Fred talks about writing, food, dogs, and whatever else deserves the treatment.
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Friday, June 28, 2024
Talkin' 'bout the car wash.
Summer is here! School is out! The kids are already bored! Time to take them to everyone's favorite ride: The drive-through car wash!
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Grilled.
Sunday, June 23, 2024
Friday, June 21, 2024
Six months and a day!
Thursday, June 20, 2024
Book sale!
Hans G. Schantz has once again organized a non-woke book sale for writers selling through Amazon. If you're looking to load your Kindle or Kindle software with books that are cheap in price but valuable in PC-free content, this is the time!
I am but a measly part of the whole shebang, an event in which every book costs ninety-nine cents. Can you believe it? Such a bargain! But it only lasts through Tuesday the 25th.
Are you tired of those books that start off agreeably, only to whale you with the old Left-Wing Sucker Punch? ("The bomber was the nice little old lady all the time! She had a MAGA hat in her luggage!") Then I'm sure you'll enjoy the opportunity to read a book that, while it may have many plot twists and mysterious characters, was not written to insult you.
After all, any liberal reading any novel on the New York Times best-seller list knows that he, she, or it will not be challenged in any of his, her, or its orthodoxy and can relax and enjoy the story. People right-of-center, or even centrist (which today makes them Nazis too) do not have that opportunity.
You don't have to buy my book, of course, but I thought you might like to know about the sale. Happy reading!
Wednesday, June 19, 2024
Hack, cough.
THANKS, TYPHOID MIKE
Monday, June 17, 2024
Weekend report.
Saturday, June 15, 2024
Gift certificates -- you're doing it wrong.
Many subscribers |
Friday, June 14, 2024
Thieving elves?
I think those Keebler elves are up to something.
Wednesday, June 12, 2024
Where is the love?
Sometimes I wonder how humanity survived the eighties and the nineties. Not because of nuclear war or novel diseases or alien invasion or even Madonna. Rather, because men reached an apogee of confusion with women.
A small sampling of pop songs of the era:
- Michael Penn: "No Myth"
- Stone Temple Pilots: "Sour Girl"
- Marshall Crenshaw: "Mary Jean"
- Mark Oliver Everett (A Man Called E): "Looking Out the Window with a Blue Hat On"
- Deep Blue Something: "Breakfast at Tiffany's"
All these songs show a man in confusion about a woman, unable to understand what she wants, except she doesn't seem to want him. I'm sure you can add many more to this list, some by the same artists.
The more I thought about it, the more it appeared to be a running theme. These are not just breakup songs; those have been around forever. They aren't even angry songs; there are plenty of those. These are songs where the male is in love, but baffled about the disaster befalling him.
Traditionally popular love songs fell into the categories of Desire, Devotion, or Desolation: I want you, I love you, I lost you. The songs I'm thinking of are a subset of the last. Torch songs can be found anywhere, but usually the torch bearer knows what's happened: she fell for someone new, she had enough of my garbage, she decided to trade up, whatever. But beginning in the eighties, and especially in the coffee-shop nineties, men were getting utterly gobsmacked by these women. She's leaving and I have no idea why this is happening.
I think there are some reasons these kinds of cris de coeur arose when they did. For one thing, after women's lib (as it was called in the seventies), men started to wonder what women actually wanted from them. Kind and sensitive? Witty and adventurous? Gentle and loving? Or was the old strong and silent still what they liked the most? Confused men trying to be what their women wanted made for cases where no one could behave like themselves, so the guys couldn't grasp why nothing ever clicked and everything just fell apart one day.
Another possibility is that couples moved much faster into intimacy than they had in the past, giving the illusion of solidity without the actuality of it. Not surprising that one person in the relationship might be much more committed than the other, thinking that, having made it to home plate, the couple had achieved something solid.
Traditionally the subsequent broken heart in such situations would be the basis of female torch songs, but by the eighties we heard it from the boys, who had a sense they had screwed up but more of a fear that they were screwed up.
Anyway, that's my theory of this subset of the breakup song -- the What Did She Want? song -- that arose in the eighties. I know there are more than I listed above, and maybe examples that preceded the era mentioned. I'd be happy to hear your additions to or even rebuttals to this theory. It won't break my heart.
Monday, June 10, 2024
Tires me out.
Rich guys have people to change their spoon-wrecked tires. |
Friday, June 7, 2024
Wednesday, June 5, 2024
Heart wrenching.
Tuesday, June 4, 2024
New products!
As you undoubtedly know, going to the market is one of the highlights of my week. When I was a wee tot I liked going to the supermarket with my mom, and there's still something quite satisfying in it. Perhaps it's the hunter-gatherer in me.
But often we gather things, or at least take a gander at things, we perhaps shouldn't. Here I am with a new edition of What's New In The Store, a.k.a. What The Hell Is That Thing?
Uh, yeah. "Smell funky? Get Skunky." Skunky is a pack of 25 rinse-free sponge sheets, useful for camping, for travel or water emergencies, for the nearly bedridden (you still gotta be able to move to some degree), or anytime you might get slimed and need to de-stink yourself without a bath or shower available. I think the name needs work, although it did get my attention.
I did not buy a pack to field-test it. I didn't have to. I've been getting Scrubby Dog Bath Mittens for years, and they work the same way -- just add a little water. They came in very handy for the late, large mud-loving dog Tralfaz. I don't think Scrubby and Skunky are made by the same company, but it's the same principle.
I think Skunky would be helpful for campers and for people who can't shower and don't have health aids to help. I don't camp and I'm not that far gone -- yet.
We'll end with these beauties, which people Of A Certain Age will be shocked to see making a comeback:
Saturday, June 1, 2024
Vote the Fuzz Line!!
Killer slogan |