Thursday, September 20, 2012
Sunday, April 29, 2012
I’VE JUST SEEN A FACE…
When people tell us that we
“look the same” or that we “haven’t changed a bit” despite the passage of time
– sometimes even decades - I think what they are really saying is: “I see the
essence of who you are and that will always endure.”
Case in point:
Years ago, I was having
dinner with my father at a long-gone, north-side Chicago delicatessen called
Ashkenaz. Dad was in his late 70s; he would be gone in a few short years. We
finished our meal, got up from the table and, as we headed toward the exit, my
father stopped short at the sight of another elderly gentleman at a nearby
table. The two old men made tentative eye contact, looking oddly at one another
as the spark of recognition slowly but surely caught fire.
“Bernstein,” said my father.
“Elkins,” responded
Bernstein.
Turns out they were friends
in 5th grade but had not seen each other in almost 70 years – not since they were
little boys. Today they were weak and wrinkled and gray, yet they still “looked the
same.”
“So, what’ve you been up
to?”
While that question was on
both men’s lips, it remained unspoken. There was nothing to do but shake hands
and part company, shared schoolyard memories floating behind their eyes.
A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO MEMETICS
Meme
(meem) An idea, behavior or style that spreads from person to person within a
culture. While genes transmit biological information, memes transmit ideas and belief information.
Back
in the mid-1970s, the fashion industry perpetrated a
horrific crime
against the American male. It was called the “Gatsby Look,” and was
characterized by, starting from the ground and working our way up:
chunky,
high-heeled, platform clown shoes with bulbous toe caps, elephantine,
hip-hugging, bell-bottom trousers with three-inch cuffs, and grotesque
polyester sport coats featuring lapels so wide that, if wind speed and
direction were just right, they would catch the air current like wings,
lifting
you off the sidewalk and flapping like a dying duck through a plate
glass window faster than you could say, “Saturday Night Fever.”
Yes, it was hideous, but it was in style. And, if
it’s in style, it must look good. At least according to the meme of fashion.
It is only with the perspective of the passing years
that the erroneous meme of bad fashion can be revealed in all its grotesque
glory. When you examine photographs from that era, one question immediately
springs to mind: “Were these people on drugs?” (Come to think of it, it was the
70’s so, yes, they probably were on drugs.)
I wish it were
possible to dispense with the passage of time and root out, illuminate
and then destroy those bad memes right now - before they can worm their
way into our psyche and do their damage.
Fat chance.
Bad
memes are everywhere – viral bits of programming
that sabotage our attitudes and our actions. The manipulative world of
advertising is fueled by memetics – memes are its life-blood, actually –
word-of-mouth the primary contagion. Do we really need a beer can that
changes color when the beer is cold enough to drink? Of course we do!
And we need it desperately - if we bite the hook on that little meme
like obedient tuna fish.
Urban legends and conspiracy theories are
memes. Biases, prejudices, homophobia, sexism and racism – especially when
hammered into the minds of innocent young children – are the worst of memes.
By the way, not all memes are bad. Many memes are
fairly innocuous, if not downright beneficial. The running craze began in the
seventies. It’s hard to argue with a cross-cultural physical fitness movement.
It was a meme because it was an idea that became contagious throughout society.
But good memes can spawn evil offspring. Nike was born out of the running craze. And now we shell out $150 a pop for running shoes. (I don't mean to suggest that Nike is an evil company; just the meme that brainwashed us into accepting exorbitant prices. On second thought, maybe Nike is evil.)
But good memes can spawn evil offspring. Nike was born out of the running craze. And now we shell out $150 a pop for running shoes. (I don't mean to suggest that Nike is an evil company; just the meme that brainwashed us into accepting exorbitant prices. On second thought, maybe Nike is evil.)
Theme songs and catchy jingles usually become memes.
That insipid melody torturing you because you can’t get out of your head? Sorry, you’ve been memed. Catch-phrases are
another class of essentially harmless memes. Popular TV shows and movies will
often infect the cultural dialog with unique verbiage that inevitably morphs
into cliché from overuse. Have you ever parroted one of these clever
witticisms?
Whatchoo talking about, Willis?
Stifle yourself!
Alrighty then!
I want my MTV!
Pity the fool!
Say hello to my little friend!
I’ll be back!
Where’s the beef?
I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!
Well, ex-cuu-uuse me!
Stifle yourself!
Alrighty then!
I want my MTV!
Pity the fool!
Say hello to my little friend!
I’ll be back!
Where’s the beef?
I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!
Well, ex-cuu-uuse me!
The
list goes on and on. Oh, and lest we forget his 15 minutes of idiotic infamy,
we have Charlie Sheen to thank for these beauties:
Duh,
winning
Tiger blood
Adonis DNA
Rock star from Mars
Tiger blood
Adonis DNA
Rock star from Mars
If
only we were immune to false memes. We could tune out the noise that drowns out
our own unique voice and restrains our personal freedom. But memes are
profoundly seductive. After all, memes are a shared experience. We are social animals and memes connect us to one
another. But the worst of them perpetrate false beliefs that, in turn, manifest
habits and behaviors that fail to serve our greater good and the good of those
with whom we share this planet.
So, pray for a vaccine. And narrow lapels.
So, pray for a vaccine. And narrow lapels.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
IT'S A LONG, LONG WAY TO YPSILANTI
It’s the real great race –
a punishing and unforgiving test of endurance and survival. There is no
second-place. You either win… or you die.
The odds against winning
this race are staggering. You’re completely blind and you have no feet.
Fortunately, it’s a level-playing field. The 300 million other competitors
exploding out of the chute alongside of you have no eyeballs either and they’re
footless, too. Thousands are dead or dying before they even get started. It’s
that brutal. You’re struggling forward in futile desperation, relying purely on
instinct, navigating terrain that is slippery and treacherous. You have no idea what
lies ahead. Actually, you don’t even know where the finish line is. Why?
Because you’re a human
sperm cell.
And if you somehow manage
to miraculously beat out your spermatozoa brethren and hit pay dirt first and
then find purchase and hold on tight, and that ovum you’re burrowing into
resides inside the uterus of a woman with a pedigree, with assets, some
strategic real estate, maybe ownership in a company or two, or perhaps your little
sperm-self was generated inside the left testicle of young Mr. Zuckerberg… then well
done, little tadpole, well done indeed!
Okay, so you just won the
lottery. What’s the point?
"Sperm" is the point.
I love words, and "sperm" is a terrific word.
The sound it makes as it escapes the lips is perfectly suited to the object it
designates. What the hell else would you call the stuff? (Wait a minute - I just ran a search on "slang words for sperm" and Google coughed up 162,000 links over 56 pages. So, there is no shortage of alternatives.)
Shakespeare wrote:
That's all well and good. But I, for one, am thankful that a rose is a rose and not a hemorrhoid. A dozen long-stem hemorrhoids? I don't think so.
There's a weird irony to the word: "phlegm." An excess of consonants for an excess of mucus. I once had a bad head cold - it was mucus to my ears. In Belgium, they speak Flemish. Which begs the question: is hocking loogies their national pastime?
"What's in a name? That which we call a rose
by any other name would smell as sweet."
That's all well and good. But I, for one, am thankful that a rose is a rose and not a hemorrhoid. A dozen long-stem hemorrhoids? I don't think so.
There's a weird irony to the word: "phlegm." An excess of consonants for an excess of mucus. I once had a bad head cold - it was mucus to my ears. In Belgium, they speak Flemish. Which begs the question: is hocking loogies their national pastime?
Back to sperm. Say it again. Sperm.
Warning: do not shout “sperm!” in a crowded movie theater. Just repeat it
several times quietly to yourself in privacy: Sperm, sperm, sperm. (“Smegma” is
another perfectly suited word, which is ironic given its anatomical proximity to
“sperm,” but for obvious reasons this reference will remain brief and
parenthetical. Let’s be frank, “sperm” is bad enough.)
I picked up one of my boys
from school and he asked me, “Hey, Daddy – what’s a sperm?” I quickly offered to buy
him an ice cream cone if he would agree to drop the current line of
questioning.
Yes, sperm is a perfect
word. But others are not quite right. Some words miss the mark entirely.
The word “yacht” for
example. (Origin: from the Dutch “jacht” meaning hunt) The pale and pathetic
sound betrays the majesty of the object itself. True, the
cockeyed spelling has a certain appeal, delivering an exotic aura of mystery. But the
disappointing thud of the word spoken aloud is simply ridiculous. Would you lust after a 200-foot
long ocean-going luxury vessel with a helipad if it was spelled…
“Yot?”
Of course not. On second
thought, absolutely.
And on a related subject,
I have no interest in living inside of a yurt – regardless of the spelling. I
would venture to guess that few of us have ever spent time both on a yacht and
inside a yurt – and certainly not on the same vacation. Keep in mind that it
would not at all be unusual to encounter a yak or a Yeti or a yogurt-eating
Yogi when exiting a yurt – except of course, in Yakima. Or the Yukon. Or Yugoslavia.
Or Ypsilanti.
If you are ever asked how
you get from “sperm” to “Ypsilanti,” please point them towards my blog.
You’re welcome.
Friday, April 13, 2012
MIAMI WEISS
The disturbing misadventures of a retired private eye with advancing dementia.
Part 1
INT. RETIREMENT HOME – RECREATION ROOM – DAY
MOE
WEISS, a belligerent octogenarian with a twinkle in his eye, sits in front
of a large flat-screen TV, surrounded by other ELDERLY RESIDENTS. He’s
babbling, oblivious to his surroundings
WEISS:
I like being a private eye…
OLD
WOMAN: You talking to me, Mr. Weiss?
WEISS:
But to be perfectly honest with you, it’s been a long time between cases...
OLD
WOMAN: Last week you were a fighter pilot.
WEISS:
Sure, I cracked the Passover Blintz hijacking in ’52, but what can I say? I got
old…
OLD
WOMAN: Meshuggenah.
WEISS:
Passed enough kidney stones to pave a driveway. I lost my nerve….
OLD
WOMAN: And your hair. And your teeth.
ATTENDANT
walks over with a glass of sparkling water.
ATTENDANT:
Here’s your seltzer, Mr. Weiss.
WEISS:
That’s very kind of you. I appreciate it. If you’re not too busy, maybe you
could get for me a nice tall glass of seltzer, too, while you’re at it. If it's not too much trouble...
Weiss sips from the glass as
the attendant rolls her eyes and turns away. Weiss reaches out and pinches her
ass; she reacts startled. He belches and smiles contentedly. Then his wheels
begin to turn… he remembers something.
WEISS:
Seltzer… Oh yeah! Get out! Like it was yesterday, I remember. I remember the
seltzer… (He holds the glass up to his eyes and watches the tiny bubbles)
I remember the bubbles…
EXT.
SUBURBAN BACK-YARD – TEN YEARS EARLIER – DAY
Weiss, now a younger man in
late 70s, is seated on a lawn chair, garden hose in one hand and his teeth in
the other.
WEISS: (in voice-over) I was sitting in the lawn chair, rinsing
the poppy seeds from my lower denture with the garden hose, when I heard the
gunshot. They say you never hear the bullet with your name on it, which is
beside the point, because it wasn't even a gunshot in the first place. It was
my hemorrhoid donut pillow exploding under my tuchus, courtesy of my grandson,
Elliot, and his fercockta Swiss Army Knife - the Champion model that I bought
him for his Bar Mitzvah wholesale. When I grabbed from him the knife and
offered to make him another circumcision with no anesthetic, he ran kvetching
to my daughter-in-law, Mildred, the bleach-blonde shiksa with the bare midriff
that haunts my wet dreams....
Back porch screen door
swings open and MILDRED, late
40s, bleach-blond beehive, leans out.
MILDRED: Hey, pa… telephone
for you! A Mrs. Feldman.
Weiss replaces his dentures, rises and shuffles toward the
house.
WEISS: Get out! The chesty
widow with the fingernails and the big red lips?
MILDRED: She says she’s your
proctologist’s nurse.
WEISS: The ass doctor?!
Sonofabitch! I bet they found a tumor on my X-ray!
To be continued….
HOW DIRTY IS YOUR MIND?
There is a certain four-letter word that is only used to describe a woman, and the last three
letters of the word are:
___ U N T
Okay, what’s the word? It's never used to describe a man. Be
truthful now, what is the first word that jumps to your lips?
Hmm. Really?
Is it a word that describes
the woman who is married to your uncle?
I didn’t think so. But if I misjudged you and you did come up
with the word “aunt” you’re probably in the minority. The rest of you, well,
admit it – you’re a little embarrassed, I'll bet - you sick bastards.
I use that word lovingly.
It can be tricky to base our
decisions on logical analysis and careful scrutiny of all relevant factors.
It’s much more convenient to blindly follow our primitive, gut instincts.
A better method would be to
balance that sudden creative and emotional inspiration with a moment of calm
and quiet reflection, wherein common sense can be brought to bear. The key is
to allow left-brain rationale to temper our passion – not to override the
emotion, but to deepen the original right-brain impulse and forge it into a
dispassionate and dependable strategy that can be trusted and acted upon with
confidence.
If you answered the “_unt”
riddle incorrectly, you probably let your right brain (the seat of emotion) run
with it. But had you waited before answering and allowed your left (logical)
brain to take a shot at it, your strategy might have been to go through the
alphabet and try all 26 letters as a way of discovering the mystery word. And
had you done so, your problem would have been solved with the letter “A” – your
search would have ended as soon as it began.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
MESSAGE TO ABANDONED FACEBOOK FRIENDS
Dear (Insert Name of
Rejected Individual Here):
1) You have fallen out of my favor or
2) I don’t remember who the hell you are.
I sincerely wish you good fortune in all your future endeavors. Incidentally, if any of them happen to come to fruition and you are thus in a position to further my own agenda, please do not delay in accepting the friend request I shall be sending your way.
Sincerely,
(Insert Your Name Here)
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