Saturday, October 10, 2020

Preface To Traps: Kind Of Apologies

When I left KOOP in 2008, I left without needing to take a break or a sabbatical or really ever relinquishing the many tasks I volunteered for.  I remember proudly saying to someone, "I never burned out."  Which is true.  There are people who needed to recharge after being so involved, & there were people who left & never came back.  Technically, I left & never came back, but I was moving away, so I couldn't come back, not without great expense.

Just the other day, in reference to my current work, someone told me they didn't want me to burn out.  "I don't burn out," I said.

No, I guess I don't.  I just get tired.  There are so many things I could be doing to help out that I have to say no to because I am programming three radio shows a week.  I was doing this earlier in the year, of course, but there is something different about going to a station to do a show.  Even when I am doing a show from home, I'm working on it till the last possible minute.  Frankly I think broadcasting from home brings out my worst procrastinating tendencies.

Which is a kind of long-winded way of saying I opted out of the bells & whistles for this week's Self Help Radio.  I usually put a good deal of work into the show - interviews & what-not - although recording it adds more time - but I just didn't have the energy this week.  The show's in the can, it'll be on the air on Monday morning - you'll understand what I mean when you hear it.

What I could have done was take a week off - although it probably wouldn't have resulted in me catching up in any meaningful way - but instead I just simply made a radio show a bit like Self Help Radio used to be - although without a lot of research.

In sum, I owe you an apology.  Even if you don't listen, I owe you an apology.  Even if you don't think I owe you an apology, I owe you an apology.  I owe myself an apology too.  That's the trouble with setting a standard for one's radio show.  It just feels ugly to not meet it.  & Self Help Radio has such low standards to begin with!

So - sorry.  Sorry for this week's half-assed show.  I am hoping my Thursday morning gig will be done soon, & I'll have more time to spend on other things - including Self Help Radio.

Related question: am I burnt out?  Is being tired all the time burnt out?


Friday, October 09, 2020

Need I Remind You

Soon enough I'll be done subbing so many shows on KBOO (I hope) because they've recently sent out a call for show proposals, but nowabouts is a good time to remind you that even though I don't archive my KBOO shows - subs shows & the Dickenbock Report - on the Self Help Radio website, I do link to where they are archived, which is on the KBOO website.

These shows are done live by remote, which is fraught with all sorts of technical issues, which might make for challenging listening, but should you want to, you can go to the following pages to hear episodes of programs I currently do on KBOO:



The Dickenbock Report is a lot like Self Help Radio, the Sub Show is a lot like my freeform shows, except I mainly play new releases.

That's all.  Nothing much to see here.  Move along.

Thursday, October 08, 2020

Photographs Of Places I've Lived # 6: Cranford Drive

(image from Google Maps)

This is the place I lived in for most of the time I was in high school.  I returned to stay here for the summer of 1987, after my first year of college.  & I returned here again after my second year of college, although my mother was soon to be moving out of it.  That's a long story.  It is, for all intents & purposes, the last place I lived in in Garland.  Although that's a little arguable.

It was built I believe in 1982, & we were the first family to occupy apartment # 1.  I had to share a room again with my little brother, but he spent a great deal of time at our oldest sister's place, so often I was by myself.  I had my first kiss in this house, with a girl named Heather on the floor after we watched a movie - I think it might have been St. Elmo's Fire.  I also had long conversations on the phone with friends & strangers in this house, & I embarrassed myself more times than I can remember.  I was deeply into both comics & records in this house - I bought my first stereo, from money I earned at a summer job, when I lived here, & I had a decent record collection by the time I went to college in August 1986.

It was just a block away from the convenience store owned by my mother's boyfriend, who (not coincidentally) moved into apartment # 5, across the little driveway from our front door.  I'm sure he helped my mother pay the deposit & also probably paid a portion of the rent - my mother kind of had him wrapped around her finger.  As I mentioned last week, we had been living with him until his drinking drove my mother away.

We didn't move from that house to this apartment, though.  We spent a few weeks - I'm not sure how many - sleeping on the floor at my sister Pat's house.  I am not entirely sure where it was.  I don't have an address & none of the places I looked at on Google Maps looked familiar - it's been over thirty-five years after all.  I turned 15 in my sister's house, & at the time she was very pregnant - she gave birth to my nephew Josh while we were living there.  Once he was brought home, we had to go.

It's worth noting that we returned to the area where I lived from basically the age of four to the age of nine.  & Little Brook Apartments was also on Cranford, just a couple hundred feet to the west.  So by 1986 I had lived a quarter or so of my life on Cranford Drive.

Since my mother has gone, I have no reason to visit Garland anymore, but when I used to - mainly when I visited from Austin or from Kentucky - I would sometimes drive down Cranford Drive.  It's a little rougher neighborhood than when I lived there - or so I've read.  I have walked, ridden my bike, & driven up & down that street more times than I could count.  & yet I can't feel terribly sentimental about this place.  Maybe I did before, & repeated pilgrimages back have diminished its power somewhat.  Or maybe I am just not as sentimental as I used to be.

There's one story about this place - I don't know if I mentioned it before - I was downstairs one night & heard a crash from upstairs.  I rushed up & went into my mother's bedroom.  Her ceiling fan seemed to be going crazy, & her dog Kalijah was a bit freaked out.  It turns out one of the blades had broken off & flew across the room.  I turned the fan off & made sure she was all right - she had slept through the commotion.  It could have hurt her, maybe even hurt her badly.  It could have gone through her window - that's the one that faced front on the second floor in the picture above.  She barely acknowledged me & went back to sleep, although I'm sure we talked about it the next day - she had to get a new ceiling fan.  Or did she ever get a new ceiling fan?

Years later I asked her about this, & she had no memory of it.  She may have thought I was making it up.  But nope!

Wednesday, October 07, 2020

Self Help Radio 100520: Lions Revisited (The 18th Anniversary Show)

(Original image here.)

Eighteen years is a long time.  I should know!  I waited eighteen years before I got a kiss.  & Self Help Radio has waited eighteen years for someone to actually like it!  I suppose if I could wait that long for a kiss, the show can wait a little longer to find a listener.

Still, it was a pleasant anniversary show.  Almost everyone stopped by to wish happy thoughts!  There was even a surprise phone call.  What there wasn't was cold hard cash.  We could've used the cash.  This whiskey does not buy itself.  I suppose I should also say something about lions.  We had plenty of songs about lions.  No lion actually came on the show, however.  They were all "busy."  "Self-quarantining," they explained.  Dudes, the virus doesn't affect lions!  Just say you didn't want to come on the show!  My feelings are always hurt, you don't have to spare them!

Listen to the anniversary festivities at the Self Help Radio website.  Please remember SHR & selfhelp - those are the username & password respectively.  There were exactly two hours' worth of lions, & they went like it says below.

Eighteen years!  The show better register to vote!

Self Help Radio Lions Revisited Show
"Lions" Poptone _Poptone_
"Lions" Tristen _Sneaker Waves_
"Lions" Jamaican Jazz Orchestra _Encounters_

introduction + a blast from the past

"Sign Of The Lion" Tony Joe White _The Complete Warner Bros. Recordings_
"Le Lion Est Mort Ce Soir" Nancy Holloway _Portrait 1961-1974_
"Don't Go In The Lion's Cage Tonight" Homer & Jethro _Ooh, That's Corny_
"A Lion's Heart" The Tallest Man On Earth _The Wild Hunt_
"The Lion & The Teacup" Bishop Allen _Grrr..._

interview with ex-lion tamer Birdy Southworth

"Lion Tamer" Clinic _Bubblegum_
"Lion's Den" The Lower 48 _The Lower 48_
"Snarling Mama Lion" Judd _The Fantastic Story Of Mark Wirtz & The Teenage Opera_
"Mr Lion" Marmalade _Reflections Of The Marmalade (The Anthology)_
"It Comes In Like A Lion" Julia Lee & Her Boy Friends _Kansas City Blues 1944-1949_

interview with the Rev Dr Howard Gently

"Joe The Lion" Momus _Turpsycore_
"Last Lion Of Albion" Neko Case _Hell-On_
"The Lion For Real" Allen Ginsberg _The Lion For Real_
"Throw Me To The Lions" The Pernice Brothers _Spread The Feeling_
"Hear The Lions Roar" Half Japanese _Hear The Lions Roar_

an eighteenth anniversary surprise! Alyssa & Jason call

"Don't Wake The Lion" The Itals _Early Recordings 1971-1979_
"The Lion" Duke Mitchell _Gimme Dat Harp Boy! (Roots Of The Captain)_
"The Lion & Albert" Stanley Holloway _The Best Of Stanley Holloway_
"He Roars Like A Lion" Merline Johnson _The Yas Yas Girl 1937-1947_
"Fed To The Lions" The Luyas _Human Voicing_

conclusion & goodbye

"Watch Out For Lions" The Terrible Twos _Jerzy The Giant_
"I Can Tame Lions" Beatnik Filmstars _Boss Disque_
"I'm A Very Friendly Lion Called Parsley" Luke Haines _Adventures In Dementia - A Micro Opera_
"Jungle Lion" Lee Perry & The Upsetters _Funky Kingston (Reggae Dance Floor Grooves 1968-74)_

Sunday, October 04, 2020

Whither Lions Revisited?

(Image from here.)

Self Help Radio began, more or less officially, on Wednesday, October 9, 2002, on 91.7 fm KOOP Austin.  I've probably told this story before but I'm too lazy to look it up, so I'll tell it again.  Initially I was given a show at 9am on Friday mornings.  I kinda preferred the time.  It let me get into work a little late but I could also stay late.  I did a few shows on Friday morning - maybe two? - & in fact they did have themes - one of them was weekends, which I later also did as a theme on Self Help Radio - but then one afternoon I got a call from someone at KOOP named Danny who told me his story of woe.

Danny had recently gotten a show on Wednesdays at 2pm.  The thing is, he was taking vacation time from work to do the show, & it would eventually run out.  He only worked half days on Friday (he told me), so Friday mornings would be better for him.  I knew I could easily skip out of work in the middle of the day (I already cleared it with my boss) so it was no big deal, & far be it for me to be selfish about something as silly as a timeslot.  We switched times - though we had to go to a Programming Committee meeting to sell it.  To sweeten the deal, I also volunteered to oversee the show before mine, from 1-2pm, which would be an hour for new deejays to demonstrate what kind of show they wanted to do.  (In the early days, when we were just starting, there would often not be a new deejay, so I would do two hours.  In fact, my first show that Wednesday was a sub show - it was songs which said hello.  I don't count that as Self Help Radio's first episode, however.)

It seems like I was on Wednesdays forever, but I think I had moved to Fridays by 2006, so for less than four years.  I kind of wish I had been moved to Wednesday afternoons instead of Fridays, but I thought I would enjoy an end-of-the-week show.  Eventually Danny moved to Sunday nights.  Both of us left Austin, maybe even around the same time, & I think he's still doing radio where he ended up.  As am I.  I'll bet he wouldn't recognize me if he saw me again, though.  I'm pretty forgettable.

Always a sentimental sort, I started doing these anniversary shows in 2008.  The show was barely four years old!  It seemed a nice way to commemorate the project.  By then I suppose I figured I'd be doing the show for a while, but in the first two years, I wasn't sure I'd be doing Self Help Radio for any great length of time.  It was like a new relationship - who the hell knows how long it'll last?  Two dates?  A year?  But it seems I'm stuck with this show.  Which is fine.  We sometimes don't like each other, but we know each other tolerably well.

For some reason I felt like I had more to say about this anniversary stuff.  I don't, actually.  I am revisiting a theme that I first explored in March of 2005.  As usual, I won't play any of the stuff from the first show - although there'll be covers of songs previously played.  I actually have a recording of the original show, & I listened to some of it, & it didn't make me sad.  Maybe because there's a part of me that doesn't think the show sounds like me.  If that makes any sense.

Tomorrow - Monday morning - 8 to 10am - Freeform Portland - freeformportland.org - listen & celebrate eighteen years of this foolish pastime of mine.  I really never thought it would last as long as it has.

Saturday, October 03, 2020

Preface To Lions Revisited: Oops

Even though it has been properly noted on the website that Monday's show will be the eighteenth anniversary show, & even though I've mentioned here & elsewhere that at least seven people voted to determine that the theme I'd revisit would be lions, on the show last week I said the theme would be "traps."  Of course that will be the theme a week from Monday.  I brought Admiral Ackbar on last week & utterly wasted him.  Sorry.

Yes, eighteen years.  It's a wonder it's lasted this long.  I will have some thoughts about that tomorrow.

Friday, October 02, 2020

Long As The Day Is Today

This is a phrase that I don't like people using: "Not gonna lie."

One uses it I suppose to emphasize what follows, but the implication is that you otherwise would lie.  Who wants that to be how they preface anything?

"In any other context, I would be spouting utter bullshit at you, but not this time!"

Chances are I'm missing its cultural origins & am perhaps being insensitive.  I have no idea where it came from, I am only saying what seems to me to be obvious: if you have to tell us in advance that you're not going to lie, I can only assume that not only do you lie regularly but you understand that I & others are completely aware of it.

It's like when someone says "believe me" all the time.  Why do you think we wouldn't believe you?  Is it because we know you're going to say things we won't believe?

Motivational speakers & the like will perhaps say that adding a phrase like "not gonna lie" or "believe me" actually reassures the listener.  The truth is, we don't in general listen well.  & maybe it's because we ourselves hardly ever say anything that's completely factual, that isn't gilded opinion, that we even expect anyone to actually hear.

In any event, I didn't come here to write this.  It's just been pouring out of me, I apologize.  What I wanted to say is this:

Not gonna lie, this day has kicked my ass.  Currents events in the nation have occupied my mind making it impossible for me to focus on much.  My computer might be dying, & I spent most of the morning trying to figure out why.  I am falling behind on various tasks & that means I'll get less sleep than I currently do.

Hearing people say "not gonna lie" does make me want to preface emphatic statements with "not gonna lie."  Some language is just contagious.  No matter how dumb or problematic you might think it is.

Thursday, October 01, 2020

Photographs Of Places I've Lived # 5: Mayfield Avenue

(Image from Google Maps.)

It's so weird looking at a place that you once spent days in but haven't lived in for a very long time.  I lived in this house for roughly six months in 1982.  That was (doing the math in my head) thirty-eight years ago.  How many people have lived in the house since then?  I'm certain it was a rental.  Maybe the people who live in the house own it now?

A couple of years ago I wrote a lot about my time in the house.  I seem to remember being alone in the house a lot.  I first shaved in that house, using my mother's boyfriend's razor, & my face hurt for a week afterwards.  I remember a classmate I'd gone to school with for my entirely public school experience had a locker near mine in high school & told me some time after that, "Dickerson*, those sideburns are not working for you."  The upshot of my weird shaving experiment is that with the peach fuzz gone, I suddenly sported sideburns.  It would be a couple of years before I would have something that looked vaguely like facial hair on the rest of my dumb face.

There was a park down the street to the west, but I don't know if we ever went there.  I remember I had to walk home from school a lot, it was about two & a half miles, & I was usually too tired to do anything after school but read comics or listen to music.  I had a television in my room - probably a little black & white one - & I would try to stay up to watch David Letterman - I still have some cassettes of the show that I would tape so I could listen to them again - audio cassettes, not video cassettes - I taped Elvis Costello's appearance on the show in August 1982 for example - never knowing there would one day be a Youtube where I could watch it all over again.  But unbeknownst to me things were not going well with my mother & her boyfriend & at some point at the end of the year we were whisked away to my oldest sister's house in a move that my siblings must have been familiar with but hadn't really happened to me thus far (well, when I wasn't a baby).

My mom's boyfriend was a drunk, like my dad, & I guess when my mother saw the signs she got us the hell out.  She still worked at his convenience store - the Time Saver - she actually ran it when he went on his benders, which happened usually once a year - but she must have decided that even though he was her meal ticket, she didn't have to live with the guy.  & the truth was, he was very unpleasant.  & inappropriate.  He had all the tell-tale signs of a serious pervert, & I have odd memories of him asking me questions that nowadays would trigger survivors of sexual trauma.  At one meal, for example, he kept asking me if I were "well hung."  I had no idea at the time what that meant.  He found that very funny in a deeply creepy way.

This is something I asked my sister Pat before she died, because my little brother despised my mother's boyfriend, & he did not like to be in the house with him around.  So he spent a great deal of time at her house.  I asked her, did she think my mother's boyfriend did something to him?  Maybe tried something?  My sister emphatically said no.  Even if something did happen, my little brother wouldn't admit it  For my part, I didn't get any child-rape vibes from him when I was a teen but how the hell would I know what such things felt like anyway?

The house was the first time I had my own room since - well, ever.  Up until then I shared a room with one or more siblings.  I wouldn't get my own room again until college.  Now that I think about it, I don't have my own room now.  Who would've thought I'd give such a thing up for marriage?  Having one's own room is the bomb!

We didn't live in that house long enough to make any impression.  I know this because someone who lived on that street with whom I remember talking a few times came into the Time Saver & I recognized her, I even think I knew her name.  She seemed very taken aback.  This would have been just two or three years later.  She had no idea who I was.  I can still her saying, in that witheringly polite way some girls learn, "I'm sorry, I don't remember you."  It still smarts.

P.S. A couple weeks ago I tried to remember how many "avenues" I lived on.  I completely forgot about this place.  So it didn't leave much of an impression of me, either, I suppose.

* Because of gym class, many of my male classmates tended to refer to me by my last name.

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Self Help Radio 092820: Nancy's Show

(All images except the SHR logo from each respective Nancy's Wikipedia page.)

My goodness.  An entire show of Nancys?  While not perhaps the Nanciest thing one can do, it's certainly Nancier than a show with only a smattering of Nancys.  Indeed, one might argue than one can over-Nancy in many cases.  I suppose the correct amount of Nanciness is something left to a Nancy specialist, or Nancologist.  Alas, there simply wasn't enough time to consult one for this show, but luckily I had actual Nancys to talk to, or there might have been an unpleasant Nancident.

Listen to the show - it's not required that you be a Nancy, or have a Nancy present at the time, but the former is ideal & the latter is recommended - at the Self Help Radio website.  Unlike current Nancy procedures, in which Nancys get everything Nancy-related (or Nancentric) free, anyone can listen (as per a very complicated agreement with the Amalgamated Union Of Nancys) but a username (SHR) & a password (selfhelp) are required.  What happens on the Nancy show is noted below.

Please spread this information to all Nancys you know.  & perhaps some you don't.  I shiver to think of a Nancy discovering there was a radio show about her somewhere down the line, & being disturbed she wasn't contacted.  Nancys are litigious!

Self Help Radio Nancy's Show
"I Tickled Nancy" Uncle Dave Macon _Keep My Skillet Good & Greasy: The Complete Recordings_
"Nancy Jane" Famous Hokum Boys _Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order, Volume 1 (1930)_
"Nancy (With The Laughing Face)" Frank Sinatra _The Columbia Years (1943-1952)_

introduction

"Nancy Sin" Beat Happening _Look Around_
"Nancy" The Boys' Star Library _If I Was Born A Girl..._
"Oh Nancy" Young Rival _Strange Light_
"Nancy Reagan's Head" Mission Of Burma _The Obliterati_

interview with the Rev Dr. Howard Gently

"Seems So Long Ago, Nancy" Leonard Cohen _Songs From A Room_
"Nancy Sinatra" The Groove Farm _The Best Parts... Volume 1_
"Listening To Nancy" The Cherry Orchard _The Start Of Our Affair_
"Nancy & Lee" The Golden Dregs _Hope Is For The Hopeless_
"Nancy & Me" Lee Hazlewood _Poet, Fool, Or Bum_

first interview with a Nancy

"Nancy Drew" Tuscadero _The Pink Album_
"Nancy Drew" Sløtface _Try Not To Freak Out_
"I Take A Fancy To Nancy" Cleveland Becker & The MSR Singers _I'm Just The Other Woman! MSR Madness Vol. # 4_
"Song Nancy Hates" Ed's Redeeming Qualities _Big Grapefruit Cleanup Job_
"Nancy Jean" Richard Barone _Our Favorite Texan: Bobby Fuller Four-Ever!_

second interview with a Nancy

"Banks Of The Nile" Fotheringay _Fotheringay_
"Shaky Nancy" Richard Thompson _Henry The Human Fly_
"Nancy Whiskey" Ian & Sylvia _Early Morning Rain_
"Nancy's Minuet" The Everly Brothers _Walk Right Back: The Everly Brothers On Warner Bros. 1960 To 1969_
"The Night Miss Nancy Ann's Hotel For Single Girls Burned Down" Tex Williams _A Man Called Tex_

conclusion & goodbye

"Isabel The Modern Nancy" The Duke Of Norfolk _Mint 400 Records Presents In A Mellow Tone_
"Little Nancy" Fionn Regan _The Shadow Of An Empire_

Sunday, September 27, 2020

Whither Nancy's Show?

(Image from the Nancy Drew wiki.  Holy moly there's a Nancy Drew wiki!)

Tomorrow morning's show (Monday morning, as usual) will be an episode of Self Help Radio full of songs about Nancy.  Which Nancy?  Often any Nancy.  Sometimes a specific Nancy.  But it's all Nancy.  In fact, I'm going to interview the two Nancy's I know!

Yesterday I mentioned how much I preferred Nancy Drew over the Hardy Boys.  Yes, I'm still talking about Nancy Drew.  & yes, there are some songs about Nancy Drew.  But anyway, another reason I dug Nancy Drew is her boyfriend was named Ned Nickerson.  "Nickerson" was pretty close to my last name & I've always dug brainy girls.  So perhaps I pretending to be her boyfriend the entire time I was reading the series.

Anyway, please let all the Nancys in your life know there'll be a radio show about & for them tomorrow, Monday, from 8-10am on Freeform Portland, which you can find at 90.3+98.3fm & online at freeformportland.org.  Imagine if you don't let Nancy know!  She may never forgive you!

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Preface To Nancy's Show: Famous Nancys

Here's an exhaustive list of famous people named Nancy.

It turns out I currently know two Nancys.  But I thought I knew more famous Nancys.  & yet I ended up just thinking of Pelosi, Reagan, Sinatra, & Spungeon.  & only that last one when I thought of the film Sid & Nancy.

One of the things I did last year for my Frank Show (which incidentally was almost exactly a year ago, I wonder if I unconsciously scheduled another "name" show around this time because of that) was ask strangers to tell me to name three famous Nancys.  Besides the above, I might probably get Kerrigan, & almost certainly I'd get Nancy Drew.

When I was a kid, I was a voracious comic book reader, & to this day I am fond of episodic fare - I like cliffhanger endings & "next issue" blurbs.  So I loved the Nancy Drew & Hardy Boys books.  I loved the way they looked the same, I loved that they were numbered, & I loved that they occasionally mentioned previous adventures.  But.  For some reason, maybe because my brother & I fought like cats & dogs, I didn't like the Hardy Boys that much.  I read them.  But I preferred Nancy Drew.  She had a crew.  I dug that.

That list doesn't include Nancy Drew because she was a fictitious.  Here's a list of fictional Nancys.  Strangely, it leaves out the best Nancy of all.  This one:

It is of course Ernie Bushmiller's Nancy!

The strip has experienced a kind of revival with a new writer/artist (who uses the pseudonym Olivia Jaimes).  A lot of people hate what she's done because she's updated Nancy by having her carry a cell phone, talk about the internet, etc.  I think it's delightful.  Here's one of her recent strips:

You can read 'em all at the Nancy web page.  It's totally worth it!

Friday, September 25, 2020

Photographs Of Places I've Lived # 4: Villa Cordoba

(Image from Google Maps.)

When we lived here, it was called Villa Cordoba (never pronounced in the Spanish way), & there was a wall in-between the door & the front lawn of the complex.  Actually, we lived in three apartments in this small square apartment world.  The one above - the one that's green with the awning - was apartment 48 I believe.  I lived there from perhaps seventh to eighth grade.  We left in the summer before my ninth grade year.

They were by all accounts some terrible apartments.  They were cater-corner from the middle school I attended, & a teacher there, upon being told by me that was where I lived, had a look of utter horror.  In fact, we were never without roaches, & at least one time the management dealt with a plumbing problem by simply opening up some valves & letting the tenants' shit run down into the street.  But it was home to me!

It seems like we lived there forever, but it was really just four years, from when I was in fourth to when I was in eighth grade.  I have fond memories of the place, but I was equally unhappy there - I went through puberty there & began to become a person while living there.  My little brother & I were inseparable when we first moved there, & barely spoke or talked to each other at the end.  I made my first real friend while I lived there - it was at school, but every day before class in eighth grade, he'd come over, we'd watch cartoons together, & then run to school.  

Because I write about my life on this blog around the time of my birthday, I've written a lot about this place.  I first spoke about it in this post.  I continued here (with a picture of apartment 18, one of the three units in which we lived).  There is a lot more here (with a similar picture as the one above).  Gosh I've written a lot about this place, here's yet another post.  & there's one last post about the heat wave of 1980.  I guess we moved away in 1983, so I've written about other places we've lived since then.

Here's a bonus photo of me & my little brother in front of Apartment 45, which is where my mother's boyfriend lived.  I'm not sure how old we are - possibly I'm in fifth grade, Chris is in fourth.  I do know I am rocking that Star Trek shirt.


It's dated 1977 (by me, I don't know why).  I would be nine years old, & therefore in fourth grade or so. Crazy.

Thursday, September 24, 2020

One Day Till Tomorrow

He didn't print the helium properly so it looked odd on the blog.  Contrariwise his fonts stormed like something out of a primitive hayride.  So it made the most sense when the Cardinal told him to lay off.

"They make cheese that tastes like cheese!" she said worryingly.  "What's next? Sequels to movies spun-off from ice skating quarterfinals?"

I'll admit, he was a plus one on the dance floor.  The craven streetcleaner wouldn't quote me on that, howsoever the firmware nor his hat fit the rearrangement.  He thought he was quite optical when the shades were drawn.

Was there mead for the many or simply fizz for the few?  He broke down & let everyone call him "Rebecca."  He mispronounced mise en scène in the middle of the night, & begged us to forgive him his slurred spectacles.

Everyone says she won't be invited to any pantries in the near future.  "At last I have my hurts," she deviated into the cold.  "No one will mansplain musical theater to me again!"

All out of turns, they left the arcade wobbly.  "You do know," he started to say, "I've no extra space in the glove compartment."

"That's so," she never took the time to reply.  "The most natural odor you'll find repellent merely because society strong-arms stepchildren."

What a shame the random people took reindeer seriously!

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Self Help Radio 092120: Avenues

(There's a Self Help Radio Avenue in France!  Not really.  Original image here.)

"There's nothing that I'd rather do/Than stroll along the avenue/With you."
- Sir Archibald Von Poesy (but maybe not originally)

Ah avenues!  Where people take their constitutionals.  Where lovers perambulate.  Where lazy cars drive by lazily, as if to say, "we know, we know, it's a beautiful afternoon!"  Where you pause & a jolly fellow says to you, as if he's the funniest person you'll ever meet, "You know what they say!  Ave-a-nue is better than none!"

Seriously, we need to get a boulevard in here where people mind their own damn business.

Self Help Radio this week was a celebration of avenues.  From avenues which became more than themselves (such as Madison Avenue) to the metaphorical avenues of song (such as Electric Avenue).  Maybe there's an avenue you've been meaning to wander, or one you've meant to wander in your dreams.  Don't let us stop you.  But maybe listen to this show while you do so!  Just not too loud or you won't hear the traffic.  Also look both ways before you cross!

The show's only avenue available to it now is at the Self Help Radio website.  Please do not let it know it's kind of a dead end.  Remember, you'll need a username (SHR) & a password (selfhelp) to listen.  What happens on the avenue stays on the avenue, of course - but what happens on the show about the avenue is below.

Self Help Radio Avenue Show
"Along The Avenue" The Relict _Tommorow Is Again_ (Vegas Mom, 2003)
"Avenue" The Monochrome Set _Spaces Everywhere_ (Tapete Records, 2015)
"Jackson Avenue" Stephanie McKay _Tell It Like It Is_ (Muthas Of Invention, 2008)

introduction & a step outside to Albina Avenue

"Electric Avenue" Salem 66 _Natural Disasters, National Treasures_ (Homestead, 1988)
"Summer Avenues" California Snow Story _One Good Summer EP_ (Shelflife, 2002)
"Abe Lincoln Vs. Madison Avenue" Bob Newhart _"Something Like This ...": The Bob Newhart Anthology_ (Rhino, 2001)
"442 Glenwood Avenue" The Pixies Three _Growin' Up Too Fast: The Girl Group Anthology_ (Mercury, 1966)
"Bring It Up (Hipster's Avenue)" James Brown _Star Time_ (Polydor, 1991)

interview with city planner Norman Hulk

"Electric Avenue" Eddy Grant _The Best Of Eddy Grant_ (EMI Gold, 1996)
"Lonely Avenue" Ray Charles _Genius & Soul - The 50th Anniversary Collection_ (Rhino, 1997)
"I Was Born To Hustle Roses Down The Avenues Of The Dead" Charles Bukowski _90 Minutes In Hell_ (Earth Records, 1977)
"Avenue A, Shanghai, Hollywood" Jeffrey Lewis & Los Bolts _Manhattan_ (Rough Trade, 2015)
"Shaftesbury Avenue" Momus _Don't Stop The Night_ (Creation, 1989)

a Self Help Radio panel: defining avenues

"Mass. Ave" Willie "Loco" Alexander _DIY: Mass. Ave. - The Boston Scene (1975-83)_ (Rhino, 1993)
"626 Bedford Avenue" The Drums _Brutalism_ (Anti-, 2019)
"Teardrop Avenue" Bertha Colbert _Soultime Volume 2_ (Goldmine Soul Supply, 1998)
"Teardrop Avenue" Jackie Wilson _The Titan Of Soul_ (Edsel, 1998)
"Avenue" Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan _Mustt Mustt_ (Real World, 1990)

a visit with my youngest friends, Alyssa & Jason

"Eighth Avenue" Hospitality _Hospitality_ (Merge, 2012)
"Heartache Avenue" The Maisonettes _Maisonettes For Sale_ (Richmond Records, 1993)
"(All The) Avenue Girls" Comet Gain _Paperback Ghosts_ (Fortuna Pop, 2014)
"Academy Avenue" Ducktails _The Flower Lane_ (Domino, 2013)
"Hope Avenue" Stars _There Is No Love In Fluorescent Light_ (Last Gang, 2017)

conclusion & goodbye

"Tenth Avenue Freeze Out" Bruce Springsteen _Born To Run_ (Columbia, 2003)
"1432 Dexter Avenue" Three Finger Cowboy _Kissed_ (Daemon Records, 1998)
"Fashion Avenue" Grape Room _Heart Of Gum_ (Nicey Music, 2016)
"Blue Murder On Union Avenue (demo)" Elvis Costello _Goodbye Cruel World_ (Rhino, 2004)

Sunday, September 20, 2020

Whither Avenues?

(This is Park Avenue.  Image from here.)

Here's a good one.  What did one street say to the other street?  "What's avenue?"  What did the other street say back to the first street?  "I dunno.  What's ave-new with you?"

That's an example of some of the sophisticated humor prepared & ultimately thrown away for this week's Self Help Radio.  It's a show about avenues so we're "taking it on the road."  Which is of course not a thing a radio show can do, especially one made at home because no one's allowed in the studios thanks to a pandemic which, if we're being honest, is another reason why it would be a terrible idea to travel as well.

Does the show miss wandering up & down avenues without a mask?  Perhaps.  Maybe a show about avenues was conceived to recapture a normal that now seems farther away than ever.  Or maybe it was arbitrary, & looking for a reason for this or any other theme is to give too much credit to anyone responsible for Self Help Radio.  Which is Gary, of course.  It's all his fault.

Listen therefore from the comfort of your own car or home or car-home from 8-10am Monday morning on 90.3&98.3fm Freeform Portland, online at freeformportland.org.  It will be like taking a lazy drive down a tree-lined avenue in car with the top down & the wind blowing through your hair.  Or.  Or wait.  No, no, it will actually more probably be the opposite of that.  So sorry.

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Preface To Avenues: Have I Ever Lived On An Avenue?

Recently I've been showing pictures of places I used to live.  I've lived in a lot of places.  But I've never actually written them down in a kind of list, so I'll do that now - to the best of my ability - to see if I've ever lived on an avenue.

There are no dates & addresses because that would be too much work.  I do not remember living on the first two roads but my sister Karin confirmed those were my two residences before my mother left my father.

(Garland, Texas) Daughtery Drive - Rolando Drive - Kingsley Road - Cranford Drive - 5th Street.

Some of those residences were on the same street.  For example, when I returned home for the summer after my sophomore year of college, I lived at my sister Pat's - who lived at the time on Rolando.

(Austin, Texas) Elmont Drive - Town Lake Circle - 46th Street - 45th Street - 40th Street - Avenue A!

Look!  I only had to go up to 1992!  At the end of a devastating break-up, I found myself in a shitty efficiency in an apartment complex on Avenue A.

Here's where I went from there:

(Still in Austin) Depew Avenue!  Right after that, I lived from five years on Depew Ave.!  How could I forget that?

& what then?

(More Austin) Red River Street - Fairfield Lane - Ridgemont Drive.

(Huntington, West Virginia) Neel Street.

(Lexington, Kentucky) Tulsa Road - Southbend Drive.

(Fort Worth, Texas) Diaz Avenue!

Lookee there!  I lived on a road called Diaz Avenue in Fort Worth, Texas!  We lived there for just a few months - & there are only three more roads I've lived on since then:

(Still Fort Worth) Bal Lake Drive

(Portland, Oregon) 62nd Avenue?!?

Oh man I swear I didn't know we lived on an avenue here in Portland!  But I guess we did - for about six or seven months.  Now, alas, we live on plain ol' street.

But wow.  From 1992 till around 2002 I lived on an avenue, plus a few months in 2016 & in 2019.  That's like one-fifth of my life lived on an avenue.  I didn't even think I lived on even one avenue!

Look forward to pictures of these places in the future!

Friday, September 18, 2020

Thank You

Over a hundred people saw & maybe even read my blog post yesterday about my mother.  Most of them were pointed here by Facebook, I linked to what I wrote.  The response was kind & thoughtful.  Many of my Facebook friends actually met my mother.  & three of my siblings responded as well.  I wanted to share what they said here.

My oldest brother Eddie wrote, "Because our world was so different me being in another decade I am glad you wrote about your life with mom I too knew her stubbornness and her eccentricities but my version is more a view from a much earlier time because I got in person looks at mom and dad together and saw the toll it took on mom.I wish that I had known you and Chris up close but by the time you were born I was already moving into my adult life so I had other priorities by then.but never doubt that I loved all my siblings just in different ways and times thank you for your insight into our mom I think each of us have on own chapter about her"

He's right.  I wish I had the skill to write a book about how all seven of us saw her.  I just don't.

My brother Ralph wrote: "Gary, no better words were ever written for Mom. She would have loved this. I know that grief and pain will eventually fade, but it still hurts. You know Mom was immensely proud of you even with you lovable quirks. Know that I am always available, so hit me up any time. Love ya Bro, stay strong"

Ralph was the one sibling I reached out to - I speak regularly with my sister Karin - after Mom's death.  I hope he doesn't mind me sharing what I wrote to him, which was this (in part):

"Been thinking about you a lot.  Hope you're holding up all right.  It's been a weird past few days, I'm never sure how to navigate grief so I simply let it wash over me, & it makes moving around in the real world awkward & uncomfortable.  I talk to Karin & know she's strong enough to handle this.  I'm not really close in any way to Chris or Steve or Eddie.  But I do know Mom talked about you a lot, & she loved spending time with you - it was one of the high points of her week to go to lunch or go shopping with you.  You probably don't feel this way because everyone knows Eddie was her favorite, but I think of all of us, she liked you best."

That's something that engenders in me, at least, no jealousy.  Something about my brother Ralph resonated so much with my mother that even when she was frustrated with him, she loved to talk about him.  & I liked it when she was happy.

Finally, my sister Karin wrote: "Well done. I love you baby brother, even though you are technically a grown up now."

Karin always has to get a dig in!  She knew I'd appreciate it.  "Technically"!  She should be a comedian!

Truly her approval meant the most.  I worried she might have some issues with what I wrote.  It has to have been one of the hardest things I've ever written.  & frankly I'm still reeling from it.

More radio show stuff anon.  Again, I appreciate anyone who took the time to read my self-therapy here.  That's what I wanted to say here today.

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Mom

  

(Mom & me, some Christmas in the mid-2000s)

My mother died on Sunday.  It wasn't a surprise, there was time to prepare for it.  She was suffering from Alzheimer's, which had dramatically worsened since last I saw her, in May of 2019, right before we moved to Portland.  She died in her sleep, which is how she wanted to go.  I know this because she talked a lot about her death.

But I confess I find grief baffling, inscrutable, unpredictable, subtly cruel.  Last night I needed to sleep a couple of hours before doing a live remote radio show in the early morning, but my brain kept having a conversation with me about her.  It wanted me to write something about my mother.  Although I suspect I will be writing about her for the rest of my life.

When I was young, I was extremely attached to her.  I used to have nightmares that placed me on one side of a chasm, or river, or some uncrossable mass, & her on the other.  The dream would move her farther away from me, the distance increasing exponentially, & I'd awake frightened & alone.  I remember in the presidential campaign of 1980, when Reagan talked blithely about nuclear war, I'd be terrified that I wouldn't be with her if we died when the bombs finally rained death from the sky.  But I grew out of that.  My mother was stubborn & slow to trust me, & we fought constantly in my teen years.  I was very glad to get out of the house & go to college to get away from living under her roof & her rules.  There was something about me she didn't understand, & maybe didn't want to understand.  & I'm sure I felt the same.

In my adulthood, I began to feel something like an obligation to both help her & to be in touch with her.  She retired around the time of the OJ Simpson trial, & she watched that spectacle night & day.  When it ended, she found the remaining broadcast television wasteland uninteresting, so I had cable installed in her little apartment, & I guess I paid for it for over a decade, maybe two.  For a time, until she told me to stop, I would send her fifty dollars a month - she had very little money.  Maybe I felt I had to pay her back for something?  A debt I could never entirely repay?

& I started calling her every week.  This became more important after I moved from Texas, when I couldn't see her regularly - the visits dwindled in the last decade to one a year until we lived in Texas again from 2016-2019.  My mother was a gossip, so I was kept informed about the rest of my family through her narratives - & when my sister Pat was alive, I'd ask her about what my mother told me, to see how my mother would alter some tales (& the same with Pat!).  While my mother often expressed disappointment about her children - I was told by Pat about the times I disappointed her - she always took their side during conflicts or disagreements.  Well, she took her boys' side, anyway.  Mom was harder on her daughters because she felt they were stronger than her sons & could take the criticism.

Everything I write seems to need some other explanation of my mother's world view.  She was raised in Nazi Germany by a very superstitious mother & a fun-loving father.  I believe this is why she thought women were really in control of the world & men were lovable goofs, who only appear to run things because women let them think that.  She married an American who had joined the army to both fight in World War Two & escape from the awfulness of his life in Texas.  Their first child, my brother Eddie, was born in Germany, but postwar Europe had little opportunity for them, & the family was brought back to Texas.  Settling in Garland, my mother had more children - Pat, Steve, James, Karin, &, in 1968, both me & my little brother Chris.  (Yes, we were born in the same year, me in January, he in December.)

My birth was unexpected - my sister Karin is six years older than I am & was the proper stopping place for the family.  My father was very deep in the cups by then, & probably wasn't going to get better any time soon.  My mother despised him for his drinking, for his weakness, for the privation his disease caused - although she kept it well-hidden for most of my life.  When she would unload on him - long after he was gone - I was somewhat shocked - she really never showed the anger that she kept inside, at least not to me.  Her obituary - which you can read here - doesn't mention my father at all - & that's exactly how she would've wanted it.

The mother I grew up with worked to support five children living at home.  & she worked hard.  & she wasn't around a lot.  Some might have thought it was something like neglect - though she always made sure we were fed, & had clothes, & had a place to live - none of the evictions she had to deal with with my drunken father! - it actually turned out to be very good for me.  I was introspective by nature & left alone I read, & listened to music, & drew comics, & even pretended to have a radio show.  Mom the housewife might have forced me to go outside & attempt to play sports or other such horrors.

It really does seem like I'll be writing about her for the rest of my life.

My mother was a fearful person - one time on the phone with me, she paused & said thoughtfully, "I guess I'm just afraid of everything!" (I laughed out loud) - & her greatest fear was death.  Raised by a Catholic mother (who really must've had a fascinatingly complex superstitious understanding of the world) & a Lutheran father (who mostly seemed a bit Epicurean), she somehow synthesized a good guess of what comes after death: She believed there was a god up there, who doled out punishments & rewards, & whose approval or disapproval was demonstrated in how one's life was going.  In the past few years she told me these two contradictory things: she told me that this god had definitely favored her because she had been blessed with her own health, & healthy children & grandchildren; but in moment of unhappiness, she would wonder how she met his displeasure - "What have I done to deserve this?" she would ask me.  Hedging her bets, my mother kept herself as healthy as she could - she was in no hurry for confirmation of this afterlife hypothesis.

She also feared being put in a nursing home, where obviously the poor elderly people were treated abominably - terrorized, even - by a naturally sadistic staff.  This was the impression she got when my father's father was put in one before I was born - an impression she simply could not nor would not shake.

It was therefore a difficult irony that her worsening mental state required that she be in a place where professionals could look after her.  It's hard to know how much of her was left in her brain at that time - our weekly conversations were getting shorter & shorter, & at least once she didn't know who she was talking to, as she kept referring to me in the third person & seemed to think that Gary was still a child.  But I suspect enough of her knew where she was & attempted to fight it by using her super-power, which was stubbornness.  She thought if she were uncooperative, she might be made to leave.  & believe me, if she had been mentally well, she might have succeeded.

Unfortunately, she wasn't.  She stopped eating & drinking.  The staff told my sister she had the demeanor of one who had simply given up.  My sister & oldest brother got to see her in the end - the pandemic made it impossible for anyone else to visit except for window visits - & she was very weak, she didn't open her eyes, she would only talk in German.  She went for ten long weeks in this manner - a testimony to how strong she was, how well she kept her heart & lungs & other organs healthy despite being diabetic.  If her brain had been unaffected she'd be with us still.

She died seven days before she would turn 91.  My sister & I talked the day she died, we remembered that our mother kept moving her age up in conversations.  Before she turned 90, she was 91.  This year she was 93 or 94.  She marveled at how long she'd lived at the same time she expressed that she didn't want to live all that much longer.

Well.  Writing all this hasn't really helped me much - I had hoped this would be a kind of therapy for me - it may be that I miss the Sunday phone calls or at the very least am in denial that I will never speak with her again.  It may just be that I have so many more things to say about her.  She was my mother, after all.

She asked me to give the eulogy at her funeral.  She's being cremated & the pandemic would make it impossible for us to gather, so my sister is planning a memorial service in the spring.  Maybe these thoughts are rough drafts for my final obligation to her: to try to tell her story in the way she deserved at the last gathering of her family for her.

It may seem weird to write this on my radio show's blog but I share my personal stories here too.  My mother liked listening to me on the radio - she listened live to my KNON show in Dallas & called me right after it to tell me what she liked about it (she always kinda wished I'd get paid for it though).  She thought I wasn't ambitious enough.  Another thing I couldn't entirely explain to her.

Gosh, Mom.  I don't know if it's time to say goodbye yet.  Let me write some more about you later.  You'd probably find all this very flattering.  Even if you'd think I ought not to share some things.  Don't worry, I can anticipate your disapproval & your embarrassment when I get to those stories.  & I know you'll love me anyway.  We never quite got each other entirely, but we did love each other.  That was a pretty solid arrangement.

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Self Help Radio 091420: Fiction

(Original image here.)

Fiction comes in many forms.  & of course they're all lies.  I'm sorry, I can't hold my tongue any longer.  The theme of this week's Self Help Radio shouldn't be fiction, it should be "LIES!"  It's all lies!  Fiction isn't real!  The stories in your precious books aren't real!  Your movies, your plays, your television show - those are people pretending to be other people.  They're not really in outer space!  Or even in New York!  They are in false places called "sets" or else if they're "on location" they're not the people they say they are.  & those precious books of yours - someone made the stories up.  They never happened.  Surely there shouldn't be a show celebrating that!

While we're at it - have you heard about how faulty your memory is?  Just read up about it - read non-fiction books & articles about it - you'll see that much of what you think you remember is just stuff your brain changed to protect you!  So your memory is mostly fiction!  Imagine that!  You can't even remember your own life properly!

Although.  If that's the case.  Fiction is all we have.  All right, then.  Let's have a damn radio show about it.

It's where all Self Help Radio episodes go to die: at the Self Help Radio website. Please remember there's a username (SHR) & a password (selfhelp) to listen.  The show is almost exactly two hours long.  What happens on the show is below.  Enjoy.

As long as you remember it's all lies!

Self Help Radio Fiction Show
"Ficciones" Los Vidrios Quebrados _Fictions_
"Fiction" Joni Mitchell _Dog Eat Dog_
"Fiction" The Lucksmiths _Warmer Corners_

introductions & definitions

"Fiction" Afrika Bambaataa _Hydraulic Funk_
"Fiction" The Nails _Hotel For Women_
"Fiction" Islands _Should I Remain Here At Sea?_
"Fiction" $10,000 _The Crossword EP_
"Fiction" The Concretes _In Colour_

interview with creative writing teacher Errol McDougal

"Love Is A Fiction" The Shirts _Street Light Shine_
"Living In Fiction" Icky Blossoms _Mask_
"Fictional Girl" Kelley Stolz _In Triangle Time_
"Fictional Decision" Drahla _A Compact Cassette_
"The Fiction (Gareth's Song)" Osunlade _Rebirth_

Book Corner with Ned Dry

"Science Fiction/Double Feature" Richard O'Brien _The Rocky Horror Picture Show_
"Science Fiction Man" Clare & The Reasons _The Movie_
"Science Fiction" Happydeadmen _Classics - A Decade In Pop_
"A Science Fiction Film" Woody Allen _Standup Comic: 1964-1968_
"Science Fiction" George Coleman _Bongo Joe_

interview with the Rev Dr Howard Gently

"Part Past Part Fiction" The Chills _Heavenly Pop Hits_
"Stranger Than Fiction" Yeah Jazz _Six Lane Ends_
"Lost In The Fiction" Jim Salinger _Starry Verse_
"Political Fiction" Half Pint _20 Super Hits_

conclusion & goodbye

"Beautiful Fiction" Braille Stars _Fields & Streams_

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Whither Fiction?

 
(Image from here.)

Trying to think just why I would do a radio show about fiction...  I'm almost certain it's because I listened to the Lucksmiths record Warmer Corners very close to the time I listened to the Joni Mitchell record Dog Eat Dog.  Not necessarily one after the other, maybe not even the same day - but close enough that I thought "Hey, both records have songs I like called 'Fiction'!"  & when I have thoughts like that, it means I'll probably want to do a show about it.  The deal was probably sealed when I was listening to a Kelley Stoltz record - In Triangle Time - & there was a song called "Fictional Girl" on it.

As someone who loves fiction & probably reads too much of it, I struggled with what to include with the show - someday surely I'll do a show about books & I really do one day (if I haven't already - let me check) should do a show about libraries.  So how many songs about fiction that don't mention fiction I could include was somewhat hampered by other themes waiting in the wings.

What will get played?  You'll have to listen tomorrow - Monday morning - on Freeform Portland, 90.3 & 98.3 fm & freeformportland.org.  From 8-10am.  & as usual, it will be entirely unreal, which is to say, a work of fiction.