Friday, June 24, 2016

Organic, Mutts, and Micro Brews



I looked it up.
"noting or pertaining to a class of chemical compounds that formerly comprised only those existing in or derived from plants or animals, but that now includes all other compounds of carbon"

That, my fellow citizens of the planet, is the dictionary definition of the word ORGANIC.
So, unless I've missed something, this includes you, me, your fat neighbor, aunt Shirley, the dog,  and those pants in your closet with the Hidden Valley Ranch dressing stain. 
What I'm wondering is what is the VERY BIG DEAL with ORGANIC?!  Apparently, for anything to be considered any good it has to be stamped ORGANIC by some clown somewhere.  What gives?  Is there a commissioner or czar of organic who wields a yea or nay in this deal?  
It's getting out of hand you know.  The latest in television technology, for you early adapters, is the OLED TV, which, in case you're among the many not in the know, stands for Organic Light Emitting Diode television.    So what is the big deal? If the box doesn't work you can eat it?  After all they are displayed not far from the organic bananas at Costco.  Perhaps it's time to investigate just what ORGANIC brings to the big screen LED party other than the magic of chemical compounds that formerly comprised only those existing in or derived from plants or animals. (That dictionary sure comes in handy.)

Here is another puzzler that begs investigation:  How  did we get to a point where nearly everyone but me has a "service" dog?  Perhaps a scam is afoot?  Don't get me wrong, I love dogs but, like elephants, they're fun to look at but you wouldn't want to own one.  Sure, I had dogs as a kid.  My daughters had a dog too and when they left home the dog died.  That's when my wife and I looked at each other and said, "the madness stops now."  Dogs are the world's worst piggy bank.  A pooch owner is a person constantly pumping money into food, vet bills, kennel fees, doggie health insurance--yeah, they have it--and dog whispering charlatans of every stripe only to be rewarded with an unending backyard full of dog dump.  And now we have these faux "service" dogs with semi-official looking vests purchased on the Internet who suddenly are everywhere.  People bring them to stores, restaurants and bars and a few are even willing to buy their canine buddies airline tickets for the next trip to grandma's.  (Nothing like dog farts on a crowded plane.)

Sadly, as long as I'm bitching about the unending ruination of the country, the least snobby of all beverages, beer, is now under full attack by those soul sucking millennial  hipsters.  Though never a favorite of mine when I was in alcohol overdrive, I always respected suds as a harmless way to start the day.  Beer, until quite recently, was a middle-class thirst slaker enjoyed by guys wearing bowling shirts and sporting names like Bud, Louie and Big Jake.  Hipsters and their "handcrafted" micro brews have turned beer drinking into the same kind of elitist undertaking heretofore reserved for wine sipping pantywaists.  (By the way, could somebody please explain how we "handcraft" beer?)  
If it doesn't say "Bud", or maybe "Pabst" leave it to the posers.  I't should be illegal to sell a six-pack of Pabst to anyone who doesn't look like Chester A. Riley.  (If you don't know who he is, no brew for you!)

"What a revoltin' development that micro brew crap is."


"Breakfast of Champions!"

Never drink beer in a bar that doesn't have one of these parked out back.

Friday, June 17, 2016

Reflections: Sunday on the deck with Dad

(My brother, Steve, spent many years in the newspaper business and is a fine writer.  This is a piece he wrote in June of 1990 about our father.  Dad has been gone more than twenty years now, but this still resonates.)

By: Steve Copper

"There is a deranged duck in the pond," my dad informs me matter-of-factly.

It's Sunday afternoon, Father's Day.  We are standing one story above the ground on the narrow deck of my parents' condo squinting out into the glary light.  It is hot and breezy, the sky a dizzying whirl of blue and cirrus clouds.

My dad, who is retired and has time on his hands, keeps a close watch on the ducks these days as they come and go in the small lake out beyond the manicured lawn behind the condo complex.  He counts the ducklings ("Snapping turtles got most of them this year.") and enjoys what, to his admittedly inexpert eye, seem to be the vagaries of duck social life.

If there is a weird duck out there, I'm sure my dad knows about it.  When he points out the wayward fowl in question--a lone duck, a diver, he says--I observe him for a while too.  He (or is it a she?) swims erratically around the lake avoiding the other ducks.  My dad thinks maybe it has lost its mate and is grief-stricken.  Through binoculars, the duck looks to me to be young and scrawny and glassy-eyed, maybe a little disheveled (a tuft of feathers is askew on its head).  Dangerous, I think.  A loner, a rebel.  The John Hinckley or the Travis Bickle of the duck world.

Hinckley Duck goes away eventually, paddling with a sudden purpose (off to buy a handgun?) toward a distant corner of the lake and out of sight.  Our thoughts and conversation drift to other things.

I have been thinking a lot about the old man lately, and about the inexorability of genes.

There was a rebellious time when I thought I had little in common with my dad and I don't think he knew quite what to make of me.  If there's one thing he can't stand in the world it's a smart-aleck.  "Stay away from that guy.  He's a smart-aleck," was a warning I heard repeatedly as a kid.

Dad is your basic solid-citizen--a patient, portly Ward Cleaver type interested in insurance, real estate, the crops, golf, washing the car, moderation and fairness.  He is cursed, however, with two kids who are Eddie Haskells.  Classic smart-alecks.  My brother is a big city DJ, I'm a small town newspaper drone--jobs for un-solid citizens--two businesses fraught with cynics, burn-outs, booze-hounds and other unsavory characters.

At one point, I think my dad dreamed that I could be a golf pro.  He bought me golf clubs and got me started playing when I was little.  I was pretty good and he kept encouraging me.  Of course I gave it up in high school.

I was a brooding, solitary, wiseacre kid and I have become a brooding, semi-solitary, wiseacre adult.  Lately though, in the mornings before I had time to activate my arsenal of self-delusions, I am often startled by the slightly puffy countenance returning my myopic gaze in the mirror.  "Dad," I think.  Time and circumstance (and booze) work their magic on a face, but the genes will out.  I notice too, I am taking new pleasure in things like washing the car and mowing the yard.  Perhaps moderation and a resumption of my golf career are next.

Dad has gotten jolly in retirement, though, to be honest, the last few years have not been especially kind to him.  A man who, as I recall, was never sick a day in his life had barely said goodbye to the everyday work grind when he was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, then diabetes.  He developed an ulcer, needed back surgery, spent the better part of a winter in the hospital or flat on his back at home.

My family is small but not what I imagine most people would consider particularly close-knit.  Much is left unsaid between us.  We share, rightly or wrongly, a distrust of anybody who talks too openly about his feelings, and a sense that life's important stuff, its essential truths, are ineffable.  Maybe it's this Midwestern reticence, but I never heard my dad complain through any of his troubles.  (He will be embarrassed, of course, that I'm committing any of this to paper.)

I think he's having a good year this year, I'm happy to say.  He's able to golf again.  His White Sox are winning (he's a life-long fan; naturally, to be contrary, I became a Cubs fan).  Most of all, he seems comfortable with himself--untortured by regret--which, I imagine, must be the best part of growing old.  He's done OK.

When it's time to leave, my dad walks out to the parking lot to see me off.  Night has begun to crouch down around the lake and the white brick condos.  My folks decided to move to this place when the house got to be too much for them to care for, and I sense they are just now starting to feel at home here.  It still seems foreign to me.  We stand by the car for a moment as insects whir incessantly from the shimmering trees.  He notes with some pride that I am keeping my car clean.

"Happy Father's Day.  And thanks," I say for a final time, and we shake hands this Sunday.  Father's Day.

"Another day long gone," he says to me cheerfully.  And in my head on the quiet drive home my father's voice echoes back to me as my own.


(Since this was written Steve has become the father of Walter Copper a young man who will no doubt think his dad is the dumbest most unfair clown on the planet until he comes to grips with the limits of his own intelligence and lack of experience.  That's just the way it is with fathers and sons.  I was lucky.  I had daughters; they knew I was a moron but loved me anyway.)  KC-retired smart-aleck




Friday, June 10, 2016

Summertime, And The Livin' Is Wistful



The change to summer came suddenly here in the Pacific Northwest.  We went from a rainy cool spring to lazy, hazy the sun doesn't set until almost nine, full blown summer the day after Memorial Day.  I know it's not official until the solstice but the intoxicating perfume of driftwood fires and suntan lotion from the beach just below our house says otherwise.

It catches me by surprise every year.  A whiff of tanning cream, lotion or oil instantly transports me to my teenage years of the mid 1960's.  There is decidedly more bare skin on display in 2016 than there was in the season of my raging hormones and I find myself wondering how young guys of today handle it.  It was distracting enough when bikinis were more modest, but now it must be excruciatingly difficult for a guy to keep a Speedo from levitating.

Tattoos are everywhere and I regret our society has reached a point where body mutilation is considered an acceptable fashion statement.  Was it really that long ago when this kind of body "art" was strictly the province of carnival workers and ex-cons?  Of course there were the unfortunate tats still worn by military vets of my dad's generation as mute testimony of alcohol poisoning in foreign ports, but that was different.  Wisely, most of those guys knew enough to get inked on surfaces they could easily hide when they returned to civilian life.  The neck and head tattoos of today are a far different story.  And, sorry, I don't care how petite and discretely placed, tattoos on women don't do a thing for Boomer boys like me.  We associate that with a show we saw in Tijuana 45 years ago.

Note to self:  Buy as much stock as possible in companies that manufacture laser tattoo removal equipment.  It's only a matter of time...

Think she'll still like these in thirty years?

Friday, June 3, 2016

The Year Santa Got Rolled



Why it popped into my consciousness in this month of June leaves me scratching my head.
Perhaps as we get older the file cabinet of stories acquired over a lifetime of misadventures becomes so loaded with material that a synapse misfire will produce a decidedly "out of season" memory.  For example, just this morning I awoke recalling an event from Christmastime 1970.  

 I was working for a radio station in Gainesville, Florida that had studios located in the largest shopping mall in town.  Being far less sophisticated in those days,  merchants in the shopping center thought having a broadcast station on the premises was a smart promotional move as shoppers would stop to watch the paid monkeys (see disc jockeys) do radio shows from our glassed in studios.  As if it weren't bad enough being reduced to a circus act, management also required the air staff to dress as if we had real jobs.  This meant combing our hair, wearing ties and refraining from scratching our privates.  All major concessions on the part of those of us engaged to honk the hits for WUWU.  (It was already tough enough just saying those call letters!)

The Saturday before Christmas I was into the final hour of my 6-10AM morning show when the manager of the mall's Sears store dropped by the station and asked the receptionist if he could have a word with me.  In those days Sears was a major player in retail nationwide and, just as in many malls, Sears was the anchor tenant of this particular retail development.  After entering the studio and some initial small talk he got to the point of his visit.   Santa was to arrive at the Sears store shortly after 10AM and he wondered if I would be interested in picking up a quick $100 to handle the microphone and help keep the crowd of kids in line.  In those days a hundred bucks was a considerable addition to my weekly salary and I quickly agreed.

Talking up the intro to the treacle infused and eternally crappy "Make It With You" by Bread at approximately 9:56AM I practically skipped out of the station.  Not only was I on my way to a cool $100 for doing next to nothing, I also didn't have to listen to that musical meadow muffin.  It was going to be a great day!

"Piece of cake.  What could go wrong?"
When I arrived at Sears the manager handed me my check and pointed me toward the microphone and the parking lot which already had a large area blocked off for Santa's helicopter arrival.  There was rope and yellow tape to restrict the crowd and I was tasked with reminding everyone to stay behind the barriers to ensure the safety of all.  The crowd was huge and was mostly composed of grade school aged children and their parents.  I had been given a few promotional and sales items to announce in addition to my reminders to stay back and allow plenty of room for the helicopter and Santa.  When the helicopter came into view the kids began jumping up and down with excitement.  I had to keep repeating the admonishment to "STAY BEHIND THE YELLOW TAPE" so that Santa could land.  Once the chopper was on the ground the crowd began to surge forward.  They could see that Santa had many bags full of small packages that looked to contain candy and small toys.  As he backed his non-padded ample ass out of the whirlybird, the crowd jumped the line.  In spite of my pleas, chaos reined, Santa was rolled, the helicopter nearly turned over and...the cops were called.  It was like drag queens at a wig sale.  In the confusion I made for my car and a nearby bank.  Oh, the humanity!
"You little bastards are going on the naughty list!"
As I write this it occurs to me that perhaps recent television coverage of Bernie Sanders supporters may have jogged my memory.  Maybe a warning phone call to old St. Nick is in order?  I happen to know he has a Trump sticker on his sleigh.

As George Carlin once observed: "The world is a freak show.  If you're an American, you have a front row seat."