12.24.2022

Let Your Heart Be Light


I love Christmas. It rivals Halloween as my most favorite day of the year. But the holiday and I had to find each other, because it evaded me most of my life. My experiences were different than most. In the end, what remains is a tale of love, magic, and a true capturing of the spirit.

At a very young age we were poor. It was just my Mother and I. We were on welfare, which meant that at the end of our food stamps, we survived the rest of the month on popcorn and apple juice. Every December, a member of the Salvation Army would arrive with a giant box of food and a big red sack. The box contained our Christmas dinner - a canned ham, boxed potato, two peas, cranberry can, and a Table Talk pie. The sack was always exposing its toy contents. I would beg to open one, and she would sternly reply, "You have to wait for Santa." Needless to say, the whole Kris Kringle charade wasn't believed for very long. 

Despite writing lists at school to the big guy, asking for special and specific toys, I never got what I wished for. I know and believe the saying,"beggars can't be choosers," and I am the most selfless person that exists, but still, it would have been nice to get one special prize. To have that one treasured memento from the big orgasm. 

You know the program "Toys For Tots," where you contribute the most boring and least expensive toy to a needy child, so that you can pat yourself on the back and feel good about yourself for one more year? These were my gifts year after year. A lot of Barbie Doll clothes, but no Barbie to put them on, baby toys, coloring books, and pint-sized rough stuffed animals. 

After my mom married my stepdad, Christmas became money-driven - the exact opposite of what I was used to, and think she was used to as well. She was finally able to shop for presents, but at this point, she had no idea who I was or what I liked, so for years, I got cash, gift cards, expensive bed sets, gamer systems, and bath soaps.

Eventually, as I aged, this evolved into a strategically placed white envelope of money on the tree. Yes, money is nice and good and who the hell doesn't love cold hard cash? But where's the thought? The love? By this time we weren't even waking up together for Christmas morning.

Then came the dark years. Seven Christmases spent driving 3 plus hours, sometimes in very harsh winter weather, only to be confronted with anxiety-induced panic attacks, caused by my new family. I came to dread the holiday because it often came with fighting, general hostility, and a constant reminder that I didn't belong. I couldn't wait for it all to be over, because it meant it was the longest period of time before I had to endure it all again.

By age 25, Christmas and I were not simpatico. Images of the fat man in the velvet suit caused me to have fight or flight reactions. I needed a miracle, a Christmas angel to save me. Fortunately my savior just lived in Leominster. He swept me off my feet and gave me a new life. 

Our first holiday together was Thanksgiving, and I insisted on cooking. My PTSD was so extreme, that the thought of close quarters with a lot of people made me feel physically ill. I cooked for us and his parents. It was lovely. It afforded us an opportunity to really get to know each other. We really talked and I liked them. As they were leaving, they insisted I take part in their family Christmas. I committed.

Going into December, the first thing I noticed with Paul was the Christmas music. And seriously, what the hell was that? Apparently, there was a whole catalogue of music devoted to the one special time of the year, that spanned decades, and included many famous musicians. The rules were to only listen to this kind of music until December 26th. A special tradition, and a crash course for me. 

Then came the movies. Granted, I didn't live in a box, and was aware of some. Home Alone was my second movie theater experience. And I loved Die Hard and Die Hard 2. But there were so many more out there that I had never ever heard of, like, er, A Christmas Story. Yes I know. The marathon. 

Halfway though the month, we made a small pilgrimage to Bennett Place, to meet with his family for list-making. This was so strange and novel. We all ordered Chinese food, passed around paper and pens, and wrote down everything we wanted, under the assumption that they would be purchased by everyone else. They all enjoyed each other's company, sang along to cheesy 80s songs, made fun of each other, and chain smoked around the table. They were so beautiful. Christmas Vacation blasted from the living room, and the audible disconnected jokes added a texture to the entire event. Before leaving we were invited to Christmas Eve at Auntie Shannyn's. I warmly agreed. 

A real Christmas tree was very important to Paul. He salivated at its rich scent. He noticed on his drive to work that there were a group of kids selling roadside trees, adjacent to a Friendly's restaurant. We planned a special date. When we arrived these were the Boy Scouts of America, and all of their trees were small, like them. We picked our midget tree, had the toddlers tie it to our crappy roof, and celebrated with fries and bacon cheeseburgers. Just like a couple of kids. 

When we got the tree home, I wanted to decorate right away, but he said "We have to let the tree fall and have a drink." Seven years of a cheap ass Walmart fake tree, and I was damn clueless. But the next day we adorned our stout little growth. All of his ornaments were precious and from his childhood. He spoke of every deep meaning with every branch he hung them from. By doing so, he included me into his pleasant memories. I felt a tingle. 

Walking into Auntie Shannyn's upstairs apartment, I'm slapped in the face with a white brightly lit glowing tree, surrounded by people, all cramped together on dirty couches and chairs. Christmas Story is happening on an obscenely large TV, but no one is watching. And all at once, everyone leaps to their feet to hug and kiss us. We're lead into the kitchen/dining area, and are seated at a very long table with a festive plastic table cloth, and littered with boozy solo cups and cheeses.

Our meal for the evening is sandwiches and salads. You see this family works for a living and they are all gathering after a long days work ready for celebration. So no one wants to cook or do dishes. We conclude our feast with Uncle Jimmy's famous peanut butter fudge. It's made from scratch - its chalky goodness sits just right with me. 

We rode home hand in hand, listening to a special holiday CD, as the Oldies 103.3 Christmas playlist was no more. Paul thoroughly educated me in this great tragedy of his life. Bedtime soon followed, but not before placing my thoughtful gifts for him under our tree. 

Christmas mornings start early here, which took some getting used to. At this time of our lives, we typically slept past noon. Sometimes all damn day if we wanted to. Before dawn I felt a gentle arm on me and heard him whisper for me to wake up. Our tree was lit, the coffee was made, and presents poured out from under the tree. Paul hands me a stocking, which is full of candy and junk. Each gift after the other is more thoughtful and silly, and by dawn's early light, I felt something.

This something grew deeper as the morning went on as we cleaned up, got dressed, fooled around, and ate donuts. I felt safe. I was loved, wanted, and cherished above all things. And by the twinkle of the Christmas lights of our tiny ass tree, the spirit of Christmas moved in me. 

I have this sensation yearly now and it's only grown deeper now that we have a young child to share it with. We can share good feelings with him and build traditions. Paul didn't just save Yule, he rescued me. And now, for all time, Santa Claus will forever have him on his nice list. 

- Babes


12.23.2022

NO PARTICULAR ORDER : Adult Entertainers


PAUL
Jeanna Fine
Katsumi
Sindee Jennings
Lisa DeLeeuw
Belladonna
Alexis Texas
Christy Canyon
Gianna Michaels
Raylene
Dee Williams

BABES
Sasha Grey
James Deen
Lexi Belle
Chloe Cherry
Charlotte Stokely
Sinn Sage
Joanna Angel
Belladonna
Manuel Ferrara
Gianna Michaels

12.21.2022

NO PARTICULAR ORDER : Songs of 1993


PAUL
"Rain" - Madonna
"What's Up?" - 4 Non Blondes
"Come Undone" - Duran Duran
"The River of Dreams" - Billy Joel
"Livin' on the Edge" - Aerosmith
"The Sign" - Ace of Base
"Loser" - Beck
"Big Gun" - AC/DC
"Rooster" - Alice in Chains
"Mary Jane's Last Dance" - Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers

BABES
"What's Up?" - 4 Non Blondes
"Rain" - Madonna
"The River of Dreams" - Billy Joel
"Come Undone" - Duran Duran
"Cannonball" - The Breeders
"Are You Gonna Go My Way" - Lenny Kravitz
"Big Gun" - AC/DC
"Loser" - Beck
"Creep" - Radiohead
"Rhythm is a Dancer" - Snap!

12.19.2022

A Christmas Story Story

"It isn't necessary to imagine the world ending in fire or ice. There are two other possibilities: one is paperwork, and the other is nostalgia."
- Frank Zappa

Snow can be frightening, ugly, dangerous; it's a beautiful woman with no sense of humor, a silent heart attack in your sleep. It's also the most striking natural event you could ever witness; its transformative powers can disguise an entire landscape as an unrecognizable monochromatic sculpture, masking all imperfections, teasing a fresh start to your surroundings. That's the payoff; the end result of the weird psychedelic metamorphosis of snowfall - particularly at nighttime. Snow absorbs sound, creating a heavy hush even in a populated area, and this tranquility is enhanced by this sorta spellbinding glow generated from the city lights permeating the reflective flakes in the air. Even at 2am the sky remains a bright pink. 

It was on a December night like this in the very early 1990s when I went to McDonald's with my father. I don't remember the circumstances that brought us there - not that it matters now and it certainly didn't matter then; it was almost Christmas and I was getting McDonald's. I remember the sign outside, lit up, standing underneath it: the Golden Arches were still supersized back then before the company became overwhelmed with shame for their place in popular culture. Snowflakes illuminated by the bright yellow "M" zigzagged in the chilly gusts of hamburger-flavored air. Santa was close, Ronald was closer.


It wasn't much warmer inside, preserving the grey slush on the slippery plastic-wood flooring. It didn't matter - one doesn't remove their coat & hat for McDining, it's part of the formal informal wear; the nylon "swish" of my Starter Jacket as I brought each fry to my mouth was the sound design of my setting. And french fries there were; my father and I had a system whereby we'd combine our separate fry orders into one salty potato mountain atop the plastic serving tray - a technique inspired by Louie Anderson. I was going through a short-lived McNugget phase - one I'd never fully revisit on the basis that they're too characteristic of appetizers or sides. But I was also going through a "no condiment" phase, and if you go about trying to get a custom-built burger from McDonald's you'd better be prepared for chaos. The simplicity of dry breaded chicken product is what I required at that time in my life. 

A damp and tired rabble of holiday shoppers were scattered about the dining room, and one booth at the far end was occupied by an unsophisticated TV/VCR setup, awkwardly placed on the table with wires running every which way, disappearing into unseen outlets you never even knew were there. I'd never seen anything like it in a fast food restaurant, before or since, and playing softly on this kinda smallish TV was A Christmas Story, which I'd only ever been kinda peripherally aware of but had never actually seen any of it. And that was pretty typical for this time in history.

When I was a kid, the movie that dominated the December airwaves was It's A Wonderful Life, almost to the point of parody. It wasn't until 1997 that TNT started doing the 24 hour Christmas Story marathon, thus igniting a global phenomenon in just a few years. By 2000 there were action figures and t-shirts and lunch boxes and all the kindsa merchandise that would accompany a hit movie of that year. But that's the gag: it was new to a lotta people, and very suddenly we had this lightning rod of comedy and nostalgia and scenes and quotes that was creating this new kind of joy and mania; the Holiday had been yet again reimagined for a new century by celebrating a film from the 1980s that celebrates Christmas in the 1940s. 


But back at McDonald's in the early 90s it was the purest example of Cult Movie, and somebody (I assume in management) was part of that cult - so much so that they lugged a buncha audio/visual equipment (probably from the backroom where new recruits are shown training videos) out into the goddamn dining area to play their own personal videocassette of what was decidedly not The Grinch or Charlie Brown or Wonderful Life, but a nearly-decade-old commercial flop from 1983. This anonymous Mickey D employee was ahead of the game: they grew up with it, they already had the tradition, they were already hip to Red Ryder and Ovaltine, electric sex and pink nightmares, the Bumpus's dogs and Chinese turkey. My father and I were just left with a story: "Remember that movie with the weird kid that we saw at a McDonald's for some reason?" It made it more hazy & surreal that we weren't able to actually hear or see the picture very well; halfway across the room in a noisy public setting on a 13'' Magnavox playing a worn VHS with tracking problems didn't really draw us into the narrative in the 15 minutes we were in its presence. But within a couple years as Turner Broadcasting decided this was what the world needed, we hooked into it like a spasm of déjà vu: "Hey, I kinda know this movie!" And under uninterrupted circumstances I was able to see it and appreciate it for everything that it is -- and what it is is a lot less superficial than the sight gags and one-liners the culture seemed to latch onto. 


I suppose it's kinda flat and transparent to make the Normal Rockwell comparison, but so few movies manage to be this innocent and lighthearted without drifting off into fantasy or pathos. It's not "timeless" because it's a period piece rooted in a very specific era, and it's not "dated" because nothing about it indicates that it opened alongside Sleepaway Camp or that the #1 song was "All Night Long" by Lionel Richie - that all feels like an entirely different planet. There were no real lessons to be learned or big emotions - it just champions Nostalgia in a nonspecific way. Stuff like Christmas, America, grade school, and the 20th Century are all incidental in the idea of idealizing the past; any past; our past. No childhood is entirely unblemished, unless it's through the lens of movie magic or the pen of Jean Shepherd. Nostalgia is good for art, but it's better for life. We recognize and revere this film not because we pine for our own bygone BB gun or experience some form of gustatory synesthesia of sucking a bar of Lifebuoy; apart from its general overall competence as a well made movie, it's successfully relatable in depicting the moments of genuine joy we experience as a child - whether it's waking up on Christmas morning, participating in a radio contest, or going to McDonald's with your dad.

- Paul
 

12.17.2022

NO PARTICULAR ORDER : Screenplays


PAUL
The Fisher King - Richard LaGravenese
Midnight Run - George Gallo
The Paper - David Koepp & Stephen Koepp
Glengarry Glen Ross - David Mamet
Falling Down - Ebbe Roe Smith
Pulp Fiction - Quentin Tarantino
Raising Arizona - Joel Coen & Ethan Coen
Swimming With Sharks - George Huang
My Cousin Vinny - Dale Launer
A Civil Action - Steven Zaillian

BABES
Adaptation - Charlie Kaufman and Donald Kaufman
Magnolia - Paul Thomas Anderson
After Hours - Joseph Minion
Fargo - Joel Coen & Ethan Coen
Inglourious Basterds - Quentin Tarantino
Se7en - Andrew Kevin Walker
Manhattan - Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman
The Royal Tenenbaums - Wes Anderson & Owen Wilson
The Sixth Sense - M. Night Shyamalan
The Silence of the Lambs - Ted Tally
 

12.15.2022

NO PARTICULAR ORDER : Christmas Songs


PAUL
"Christmastime" - Aimee Mann & Michael Penn
"The Winter Song" - Angel
"Sleigh Ride" - Johnny Mathis
"A Christmas Carol" (from Scrooge) - Choir
"O Holy Night" - The Mormon Tabernacle Choir
"Last Christmas" - Wham!
"Thank God It's Christmas" - Queen
"Wonderful Christmastime" - Paul McCartney
"Silver Bells" - Andy Williams
"Presents For Christmas" - Solomon Burke

BABES
"Christmas Wrapping" - The Waitresses
"The Christmas Song" - Nat King Cole
"Happy Xmas (War is Over)" - John Lennon & Yoko Ono
"Christmas Canon" - Trans-Siberian Orchestra
"2000 Miles" - The Pretenders
"Thank God It's Christmas" - Queen
"All Alone on Christmas" - Darlene Love
"The Most Wonderful Day of the Year" (from Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer) - Cast
"Christmas Time is Here" - Vince Guaraldi Trio
"Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy" - David Bowie & Bing Crosby
 

12.14.2022

GROOVE APPROVED

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