BEAR, SCHMEAR!

Entries from January 2009

frozen balls,Ryan Seacrust, and other random gym stories

January 29, 2009 · 7 Comments

This was not a good morning to shower at the gym. Not good at all. There was a sign posted in the men’s locker room which read thusly:

NO HOT WATER IN SHOWERS.SORRY.

WE ARE WORKING ON IT AS WE SPEAK.

Do you know how cold the water was this morning?  Fucking cold, that’s what.

Uh.. “We are working on it as we speak” ??  What the fuck does that mean? You’re not speaking, you’re writing. Whatever. I wonder if Magic Johnson had to take a cold shower. I’ll bet heads rolled over that one, I do.

There was a total freak at the gym last nght. I couldn’t stop watching him. Every few feet or so he’d stop whatever he was doing and perform a light little bounce step and shuffle. Even in the middle of a set, he’d stop himself, spring up and bounce and caper about a bit, then resume his set.

So much energy. So few brain cells.

I heard the greatest asshole celebrity story yesterday.  The__________ Airlines rep was in the office yesterday, and she was telling about a recent encounter with Miss Ryan Seacrest which occured last week.  My _________ Airline rep, ___________ is a feisty little thing, very dry sense of humor and very quick on her feet. It served her well last week when Ms Seacrest approached the _________ Airlines counter at LAX,  loudly demanding a first class upgrade on his coach class seat. Did the gentleman have a _________ Airlines frequent flyer number or upgrade status? No, he fumed. He did not.ryanseacrest-731977

Well, then did the gentleman wish to PURCHASE (like any other passenger) an upgrade to first class?

The bitch made a huge stink at that point,because he felt he deserved a FREE UPGRADE, just because he was himself a fabulous celebrity. So my very cool friend _______ was called up to deal with him.  She’s had experience with overstuffed delusional psuedo celebs and knew just how to handle him.

“Sir, unless you have accumulated frequent flyer miles, or applicable upgrade coupons,you are not eligible for a free upgrade. I’m awfully sorry.   At this point, Seacrest actually pointed to himself with both hands and shrieked “DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM?!?”  She replied, cool as ice, “Yes sir.  you are….(glances down at his eticket coupon) Misterrr….Ryan Seacrest.  Correct?  “Havent you ever heard of “American Idol”? he SPAT.  Smiling widely (she reinacted it for us), she said sweetly  “I’m not sure, isn’t it a Television show of some kind”?  He almost exploded “I’m going to talk to people about this, and you’ll be sorry!” he screamed, and stormed off.

God, I dream of being able to piss an asslebrity off like that. What a megadouch.

Categories: me

Freak show

January 24, 2009 · 4 Comments

So I’ve quit Gold’s gym in North Hollywood, as it was too damn worn down, the people were obnoxious, and it was too far to drive, gas mileagewise and trafficwise.  I’ve gone back to my old, celebrity- ridden gym at the Sherman Oaks Galleria. That’s the same gym where I had my Veronica Cartwright encounter.

24houfitness-flash1See? here it is

shermanoaksgalleria2

Here’s the 411 on the Galleria, according to wikipedia:

Some scenes in the movies Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Commando, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Valley Girl and Chopping Mall were filmed at the Galleria.

The “Galleria” is mentioned in the song “Valley Girl“. from the Frank Zappa album Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch, as well as the eponymous “The Galleria” by Phantom Planet. It is also mentioned in the film “Clueless“.

The Galleria is also home to a 24-Hour Fitness franchise owned by Magic Johnson. This gym is frequented by José Canseco, Jay Mohr, Keenen Ivory Wayans, Alec Baldwin, Tera Patrick, Zac Efron, Vanessa Ann Hudgens, and Mariah Carey.

I’ve heard that Zach Quinto used to be a daily user before “Heroes” came along. 

I saw Steve Martin on Monday night at the outdoor restaurant near the movie theatre, and on Wednesday night, I saw Richard Hatch working out.

They’d better all stay out of my way.

Last night,  I saw the best freak of my life,  and believe me,  that’s no exaggeration. Now, remember I’m from the south of Market San Francisco scene, which means that their ain’t nothin I havent seen or heard. 

 I am J A D E D,  ok?

But all that I’ve seen in all my years  did not prepare me for what I saw at the Galleria last night.

I was descending on the escalator after my workout and coming up the other way was the most stunning, tall, gorgeous, Angelina Jolie-esqe supermodel. She was dressed in an outfit which highlighted her perfect figure and big …tits.  She had a gorgeous face, amazing eyes, killer facial structure.

In a word, knockout.

Oh yeah..the amazing thing is, she had a full pornstar-esqe mustache, and a full goatee. It was a rich, full chestnut brown. To match her flowing hair.

Wish I’d taken a picture.  And I couldn’t help but stare.

Categories: me

frosty

January 24, 2009 · 4 Comments

To honor the fact that Rush Limbaugh hates all poetry as meaningless trash (his words),  I want to print my alltime favorite poem. I first encountered it in a 4th grade English book, and it’s entranced me ever since.

So what the hell- Read it.

Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening


by Robert Frost

 

Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

Categories: me

CUCKOOO! CUCKOO!!

January 22, 2009 · 4 Comments

OOOOOh man! They’re hemorraging crazy over at freerepublic.com!

They’re wailing and moaning and crying to their mythical idol.

listen in:

“”        Heavenly Father, bless George Bush and his family and associates. They have earnt(sp) rest, and we shall miss them.

Please protect America from the dark forces that now stand in the place of authority. May the unborn be saved from the new Herod.

Invade the hearts of these men and women who now rule America: we claim them for Christ. May they repent of their deeds and turn to thee.

+ We ask this in the name of Your Son, Jesus Christ Our Lord, Amen +     “”

 

 

MMMMBBBWWWWAAAA HAAAA HAAAAA HAAA HAAAAAAAA!   Sit on it and spin, you deluded, dumbass  fucktards! Your day is over.

Sweat and tremble – after all…you’ve EARNT it!   LOL!

Categories: me

CHANGE!

January 21, 2009 · 6 Comments

monkeynutsEX

PRESIDENT

MONKEYNUTS

HAS

LEFT

THE

BUILDING!

 

 

 

 

 

President Obama has taken up the mantle. Today is a good day in America.

The long national nightmare has ended.

CHANGE begins now.

India Obama Inauguration Global Reax

 PHOTO COURTESY ASSOCIATED PRESS

Categories: me

ahnuld’s new maximum lift

January 17, 2009 · 4 Comments

swazanaggah

 Look at Schwarzenegger.

Looks like the governator is going cut rate with his plaztic surgeon, doesn’t it?

Either that, or Joan River’s cutter is giving him half off coupons.

   *  *  *

 

A reader found this pic of me on the interwebs..

 

coverI really have no idea who did this. I can’t find any evidence of such a magazine. There are some other covers on GOOGLE, but no magazine link.

weird.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  *   *   *

Anyone know what the highest civilian medal you can get is?

I’m going to find out, and when I do, I’m going to write Howard Berman, my congressman, and call for a decoration for the pilot of  the USAIR jet that water landed on the Hudson river yesterday. I’ll ask for it for the ferry boat captains who came instantly to the rescue, too. They had no guarantee that the plane wouldnt explode and yet they came.

Today, I’m proud.

Commander Chesley B. Sullenberger, I’d like to buy you a beer.

Categories: me

“Psycho”

January 10, 2009 · 3 Comments

Remember the part in “Psycho” (1960 d- Alfred Hitchcock w-Joseph Stefano dp- John L. Russell) where Janet Leigh is confronted by the Highway patrol cop on the country road? It’s the morning before she checks into the Bates motel, and takes that fatal shower.

Well….

I found it.

Took pictures, too. I had an idea that it was near Gorman, on the Gorman Post road. So, I captured the images off of the dvd, printed them, and headed up there to find the location. It’s about 45 miles out of LA, just off the I-5 near the top of the Grapevine. It was fucking COLD up there. 

Here’s what it looks like now:

psychocompare2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I was able to find it by comparing the lay and bend of the road, and the distinctive telegraph poles. Lead me right to it. The hill on the left, just behind the police cruiser, is obscured in the 2008 photo by fog. The 1960 shots were taken in june of 1960, on a warm day. When I was up there, the temperature on my dash thermometer read 31 F

Categories: me

SUBNORMAL

January 10, 2009 · 3 Comments

SUBWAY SANDWICH SHOP

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Encino, California 

12:14pm PST

ME:  Yeah, a 12 inch club on wheat with everything on it please.

MORON: Cheese?

ME: Yes. Swiss

MORON: Lettuce?

ME:  Yes. Everything on it.

MORON: Peekles and peppers?

ME:  …YES!  …ALL the produce please.

MORON:  O.K.     ….   You want olives?

*SIGH*

 

This photo is appropos of nothing, but I’d bet that the Subway Sandwich moron wouldn’t get the problem here:

 

failed-jpeg

Categories: me

wow! read this. It says it all

January 9, 2009 · 6 Comments

DRAG QUEENS AND A FEW BRICKS

By Dogpoet

Monday, November 17, 2008

Last Friday a couple hundred gays and their friends chased a small group of young Christian preachers out of the Castro, calling them “bigots” and chanting “Don’t come back!”

I wish I’d been there.

The video of the event, or rather part of the event, has now been posted on YouTube, along with a written account by one of the preachers, who claims that they were both physically and sexually assaulted.

“It wasn’t long before the violence turned to perversion. They were touching and grabbing me, and trying to shove things in my butt, and even trying to take off my pants – basically trying to molest me…”

Unfortunately for him the video doesn’t capture any of this particular “molestation,” but our little gay uprising has predictably garnered both scorn and ridicule, and our community is accused of hostility and intolerance, and all weekend I wrestled with my conscience over the primal anger that still sweeps through me when I watch this video.

Why so angry? Why so hostile? The reasons may seem obvious to us, but since all of the preacher’s buddies on YouTube keep asking those questions, let me take a stab.

We grew up wondering what the hell was wrong with us, why we were so different from everyone around us. We observed and learned how to act, and some of us could hide that part of ourselves and pass, and some couldn’t, and those are the ones who were mocked and beaten on playgrounds and in cafeterias and gymnasiums.

We started to figure out how we were different, and how we were perceived. And for the rest of our lives we were told that we weren’t good enough, that we were sick and immoral and doomed to Hell.

Sometimes we made it out of adolescence without slitting our wrists, and we grew up and started looking for each other but we could only find each other in bars, because any other place was too dangerous. And those bars were raided by the police and we were rounded up and thrown in jail and our names printed in newspapers.

We were thrown out of jobs, out of schools, out of the military, out of churches. We were disinherited and shunned from our own families.

Our own bedrooms weren’t safe, according to our government.

When we got sick and died by the thousands we were ignored, and then told that it was all our fault. “God’s punishment,” they called it.  Only when Magic Johnson revealed his HIV-positive status, after thousands and thousands of us had already died, did the media treat AIDS as a legitimate story.

We couldn’t join our friends and partners in their hospital rooms, or at their funerals, because we weren’t considered family. Or we were allowed at the funerals only to see Fred Phelps and his followers show up to console us in our grief with signs that read, “God Hates Fags.”

When we asked for the same rights that everyone else enjoys we were castigated for wanting “special privileges.”  Our fight for the same rights that straight people take for granted was called the “Homosexual Agenda.”

We were blamed for threatening the institution of marriage by people who drunkenly wed in Las Vegas chapels, people who committed adultery and beat their wives and their children and then preached and pointed fingers from pulpits on television every Sunday.

We were the scapegoats and the punching bags for Catholics, Mormons, Muslims, Evangelicals, Fundamentalists, and Born-Again Christians, to name just a few. And our supposed allies couldn’t stand up for us because they might be mistaken for one of us, and that, as everyone knew, was the worst thing you could be.

We were barred from adopting the children of people who weren’t capable of parenting themselves, let alone someone else. We watched as people wrung their hands on television and cried that their children needed to be protected from us, that children needed to be sheltered their whole lives from even realizing that we existed.

Each and every one of us grew up surrounded by images, in magazines and television shows and movies and on every street in every city in the country, of straight people kissing and fucking and holding hands. But when we demanded the right to marry we were “shoving it down their throats.”

We were told by our families not to bring our partners home for the holidays, so we left our partners and flew home and sat around the dining table with people who pretended that we were something we weren’t, and that everything was fine when it wasn’t.

We read in newspapers  that “I-killed-the-faggot-because-he-made-a-pass-at-me” is a legitimate legal defense.

We were allowed to dress up straight men on television, and listen to straight women recount their relationship problems while we nodded sympathetically and told them that their shoes were fabulous. They let us plan their weddings. But the idea of a gay wedding was just too much, too soon.

We were told  that our love for each other was sick and immoral and undeserving of protection. They placed our love in the same category as incest and bestiality.

We were even blamed for Hurricane Katrina.

People who haven’t walked an inch in our shoes told their followers with unwavering conviction that we chose to be gay. That this distinction (this lie) therefore separated us from all of those who fought for their “legitimate” civil rights. That we didn’t even deserve to use the phrase “civil rights.”

We were told, decade after decade, by the political allies that we elected and supported, that we needed to be even more patient than we’d already been, that our time hadn’t come, that Americans weren’t ready for us to have the same rights as everyone else.

So we retreated from the scorn and the violence, and we built little communities, neighborhoods in cities where we could feel some measure of safety and belonging, however fleeting or illusory, where a few of us could feel bold enough to hold our partner’s hand when we walked down the street, in our neighborhoods, just a couple of square miles, here and there, scattered across the country.

And still they came. Over and over people who claimed that they were led by God came into our lives, came into our funerals and our bedrooms and our relationships, called us immoral and disgusting, arrested us, beat us, robbed us, and killed us.

And still they came. After we’d been given the right to marry, after we’d stood in line at City Hall, after we’d baked each other cakes and made cards and bought presents, after we’d taken each other’s photos and stood and witnessed our love for each other while surreptitiously wiping tears from our eyes, after all of that, they still had to come. They came into our private lives, and stripped away our rights.

And Friday night, after we’d lost at the polls, after we watched the entire world celebrate the “dawning of a new day,” after our rights had been eliminated, after we’d crawled back to our neighborhoods and licked our wounds and talked to each other about what we should do next, they came again, into our neighborhood, into the Castro, to try and save our souls.

They were just stupid kids, with the worst sense of timing ever, but they were led by “love,” right? They came into our neighborhood, after we had suffered such a defeat, to “worship and to sing.” How innocent it all sounds.

But why us, why the Castro? They came into our neighborhood because we’re still not good enough, we’re not worthy of respect, we are immoral and wrong and in need of their salvation, and their compassionate, Christian beliefs somehow prevented them from questioning the wisdom of their timing, in such a neighborhood.

And it comes as no surprise that after our backlash, after we’ve chased them out of our neighborhood, after we’ve gathered at their temples, and marched around their churches, after we’ve made public the already-public record of their campaign contributions, they wring their hands and cry to the cameras that we are the intolerant ones, we are the hostile ones, we are the ones denying them their simple human rights.

What’s surprising to me is that we waited so long to chase them out of the Castro.  That we haven’t chased them out a thousand times. What’s surprising to me is how tolerant we’ve been, for so many years.

Let me put it blunty. We’ve taken their abuse, and we’ve taken it some more, and then, just when we thought we’d taken enough, we took some more.

I’ve read on more than one gay blog that our anger is a dangerous emotion, that we shouldn’t act on it, that we should just ignore it. But if a bunch of drag queens hadn’t gotten pissed off and thrown some bricks nearly forty years ago, none of us would even have a gay blog. They’d put up with the scorn and the violence and the police raids for so many years, and something that night put them over the edge. Instead of meekly surrendering to yet another raid, something that night pushed them in a new and exhilarating direction. The first to fight back were the drag queens, hustlers, butch dykes, and street kids, who threw pennies, bottles, and bricks from a nearby construction site. The same types that some of us still want to push to the margins and keep from television cameras.

Just like some of us want to pretend that we can only reach our goals by acting like Ghandi.

The anger of the crowd at Stonewall swelled and turned, over the following weeks, into an urgency for broader activism. Within two years there were gay rights groups in every major American city. We’ve continued their work but grown complacent, and overestimated our so-called assimilation.

But Prop 8 is our flashpoint. For the first time we had a right taken away, one that we had enjoyed and honored for five short months. After 18,000 weddings a simple majority of Californians, preached to by their church elders, persuaded by deceitful commercials funded in part by non-Californians, stripped us of that right.

Lately, the conventional wisdom in the Castro said that the neighborhood was changing, losing its character, its gay essence. Too many straight people were moving in, with their children and their double-wide strollers. And really, wasn’t that to be expected? As we were more widely “accepted,” as we were assimilated into society, our neighborhoods were bound to change. To disappear.

Friday night reminded some of us, at least, how important our neighborhoods still are, and that we all have our flashpoints.

In a perfect world we could walk down the streets of the Castro and pass the preachers with only a glance, and continue on our way, and let them sing and worship and maybe even convert a desperate soul or two. In a perfect world we could all sit down at a table and talk peacefully and reach some diplomatic compromise. We could work with the communities and the religious representatives that have opposed us, and come to a better understanding of each other, and reach our common goals.

I’ve never seen that world, and I never will.

Sometimes it takes anger, along with diplomacy. Sometimes a few drag queens need to throw a few bricks for things to finally change, or for things to at least begin to change.

We are human, with human emotions, and one of those emotions is anger.
And sometimes we need to fight back before others begin to see that maybe we’re stronger than we appear, and maybe they need to back off, and question their methods. We need our anger. We need our outrage. We need to fight back. Our anger could take us farther, in the next few months, than we’ve gone in the last few years.

Most of the time, when we live in the gay ghetto, our oppressors are abstract: a flickering image on a television, a cluster of words in the newspaper. Rarely do we get to see them face-to-face, as some of us did that night in the Castro.

I still wrestle with my conscience. I don’t know what I recommend. I don’t know what, exactly, is the surest road to our goals. There is a part of me, maybe the larger part, that feels only relief that I missed out, the part of me that knows that what happened was ugly and divisive, the part that questions if our backlash served our goals.

But it’s the other part of me that’s writing this, the other part of me that scares myself, the part I want to let loose, if only in words, to give it room to stomp around and fume. The part of me that looks back over the history of civil rights, to search out what role anger played.

That part of me wishes that I had been there, that night in the Castro, to have, for a few minutes at least, real, flesh-and blood examples of our oppressors, to feel the rage ignite within me, and around me, to watch in both surprise and elation my peers shake themselves out of that quiet place of resignation, to watch everyone around me cross the line that we’ve kept ourselves behind for so many decades, despite what the world keeps handing us. For one night, for a few short minutes, to chase our enemies from our home, and watch them flee, flanked by cops in riot gear, until they disappear from view, and we can turn back to each other and celebrate.

Categories: me

Majel Roddenberry’s funeral

January 9, 2009 · 1 Comment

I’m finally getting around to posting about Majel Barrett Roddenberry’s funeral last Sunday morning at Forest Lawn in Burbank.majelprogram2t

Majel Barrett played Nurse Chapel in the original Star Trek, and was the wife of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry.  She was considered the matriarch of Star Trek and she made herself the mother of all the fans. I’ll never forget how she treated me in the 80’s when I used to go to the conventions. She always treated me as someone she was interested in talking to, and I remember when the pilot for Star Trek: The Next Generation was in post production, she said to me “Oh Rich, I so wish you could see what I’ve seen. You’re going to be so exited about it! I’m excited for you!” and she gave me a hug. I’ve never forgotten that, and when she died I really felt a deep sense of loss. It was announced that there would be a public memorial, and so I went.  I thought it was to be just someting for the fans- a video presentation and maybe Rod Roddenberry saying a few words.

majel20memorial20program11

 

 

 service program ~ click to enlarge

The fact that it was being held at Forest Lawn should have tipped me off that it was to be something more.  It was, in fact, her funeral service, with ALL of her family, friends, and past co-workers. It was a veritable who’s who of the Star Trek universe. I can’t describe how ethereal it was to be in the same room, milling around with all of those people, as one of them. Standing next to Nichelle Nichols (Uhura) George Takei (Sulu)and Walter Koenig (Chekov) as Brent Spiner (Data) and Wil Weaton (Wes Crusher) walk by, talking to each other.  Also there was Marina Sirtis (Deanna Troy) Robert Picardo (the Dr. in Voyager), Nana Visitor, Max Grodenchik and Rene Auberjonois from DS9. Rick Berman, J.J. Abrams, John Delancie ( Q), and so so many others.  I learned afterwards that Buzz Aldrin and Neal Armstrong (!!!!!!!) were there, but I didnt recognise them.  If you’re an original series geek, then you’ll remember the episode ‘The Galileo Seven’ – Remember Mr. Boma? He was standing right behind me as we were congregated to enter the church, and in the picture of me below, you can see him walking in behind me. The actor’s name is Don Marshall. He looked so different, I would never have recognised him by sight, but when he spoke, that unmistakable voice was IMMEDIATELY recognised.

boma1

 

 

 

 

 

Don Marshall “Mr. Boma”

majel-memorial-pic

 The service itself was very moving. I sat in the 3rd row, right behind the family. Gene Roddenberry’s 85 year old brother sat right in front of me. Sitting next to me was Joanne Linville (Romulan Commander ‘The Enterprise Incident’,pictured) and nearby was Arlene Martel (T’pring ‘Amok Time’). most of the eulogy was of old friends recounting anecdotes about the incredible lady that was Majel Barrett.

The best story came from one of Gene Roddenberry’s best friends. He said that Majel, a 40 year member of the Bel Aire country club, was upset that there were so many feral cats running around. Majel, a lifelong HUGE animal lover – she had anywhere from 10 to 13 cats at any one time – offered the caddie staff $25 for each cat captured, so she could have them spayed/neutered and returned. The usually canny and hard-to-fool Majel was totally taken in and bested when each and every one of those caddies suddenly showed up with cats they’d found all over west LA – and each of them got their $25 per cat. The guy estimates that they turned in over 100 cats. Meow.

whatarelittlegirlsmadeofhd1271

cap1861

 

 

 

 

 

 

Joanne Linville ~ sat next to me

The most moving part, however, was of course when Rod Roddenberry spoke.
He absolutely devastated me, and I suspect most every on else in the congregation when he related that he grew up bitter towards his mother, with a poor relationship, not understanding her at all.He had come to love her deeply only after coming to grips with his feelings, and realizing that he was, as her son, unable to see beyond her facade of wisecracks and needlings.He never could see her tender side.
Until she got ill, and they communicated.
Man, I doubt if there was a dry eye in the church, but I couldn’t see it beacase I was fallin like to beat niagara myself.  Mr. Roddenberry in front of me was crying .
You know, it took a lot of guts to stand up there and reveal that. A LOT of guts, indeed.
Rod announced that the San Diego Zoo just approached him with the need of a new lion maternity ward, and now, through a generous bequest, there will soon be a new Majel Barret Roddenberry Feline Maternity ward at the zoo. Also he announced that sometime in 2012, Majel and Gene’s ashes will both be launched from a spaceship into outer space.

Afterwards, I spied Nichelle Nichols standing alone and just then George Takei rushed by and she gestured like “hey George!” but he didnt see her – I found that a bit odd, but they were together later, so whatever.

You can go to this link to see many more pictures of the service and reception.

Categories: me