Tessa,
Gaze upon him. Stare into his big glassy eyes. He is half Goldendoodle, and half St. Bernard. He's a St. Berdoodle, or a Goldentard. I really don't know. No matter, he's 100% yours. He's 13 hours away, but he's flying out to see you in a couple days. He will then commence to dance about our home in that robotic puppy-like way, that joyful I-just-learned-to walk manner, and we will all be happier.
Then he will pee in the corner and we will be slightly less happy.
But we will clean that up, and the happiness will return in full. Life will very closely resemble a scene from a French film, where a young couple strolls along the Riviera, staring deeply into each others' eyes, getting to know the person they already love intently. Except, it won't be the Riviera, it'll be a city street in St. Paul, and the young couple is staring at a puppy.
I can't wait. Who doesn't want to be loved unconditionally by 130-pounds worth of man's best friend? so Tessa: will you take this puppy, have and to hold, to walk and to feed, in he-ate-a-thesaurus and in health, till death do you part? I know I do.
Monday, February 21, 2011
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Inamorata, Volume One: Mischke
Tessa,
On the way back from Chicago, I struck upon a good idea. Leave me alone for 7 hours in the boring wastelands of the Badger State and I will produce exactly one idea worth expanding upon. The idea was this: list off my favorite things, one entry at a time.
The list excludes the Big Ones. You, The Good Lord, the 1st Amendment, Wendy's Spicy Chicken Sandwich -- these are everyone's favorites, they go without saying. Plus, there's already a whole slew of internet chatter on the Spicy Chicken Sandwich. I'm not gonna say anything that hasn't already been covered. So here goes...
I flipped to AM. I didn't listen to AM radio, and wasn't really sure why it was even there. It was like FM, but without all of the things that made people want to listen to FM. A guy talking, some music in Spanish, someone reading the news. And then there was someone else. This guy didn't sound like a talk radio host; he sounded like someone who had about 30 seconds before the real host came back from the bathroom and called security. He was talking about the solar system, about how a group of European scientists wanted to drop Pluto as an official planet. This grabbed my attention. I'd just finished my science project on Pluto. If they yanked it's Official Planet status, I'd have to start over. I sat up. The man continued. Pluto was the only planet discovered by an American, the Europeans can't take Pluto from us. "If you absolutely must yank one of them," he begged, "please, yank Uranus."
11-year-old-Me exploded into laughter. I covered my face with my pillow and laughed harder as the man went on and on. My parents knocked on the door and told me I was supposed to be sleeping, that I'd better be in bed mister. I listened till midnight, and the show was over, but I was hooked.
Tommy Mischke could turn a newspaper article about some drunken nun in Germany who crashed her riding lawn mower into a telephone pole into 30 minutes of quality material. This was better than anything on TV. Mischke took calls cold, meaning people calling the station expected to get a call screener, but got Mischke instead. By the time they realized who they were talking to, they'd already been on live radio for 12 minutes. Mischke once took a call from a guy named Al, who called in to ask about a weather update. Tommy told the guy he was the station meteorologist, Blow Zephyr, and kept the guy on the phone for over 4 hours. When the guy turned on his radio and heard his own voice, Mischke convinced him it was atmospheric interference. I know about this stuff, after all, I'm the station weatherman, Blow Zephyr. They talked another 90 minutes.
This one time, he called the operator with a caller on the line, and...well, here: you listen. You'll see.
See! It's chaotic and weirdly troubling, and it's broadcast on 50,000 watts to...er, dozens of people. Most importantly, in a sea populated by ten thousand cookie-cutter sports/politics junkies, Mischke stands alone. He's the only radio host to go for an entire 2 hour show without uttering a word. 2 hours of dead air. Complete radio silence, interrupted every so often by commercials. Anyone else behind that mic would've been out of a job; Tommy was awarded Best Twin Cities Radio Personality that year.
So there it is, my favorite person to listen to. I don't know what it says about me, but If I ever go crazy, start hearing voices, I hope they're old Mischke reruns. Here's one more for the road.
On the way back from Chicago, I struck upon a good idea. Leave me alone for 7 hours in the boring wastelands of the Badger State and I will produce exactly one idea worth expanding upon. The idea was this: list off my favorite things, one entry at a time.
The list excludes the Big Ones. You, The Good Lord, the 1st Amendment, Wendy's Spicy Chicken Sandwich -- these are everyone's favorites, they go without saying. Plus, there's already a whole slew of internet chatter on the Spicy Chicken Sandwich. I'm not gonna say anything that hasn't already been covered. So here goes...
Volume One: Tommy Mischke
I got a Sony Walkman for Christmas in 1993. I was eleven yeas old. It was late at night, and I was laying in bed, wearing my Batman underwear, trying slow my brain down long enough to fall asleep. This was my least favorite part of the day. I put my headphones on, flipped the switch to my shiny black Walkman, and thumbed the dial across the FM landscape. I only listened to Oldies, which meant that a) I wasn't interested in 95% of the available channels, and b) I was guaranteed to not hear anything new.I flipped to AM. I didn't listen to AM radio, and wasn't really sure why it was even there. It was like FM, but without all of the things that made people want to listen to FM. A guy talking, some music in Spanish, someone reading the news. And then there was someone else. This guy didn't sound like a talk radio host; he sounded like someone who had about 30 seconds before the real host came back from the bathroom and called security. He was talking about the solar system, about how a group of European scientists wanted to drop Pluto as an official planet. This grabbed my attention. I'd just finished my science project on Pluto. If they yanked it's Official Planet status, I'd have to start over. I sat up. The man continued. Pluto was the only planet discovered by an American, the Europeans can't take Pluto from us. "If you absolutely must yank one of them," he begged, "please, yank Uranus."
11-year-old-Me exploded into laughter. I covered my face with my pillow and laughed harder as the man went on and on. My parents knocked on the door and told me I was supposed to be sleeping, that I'd better be in bed mister. I listened till midnight, and the show was over, but I was hooked.
Tommy Mischke could turn a newspaper article about some drunken nun in Germany who crashed her riding lawn mower into a telephone pole into 30 minutes of quality material. This was better than anything on TV. Mischke took calls cold, meaning people calling the station expected to get a call screener, but got Mischke instead. By the time they realized who they were talking to, they'd already been on live radio for 12 minutes. Mischke once took a call from a guy named Al, who called in to ask about a weather update. Tommy told the guy he was the station meteorologist, Blow Zephyr, and kept the guy on the phone for over 4 hours. When the guy turned on his radio and heard his own voice, Mischke convinced him it was atmospheric interference. I know about this stuff, after all, I'm the station weatherman, Blow Zephyr. They talked another 90 minutes.
This one time, he called the operator with a caller on the line, and...well, here: you listen. You'll see.
See! It's chaotic and weirdly troubling, and it's broadcast on 50,000 watts to...er, dozens of people. Most importantly, in a sea populated by ten thousand cookie-cutter sports/politics junkies, Mischke stands alone. He's the only radio host to go for an entire 2 hour show without uttering a word. 2 hours of dead air. Complete radio silence, interrupted every so often by commercials. Anyone else behind that mic would've been out of a job; Tommy was awarded Best Twin Cities Radio Personality that year.
So there it is, my favorite person to listen to. I don't know what it says about me, but If I ever go crazy, start hearing voices, I hope they're old Mischke reruns. Here's one more for the road.
I Heart You.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Sweet Former-Home Chicago
Tessa,
I'm all growed up. I know this because I was sent to a conference, with business cards. I think the idea is that I'm to hand them out to other grown ups. The thing is, it's the Covenant Church; having business cards at that convention was like having oars in desert. It's cool you've got them, but you certainly don't need them. Everyone's related, or you graduated with them, or their parents went to North Park and made a sacred pact to get pregnant at the same time and then send their children to North Park, where they would fall in love and continue the cycle. Business cards? Please.
It always impressed me that even the places people couldn't see with the naked eye were gilded little masterpieces. Pretty sure this place predates the zoom lens, so why go out of the way to make the mural reach to the ceiling? Must have been an excess of Tiffany's glass laying around. "Might as well use it all, Lou."
Ah, the hotdish-laden feast of Sällskapet. Everyone said "Hi." You were missed. All the kids are so big. It's only been six months, but they keep growing like we can just move the ceiling or something. Jackie hugged me, Christopher punched me. People were glad to hear we're doing well, which is what I told them. I suppose we'll have to make sure and do well now, or I'll be a liar. I don't think doing well is out of the realm of possibility. Doing adequately makes me happy enough most days, but adequate never changed the world.
Harriette sends her greetings. She hasn't grown at all since we left; still the same canon-ball-with-legs. Our friends are great. Some of them fed me, others let me sleep on their floor. It was good to see them all, but it made me realize how great it was to have all of us in the same place for those years. It was a hard stretch; everyone poor, carving next month's rent out of bad jobs. But we won't look back on it like that. We'll look back at all of us, younger and healthy and able to stay up till all hours of the night eating and drinking wine and cracking jokes. No mortgage or kids or out-of-town conferences. Just a bright flash of unburdened revelry that came before all of the things that will come after this.
I Heart You.
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