Friday, September 28, 2007

THE GIRLS OF CRAIG'S LIST
HOTTEST BUBBLE BUTT
FINAL ROUND
Last Chance to Vote for your favorite!A few details about our finalists...
Contestant A is 23 years old and a single mother of two who hails from the Motor City. She likes long walks, sunsets and Tuesdays at Buffalo Wild Wings!

Contestant N is 20 years old and also a single mother of two. A native of Hotlanta, a list of her favorite things would include teddy bears, her kids (of course!) and her Great Dane Goliath!
YOU MUST VOTE FOR ONLY ONE CONTESTANT!
GOOD LUCK GIRLS!

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

My Dear Lyzako,

It seems that a previous note from myself to you was based in large part on factual error as pertains to the liquor laws in the great state of Pennsylvania. I mistakenly thought that the only way beer was offered for sale there was in increments of twenty-four, which is indeed what I was told by the owner of a state ‘Beverage Store’ during my last visit. They even went to the trouble to stock cases of seven-ounce bottles as a way around the ’twenty-four or nothing’ rule. No mention was made that I could buy anything less than a case unless I bought it to go from certain bars, which seemed at the time as though it would be a risky proposition that might lead to me pounding a few while I was there prior to the six-pack purchase. Not a bad idea if I were a local and completely familiar with the terrain, but I feared a car with an out-of-state licence plate swerving and jerking as though the driver was lost (and/or under the influence) might tip off the authorities and I wasn’t in a position to deal with getting pulled over, drunk or not.

Upon my second visit to the ‘Keystone State’, I was finally set straight, if not on the specifics of the beer selling law, at least on where I could easily purchase the quantities I desired for immediate consumption. After a harried day of airports and driving through rush hour traffic, I reached my room yesterday just as the sun was dropping from the sky. I still had a bit of surveillance work to do, but I was ready for an ice cold one and my stomach was grumbling for food. I hadn’t eaten since lunch, which was taken on the run at O’Hare - a Chicago-style hot dog (I’m beginning to feel that there should be no other kind... including Coneys, my friend!) complete with fluorescent green relish, yellow mustard, tomato wedges, half-moons of thinly-sliced cucumber, four or five hot Serrano chile peppers, and topped off with a huge dill pickle spear. As good as it was, the dog had long since stopped sticking to my ribs (although I discovered later that a bit of mustard had continued to cling in my beard throughout the day, with nary a person I spoke to, including the guy at the beverage store, mentioning the fact).

Just after the sun had set I headed out to the ‘job’ site for a quick look around and noticed a lit sign cabinet with red and yellow lettering announcing: “SUBMARINE SANDWICHES” and “COLD BEER TO GO”. I made a mental note that something must have changed and that perhaps my experience in Lancaster of a month ago was peculiar to Amish Country. After I had punched out for the day, I swung by one of the beverage stores that I had passed on my way into Monroeville only to discover that I was again held to the ‘by the case’ rule.

“I’m just visiting and I don’t really want a case,” I told the proprietor.

“How long are you in for?”

“Just a couple of days.”

“Well, you can go up here and get a six-pack from a pub and grille, which will be on your right, or there’s a sub shop called Rudy’s down a little further on your left. They have a yellow sign.”

“I thought I saw a sign like that a little while ago. I can get a cold six-pack?” He nodded. “And I can get a sandwich?” Another nod. “That’s perfect.” And it was.

On the advice of a business associate, I opted for a twelve-pack of a local beer, the Yuengling Lager. Touted as being from ‘America’s Oldest Brewery’ - one that has been run by the same family for five generations ‘Since 1829', the brew turned out to be a winner... smooth and drinkable and a nice pairing for my Mushroom Cheesesteak Sub, which was also a delight, the bun delicate yet firm to the bite, the beef tender enough to melt in your mouth.

Ahh... Rudy’s. It’s almost five o’clock here now... quitting time, Happy Hour for the Nine-to-Five Brigade. I put in my four hours today, earned my supper, and my new friend Rudy is almost directly across the street from the hotel where I sit as I type this and listen to the hum of the refrigerator, empty save for a few cans of Yuengling Lager. The saliva is practically running from the corner of my mouth just thinking about another sandwich and more beer. Maybe some wings. Did I mention that Rudy has wings? Well, he does. Pizza, too...and onion rings and breakfast croissant sandwiches and, most importantly of course... MOTHERFUCKING SIX PACKS TO GO!

Cheers!
Marty Sherman

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Monday, September 24, 2007

If you're not familiar with George Clinton, think of him as the Frank Zappa of Funk. Take that concept one step further, and that makes Funkadelic George's Mothers of Invention, both bands coming into their own in the late sixties and early seventies and both blending elements of Psyche Rock, Doo Wop, Jazz, Blues, Soul and R & B to produce music the likes of which had never been heard before.

Today's Five Star features the second LP the Clinton gang recorded for the Westbound Label, and one of the juiciest in terms of flat out genius guitar work, courtesy of Eddie 'Maggot Brain' Hazel. Recorded in 1970, the same year Jimi Hendrix died, 'Free Your Mind...' seems to pick up where Hendrix left off, with Hazel scorching the tunes with fuzzy feedback as though Jimi himself, still tripping on acid, were directing the action from beyond the grave. Other musicians in the lineup include Bernie Worrell on keyboards, Tiki Fulwood on bass and drummer Billy Nelson. Vocals are provided by George, Clarence 'Fuzzy' Haskins, Ray Davis, Grady Thomas and Calvin Simon - all members of The Parliaments, George's original Doo Wop group that dates back to 1955.

There's a real one take, 'jam session' feel to the cuts on this LP, and rumor has it George challenged the band to see if they could come up with enough material for an album in a single day, all while being high. I wasn't there, but it sure sounds like that's what happened.

Over the years, lineup and name changes (due to contractual and legal reasons, besides The Parliaments, George's bands have been known variously as Parliament, Funkadelic and P-Funk) have led to different permutations of the band, but George has maintained a firm hand on the rudder of the Mothership, directing the flow and bringing the Funk throughout. Funkadelic managed to place a handful of singles in the Top 100, most notably 'One Nation Under A Groove' (1978), and '(Not Just) Knee Deep' (1979); while the more dance-oriented sound of Parliament scored a number of charting hits including 'Up For The Down Stroke' (1974), 'Chocolate City' (1975), 'Tear The Roof Off The Sucker' (1976), 'Flash Light' (1978) and 'Aqua Boogie' (1979). As The Parliaments, they took '(I Wanna) Testify' to #20 in 1967, and later albums credited to 'George Clinton' (still featuring much the same group of musicians as the Parliament and Funkadelic sessions) produced a series of successful singles, 'Atomic Dog' topping that list and reaching #1 on the R & B charts in 1982.

Over the years Clinton has influenced and worked with a number of musicians, from Prince to The Red Hot Chili Peppers to Outkast, and next to James Brown may be the most sampled artist of all time. He even wrote the theme song to the Tracey Ullman Show!

Unfortunately, drug problems plagued many of the members of George's bands, including George himself, who was busted for cocaine possession as recently as 2003. Guitar great Hazel did some serious jail time and died in 1992 at the age of 42.

George and the gang were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, and George continues to be active in the music world both as a performer and producer.

My pristine copy of this LP is a reissue from the eighties, and if you don't mind I would like to toss in my two-cents' worth as to how much I believe the gatefold cover adds to an album package, especially when there's a photo like this one to wrap around to the back. Hold one of these babies in your hands and the inferior nature of CDs as collectibles will immediately become apparent. The gatefold cover was also used to great advantage by The Ohio Players, another superior Funk band in their own right who were also signed to the Westbound label, their album covers infamous for kinky, bondage-influenced photos of nude women. Hmmm, I wonder if it's too soon to do an Ohio Players LP for the next Five Star...?

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Saturday, September 22, 2007

ACCORDING TO THE PROF,
SOME SATURDAYS CAN BE
PRETTY DAMN BLUE, TOO
...


Tell It Like It Is Baby


I don't need any pep talks, man
Don't need to be told that
'Everything will be alright'
Don't sugar coat it for me, okay?

'Alright' is just a relative term
You see what I need is something
To compare that to, something else
That's not worse than 'alright'

Because I already know
That side pretty well

No, what I need is something
That's a damn sight better than
'Alright' - a damn sight better

I need something that goes beyond
The physical coupling that passes
For love in this world

Something that goes beyond beauty
Passes right by good will & leaves trust
Standing in the dust

I want proof that torture is evil
Proof that love is good
Because I have love in me
Been tortured, too

No - evidence is what this kid needs
Something I can feel, see, taste, smell

In the meantime I'll pick myself up
Grab myself by the shoulders and
Give a hard shake...WAKE UP!
Smell that coffee, man

Take a good long whiff
Because it's just a matter of time
Before the last cup's been brewed

And the sink sits full of dirty dishes

-Prof. Dirk Beat


A Difficult Choice

The sun shines its shine
The wind blows its blow
A dog barks its bark
It's time for me to go

-Prof. Dirk Beat

Friday, September 21, 2007

THE GIRLS OF CRAIG'S LIST
HOTTEST BUBBLE BUTT
FINAL ROUND
Vote for your favorite!**Remember: Your vote matters! Exercise your freedom of choice by voting for the girl with the hottest booty!
YOU MUST VOTE FOR ONLY ONE CONTESTANT!
GOOD LUCK GIRLS!
I SWEAR TO GOD A NEARLY VERBATIM CONVERSATION OVERHEARD AT BREAKFAST!
The Reason Why The Human Race Is Driving Me Crazy

One Saturday in August, while trying to have a nice, peaceful breakfast and read a book for a half hour or so, I was forced to listen to this hideous middle-aged woman with an enormous ass and fuzzy gray hair just talk and talk and talk (quite loudly, I might add) about what she was doing at any given moment until I thought I was going to scream. She was with her husband or boyfriend, somebody she called 'Honey'. “Is this okay, Honey?” she asked as she pointed to the booth directly in front of the one I was sitting in.

“It’s perfect”, said Honey. Yeah... perfect - for everybody but me.

She plopped her ass down facing me with Honey across from her so I could see the back of his stupid head, on which he wore a hat throughout the entire meal. At least it blocked my view of her. She then proceeded to yakyakyak until it was all I could do to keep from strangling the both of them.

“Did you wash your glasses this morning? Because they’re filthy. I know what I want. I want French toast and two eggs.” She looked over the menu and observed, “Oh, these are very good prices. Look, with this one you get two eggs, three different meats - sausage, bacon and ham, American fries and toast all for only $4.95. Give me your glasses and I’ll clean them off for you because they’re really filthy. I’ll take them into the bathroom and wash them and I’ll finish wiping them here.” Which she did.

When she came back, she said “Alright, now I’ll finish wiping them here. They were really filthy, you know,” she said as she finished wiping them there. “What are you going to have? I’m going to have French toast and two eggs. Where’s the waitress, I’m ready now. Oh, there she is. I’m ready.” Both she and Honey asked some pretty wise-ass questions of the waitress, many of which she didn’t know.

“What’s the famous fat sausage like? Is it wonderful?” This from Honey.

“I don’t know,” said the waitress, “I’ve never really tried it.” She went on to describe the sausage as best she could.

“How about the biscuits, are they made here?”

“I don’t know. Let me ask.” Sure enough they were made there. After much consideration Honey ordered the Sunrise Special, which normally includes all three breakfast meats, only he substituted some of the “wonderful” sausage for the regular and requested no ham.

“You can still bring me the pineapple slice, though, and I want my American fries extra crispy, and a couple of your home-made biscuits.”

“Instead of toast?”

“Yes, instead of toast.” He also requested a glass of water without ice, forcing the waitress to replace the glass of ice-water which she had already brought to the table.

“He has adversity to ice,” said the wife, “but only in his water. Ha. I’ll have some French toast and two eggs. What kind of bread do you have?” The waitress went down the list and I lost track of the inane conversation momentarily, but she eventually asked Wife how she wants her eggs prepared. “Oh, I don’t really like them runny, and I don’t really like them hard...hmmmm.”

“How about over medium?” offered the waitress.

“Oh, yes. That’s perfect. Over medium is just the words I was looking for. And some sausage. Thank you.” A few minutes of meaningless chatter until the food came and then when it was set before her and the waitress walked away the wife said: “Oh, I wonder why she used that bread? I didn’t want that kind of bread. I thought she could tell by my asking about the bread that I didn’t want this kind of bread. And how come I get this kind of sausage and not fat sausages like you have? Excuse me, but why didn’t I get fat sausages like his?”

“Well, he asked for the fat sausages. We have fat sausage and just regular.”

“Oh, I had no idea. You know they have these fat sausages just like this at Beaumont Hospital and they’re really good. I thought you could tell that’s what I wanted.”

“Do you want me to get you the other kind?”

“No, I’ll just eat these, thank you. Now I’ll eat my French toast and eggs”, she said. “Can I trade you a piece of this sausage for one of your fat sausages?” she asked Honey, who quietly complied. “Mmmm, this is really good sausage. Were you supposed to get gravy with the biscuits?”

“No, I didn’t want gravy,” he said. For the rest of the meal they pretty much just chewed and read the paper in silence with only a few outbursts, thank god.

“Bus Issue Settled in Walled Lake” she announced to Honey, reading the headline. “You know that bus line thing, it looks like they settled it.”

“Oh?”

“Yes”. Upon leaving she made a big show of the tip: “Oh, and here’s the tip. I’ll go back and leave the waitress her tip,” she said while Honey paid the bill.

I gave up trying to read half way through breakfast, closed the book and just ate my corned beef hash and eggs quietly, wishing silently that I would be lucky enough to never see either of them again. Indigestion plagued me for the rest of that Saturday.

That was over a month ago, and so far so good...

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

SHERMAN WHISTLES WHILE HE WORKS
Epilogue


As I sit here now in the room waiting for the phone call and the beer to chill, staring blankly at the television and listening to the air conditioner hum, I can't seem to take my mind off of 'Letisha' or whatever her real name was. I did the job right, I know. She didn't suffer much and I didn't have to look her in the eye when I did it. But for whatever reason, the toe thing bothers me as much as the actual killing does, and I can feel her presence here in the room with me just knowing that her cute little ring-clad toe is chilling in the fridge along with my beer.

I said there wasn't much to see once I'd hit central Ohio, but about a half-hour outside of Cincinnati, speeding south on I-71 I passed a pair of billboards on the east side of the freeway, jutting up from a cornfield on flimsy four by six timbers as if the Devil himself was holding the signs aloft over the monotonously flat landscape, skewered on a huge pitchfork for passing motorists to view.

“IF YOU DIED TODAY, WHERE WOULD YOU SPEND ETERNITY?” read the first one, its crimson capital letters emblazoned on a background black as coal.

The simple message on the second one was: “HELL IS REAL”.

The room phone is ringing now. I'm sure it's the guy with my money, the guy who wants poor Letisha's toe. I don't really want to answer it, but I have to, I guess. After three rings I tip the Jim Beam to my lips, point the bottom of the bottle right at the ceiling and drain it in four searing gulps.

That billboard was right. Hell is real. I know because I'm in it.


Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Dear Lyzako,

As I sat beneath a tree yesterday eating my bagged lunch, I was overtaken by a childhood memory, one that involved joy and the experience of carefree living under the late Summer sun and the blue sky and the puffy white clouds (much like those you see in the opening credits of 'The Simpsons'). For a brief moment the decades melted away as I sat there listening to the chirps of the sparrows and the insistent shrieks of crows as they flew from tree to tree above me. If not altogether humorous, the memory seems worth relating, given the recent difficulties I've experienced in my adult life.

After my main course of turkey salami, Asiago cheese and Romaine lettuce on toasted multi-grain bread, I pulled from my bag a plum the size of a toddler's heart and sank my teeth into its juicy flesh. As the sweet nectar of my humble dessert filled my mouth it simultaneously ran over my chin and into my beard, streamed down my fingers and dripped onto the front of my tee shirt leaving sticky stains.

Suddenly I saw myself as an eight-year-old...

I was sitting in the crook of a low branch in one of Papaw's plum trees, just outside of Corbin, Kentucky, surrounded by the Daniel Boone National Forest and only a mile or so away from the original Sanders Restaurant where the Colonel himself first served up his patented fried chicken recipe complete with all eleven herbs and spices. As I plucked the succulent purple fruits right from the limb and ate my fill, I was at the same time using the mushy, overripe ones to pelt my brother who had taken up a similar position in his own tree nearby, laughing, eating and returning my fire at will. After devouring the flesh of the fruits and sucking every scrap of it from the almond-shaped stones at the centers, we discovered yet another form of makeshift ammo, and began gleefully spitting the stones at each other as General Richie and I engaged forces in the historic Second Battle of the Plum War of 1966.

As I recall we were scolded only mildly at the time... told to get down from the trees, stop eating the plums, stop throwing them, etc... all things that an adult would deem bad behavior, but at the same time the very stuff that makes a child's life worth living.

The scene flashed before me in an instant, held my thoughts until I'd finished dessert and was rolling the naked stone around in my mouth. Instead of spitting it in the bag as I normally would, I felt a sudden urge to go for distance, so I stood up in order to maximize the trajectory. I caught myself laughing a bit on the inhale, feeling silly about what I was doing, got a little distracted and nearly sucked the thing down my windpipe. Sputtering and bug-eyed I spat it out as quickly as possible knowing there wasn't anyone in the immediate area to administer the Heimlich maneuver should I foolishly insist on choking myself. When I did so, the sharp edge on one side of the pit actually sliced a tiny cut in my tongue, the metallic taste of blood erasing all memory of the sweetness of the fruit. My eyes streamed with tears and I coughed for some time before recovering fully and laughing out loud until I couldn't breathe.

It was the best laugh I'd had in ages. Come to think of it, it might have been the best laugh I've had since 1966.

Cheers and Regards!
Marty Sherman

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Never Too Soon For Us, Jessica

Like Venus rising against the night sky
A precious gem, you shine your heat
That warmth your skin and a kiss
From your soft lips takes me back
To my very first time, tingles my spine
As though I'd never been kissed

My heart a pinball caroming in glee
Your touch the flipper that puts it
In motion, causes it to happily race
Through this paranoid world, spinning
Silver glory for the two of us and
Stirring my soul again with love

The ten most wicked things in this
City of sin are easily swept away
From memory by your deep eyes
The color of coffee, by your smile
Bright as any toothpaste ad
By your sweet lips, your honey voice

These four parts of you rival any list
For these four fantastic parts of you
The Ten Commandments can wait
Stir these idle hands my dark angel
Awake my sleeping dictionary
And follow me into the blue

Your very presence has set up camp
Within my raging heart, set it to beat
A frenzied rhythm of love and desire
Set a fire to warm us both in that camp
Nowhere else do I find that warmth
So patiently I await you, angel

While I wish good luck to Chuck

-Ye Olde Blowharde

Monday, September 17, 2007

SHERMAN WHISTLES WHILE HE WORKS
Chapter Seven: The Beginning of the End


It was two-thirty by the time I made it back to my hotel room. The hotel bar was closed and I was left to suffer through the rest of the night without a drink. I sat and watched television as I carefully cut the contents of the manila envelope, photograph and all, into tiny shreds then flushed them down that barely functioning toilet. I'd forgotten how poorly it worked. It took me an hour just to get rid of the last of the paper, watching flush after flush swirl slowly around, holding the handle down to empty the bowl completely, but by four I was finished. I punched out for the day, flipped numbly through the channels, finally killing the thing and lying across the bed, then staring at the ceiling and listening to the white noise of the air conditioner until the sun came up. I got up, shit, showered, shaved and packed.

I hadn't slept a wink, but I figured I could catch up once I got to Ohio.

The trip over to Cincy took me back through the mountains on the turnpike, clipped through West Virginia and across southern Ohio to I-71 South. It was a nice trip, all in all. After I'd paid my last toll on the turnpike I was happy to be on the open road, free to take an exit anytime I felt like, happy to be rid of the sameness and the narrow lanes of the toll road. I rolled west on I-70 with the window down and the wind in my face. The weather was good, much better than I'd experienced on the trip down, and the view was scenic up until I reached central Ohio. When I wasn't cursing the traffic I was checking out the scenery, trying to keep my mind off of what I'd just done and stay focused on the last part of the job. After all, I still had the toe to deliver. Once I'd checked into the hotel a middleman was supposed to collect that as proof I'd done the deed, then hand me the forty grand.

I made the trip in a little over eight hours, found my hotel thanks to very good turn-by-turn directions on my Yahoo Map, and checked in around 7:30 p.m. “Where can I get some beer around here?” I asked the clerk at the desk, a plump, middle-aged black woman.

“You go back up this way,” she said indicating a right turn out of the parking lot. “That's Kenwood. Go on until you see a gas station on both sides of the street. You can get beer there.”

“What about food?”

“Turn right or left and you'll run across something. There's a Subway to the right and I'm not sure what all to the left.”

“Thanks.”

I dumped my bags in the room and headed out, weary from a sleepless night and the drive, but too hungry and thirsty to care. After picking up a meatball sub, I made a quick stop at the beer store for my alcoholic supplies. The beer was warm, though, no room in the coolers for it at the tiny store where I bought it. Thank god there was a mini fridge with a freezer in the room. Once I was back, I kicked off my shoes, loaded up the freezer, pulled the toe from my pocket and put that in the ice box, too. I was tired of carrying it around.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

THE GIRLS OF CRAIG'S LIST
HOTTEST BUBBLE BUTT
SEMI FINALS: ROUND TWO!
Vote for your favorite!**Remember: Your vote matters! Exercise your freedom of choice by voting for the girl with the hottest booty!
VOTE OFTEN FOR AS MANY AS YOU LIKE. ONE WINNER WILL
EMERGE FROM EACH OF THE SEMI FINAL ROUNDS!

DID YOU KNOW THAT VENEZUELA IS PARADISE AT THE CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE? WELL, IT IS.

So it's Saturday afternoon and I had just finished mowing the lawn. The day's first can of Blue had just been popped and I was flicking through all eight of the broadcast channels that I'm able to pick up on the rabbit ears in my basement, while taking a much-needed break from my onerous weekend chores. There was a pan of tomato sauce in the fridge that I'd made Thursday night and the next thing on my list was to boil water for spaghetti so I'd have something to pour the sauce over for dinner. Before I could cross that one off though, I needed a little sitting down time, some relaxation time, some beer time if you know what I mean.

As I thumbed the button on the remote past UNIVISION the screen filled with beautiful brunette, so I stopped. How lucky could I get? I had stumbled across a taped rebroadcast of the Miss Venezuela contest from the week before, right at the beginning of the swimsuit competition no less. My jaw dropped as the contestants paraded by smiling and showing off brown legs and boobs, some strutting like high fashion models on a runway, some slow-rolling their hips and swaying as though dancing to music, each girl more beautiful and sexy than the one before.

Since I can only speak enough Espanol to order a cerveza or get my fachada slapped, I wasn't able to understand everything they were saying, but it didn't matter. I got the gist of it and let out an audible 'Ay Caramba!' or two just to try and get into the spirit of the affair. I think I even crossed myself at one point, looked to the ceiling to thank God. I popped open a bag of jalapeno flavored kettle chips and grabbed Blue number two, pretending it was a Tecate with lime. Caliente!

As the competition unfolded, I continued to be mesmerized by the colorful designs on the one piece suits, transfixed by the lips and hips, the smiling eyes of the gorgeous women, hypnotized by the rhythm of their movements as they crossed the stage in toe-revealing high heels. For twenty-five minutes I was in Heaven. Once it got past the swimsuit competition, though, I have to admit that I started losing interest. The next phase, of course, involves actually talking to the girls, who were wearing flesh-smothering evening gowns by then, and I have to tell you that this is the exact point I lose interest in any beauty pageant, regardless of whether I can understand what they're saying or not. Most of the girls who compete in these things aren't really all that bright. You all heard that idiotic, rambling answer from South Carolina during the Miss Teen USA competition, right? Well, if you didn't, you can check it out on You Tube. It may make you laugh (because you're a heartless bastard), but when I see it I cringe with embarrassment for the poor girl.

Anyway, I switched the channels just in time to see a classic Soul Train dance line brought to me by McDonald's. Bah da bah bah baahhh, I was lovin' it!

Back to Miss Venezuela, though... My favorite didn't win, but the girl who did - Dayana Mendoza, was just as gorgeous. I'm not sure how this all fits into the Miss Universe Pageant, or if it even does. All I know for sure is this: If the universe suddenly just consisted of Venezuela and I had to move there tomorrow, there'd still be more than enough beautiful, sexy women for me. And during the course of practicing my Espanol on the ladies down there, I'd more than likely get my fachada slapped.

A lot.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

WINTER'S A COMIN'...
A Drinkin' Flashback to Last February

I had planned to stay sober yesterday, and was somewhat disappointed in my lack of resolve, so those first three at The BAR went down with some difficulty as I began to understand the scope of my drinking problem. I didn't enjoy them, really, just waited for the alcohol to take hold as the furnace there blew hot air, and cigarettes, though few at the time, added to my general discomfort. A guy at the end of the bar waiting for his carryout food also drummed his hands on the bar top loudly in time with the music which the bartender had played on the jukebox, depressing tunes which I already didn't like but were made even worse by his restless, nervous thumping.

I looked into The Emerald from inside the BAR before leaving, but decided that I needed an entire change of venue, so I carefully steered my truck north a couple of blocks and walked over to Huey's Buoy. I parked my ass on the first seat in the place, near the door and just to the right of a trio of mongoloid biker types who were obviously towards the end of an afternoon of drinking. Lorelei met me there with a pint of Labatt and a glass of ice water, my usual, asked me how I was doing.

“Cold,” I said as I rubbed my hands together.

“Come sit down at the end by me,” she suggested.

“That's the smoking section. I think I'll stay here.”

The bikers weren't smoking, thank god, a minor miracle in itself, so I settled in and started observing. The guy nearest me stood the entire time I was there. He had a short goatee and longish gray hair in a pony tail topped with a baseball cap, a big gut, working hands with cracked nails. He seemed to be holding court as his buddies looked to him for entertainment and knowledge. The guy in the middle, the most normal-looking of the three, was clean shaven and had large ears that stuck straight out from his head like an elf. He wore a black varsity jacket embroidered with a company name and switched from beer to Bloody Mary when their food arrived. The third guy who sat on the far end of the group was tiny, almost dwarfish in appearance and size, sporting a thick black mustache, a baseball cap and glasses, and his stubby thick fingers could barely grasp his bottle of beer without using both hands. Their overall mood was jovial and kind, probably due to many previous libations, and when their dinner came, they set upon it like hungry lions.

Lorelei emerged from the kitchen and headed our way, holding high two large platters topped with steamed lobsters, red as rose petals, gorgeous in their simplicity as food. The guys perked up and I found myself feeling a little jealous of their shameless excess. She put them before 'Goatee' and 'Ears' before retrieving a cold plate from the fridge for 'Dwarf'. “There's forks and lemons in the buckets,” she told them, “Need anything else?”

“C'...C'rona,” slurred Goatee before draining his bottle and thumping it onto the bar.

That's when Ears decided to have a Bloody Mary. In less than a minute Goatee had devoured the meat from the tail, twisting it onto the tines of his fork and holding it up for the group to see. “Shee,” he said to them, “Jush twhirl id like shpagetti!” From the look of things, Ears didn't have a lot of experience eating lobster, was looking to Goatee for instructions, the mechanics of it being somewhat of a chore for a first timer who doesn't want to make a mess. Goatee flipped the carcass over. “Brainsh,” he said as he growled low in his throat with pleasure, “Mmmm, brainsh. Yoo ghotta eat th' brainsh. Mmmmm.” He scooped out every moist bit from the shell, sucking at the scraps noisily, then moved on to the claws. Ears was still working on his tail, and Dwarf was gingerly picking at his cocktail shrimp, squinting through tiny eyes and chuckling evilly at the two of them. Goatee tried using the hinged nutcracker on the claws, but gave up, his hands slick with drawn butter. “Shee theezsh clawzsh...clawzsh,” he stuttered before putting one in his mouth and crunching down on it, cracking it open to free the sweet white meat inside. “Mmmm, clawzsh...mmmm.”

Dwarf laughed at him, and Ears took a jibe or two as well. “Wanna, wanna shrimp?” asked Dwarf with apparent glee.

“Nhope, clawzsh...mmmm,” said Goatee.

“Need more butter?” asked Ears, “We can get you some butter to take home.” He laughed as Goatee licked his fingers and sucked every ounce of meat from the claws.

“Crab, crab claws,” giggled Dwarf.

“Nhot crhab! Lobshter!” slurred Goatee, “Nho chrab...nhot yed...”

Goatee had finished and Ears was just then working on the claws, carefully cracking them and passing on the goo inside the carcass. “Want mine?” he asked Goatee, pointing to it with his knife.

“Yooo eadit,” said Goatee, “Itsh ghoood...th' brainsh, mmmmm....”

“Wanna, wanna shrimp?” asked Dwarf again.

When they had finished the main course, Lorelei returned to scoop up the debris. Goatee was carefully wiping up the bar, removing all traces of spilled butter and saliva with a paper napkin. “How, HowdIdhue?” he asked her.

“Better than most,” she said with a grin and a chuckle. “You guys need anything else? Dessert?”

“I'll haff shum shoop,” said Goatee, “I had th' hwon...I'll haff th' hother hwon.”

“The bisque?”

“Yeah...bishk.”

Lorelei came back with a cup of crawfish bisque and a thick slab of cornbread, which Goatee ate greedily, slurping noisily at the bisque and forcing crumbling chunks of the cornbread into his mouth. “Mmmmm...ishgoood....mmmm,” he murmured to no one in particular. Then to me, “Th' foodsh ghood here.” I agreed. Goatee rambled on, “Whee bhen, bhenda thad hother bhar...th' Shtone, Shtone ...shumthin...”

“The Stone House?” I asked, “Down by the fairgrounds?”

“Yeah, yeah,” nodded Dwarf, his head bobbing quickly. “That's it.”

“I was only there a couple of times,” I told them. “The bathroom's downstairs, right?” They just looked at me bewildered. “You gotta go downstairs to piss, right?”

“Whee wernt there that lhong,” said Goatee.

“Yeah, yeah,” said Dwarf with a smile, “I think you're right. It's downstairs.”

“I pisshed out bhy th' c'har...” said Goatee, apparently just remembering.

“Whereyoofhrom?” Goatee asked me, “I'ma Shwede. Shwede fhrum C'hambohdea. My shishter and ghirlfren live in Haweyee. I alwaysh gho to Alhashka to eat... mheat... mmmm... Vhenishon shawshidge...” He held his hands up with index fingers pointed about eighteen inches apart to indicate the length of the tasty treat.

“Oh, yeah,” I agreed, “That's good stuff. My uncle hunts deer all the time.”

“Whereyoofhrom? I'ma I'ma Shwede.” Just then I noticed that Goatee had a small blurry tattoo on his right hand at the base of his thumb, a pentagram inside a circle, a pagan symbol of worship that represents the five senses, also known by Christians as the devil's hoof print. “Fhrum C'a-C'hambodea.”

“You sure you don't want to take some butter home?” cracked Ears.

“How about dessert now?” asked Lorelei when she came back, Goatee finished with the last of the soup. “Key Lime pie? Peach cobbler?”

“Get 'im a peach, peach cobbler,” laughed Dwarf, thumbing down towards Goatee. “Cobbler.”

“Nhoh,” said Goatee, “Hime dhun.”

“Okay, I'll bring you your checks.”

Ears went to the bathroom and Dwarf moved down to Goatee, a heated discussion ensuing as to whether or not Ears was showing the proper amount of respect to Goatee, whether he'd been paying his fair share for the past two days or not. I gathered that Ears had been bunking at Goatee's house, either for work purposes or because he had been booted out by his old lady. When Ears came back, he said “You guys still talking about me? You going to buy my dinner?” This last comment directed to Goatee.

“Whell,” said Goatee, “Yoo shood bhy mhine. Yoo haffent shpent hany mhunny yhet.”

“What are you talking about,” protested Ears, “I bought drinks. I bought beer. I paid for lunch yesterday.”

“Bhutt yoo shtay ad mhy howsse, dhring mhy bheer, ead mhy fhoood,” said Goatee.

Along about that time, Mortimer was busily cracking some fresh oysters right in front of us, carefully prying them open and cutting the muscle loose from the shells.

“Arethozsh Blhew pointsh?” asked Goatee, “Theylook ghoood... mmmm... jhuicy...”

“Ah, no,” said Mortimer, “These are from Prince Edward's Island. I can't always get Blue Points this time of year.”

“Wheeshoodgedsum,” said Goatee, his appetite apparently still unsatisfied. “Theylook ghood.”

“You want some?” asked Lorelei.

“Nhahh...C'han, c'hanIpay th' chekh?”

“Sure,” she said, pointing out to Goatee that it was right in front of him on the bar.

“Whassid, whassidsay?” he asked.

“Thirty-nine-sixty-eight,” Lorelei told him. Goatee handed her two twenties, accepted the coin when she returned with his change and carefully peeled four wrinkled dollar bills from a wad of cash he had in his pocket to leave her for a tip - barely ten percent.

After they'd left, I told Mortimer, “You know, I'm always afraid that people lump me in with guys like that just by looking at me.” He just smiled, probably didn't hear me. Either that or he's an asshole.

When Lorelei came back to ask me if I wanted another one, my eyes were fixed on her boobs, which bounced magically up and down, perfect little handfuls of flesh. “I'm sorry,” I told her, “But I couldn't take my eyes off your boobs. I didn't mean to be rude.”

As she walked back down the bar she looked over her shoulder and said, “Now you're probably looking at my ass.”

“You don't really have an ass,” I told her honestly.

“I know,” she laughed.

Friday, September 14, 2007

WELCOME TO BLUE FRIDAY
WITH PROF. DIRK BEAT...


12:15 To Hell

The Sun screams whitehot pain
As the Forest shivers & shakes
Like suddenly struck Matches
Oaks, Maples, Elms alike
Become flame & die as
The Modern World comes to its
Natural End

Standing in line at the bank
On a Friday at lunchtime...
Not so different than
Being Crucified, man
Go ahead, You, talk that talk
On that talking thing you have
Toss a few more Stones at me

I can take it

I just don't know how much longer
This Modern World can

-Prof. Dirk Beat


Bewitched, Bothered and Deranged

Somewhere between dusk & dawn
Another world exists & it's REAL
Close your eyes, man, you'll see
HELL behind the Nightmares

Trust me

It pushes hard on me, forces the issue
I can't ignore it no matter how I try
Can't just let it happen & move on
No way, man, NO WAY

I BELIEVE

* * * * * * * *

I need another tattoo, maybe two more
You know, so people will stop asking
“What's that one mean, man?”
So I'll just look like another stupid

Somebody who likes tattoos, dig?

Somebody who appreciates the
PAIN of it
The ART of it
The FOOLISHNESS of it all

I'm planning HECKLE & JECKLE
For my right forearm
Purple cartoon silhouettes of
JAZZ MUSICIANS for my left

To keep my first one company,
Understand? Make it less
Fucking sigNIFicant, son

Is that FOOLISH enough for you?

WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU
LOOKING AT?!

-Prof. Dirk Beat

Thursday, September 13, 2007

howfictuppamI?'

HeynnNancey!wiowthefuckruuuoyou?!!

GodmnamnitImmndrnk!

Iw3rotehtat last poem abo utyouw!!

EFven thoug I knwotyour eyse are green...

Isthesame.....
SHERMAN WHISTLES WHILE HE WORKS
Chapter Six: Dig This


It took about an hour but I managed to dig a decent-sized hole in the middle of a stand of trees and surrounded by brush, a couple hundred feet away from where I'd parked the car. I hit a root or two, chopped through them with the shovel, but other than that it was easy digging because of all the rain the day before. Finally I had a small grave dug about four feet deep, carefully saving the grass and weeds from the ground's surface in one foot square chunks to replace once the hole was filled. I went back to the car, wheezing from the exertion of digging, popped the trunk and pulled the body out. It seemed heavier than when I put it in. I carried it over to the grave and put it down beside the hole. I untied the bags, reached in and found her feet, pulled them free and removed her left shoe - a sandal which she'd changed into after work. I was surprised to see a Gucci label stamped into the sole. The sandals were white, a single, silver-buckled strap around the heel with a strip of red and blue fabric woven through silver chain decorating the top piece that ran between her toes. They were nice. I wondered if she had a matching belt. The pale moonlight shimmered off her silver toe ring, and I noticed that the nails of her pretty toes were painted deep crimson. The color of blood. I reached in my pocket for the end cutters.

I'm squeamish. I hate to admit it, but it's true. This part of the job had been bothering me since I'd read the instructions Boss had given me two days ago. But no toe, no pay, so I took a deep breath, worked her ring-clad middle toe into the jaws of the end cutters as far behind the ring as I could, closed my eyes and squeezed hard with both hands. I heard a sickening 'pop' when the bone gave way, then a squishy feeling as the cutters nipped through the flesh. My stomach was beginning to feel light and my forehead felt hot. I stood up, tried to take a deep breath, then dropped to my knees and puked right in the grave.

Once I'd gotten my legs back under me I looked around for the toe and panicked momentarily before realizing that I was standing on it. I tore off a piece of one of the trash bags and wrapped the toe up before slipping it into my shirt pocket, pushed her feet back inside the bags and rolled the bundle into the grave. I heard myself say “Sorry”out loud and had the sense that I was looking down, watching the work instead of actually toiling away myself. I tossed the sandal, the end cutters, the poncho, the work gloves, the extension cord and her credit cards on top. I leaned the shovel against one of the trees then stomped at it until the handle broke in two. I threw that into the grave as well, then scraped the dirt back in with the side of my foot and finished it off by replacing the sections of grass and weeds. In a week nobody would know I'd even been here. Except for me, of course. I would never forget.

* * * * * * * * * * *

I drove around until the needle was on 'E', found an industrial area and began circling the blocks in figure eights. The trick was to run the tank empty, make it look like a mugging and a joyride, but not leave myself too far away to walk back. The Neon had less than a quarter of a tank when I started, but it took me nearly two hours to run it dry. By the time it shivered to a stop I was on the other side of town, a good four mile walk from my rental van.

I left the car at the side of the road with the keys in the ignition and the radio on but the volume turned down, flipped the seats up, opened the glove box and the trunk and began walking
. After a mile or so I pulled off the plastic gloves. My fingers were swollen and wrinkled, like they get from too much time in the bath. I saw a dumpster next to a muffler shop and casually tossed in one of the gloves as I passed. There was almost no traffic in this part of town at this time of night, which was good. Another few blocks and I hit Fruitville Pike, turned east heading in the direction of the van. I stopped into a 7-11, bought a Slim Jim, a Snickers and a Gatorade, paid for the stuff with my card so as to avoid handing the cashier the money. I didn't want to draw attention to my shriveled fingers. It was well after midnight, though, and the young guy at the counter was barely awake, yawned even as he rung me up. “Three-seventy-seven,” he said. On the way out, I stripped the plastic from the Slim Jim and tossed it, along with the remaining plastic glove into the trash can to the right of the door.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Dear Lyzako,

Despite the fact that you took great care to maintain an extremely low profile as a resident of Ferndalia, were practically invisible to your thousands of adoring fans as you ran your errands incognito (shades and a floppy hat doing most of the hard work), I must say that your departure has left a void in the atmosphere here that is difficult to describe. Sometimes it's as though I've been handed a book to read, one that's received glowing reviews and comes highly recommended, only to find all the pages blank once I've opened the cover. I put the book down, sure that I must have made a mistake, return to it later and find that the pages are indeed still blank.

I washed my laundry today at that place on Nine Mile - the one the Chinese guy took over, the one that's been sliding slowly downhill ever since. The air conditioning was working wonderfully for the first time all summer, due most likely to the fact that it was only sixty-five degrees outside this afternoon and the doors were propped wide open. One change machine refused to take more than two of my dollar bills, which to all appearances were flawless, untorn and flat. Half of the neon signs mounted to soffits around the room reading: 'Triple Loaders', 'Dryers' and the like no longer work and one tube over the centrifuge machines sagged out from the wall in a way that might suggest the connection could create a fire hazard. The signs that continue to light up hummed and buzzed so loud that they could be heard over the washers. Every other washing machine had a note taped over the coin slot describing various malfunctions in childish ballpoint scrawl, 'DON'T WORK DON'T SPIN' being the most popular. Nearly all the ones that were operational were stuffed with clothes long finished and left while thoughtless customers shopped, ate or slept in their cars.

When I first arrived the place was a nightmare of half-heard cell phone conversations, crying babies and slamming washer lids. Thankfully, by the time I was halfway through the chore it had quieted down considerably, the babies either falling asleep or leaving and the rude phone people taking off while their laundry washed. I knocked off a chapter of 'White Doves at Morning', flipped through the local rags and was out of there in an hour-and-a-half.

Just as I was getting the last of the pile folded, though, that spectacle-wearing, gum-cracking witch that works there came by in her little red vest, pushing a dust mop and chewing like she was getting paid just for working the gum.

“Feels like Fall out there today, doesn't it?” she said to me, obviously mistaking me for somebody who she's talked to before. Either that or she was in an uncharacteristic social mood. To the best of my recollection she'd never so much as said 'hi' to me before. Anyway, I had farted just seconds before her arrival. I'd been dropping the silent-but-deadly kind ever since lunch and the stench was sweet - a mixture of last night's beer and the navy bean soup and chicken sandwich I had for lunch.

“Yep,” I said as she approached the bloom of my aroma. “It's coming alright. Won't be long now.”

I don't quite know how this ties in with your move, but I do know that you can picture the whole thing as it went down in a room with which you are familiar, can see the cast of characters in your mind - the Chinese guy, the gum-cracking attendant and myself, starring as The Farter. You can leave out imagining what it smelled like if you want.

The long and short of it is: it cracked me up on a day when I needed a natural laugh. What's funnier than a fart joke after all? Unfortunately, there was no one else around to appreciate it. That's where you come in and what prompted another letter on my part.

That and I only need two more posts to drive those fucking apologies off the first page.

Regards,
Marty Sherman














Ponder This:


The sky bluegray like your eyes
The clouds soft as your hair
But angel white instead of brown
Untouchable yet soft I know
Softer still is your hair of silk
Which makes my flesh tingle
Every time it brushes my cheek

Every
Single
Magical
Time

The scent of the lilacs like your skin
The cooling breeze your smile
The grass beneath my feet our bed
And the world watches us make love
Until the stars like diamonds
Of perspiration on your lilac skin
Have scattered across the night sky

And the
New Moon
Sheds a tear
of Joy

-Ye Olde Blowharde


The Reality Of Reality, My Friend

I shoulda mowed the lawn yesterday
Shoulda cut that grass
...but I di'n't

I sure shoulda washed my clothes
Shoulda gone to the laundromat
...but I di'n't

Instead I...

Just wore that same pair of
Underwear for a third day
Powdered myself
Against the stink
& when I crossed the lawn
That jungle of grass
I tripped & fell
Disappeared from sight

I shoulda felt bad about the grass
Shoulda felt guilty for lettin' it go
...but I di'n't

I shoulda apologized to my neighbors
For the long grass & my ass smell
...but I di'n't

Instead I...

Just lay there beneath the Autumn sun
Felt its dying warmth on my neck
Felt the grass between my fingers
Felt the odor of the earth rise into me

& laughed

Longer & louder
Than ever before

-Prof. Dirk Beat

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

THE PASSIONATE PURSUITE OF PORNE

Okay, I admit to being somewhat titillated by pornography. Yeah, yeah. I know it's an understatement. I can't explain the psychology of it, but I have to believe it goes all the way back to the caveman era. Survival of the species was man's paramount mission in life and the sights, sounds and smells of copulation were stimulants to produce arousal in others, who quickly followed suit with their own procreational behavior, thus ensuring that the population of the tribe would be maintained. (The orgy is a natural thing, you see.) Modern society has pushed this instinctual animal behavior into our private lives and away from the public eye, thereby making it seem 'dirty'. Laws have been set up to strictly dictate where, when and how we can not only view pornography, but copulate with other consenting adults as well. And let's not forget the Pope. Organized religion has had more than its fair share of influence on the rules these days, too.

I remember the first time I got aroused just reading something. It was 1971 and I had recently become a teenager. My dad always had mystery and action paperbacks laying around and I was suddenly deemed old enough to read them. That summer I picked up a Nick Carter novel to start the odyssey and I don't think I put it down until I had read the whole damn thing. Mixed in with the spying and the killing were fairly graphic descriptions of the hero bedding the ladies and I was floored by the fact that so much stimulation could be found between the flimsy, ragged covers of a paperback book. I raced from page to page to get to the sexy parts and before I knew it I'd finished it.

After I'd polished off all the Nick Carters my dad had, I moved on to the Carter Brown mysteries and fell in lust with the covers. The lovingly crafted illustrations of beautiful women depicted on the outsides of the books drew me in more than the stories on the inside, and no doubt accounted for a substantial portion of the publisher's sales as well. At that early point in my life, the half-naked, leggy women were as much of a turn-on to me as anything I'd ever seen, and I longed for a career like the one enjoyed by the cover artist, Robert McGinnis, who I considered a magician with the brush. I still collect the paperbacks to this day.

Of course, my innocence was compromised when a year later I found a stained and coverless Playboy magazine in the bushes across the street, took it to school and showed it to a select few friends. It was my first glimpse of female pubic hair, and the centerfold seemed almost alive when I folded it out, the brunette's perfectly smooth and shapely legs revealed with the final flip of the page. Word got around and the magazine was eventually confiscated, but there were many clandestine viewing sessions at my locker prior to that. I'd finally realized the power of pornography, but I didn't understand why it was feared and frowned upon so. Still don't.

I lost my virginity at sixteen, went on to a few girlfriend relationships but nothing serious, and at age eighteen saw my first X-Rated film, 'Emmanuelle', in a mainstream movie theater at a shopping mall in my home town. Some buddies and I went as a group to see it, and when we came out and got in the car, there was actually steam rising from the crotch of my jeans in the cold January air.

In college I was a serious student. I graduated in '82, moved to the big city, got a job and set up residence with plans for the future. Plans of being a fine artist - a painter popular enough to live on gallery sales and commissions. I had a few magazines of naked women under my bed, but the pursuit of pornography wasn't something that I thought about on a regular basis at the time. Living a spartan lifestyle in a cheap apartment, I deprived myself of every unnecessary luxury while saving my hard-earned dollars for an eventual return to school to earn my Masters Degree in Fine Art. Well, that never happened, but I did get to see some porn videos at a friend's house around 1989, and upon returning home was flabbergasted by the array of selections available at my own local video store. I immediately rushed out and bought my very own VCR and have amassed a private cache of personal favorites since then, duping them onto my own tapes with the aid of a second VCR which I purchased some time later.

I had favorite starlets...Angel Kelly, Dominique Simone (before the plastic surgery on her face and boobs), Sade (not the singer) and the sweet-but-not-so-innocent girl pictured above, Miss Nina DePonca. She's still tops in my book. Then came this God-forsaken Internet and everything was ruined with viruses and spyware that compromise your computer if you take a look at anything resembling pornography. And lest you Mac users think you're off the hook in that department, just wait until you've carved out a large enough market share for those nerds to take the time to fuck with you. Then watch out.

No, I'll stick to my trusty VCR, thank you. I now have one that plays both DVDs and tapes. And my low-def television set works just fine for porn. I mean, who wants to see some of those close ups in high resolution? I sure don't. The body hair, the scars, the pimples on the asses... I shudder just thinking about it. I truly don't want any more advances in technology that makes porn even more realistic than it already is. After all, the best part of the whole experience happens inside your mind, inside the fantasy. That's the whole point, am I right?

Did you ever see that holodeck thing on the new Star Trek shows? You know... the one where you can go inside and experience a three-dimensional, physically real world of your own choosing. You can fight with gladiators, climb mountains, go sailing...pretty much anything you want. Captain Picard used to visit often and play like he was a detective, a lot like the character in some of those Carter Brown books I mentioned before. Well, if they ever actually do come up with something like that, I won't make it out from my first trip inside. You see, gladiators and mountain climbing aren't my idea of fantasy. It just sounds like too much work to me.

No, in my fantasy, Nina DePonca and I would fuck like animals until there wasn't a single drop of fluid left in my body, and I would die a happy man.