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Posted December 1, 2005
You can probably tell that sometimes I have to force myself to do this. It's the last thing on earth I feel like doing. You can also probably tell that's when I often do my best work, when I don't want to do it. Conventional wisdom tells the journalist that he shouldn't be writing in the first person because, after all, we're supposed to be covering an event and the event isn't us. That sentence should have read "The writer often does their best work when they're forced to do it," or more confrontationally, "You often do your best work when it's the last thing on earth you feel like doing." Anything but "I," which makes you an egotist, not a journalist. Sometimes I'm in "pure writer" mode where I'm free to simply improvise, treating my computer keyboard with the same reverence I pay and play to a Steinway keyboard, crank it up and see what this baby can do. But sometimes I need to get into "professional journalist" mode, so I picture Leonard Maltin's Film Guide. If you were looking up, oh, say Field of Dreams, would you want to read "This film reminds me of my fucked up childhood and how my dad forced me to go to Dodger Stadium and sit through baseball games where we always had to leave during the eighth inning to beat the parking lot traffic." I don't think so. You're probably trying to decide what to watch tonight, seeking simple information concerning how good a film is, how many stars does it get, and the last thing you need to know is how fucked up was the childhood of the writer. It's perhaps in reaction to decades of dealing with professional newspaper and magazine editors that I now find myself on the internet randomly inserting myself into every news item I find, covering the inside world with the same scalpel I use on the outside world. That'll show 'em. I would hope I haven't grown beyond the realm of mere enterprise and still contain the skills to do the job. Maybe not. Here I present a recent discussion I had with the entertainment editor of a major daily who prefers to remain anonymous, so let's call him Sam. Sam, It was August 11, 1973, when I went to The
Corral, a tiny little place in Topanga Canyon, maybe room for 300, to see
Joni Mitchell opening for Neil Young and the Santa Monica Flyers. Joni
was good, Neil was excellent, and at the end of his set said "some friends
of mine have formed a new band and they've been rehearsing for a few weeks.
They've never performed in public before, so if you want to stick around,
you're welcome to check them out." Half the place split, the rest of us
stuck around to be blown away by the very first public appearance of The
Eagles, who did their whole first album. How about a piece on The Eagles
last concert by someone who was there at their first?
Michael, That sounds great to me. Will you take $75 for it? Can you provide the context about how long they had been backing up Linda Ronstadt and any other bands, say Rick Nelson? How they recruited guys from Poco and the Burrito Brothers, etc? And would you know if there were any photos taken of that night? When can you have the story ready? I look forward to it.Sam, $75's fine. I would tell their whole story, focusing on the difference between the band I saw then and what they are now. Even people who currently hate the Eagles because they're so slick would have liked the band I saw then. As far as pictures are concerned, I didn't take any and there's no one to contact at the Corral since it burned down, but there are Topanga blogs of aging hippies where I've seen postings from people who remember the night. I can post a request for pictures and who knows what will turn up. Of course the big issue is that I haven't seen
their farewell tour yet and don't have tickets. I was thinking of going
on 11/12 to the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, but if you want the piece before
they appear here, then I've got to see them at Staples or Arrowhead or
Glendale. Either way, I would need a letter from you to get a press pass.
I can probably handle contacting the Eagles press office myself, but if
you've already got contacts that would be great. Any way you want to work
it.
Michael, I appreciate your desire to get tickets to see the Eagles before the story, but I wouldn't want the scope of the story to be so big that you would need to compare the Eagles then with the Eagles now. I see this as a little story of how they started and how they sounded before they became huge. You should keep it to 700 words (no more than 800) and end it with just a reference to the corporate monstrosity they are now. - Sam
On August 11, 1973, I went to The Corral, a tiny place in Topanga Canyon,
to see Joni Mitchell opening for Neil Young and the Santa Monica Flyers.
Joni was good, but no one was paying attention, so she left in a huff after
only a few songs. Neil Young was excellent and tore the house down. At
the end of his set, he said "some friends of mine have formed a new band
and they've been rehearsing for a few weeks. They've never performed in
public before, so if you want to stick around, you're welcome to check
them out."
And that's it unless I can
get tickets and compare their first to their latest.
Michael:
The only reason I didn't include any of the facts you list here about the Eagles is that I didn't know them. Beware working for someone who knows more than you do. The article included absolutely everything I knew about the Eagles, and I still thought it was entertaining and informative. It's perfectly understandable that you would want your readers to get all the facts, even the ones I don't know, and I'm willing to do the research, but it'll take at least a couple days. I actually have three other deadlines today and the storm knocked my phone lines out. I'm writing this at 6AM but God knows when you're getting it. I certainly don't blame you for the Sun's editorial
policies but damn, they are a bit archaic. My own personal editorial policy
is if it's good reading, run it.
Michael,
Just to be sure, I made a posting to a Topanga Canyon website asking if anyone had been there, and I heard from two people who had only HEARD of the concert, and had heard the place was so packed that part of the roof caved in from fans trying to get in. This was news to me, but between Young and the Eagles, I was never outside, so I have no way of knowing how many rabid fans of the laid-back Eagles were attempting to fly like one through the skylight of the Corral. So there are many possibilities...
I'm one of the majority who found it impossible to get tickets to The Eagles this week, and even armed with an article in print and an assignment to cover the event, my plaintive pleas to publicists fell upon deaf ears. In any case, you are welcome to plunderize
and extract any portions of my Eagles article you may find useful, and
if a publicist with a heart larger than a flea's naval shows a speck of
human decency and gets me in, I'll send you a further report.
Michael,
The Opposite of Journalism Tom Robbins has a new book out, Wild Ducks Flying Backward. It is simultaneously the worst and best book ever, and I cannot recommend it more highly. It is his only book that is not a novel but merely a collection of his short writing, his liner notes, his articles, and his journalism - spanning 30 years. If you ever wondered why Tom Robbins stopped being a journalist and devoted his entire writing time to novels, this book will answer that question with a resounding crack to your cerebellum. Outside of his novels, Tom's writing is still Tom's writing, and it is precisely the sort that drives newspaper editors crazy. Imagine for the moment that you have asked Tom Robbins to write the liner notes to the new Leonard Cohen album, and what you get back contains this: "There is evidence that the honoree might be privy to the secret of the universe, which, in case you're wondering, is simply this: everything is connected. Everything. Many, if not most, of the links are difficult to determine. The instrument, the apparatus, the focused ray that can uncover and illuminate those connections is language. And just as a sudden infatuation often will light up a person's biochemical sky more pyrotechnically than any deep abiding attachment, so an unlikely, unexpected burst of linguistic imagination will usually reveal greater truths than the most exacting scholarship. In fact, the poetic image may be the only device remotely capable of dissecting romantic desire, let alone disclosing the hidden mystical essence of the material world." Not a word about Leonard Cohen except for the fact it's about absolutely everything, including the nature of the universe and the struggle to express it in words, just like Leonard Cohen, just like all writers, me and you, people whose passion to express ourselves is constantly pressing against the boundaries of our talent to do so. A writer cannot read this without thinking my God, I should be writing like this, how does he do it? Even when he's on topic he's a singular master of metaphor. How would you describe Leonard Cohen's voice? Deep, monotonous, flat, unemotional, and gravelly are words that spring to mind, but they're not good enough for Tom Robbins, who does it like this: "It is a voice raked by the claws of Cupid, a voice rubbed raw by the philosopher's stone. A voice marinated in kirschwasser, sulfur, deer musk, and snow; bandaged with sackcloth from a ruined monastery; warmed by the embers left down near the river after the gypsies have gone. It is a penitent's voice, a rabbinical voice, a crust of unleavened vocal toast - spread with smoke and subversive wit. He has a voice like a carpet in an old hotel, like a bad itch on the hunchback of love. It is a voice meant for pronouncing the names of women - and cataloguing their sometimes hazardous charms." Knowing how he works, I would venture to say that Tom spent the better part of a day working on that paragraph. I can only describe Tom Robbins' voice as one to aspire to. He teaches us that as long as you're going to write, you might as well put some thought into it and say something that, beyond the slightest shred of any doubt, has never been said the way you're going to say it. It's the opposite of journalism and screenwriting, making this book the absolute worst possible role model for a writer trying to work at a newspaper or for a writer of screenplays where florid descriptions are verboten. My story of the Eagles concert above is a perfect example of "being yourself" getting in the way of making 75 bucks. It seems to be that you can only write like Robbins if you're working for yourself. Robbins' novelistic approach to journalism might be an acquired taste, one you can't bite into like an apple but must consume as delicately as a pomegranate, piece by piece, savoring each morsel or you'll get it all over yourself, and you should get over yourself. Nobody's going to ask you to write like this, except possibly me. ![]() ![]() ![]() How would you describe the Bush administration? Corrupt, arrogant, fascist, warmongering, intolerant, and brutal are words that spring to mind, but they wouldn't be good enough for Tom Robbins, who never writes about politics. But if he did, what would he say? Send your answers to: How Tom Robbins would write about the Bush Administration.
First Jobs Warren Beatty - Rat catcher
- Planet Proctor - Answers to Last Week's Stupid Question Question: How many personal problems
does it take to screw in a light bulb?
Personal Problems, I don't have any personal problems... except...maybe...being out of light bulbs. Honestly I could give you a list of my problems but for them to make sense I would have to tell you my life story and no one in their right mind wants that. lets just say i have a 19 year old daughter I would sell cheap if I could get away with it. - spitfyre None. It'll never happen, no matter
how many personal problems show up. Believe me. No matter if there are
2 or 2 billion, the bulb will never get screwed in. It might get screwed
up but never in.Each personal problem will be worse than the next, and
all the personal problems will try to suck the energy out of the others,
and everyone and everything within ear shot. But even if only one personal
problem show up the light bulb won't get changed. The one will sit and
piss and moan about how no one cares and no one gives a shit any more and
more likely than not the bulb will get smashed against the wall by wave
after wave of self pity.But I do want to say that your story of personal
problems has touched my heart. Never before have I EVER heard of anyone
with more problems than you have. Please accept this expression of my sincere
sympathy. Now fuck off and quit bothering me while I change this light
bulb. You sure as hell aren't going to do it.
We're sitting on our blessed Mother
Earth from which we get our strength and determination, love and humility
- all the beautiful attributes that we've been given. so turn to one another;
love one another; respect one another; respect Mother Earth; respect the
waters-because that's life itself!
Problems?? Problems are facile equations
with a multiplicity of solutions. (Given free will, however,the solutions
are often troublesome, as most of us tend to outsmart ourselves.)
Only one really gnarly one. Then the
lightbulb is really screwed.
TWO. ONE TO HOLD THE LADDER WHILE THEY
PISS AND MOAN ABOUT THEIR PERSONAL PROBLEMS AND ONE WHO DOESN'T GIVE A
SHIT ABOUT YOUR PERSONAL PROBLEMS AND JUST WANTS TO CHANGE THE FUCKING
LIGHT BULB.
Ask not how many personal problems
does it take to screw in a light bulb but how screwing a light bulb might
be the cause of your personal problems. Are you feeling OK, Mr. Dare? And
just how long can you hold your butt cheeks apart like that?
WTF are you talkin' about? In a gang
bang sort of way, your personal problems are a KY-lubricated little five
year old girl's toy plastic thimble to my acre of rough-hewn, creosote-dripping,
redwood telephone poles, ALL being planted by a PCP-intoxicated crew of
smelly silver-back gorillas with an overheating 10-ton jackhammer ... and
I never even got that sweet little kiss ... and my Cavebear-Klan Neanderthal
doctor insists on using an old rusty horse-saddle needle he found in a
cow pasture to help remove all the splinters!So there! Now, please pass
me some of that opium salve.
None. With that many personal problems
who needs light to see them better?
How many personal problems does it
take to screw in a light bulb? That just raises further questions; Firstly
how does an abstract concept like a problem, possessing no genitalia, manage
to screw at all? Secondly how the hell did your personal problems get inside
a lightbulb?
Well, seeing as how my only personal
problem seems to be suffer from burned-out light bulbs over my dinner table
in the evening immediately at the start of supper when a "level four" Aurora
lightning storm spontaneously develops ... and all but one of the 13 other
bulbs I try replacing it with are also burned out ... and it's ALWAYS the
last bulb I attempt inserting into the socket that is still in good shape
... and I discover that the "pull string" switch is in the "closed' position
just as I finish turning the 350 Watt bulb in while that one targeted bolt
from G_d hits the rust-disconnected lightning rod on the roof of my house--(written
while a patient at the Baghdad Hospital burn center)
One. One of my personal problems
holds the lightbulb and then the world revolves around it
A: None
My personal problems have an aversion
to the light. You can eat copious amounts of food in the dark. I know where
my damn mouth is.
Killing Me Softly
Okay, let me get this straight. Going to a priest and confessing your sins absolves you of them, but actually changing your ways and becoming a better person gets you the needle? The death penalty is wrong in so many ways that the only way to be for it is to throw rationality out the window. Once you go through all the facts, that it doesn't deter crime, that states with the death penalty have a higher murder rate, that it actually costs more to execute someone than to keep them in jail for life, that we're one of the only countries left in the civilized world that does such a thing, and that it sends the confusing message that murder is bad so if you do it we'll murder you, the only excuses left are "they deserve to die" and "revenge is sweet." Not that there aren't people who deserve to die. There just aren't any people with the right to decide who deserves to die, other than relatives of the dying with that right bestowed upon them by the incapacitated. I would say that anyone who thinks that Terri Schiavo deserved to live while Stan Tookie Williams deserves to die is out of their fucking mind. Of course the one thing the Schiavo and Williams cases have in common is a governor who gets to poke his nose in someone's eternal soul. Florida's Jeb Bush decided the Schiavo case warranted the presence of his proboscis. Now California's Arnold Schwarzenegger gets to decide whether or not to commute the death sentence of an ex-gang member who may or may not have actually killed some people but who, as founder of the Crips, certainly encouraged others to do so, and has completely changed his ways, helping street kids to do anything but join a gang. Williams' life is right there in Arnold's overdeveloped Terminator hands. I bet when Williams saw Conan the Barbarian, it didn't occur to him that the muscle-bound monster of aggression on the screen would some day get to decide if he lived or died. Charles Manson is a gibbering idiot. The last time I saw him on TV in an interview with Tom Snyder, he gave the most convincing impersonation of a raving lunatic I've ever seen. If Manson wrote a book, it would be called "How to Get Innocent People to Do Your Evil Bidding" and it would be a must read for all politicians, but apparently Chuck's literary ambitions are locked up in that little part of his mind where his conscience used to be. We're keeping Charlie alive. All the arguments the lawyers are making are beside the point. They're not arguing that it's just plain wrong. It doesn't make any difference if Stan Tookie Williams is guilty or innocent; any government taking the lives of its own citizens, much less foreign citizens, is an atrocity. Once a species becomes self-aware, evolution becomes less random and more voluntary. The next step in human evolution is when we voluntarily stop killing each other. Tookie has resolved to stop killing which makes him higher evolved than those who would do him in. Those who don't believe in evolution want to stop people from evolving since it disproves their thesis, thus only those who believe in God want to kill Tookie, despite the pesky commandment that says thou shalt not. Satan says go ahead and kill 'em. Anything that brings out mankind's baser instincts is good for Satan. God says keep 'em alive. Since life on earth is hell and there is no heaven, the life penalty is worse than the death penalty. We own our lives, not the government. Do you really want your government, not just the present government, but any other potentially wacky group of religious co-conspirators who happen to find themselves in power, to have the power of life and death over YOU? Do you give them the right to take you out for any reason whatsoever? One day its murderers and rapists, the next day its gays and pot smokers, then Jews and blacks, and inevitably absolutely everybody who disagrees with them. It's a slope slipperier than a slug in Vaseline. The only place to draw the line that keeps every citizen safe is right at the beginning. The government can't kill anybody. Period. Okay, if there's a sniper on a tall building
picking off innocent people he needs to be dealt with, but even then there
are non-lethal ways of doing it. Killing people to protect the public is
the same lame excuse that got us into Iraq, and pre-emptive strikes need
an evidence bar set pretty goddam high. Turns out Hussein was no threat
to America at all. He's certainly not a threat while in jail and neither
is Williams. Killing either of them out of vengeance says that killing
is okay out of vengeance. That's not what I'm teaching MY children. Anybody
killing anybody isn't doing it in my name.
![]() In extensive research studies,
scientists found that even patients with severe hypertension can reduce
it quite easily, without drugs, just by watching fish swim around in an
aquarium.
"The ceramic model of the
universe is based on the book of Genesis, from which Judaism, Islam, and
Christianity derive their basic picture of the world. And the image of
the world in the book of Genesis is that the world is an artifact. It is
made, as a potter takes clay and forms pots out of it, or as a carpenter
takes wood and makes tables and chairs out of it. Don't forget Jesus is
the son of a carpenter. And also the son of God. So the image of God and
of the world is based on the idea of God as a technician, potter, carpenter,
architect, who has in mind a plan, and who fashions the universe in accordance
with that plan.
"Pray for the ongoing efforts in the war on
terror, that the President and all his intelligence sources will obtain
the most helpful information in safeguarding America. Pray for them to
have godly wisdom in the manner in which they handle each bit of information.
Pray for the effectiveness of a new fingerprinting initiative that will
screen foreign travelers visiting America. Pray for the strong relationship
between Mr. Bush and Mr. Blair. Pray that the President will continue to
be guided by the Lord in his deliberations with the U.K."
"Focus,
"The truth that makes men free is for the most
part the truth which men prefer not to hear."
"In science one tries to tell people, in such
a way as to be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew
before. But in poetry, it's the exact opposite."
"Normal is getting dressed in clothes that
you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still
paying for - in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes
and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to
live in it."
"If you are distressed by anything external,
the pain is not due to the thing itself but to your own estimate of it;
and this you have the power to revoke at any moment."
"You can pretend to be serious; you can't pretend
to be witty."
"When a stupid man is doing something he is
ashamed of, he always declares that it is his duty."
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Contact George W. Bush
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Freemasons
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Skull and Bones
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Carlyle Group
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Illuminati
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact
Satan - satan@whitehouse.gov
Contact both houses of
Congress - president@whitehouse.gov
Contact the Supreme Court
- president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Dick Cheney -
vice.president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Halliburton -
vice.president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Bechtel -
vice.president@whitehouse.gov
Contact Saddam Hussein
- tightywhities@whitehouse.gov
Contact Osama bin Laden
-
deepthroat@whitehouse.gov
Contact Jeb Bush - jeb.bush@myflorida.com
Contact Fidel Castro
- jeb.bush@myflorida.com
Contact Kim Jong Il -
eng-info@kcna.co.jp
Contact Jacques Chirac
- france-presse@un.int
Contact the new Pope
- accreditamenti@pressva.va
Contact the old Pope
- thirdlevel@hellfireanddamnation.com
Contact God - president@whitehouse.gov
Am I supposed to believe
you don't drink coffee?
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Boo hoo
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"It's a charming story, very
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- Lynette Sheffield -
Acknowledgment
dIsInFoTaInMeNt ToDaY consists of information from dozens of sources, cut up, thrown in the air, and recycled randomly. It is sent all over the place, so I apologize if you're seeing the same thing twice. If you see a joke, graphic, or news item that came from or through you, thanks, send more, and please accept the fact that much of dIsInFoTaInMeNt ToDaY is unacknowledgeable, and if I sought permission from everyone whose bastardized material showed up here, I'd never get anything else done. Please note that I don't even put my own name on it. If you're still pissed off, hey, it's fair use.
Thanks,
Enrique Pasa
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Absolutely no journalistic ethics were harmed during the production of this column.