Friday, December 21, 2012

Shoot the Dog

                                        (Acrylic on re-purposed wood, about 32" x 24")

It's Christmas Eve.   I'm twelve.  My mother has prepared her three sons for a special holiday photo to be taken at my aunt's house later that night.   She's cut our hair, made us bathe, and gone to great trouble to find us matching turtlenecks.  We look great. We are itchy.

While she and Dad run to town for a last minute gift, she tells us to go outside and stay on the front porch so we "won't get into any crap".   She knows us well.

It's not cold.   But it is boring.   This explains why my youngest brother begins to dance with our dog.  

The simple steps consist of Tim holding Bernard up by his paws and shuffling back and forth. Tim is my youngest brother.   He is a trouble maker.   Bernard is our German Shepherd.   He is good natured.   Up to a point.

Bernard nips Tim near his ear and excuses himself from the dance floor.   The bite, although not vicious, causes blood to gush like a fountain.   I'm a little freaked.  Tim is a lot freaked.  And Brad, my middle brother who rattles easy, is the most freaked.

When my parents return they do not see their three sons sitting on the porch, well dressed and well coiffed.  They instead see one lying in the front yard covered in blood, one using his turtleneck to stop the bleeding, and one rocking back and forth crying hysterically.   

My dad wants, and rightly so, to be filled in.   "Just what the hell happened"!?  he shouts.   Tim blubbers that Bernard bit him which my mom reacts to instantly.   "Shoot the dog!" she screams.  

This might seem premature, but to her defense it does look like a mauling -- there's loads of blood.   Even Brad is splattered.

Bernard, with his dog sense tingling, is jumping and barking, very agitated.   Tim starts to sob, overcome with guilt.  I begin to cry too, yelling in protest.   And Brad, who's barely keeping it together as it is, now goes over the edge -- he loves Bernard.    It's what you call a scene.

"Shoot the dog"! my mother commands again over all the wailing, barking and bleeding. Luckily my dad's cooler head prevails.   He demands to hear all the facts and his verdict, the one which finally appeases my mom and spares our family pet that fateful Christmas Eve, was quite simple: "Everyone knows you don't  dance with a dog.'"

Somewhere there's a photo from my Aunt's house taken later that night.   Three boys stand between their parents near a big Christmas tree.  At first glance it seems pretty standard.  But if you look close, you'll see stitches peeking from bandages on the small boy's face.  Beside him the skinny one's eyes are red and puffy from crying.   And the oldest, to the far right,  appears tired as he forces a half smile.   None of them are wearing turtlenecks. 


Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The Fabulous Forties!

The pattern of a typical person’s happiness through life, based on about 70,000 observations in Britain. Credit: Andrew Oswald and Nick Powdthavee

A Sleestak Christmas!

I had a meeting once with a very spry Marty Krofft and I guess I made his electronic mailing list so I get sent a Christmas card every year.    They're always freaking great and so was he.

In the meeting, he told me when they were trying to cast H.R. Puffenstuff  in London, Jack Wild (the boy in the photo),  beat out another musically inclined 13-year-old British kid named Phil Collins.    Marty also quoted his father who always told him, "On your worst day, help somebody else out."


Thursday, November 29, 2012

KING TURD®

King Turd, the maker of fine snack cakes, turns 100 this month.  Here's a look back at its iconic logo throughout the last century.

(1912 -1936)  The regal beginnings from company founder Ludwig Turd, a Swiss born master baker,  who, legend has it, first sketched the bejeweled crown holding a dollop of delicious icing onto a piece of wax paper.

Notice the three jewels set in the crown?  Baking historians believe they represent the three Turd sons, Ludwig Jr., Gunter and Steve.   But others say they represent the trio of mistresses Ludwig kept above his factory floor before they were discovered by his wife who, in the fall of 1922, slit Ludwig's throat near a pallet of powdered sugar.  
(1937 -1960)   Automated assembly lines brought great expansion to the King Turd® empire and this newer, sleeker logo heralded the company's optimism.    

But when America entered World War II, King Turd®, along with many other businesses, converted their operations to the war effort.  Countless lives were saved by the two-way radio cupcakes and exploding butter tarts manufactured during this period.
(1961 - 1971)  The 60's were a time of great change and experimentation as evidenced by this bold departure designed by the firm of Appleby & Mathers, NYC, NY.  

Who can ever forget the animated T.V. spot where old King Turd himself, flying a magic pie pan, rescued hungry kids from what appeared to be a children's prison.   David Hird, a former account executive at McCann Erickson, explained it was supposed to be an orphanage -- "a sort of Oliver-type deal",  but was at a loss as to why the child actors were shackled.

(1972 - 2000)  A welcome return to its graphic roots, this clean design (the only time color lettering or "savory odor" lines were used ) celebrated the company's storied past while embracing its bright snack cake future.   

Allegations that traces of horse flesh were found in most of the KT product line were eventually thrown out of court but did affect sales and, perhaps, hastened the next logo change.
(2001 - Present)   Today the King Turd® symbol is as easily recognized as the lightning bolt across a Monroy Motorcycle™ or the winking feline on a bottle of  CatJack Cola™.   You can be certain that Ludwig would be quite proud that a century later his KT brand still stands strong alongside America's best known corporate icons.  



Sunday, November 18, 2012

What T.V. Taught Me


                                    "There is no such thing as pain.  Only the fear of pain and the memory of pain."
                                                                         Master Po to Grasshopper -- from the television series "Kung Fu" starring David Carradine
                                                                                                                                  (Acrylic on vintage wallpaper  20" x 60")

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Come & Get It

Northeast corner La Brea and Venice
The cooks must be between 5' 4" and 6' 2".   The same requirements of Air Force pilots.
Note the pineapple on top of the spit -- a little zest in the al pastor (shepherd style) pork tacos.   $1.25 each.

Did I mention they were only $1.25? And did I mention they were heaped with carne asada?
   
    A couple of cabbies wait for their meals.    LAX is very slow on Saturday nights I was told.                                         
The dining area was like a small church.  A church where a man can worship carne asada.
Looking out toward La Brea and thinking of a chinese saying, "The doing is easy.  Deciding what to do is difficult."  
I decide to have another taco.  And it was easy. 
They were only a buck twenty-five.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

More Words

                                                                        (16 x 26 acrylic, mixed media on board)
Saw a Samuel Beckett play recently with a few audience members who weren't prepared for his style of plotless existentialism.   Running only one hour, with no breaks,  "Krapp's Last Tape" does not give theatre patrons a chance to bolt for the doors.

As the curtain came down, the first sound from the audience (before the obligatory applause -- it is Beckett, after all) was an older man behind me who blurted, "That's it?"

I think Beckett would've been pleased that someone finally understood his point.



Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Magic Eskimo Breath

(Acrylic, glitter on found board 24 x 36)
                    "His continual mistake was he waited for the world's embrace instead of embracing the world."
                                                                                                                                                                       Sir Bernard Barnhart 



Thursday, September 13, 2012

Bees, Chairs, Gravy

                                             

                                       To dream of bees denotes pleasant and profitable engagements.
                                       To dream of chairs indicates you will fail to meet an obligation.
                                       To dream of eating gravy is a forecast of failing health.
                                                                                                                    Farmers Almanac -- 1932

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Double Standard

 (Acrylic on found board, 20"x5")
I'm sitting inside at the window of Tender Greens (upscale cafeteria style eatery for the urban set) on Sunset near Vine when an older woman squats over a manhole cover and proceeds to take a piss.

It's six-thirty, complete daylight.   She doesn't appear  homeless.  She wears clean clothes and carries a leather purse.   Maybe she's drunk.    Whatever.   She's definitely enjoying a nice, long leisurely whizz ten feet from my gourmet salad, albeit through plate glass.

Disgusted, I look away, but the old lady is taking her sweet time, and I keep glancing up to see what other folks think about this improvised street performance.   But the few people on the sidewalk walk by with a kind of dazed disinterest.  And nobody in the restaurant seems to notice except me.

She finally drops her skirt, moves to the bus bench and takes a seat.  I try to finish my meal, but have no appetite.   On the way home I wonder why I was so disgusted.   If it had been a dog, I would've been fine.   I realize I'm a specie-ist.  (Like a sexist only with species)   But then I think no,  if it had been an attractive, young woman,  I probably would've been strangely aroused.  So I'm just a ageist.  Phew.

P.S.  Next time you're at Tender Greens, order the Southern Fried Chicken Salad -- and sit in the back.



Tuesday, August 28, 2012

"Ain't much shoe leather in this town."

Peter "Red" Wiggins.  Originally from St. Louis.  Hollywood Blvd.  4:30 p.m. on a Tuesday.

Friday, August 24, 2012

The Hulk... more frightened than incredible


I bought some knock-off action figures downtown on Broadway.  My favorite was this scary Hulk.   Especially when I snapped the close-up and lost some of the color.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Still Kicking Satan's Sorry Ass




You may have seen this postcard before.  It's been floating around for years.   Someone gave me one a long time ago and I became obsessed with the kid on the front known as Larry Larimore, Boy Preacher.   It took a while but I tracked him down, luckily just outside of Los Angeles.  


Almost sixty years after that postcard photo, Larry is now a co-minister with his wife Gloria at the the New Life Christian Center in El Monte, California.   I sat through their sermon on Sunday morning with maybe fifty other people and listened to both he and his wife take turns in the pulpit  --  Gloria was even touched by the Holy Ghost (my personal fav) and spoke in tongues.   It was mostly gobbly-gook with some Spanish sounding words tossed in for the mostly Latino audience.  She was really going to town when I looked over and noticed Larry fighting to stay awake in his throne-like chair on the stage.  Just when I thought we'd lost him, he shouted out an "Amen!" that jolted him back to speed.    


Here's Larry and Gloria today.  I spoke to Larry after the service and he said he traveled all over the country singing and preaching as a kid and it was a great way to grow up.   Up close, he was bigger and heavier than I had at first realized, but was completely gracious and very sincere.  He seemed humble even -- something you don't find in many preachers.    He said he'd gotten out of the ministry for a while in the 70's and 80's selling real estate, but that he was delighted to be back doing what he considered his life's real work.   

And no, he's never seen a penny from the image used on those postcards. 



Sunday, August 5, 2012

Um... I'll take the one-eyed duck






Bob Douglas and his air gun attraction.  Saturday afternoon on Venice Boulevard near Alvarado.  Bob owns his own booth and paid $250 for his spot at the El Salvador Day Street Carnival.    

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Blue Bird

 
(Acrylic, mixed media, resin on found board.  Approx. 14 x 16)

I get out of my car near Pico and Normandie at a Salvadoran restaurant (I'm always trying hole-in-the-wall ethnic joints), and this very hard looking thirty-something guy dressed in the requisite gang uniform of Dickies to the collar, baggy shorts and calf-high black socks steps up.  "Hey Homie, you look like a man with taste."

He's covered in tattoos with "213" over his eyebrow, small tear drops (the number of people he's killed or the number of years he's been in prison) at his eyes and a couple of nice devil horns on his shaved head.   I don't contradict guys with horns so I agree, "That's right, I'm a man of taste."

"Then you better buy my C.D."   He holds out a homemade C.D. with his photo and the title CHOZEN.    "Chozen, that's me.  Only $5 bucks.  It's rap, bro.  Real rap."

I'm listening to it now and thinking about the other things Chozen said.  How he spent 13 years in prison but "don't bang no more" and how he "gave that dark up for the light," and how he "goes with God from now on."

Chozen's raps, by the way, are mostly violent, swear ridden tales of getting pussy and how he's an authentic "OG", not some hollywood bullshit.

Write what you know, right?

P.S.  After talking a few minutes, I asked Chozen what his real name was.  At first he wouldn't say, but I pressed, "C'mon, what does your Mom call you?"    He paused and then smiled, "Eric.  My mom calls me Eric."  

Here's a sample and his C.D. cover:




Sunday, July 1, 2012

The Ultimate Fatigue ...

                           ... of Immeasurable Joy.   (Anime Expo, Los Angeles, July1,  3:34 p.m.)

Always Be Closing

                        My first Hollywood agent once boasted that he had sold patio furniture before joining the agency...                       "Selling is selling" he proudly exclaimed.    The man never got me a gig,  but I did learn plenty about                          the difference between rattan and wicker.          
                                             
                                                      (Approximately 36' x 36" acrylic on board with found signage.  Commissioned by Mr. David Gassmann)

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Death Match!

.
"If you're waiting for the world to be fair, stick around to the end when
nobody, not even your good dog Dan, gets out alive.
That's the only time she don't play favorites."

                                                                                        -- Bernard Humid

(22" x 44" acrylic on wood panel)

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Manny, Moe, Jack

                                      "The more beautiful the voice, the harder it is to believe the singer."
                                                                                                                                           -- David Byrne

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Your Team Captain

  
                                                                                       "I hate the way we are traumatized and imprinted
                                                      in early childhood and have to spend the rest of our lives
                                                          trying to overcome these infantile mental fixations."
                                                                                                                                                                                                             R. Crumb

Sunday, May 13, 2012

O.P.Q.

                                                                                   "ONLY PUSSIES QUIT!"
                                                                                                (another pep talk from Coach Jerry Tupper)  

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Sandy



                          (18 x 24 oil on canvas)

Monday, April 30, 2012

BOYS vs GIRLS

Back when he was in kindergarten, my son and his classmates drew superheroes and listed their powers.  I took the images and blew them up then transferred them to a canvas where I added some background colors and words and voila... folk art from the kiddos.   My favorite super power:  Evil balls.  (24 x 48)

Monday, April 23, 2012

More Chickens Sans Heads

                                                             (India Ink on vintage wallpaper 16 x 24)

At my wedding reception, My Uncle Tub, a wheat farmer who had been married forty-some years, pulled me aside and matter-of-factly said most of his marriage had been like "gripping a shovel the day after you'd dug your first ditch."   He then wished me good luck and headed back to the bar.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Chicken is a little tough

(acrylic on board 14 x 14)
Most people in early childhood are, by and large, unconditionally loved.  Once that ends, and it always ends, they spend the rest of their lives in an unhappy search for that exact kind of relationship.  There is no unconditional love in adulthood.  Deal with it. -- Dr. Herbert Betts, Behavioral Scientist and author of "Quit Blaming Your Parents -- They Got Screwed Up Too."

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Heavy is the Head

                                                                                                                              (Acrylic, vintage print on board 24 x 28)


                                                Childhood Obesity Explained
On Friday, near the zoo exit,  I heard this super fat little kid tell his mom he wanted ice cream from the truck parked at the curb.  "But you just had a whole tub of Dippin' Dots*," the Mom told him.  "But I hate Dippin' Dots," Tubby replied as he ran for the ice cream line.
*Dippin' Dots is created by flash freezing ice cream mix in liquid nitrogen.