Friday, July 30, 2010

The Apple Goes Slo Mo


We first started coming to New York a couple of times a year back in 94' when our daughter and her husband decided to call it home.  As typical laid back Californians, my wife and I were amazed at the energy and excitement of "the city so big they had to name it twice".  The place was like a cage full of Guinna pigs on crack and it was unbelievably LOUD!  (That loud part comes in handy for covering up embarrassing old guy noises that my body increasingly makes.)
Everybody in New York was in a hurry.  It made other cities seem like they were on Ritalin or something.
As I sit with my feet up in California, resting up  from  days spent impersonating the "careful quick and kind" man from Bekins' Moving as Linda and I attempted to help "the kids" move from a fifth floor walk-up on the Lower East Side to a nice new condo in Long Island City, I have concluded that the Apple has slowed down.  No, really,  it has been a gradual slowing, but a slowing that is palpable and pervasive.
Why?
Cell phones.  People are on cell phones; all the time.  New Yorkers are so damn busy yakking that they have slowed their pace to a point where the whole place resembles a mental institution featuring millions of rambling nitwits gesticulating wildly as they carry on disjointed, though still loudly modulated, conversations at all hours of the day.  It is a marked change in behavior that now has me passing the natives on sidewalks, escalators, and subway platforms where I was once Manhattan roadkill.  It's a distinct advantage.  Yay me!
I gladly warn those of you who may be planning a trip to New York sometime soon.  Be careful, as you now have a very good chance of running over the locals as you check out the sites of this fabulous metropolis.  (If you're from Iowa disregard this advice and pick up your pace.)  It is in your best interest to simply leap over or step around the natives and be on your way, otherwise you'll be yelled at.  New Yorkers may be slower these days but the place is louder than ever.  All those phone conversations, you know.
By the way...How do you like the picture of the Manhattan skyline I snapped from the kids' new balcony in L.I.C.?  It's beautiful in daylight and spectacular at night and there is even room for our pup tent.
Yep, that's the Chrysler Building on the left: not a cell tower.


Friday, July 23, 2010

Just A Minute, It'll Come To Me...

The kid came out of nowhere.
My pal, Terry, and I were riding our bikes early in the afternoon of a hot Michigan August.  We had to have been around ten or eleven and the bikes were fairly new, probably from the previous Christmas.  I remember priding myself in "knowing this town like the back of my hand".  Only an eleven year-old would take pride in the kind of knowledge it took to master a village of approximately eighteen-hundred people.
We were riding near the old pickle factory, a less than splendid old building on the "wrong side" of the railroad tracks.  The boy rode up behind us on a feeble looking girls' bike which had been given a less than adequate recent paint job.  House paint would be my guess.
He looked to be about fifteen or sixteen; practically a grown up in our purview.  He overtook us like a cop pulling over a traffic miscreant and flashed some kind of badge he had encased in an old wallet.  The young guy claimed to be some sort of secret police officer and wanted to know what we were doing riding our bicycles in a restricted area of the town of Leslie.  As I recall, both of us were scarred but suspicious of this self important bigger kid, but what did we know?  He was older and, like a teenage baby-sitter, someone who should be treated like an adult.
Why am I reflecting on this as I wake up this morning?  Good question!
As I slowly come out of the ether, I recall that the kid had white adhesive tape wrapped around one of his beat up black oxford shoes.  At the time he pointed to the tape and informed us that this was indicative of his rank in the secret law enforcement organization that employed him.  We bought the  whole story and vamoosed back to our own neighborhood only later beginning to question the authenticity of the, (we later realized), self appointed lawman.  This morning, more than fifty years later, it came to me that the boy had white tape around his shoe simply to hold it together.  He was poor and probably jealous of the relatively new bikes ridden by Terry and me.

Memory...what an amazing and deceptive maze.
I remember the kid, his bike and shoes; even his face.
Now.....the name of that actress I've seen a couple of hundred times on that favorite TV show of mine...
By the way, what the hell is the name of that show??
You know the one.
Don't you?

Friday, July 16, 2010

Eddie Was Right...Mrs. Cleaver IS Lovely



Wearing her ever-present pearl necklace, June, Ward, Wally and Beaver Cleaver are all back.  The entire 234 episode, 37-disk set of the iconic television series "Leave It to Beaver" is now available for you to own.  I've seen the package offered on a few websites for a price somewhere north of a hundred bucks.  That's not bad when you think about it.  After all, this was a series that featured kids who actually talked and acted like kids.  There was never a doubt in your mind that the Beav and his pals weren't just like the rest of us boomers.  You know, worried about looking stupid, messing up around grown-ups, and not getting your share of cookies.  The writers, Joe Connelly and Bob Mosher had eight kids between them and I think that had a lot to do with there never being a false note in the dialog.
 In my radio days I was lucky enough to have interviewed three of the Beaver cast:  Jerry Mathers, Tony Dow and Barbara Billingsley and they all gave lots of credit for the show's success to Connelly and Mosher.  Of the three, hands down the most charming and entertaining was Billingsley.  She kept my old radio partner, Cynthia Heath Kerrigan, and me laughing for over an hour with her tales of life on and off the set of the show.  We learned that Hugh Beaumont who played Ward was known to enjoy an occasional adult beverage and would sometimes wind up spending the night sleeping in the backroom of Billingsley's family restaurant which was run by her son.  She also filled us in on the little known fact that Perer Billingsley, Ralphie in the movie "Christmas Story", is her grandson and that Frank Bank (aka Lumpy Rutherford) is her present day stock broker.  When asked who among the old Beaver cast was the best actor she didn't hesitate to name Ken Osmond.  "Ken was nothing like Eddie, he is a very very nice fellow," she professed.  Osmond, by the way, became a cop and was wounded in the line of duty.  He retired from the L.A. PD several years ago.
The most memorable funny story the former Mrs. Cleaver remembered from the days the series was in production, (1957-63), was the one about "the falling down horse".  That's what she called it.  It seems that there was an episode, maybe you remember it, where Beaver brings home a pony and ties the animal  to a stake in the Cleaver backyard.  Well, there was a scene where the family is having dinner, June in her pearls and Ward still wearing a coat and tie, and they are discussing what Beaver is going to have to do about the pony.  During the filming the director kept having to stop the action because the real live pony was making too much noise outside the dining room window.  As the shoot dragged on it was decided by the producer that a tranquilizer should be administered to the pony to calm the critter down.  All was well until sometime well into the umpteenth take the pony crashed very loudly into the scenery as he tipped over "out cold"and began to snore very loudly.  The pony was fine, but that ended the day's shoot when the cast and crew couldn't stop laughing.
Barbara Billingsley was, and I'm sure still is, delightful and the show is one of the true touchstones of American television history. 

As I reach for my credit card and head for Amazon to order my complete set of "Leave It to Beaver" I can only wonder...WHY aren't they making shows like that anymore?

Friday, July 9, 2010

I Still "Q" In My Mind

You know you're getting old when historic markers start popping up at places where you used to work.  San Diego's KCBQ is one of the myriad of radio stations where I got my ticket punched.  It was a truly legendary blow torch that belongs in the pantheon of American radio stations like:WABC, WLS, KHJ, KFRC, WBZ and a few others.  Anybody who cracked a mic on 1170 AM (and later also 105.3 FM)) knows the thrill of having your voice blasted all over Southern California and damn near all the way to Hawaii.  It was fifty-thousand watts of shear ego driven energy.  (By the way, KCBQ delivered killer ratings in the much sought after 18-34 year-old bottlenose dolphin demographic.)
Over the decades KCBQ's studios were located at different places around San Diego, but  wound up spending the most time at what was once considered "way out on Mission Gorge road" in the suburb of Santee.  "The Santee Ranch" was what it was often called by the guys, (and some gals), who practiced the bump and grind of commercial radio on "the Q".  They called it that too. 
In fact, at one time there was an entire ad campaign built around "Where do you Q?"  "I Q in my car"was on some billboards while "I Q in my bedroom" invited lots of pruient speculation.  The station was a vital part of life in San Diego for several generations.  Competitors were always around but the "Q" endured.
It's still around--sort of. Like much of radio, these days it is pretty much a conduit for syndicated talk shows and bartered infomercials for colon cleansers and Last Supper steak knives.  You know...crap 24/7.
Things change.
So now, where those of us once toiled on the air perched one floor above "Q's" fifty-thousand watt transmitter, there is a Lowe's.  The radio towers, all six of them, are gone and the building is just a memory.
We used to joke about what the close proximity of all that transmitter juice was doing to our bodies.  Looking at the number of radio names on this new monument who are no longer around to swap stories, I question what six years exposure did to me.....Okay, I'm still here,but was I  crazy before working at KCBQ?

Don't answer!


Shotgun Tom Kelly, just about the only one of us left who still has a radio job, and his wife, Linda, got the ball rolling on this KCBQ monument.  Tom works at KRTH in Los Angeles these days but still calls San Diego home.  He had at least two tours at the "Q" and put up with MORE than a few idiot general managers and program directors.  I did my own tally and realized that KCBQ had no less than five G.M.s and four program directors in my six years.  A "meat grinder'?  You make the call.
Soon this monument will reside front and center on Mission Gorge road in Santee to remind one and all that once on this spot some fun was had. You see, when radio was fun...IT WAS GREAT.

And, KCBQ was a GREAT radio station!!   

Friday, July 2, 2010

It's A Kick In The Grass???

Is this thing over yet?
World Cup soccer action resumes today after two blissful days without my local sports page informing me of the latest snooze fest from Cape Town.

Okay...I'm old, but dammit soccer is one boring game.  If it weren't for the hysterically bad acting that the slightest  injury inspires, this game would boast all the excitement of a day at the DMV.
I've tried, well not that hard, to get into it this year since the U.S. seemed to have a chance.  We all know how that worked out.  So, who do I root for now?  Paraguay?   One of my sons-in-law is from Slovakia and is a soccer fanatic but that team pulled up lame a couple of rounds back; so nothing there.  What is an aging American boomer to do?

I know that I reside in the U.S.A.'s most soccer friendly major metropolitan market.  San Diego has delivered the best domestic TV ratings for the World Cup throughout this year's competition.  Whether the good numbers are a result of our proximity to Mexico and a population that is thirty percent Hispanic, I don't know.  Maybe it's Southern California's strong youth soccer program that delivers the ratings punch.  I'll just add this one to the ever increasing list of contemporary phenomena that completely elude me.  It's a fact that I am outnumbered and embittered by it all.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I'll be checking the TV listings for re-runs of those fabulous Olympic women's beach volleyball tilts.  Scantily clad babes bouncing on the sand...A GAME ALL REAL AMERICANS CAN GET BEHIND.
Pass me the remote.

Friday, June 25, 2010

"Back In The Day... Awesome"

I've been on the road.  Technically, mostly I have been in the air and have some observations.
First, if possible, NEVER get on an airplane.  Nut job terrorists and cheapskate airlines have morphed what used to be a fairly good way to get somewhere into the equivalent of a colonoscopy.  The strip search before boarding is sort of fun if you're in the mood, but seats designed for Twiggy and NO PEANUTS??!!  Come on!  I'd sooner take a beating than fly "the friendly skies".
And don't get me started on idiots and their cell phones at the airport...

Okay, do...
It is now painfully apparent that NOBODY reads to kill time.  Instead, they talk incessantly on their cell phones.  Air terminals and planes are now filled with folks so uncomfortable with their own thoughts that they feel compelled to share every mundane detail of their lives with all souls in earshot.  (Note: This used to be called radio and it was fun because nobody answered you back.)  "Blah blah blah...a tumor that weighed fifteen pounds....and then I said...blah blah blah....back in the day."  "Back in the day", I've noticed is now in the hot rotation of verbal crutches people are wheeling.  Back in WHAT day, is the question that needs to be ascertained.  Yesterday?  Ten years ago?  Grandma's day?  Exactly what freaking day are you referencing???  Here is a good way to clear this up:  Just stop saying it!  That would be
AWESOME.

Talk about a word that needs to be retired, AWESOME is at the top of my list.  It was a good word that has now been so pummelled by overuse that it means nothing.
Webster defines awesome as: "extremely impressive or daunting; inspiring great admiration, apprehension or fear, also informally it can mean extremely good or excellent.

Awesome is no longer awesome.  Try something else.  "Mom, these cookies are impressive" would work.  How about "this martini is outstanding"?  The military pretty much ruined outstanding back in the 60's and 70's, but it's probably ready for a dust off.  I'd even settle for "bitchin".....ANYTHING but awesome.  Let's park that one for at least five years; maybe then we'll bring it up for a vote.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a date with some Planters Peanuts.  I don't care what those morons at Untied say, those goobers are awesome.

Friday, June 18, 2010


Friday, June 18, 2010

Dad's Day...Steve's Turn








Steve and the youngest Mr. Copper...Walt


My younger brother, Steve, is a fine writer. He used to write a regular newspaper column, but in recent years has been too busy as an editor to continue grinding out his insightful and often very funny observations. I wish that weren't the case.
Long ago I had decided to run his June 26, 1990 piece about our dad as a Father's Day tribute. It is one that I have saved and re-read many times over the last several years. Little did I know that he would come out of retirement to pen his thoughts on becoming a father himself. Though I'm sure he'll think I'm a dope for doing it, I am reprinting both of them here.
Hey, it's what big brothers are for. Let the torment begin...



REFLECTIONS: SUNDAY ON THE DECK WITH DAD

(Tuesday, June 26, 1990)
"There's 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 is 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, seems to be the vagaries of duck social life.
If there's 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 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, burnouts, 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've become a brooding, semi-solitary, wiseacre adult. Lately though, in the mornings before I have 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 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 the 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 the 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' 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.


(Steve Copper is a wire editor for the Journal Courier. He also writes about the movies. As far as we know, the deranged duck remains at large.)


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(Sunday June 17, 2007)


I've been thinking this week. (news in its own right)
about fathers and sons.
My dad was born 89 years ago today, June 17, 1918. He died in the wee hours on a Tuesday morning in May twelve years ago, disappearing around the last corner of this life after a long labyrinthine fade into the fog of Alzheimer's.
I think of my dad as a pretty basic guy, typical of his generation: hard-working, solid citizen, straight-arrow (never cursed, that I heard anyway, unless you count "Beans!" or "Son of a Buck!"), lived through the Depression, helped save our bacon in World War II (but never talked about it), came back from the war and simply got on with it, starting a family and carving out a life.
One of those guys.
Yet, he was always a mystery to me, and I admit I was vaguely scared of him, though I can't for the life of me tell you why. Maybe because it was always left to him to dole out punishment on those occasions (pretty rare) when the need arose. "Wait till your father gets home." my mom would threaten, though the repercussions for my brother and me were never extreme.
Or maybe I was always afraid I would disappoint him
somehow.
I think of him more often today than I did when he was alive, perhaps because not so long ago I became a father myself for the first time at an advanced (some would say embarrassingly advanced) age.
I'm 51 and have an 18-month old son, Walt- a gift in my life received after I'd pretty much given up on the whole notion.
Dad is a frequent visitor to my dreams now, and it's always good to see him. It's not the dad of old-age who appears but the the one from my boyhood - the one who played catch or shot baskets with me, the one who taught me how to mow the lawn and drive a car and , well how to be a man of the world, whatever that means and however poorly I absorbed it.
After my dad died, I found myself drawn back to the places we had lived as I grew up, particularly to Spencer, the small town in northwest Iowas where we stayed the longest and where my memories of him seemed most vivid.
He worked as a land appraiser in the farm mortgage department for Prudential Insurance then, and spent a lot of time driving the back roads looking at farms or talking to small town bankers. I drove those roads for a few days, too, watching the corn and beans sway on the undulating landscape and trying to imagine what he must have thought about.
I walked and bicycled past our old house so often that I feared whoever lived there now would suspect me of casing the joint and summon the cops.
Time tilted sideways. His ghost was everywhere, and mine was too.
Of course I went through a stage (way too long) where I thought my dad was clueless, hopelessly hide - bound.
Square. We weren't interested in the same things. He just didn't get it. Didn't get me.
Maybe I get it now.
Though we became fathers at different stages in our lives and in different eras, I find that I compare myself to him now at almost every turn about how I'm doing at being a dad and paying the bills and setting and example and living a decent life - and hoping I'm not screwing it all up.
I'm in his shadow.
My son's at a stage where he's easily impressed. He thinks I'm a giant of a guy who can do miraculous things (Look at daddy read a book! Get the mail! Drink coffee! Start the lawnmower! Carry me upstairs!)
I know I'll be a doddering old coot soon enough.
I look into Walt's eyes and wonder how I will haunt him.


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