’s here, and it’s tiny. Sure, we were promised flying cars and moon bases, but what we have is better: people performatively ingesting substances in small amounts. Isn’t it exciting?
And, perhaps, lucrative. In my opinion, microdosing is the new de-cluttering: a concept that can be explained in one sentence that a good bullshitter can get rich explaining at length. Enthusiasts, I believe that I am that bullshitter. My book about microdosing entitled No, Less Than That will be out in the fall, and I’ve already booked a spot on Megyn Kelly’s morning program.
Of course, the problem was my lack of knowledge of the subject. How could I write about something I was clueless about?
…
You’re not gonna say anything?
It was too easy. It was just too easy.
I set you up.
Don’t make me cosign your lies.
You’re boring and I hate you. But, Enthusiasts, I do not hate you. Thusly, I endeavored to dive into the world of microdosing. Okay, well, not dive. It’s a very shallow world. Let’s say I entered the world of microdosing.
But where to start? Books have already been written on microdosing LSD, and medical studies are underway employing mushrooms and ecstasy. I needed a hook, and so I thought outside the box. The tiny, tiny box.
I kept a journal of my experiments with different substances. I present them to you now, in somewhat expurgated form. (I doodled dicks and titties all over the journals, but I’m leaving them out.)
Water
9:00 am – I measure out three milliters of tap water and squirt them down my throat. I feel a bit like Galileo.
9:05 am – Thirsty.
9:10 am – How the fuck am I gonna brush my teeth?
9:15 am – Dry-brush my teeth.
9:16 am – Regret dry-brushing my teeth; wipe out mouth using towel which had previously been used to dry my asshole.
9:17 am – Thirsty.
9:30 am – Thirsty.
9:45 am – Dead.
Clothing
9:00 am – Apply five cubic inches of fabric to my body.
10:10 am – Asked to leave the Foot Locker.
10:30 am – Placed on sex offender’s registry.
Food
9:00 am – One (1) Saltine cracker and one (1) blueberry.
Excuse me.
9: 30 am – Five (5) Pall Malls to deaden hunger pangs.
Hey, jackass.
10…you cannot be here. I’m doing a bit.
People already microdose food. They’re called anorexics. You’re talking about anorexia.
I’m not talking about it; I’m advocating it.
We’re done here.
For the best.
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