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Neurotica

  • I only sleep six hours a night. Is that okay? I know Thomas Jefferson supposedly slept only four, but that just seems wrong. For a lot of reasons. Not to mention bad for you.
  • I worry about the boyfriend and the hounds. Constantly. What if, what if, what if, and so on. I know Jonno returns the favor, but what about the dogs? Do dogs worry? Have they got my back?
  • I’m happy with my beard, but does it make me look too scary? I know I’m no oil painting to begin with. And it’s not like I want a job a Disney, where they don’t allow facial hair at all, despite being adored by thousands upon thousands of circuit bears. But can I keep the beard and not have couples cross the street when they see me ambling toward them late at night? Or do I care? I spent too much on my beard kits to care!
  • I have a lot of domains registered in my name. Am I ever going to get around to doing anything with them? I feel like I’ve dropped the ball. Am I lazy? Or just a prospector?
  • I have stuff in boxes in the attic that really ought to be thrown away. The boxes haven’t been opened in years. They’re cardboard boxes. Mice have probably destroyed them anyway. I think my diplomas are up there somewhere. I hate having stuff, but it’s a necessary evil. Do I have too much stuff? I feel like I have less than some of my friends, and I’ve been trying to get rid of a lot of it, especially since the storm. I want to be portable. But do I have too much?
  • I’ve built 90% of my purchasing decisions around the hounds. And Jonno too, but that’s different. Will this blanket hold dog hair? Will Tania be prone to chew on this coffee table? Is this what having a kid is like?
  • I wish some people were dead. Not a lot. Just a couple, really. But I worry that they’d end up as martyrs and ruin everything. Is that wrong?
  • I try to count calories, and I do okay ’till mid-afternoon, and then everything goes downhill. Am I doomed to heart failure? Or something worse? I know they say you should only eat until you’re 80% full, but I just can’t stop myself.
  • I’m trying to learn PHP. Really I am. But I just can’t stay interested. Is it too late for me? Am I forever limited to HTML and CSS?
  • I play a lot of videogames for someone my age. Am I compensating? Or avoiding something? Or is it okay? I like videogames. I’ve played them for most of my life. Is there a time to stop?
  • I’m so out of the loop as far as art and literature are concerned. I can fake my way through the art stuff, but the lit world has left me in the dust. Who are these novelists anyway? Can I be a full-time resident of the 21st century and be content with a bookshelf that stops at 1938?
  • I feel like I’m a total fraud when it comes to theatre. We put on good shows, and people seem to like us, but I don’t always know what I’m doing. Is that where my “artistic impulses” are kicking in, or am I just lucky?
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Dear History Channel:

What the hell are you doing?

I mean, you’re the freaking HISTORY CHANNEL fer chrissakes. Okay, I admit, your target demographic may be a little more manly, a little more likely to own multiple assault weapons, a little more prone to compensate for a small penis. So maybe you need to punch up your junk, condensing the Civil War into something like The 10 Most Awesomely Bloody Bayonet Wounds of Gettysburg. That’s fine.

But what the bejesus is Life After People? Did some stoner on your staff see that Will Smith thing and think, “Aw, dude! Let’s churn out a whole movie like that!” Weak. It’s not history, it’s an exercise in Photoshop. A half-assed exercise in Photoshop, even. Put it in a low-rent biennial somewhere in the Ukraine. Or better yet, give it to Animal Planet.

Your ceaseless pandering is making me very angry. A channel with an online presence as austere as History.com ought to have a little sense of pride.

Your history-minded and ever-more crotchety friend,

Richard

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Lafcadio revered at the Krewe du Vieux

My favorite handout from last night’s Krewe du Vieux parade. It’s from one of the subkrewes, the Krewe of PAN, which chose to revere a slightly obscure but magnificent writer known for his quotability. Case in point:

Times are not good here. The city is crumbling into ashes. It has been buried under a lava flood of taxes and frauds and maladministrations so that it has become only a study for archaeologists. …But it is better to live here in sackcloth and ashes, than to own the whole state of Ohio. –Lafcadio Hearn, 1879

P.S. Note the gilded bagel from Krewe du Jieux in the background–my first ever! Sadly, I didn’t get it on my own; it was procured on my behalf by someone with much bigger tits. But whatevs. I never claimed to have it all..

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Another thing I missed

Deep in the bowels of the New York Times website, a queen has been stirring. For nearly a week, Francesco Vezzoli (perhaps best known for his stunning, over-the-top trailer for a remake of Caligula, which will, alas, never be remade) has been laboring in the gay salt mines, dredging up reminiscences and videos featuring the divas of his childhood.

On the downside, almost no one seems to have noticed Francesco’s work. On the upside, among his top divas we find one of my own: Monica Vitti. If I had my druthers, I’d curl up right here on our well-worn sofa, which sits dangerously close to our 1940s-era gas space heater, and reacquaint myself with Ms. Vitti’s oeuvre. Unfortunately, I have to run out in this crappy weather to teach a class on PowerPoint (yes, freaking PowerPoint). And you thought you had it bad.

Unrelated note: If you’re in South Carolina, get out and vote Mike goddamn Huckabee outta town.

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Speaking of Giant Vaginas…

Krewe du Vieux–which has been known to feature oversized organs of many varieties–rolls this Saturday. As soon as I can wrap my head around the fact that 12th Night was less than two weeks ago and we’re already having parades, I’m going to start cleaning for our wee house party. If any of y’all are in the Marigny for the festivities, drop in before or after for a cup of grog. Or mead. Or ale. (What can I say? I’m in a medieval mood this morning.)

Manohla Dargis–who has surely been called by many euphemisms for “giant vagina” over the years–just poked a hole in my hopes for Cloverfield. I mean, it’s not like I ultimately choose to attend the cinema based on a few well-crafted words from a snarky, overpaid, underappreciated critic, but the review was fairly brutal–especially for a paper that claims to stay above the fray. Among girlfriend’s choicer excerpts:

  • [T]he film is too dumb to offend anything except your intelligence, and the monster does cut a satisfying swath through the cast, so your only complaint may be, What took it so long? (A little fifth-grade, but okay.)

  • The movie moves relatively fast, though it’s nowhere near as economical as its colossus, whose thunderous shrieks and fiery projectiles bring a downtown loft party to a merciful, abrupt end. (Not bad, but I’ve seen better.)

  • But then there’s this great description of the cast: Smart as Tater Tots and just as differentiated…

Meee-yow, pussycat.

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New Orleans: Vagina Capital of America!

…On April 12, “The Vagina Monologues,” which has become a worldwide phenomenon, launching the V-Day project to end violence against women, will play the 17,000-seat New Orleans Arena with a cast scheduled to include Jane Fonda, Glenn Close, Jennifer Hudson, Ellen DeGeneres, Charmaine Neville, Salma Hayek, Rosario Dawson, Ashley Judd, Julia Stiles, Marisa Tomei and Oprah Winfrey, for whom Ensler is writing a new monologue.

April 11 and 12 will find the Louisiana Superdome interior turned into a pink and red vagina — “with a big vagina entrance,” Ensler said — as a setting for performance events, parties, parades, workshops, wellness and education programs, speakers, even spa treatments, which will be free to residents of New Orleans and the Gulf South. (Men are excluded only from the spa.)

For those two days, New Orleans will be “the Vagina Capital of America,” Ensler said. “We’re coming here to say that we should celebrate New Orleans, cherish it, protect it, just as we do our vaginas, and make sure it goes on and on.”

Times-Picayune

You know, of course, that that “news” is weeks old. When I’ve mentioned it to my friends, they’ve all said, “Oh yeah. I already have tickets.”

Honestly, how do I miss out on things like this?

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If you’re the sort of person who spends a lot of time awake–say, three hours a day or more–you’ve probably had one of those “okay, what’s next?” moments. Like in the mid 90s: remember palazzo pants? Remember how you first thought they were all cute and edgified, and then your dad’s girlfriend, Nadine, started wearing them, and you were all, like, “Oh, okay, time for something new”? Remember that?

Well, that’s kinda the feeling I’ve got these days.

Reality television? Next!

Skinny jeans? Next!

Faux-naive TV reporters pretending to be shocked as they cover the “latest” trend in fitness: pole dance workouts (which is, coincidentally, what’s on my TV right now)? Freaking next please, before I put on my robe and slippers, warm up the car, drive down to the station, and bitch-slap both the reporter and that Denise Austin clone-whore with a goddamn boom mike!

I’m bored, people. Must I be responsible for my own amusement? Can’t someone else do it for a change? The worlds of media, fashion, design, music, film–they’ve all let me down, they’ve all disappointed me. Everyone’s saying that even Gawker can’t do it anymore. And when the New York Times tries to do it alone, they either fail miserably, or their dullard readership doesn’t know what to do with it. Or, more likely, both.*

So it’s up to you, people: entertain me! Quick, before I finish that gay-tastic Dorothy Draper book and things really start to go downhill.

* Frank Rich excluded. You’ll always be my snarky little snuggle bear, Frankie.

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As I was saying:

I suppose I could’ve just rung up Mr. __________, but there were a lot of variables to consider. Would he even remember Callie? Or that she was pregnant when they parted ways? How would I persuade him to admit that he was my father? Hell, how would I even introduce myself? “Hey there, it’s me, your bastard son! Happy holidays!”

No, an out-of-the-blue phone call to my long-lost potential bio-dad seemed imprudent, so I did the only sensible thing I could: I let someone else do the dirty work. I forwarded the email and the link to Callie and waited for her to call. (She’s a very responsible woman, so I knew it wouldn’t take long.)

It didn’t. In less than an hour, she called, fresh from a few rounds of web-searching for info on the mystery man. Mr. _________, as it turned out, had several children and an estranged wife who was recently deceased. That last bit was oddly good to hear–only because when I tried to imagine all this from _________’s perspective, I presumed the hardest part would be telling his wife. “So, how was your day, honey? …Uh-huh. …Well, that sounds good. By the way, did I mention I got my college girlfriend pregnant? Because–funny story–the kid called me today. Could you pass the baba ghanoush?”

Still, I was excited, and so was Callie. Like me, she’s a born researcher, and this news gave her the opportunity not only to use her investigative skills, but also, more profoundly, to fill in a missing chapter from her own life. I don’t mean to imply that Callie still carried a torch for Mr. _________, or that she wanted to rekindle any long-ago flame, but to reconnect with the man who fathered your first child…. I mean, that’s kind of a big thing to check off your to-do list.

But even more than the thrill of research and rediscovery, Callie was excited about a very strange coincidence: that day, December 7, was the very day I’d been conceived 40 years before. Exhibiting memory skills that, alas, I didn’t inherit, she recalled that the one and only time she and _________ did the deed was on Pearl Harbor Day. (Which begged the question: what made that particular Pearl Harbor Day memorable? Was there a besotted Pearl Harbor Day party that led to my conception?) So in keeping with the general weirdness surrounding my adoption saga, I’d found my father exactly four decades after I became more than just a sparkle in his eye. Assuming, or course, that this was the right guy.

I asked Callie how she thought I should proceed, hoping all the while that she’d volunteer to make the first call. I mean, at least she knew the guy, once upon a time. Maybe she could just play it off like she found him by accident and called to say “hi”. Worst case scenario, they’d talk about the weather for a few minutes, then go their separate ways. Whether Callie sensed my unease or whether she was just eager to speak to him, she offered. She said she’d call me back as soon as she was done.

I went back to work, and before I knew it, an hour had passed. Then two. Finally, just as I was about to run out to lunch, she rang. She’d been on the phone with him the whole time.

As I suspected, at first Mr. _____________ was reluctant to admit that he was the right guy. Callie played it cool, calling under the pretense of gathering info for an alumni database, but he didn’t bite. Just before he hung up on her, though, she must’ve said something that broke the ice, something that made her identity and her intent clear. After that, it was gab, gab, gab.

She said he was warm and funny and very talkative, despite his initial reticence. He’d lived through a lot but still bore similarities to the man she’d known in college. He’d mentioned that he was pretty conservative, and he’d asked if I was married. Callie said no, and he asked if I was gay. She said yes, and the subject was dropped…. That didn’t sound especially good, but at least he knew.

Most importantly, Callie said that Mr. __________ was interested in chatting with me, but that he wanted me to call at a specific time so he could speak freely. (The Yellow Pages listing only had his business line, and he didn’t offer a home or cell number.) I had a long list of things to do that afternoon that I couldn’t avoid, so I called and arranged for a chat the next morning. He rang me at 11am on the dot.

We talked for over an hour that morning. He told me some harrowing stories about living through the wars in Lebanon, fearing for his life, escaping in the middle of the night to Cyprus, going back to Beirut and trying to raise a family, and eventually moving to the states. I told him about my life growing up and my life now. I sent him some photos to look over, which he seemed to enjoy, but it’s hard to tell. We’re still kind of feeling each other out.

Not surprisingly, my chats with ____________ have been very different from the first ones I had with Callie. She was overjoyed when I contacted her; she’d been waiting for that moment for years. We had a lot in common–including many friends in New Orleans–and she and my half-sister and I got along like a house on fire, right from the start.

With Mr. ________, it’s slower going, much more cautious. I mean, hell, he’s only known about me for a couple of weeks. In forty years, I don’t think he’d thought of me at all, and he certainly wasn’t anticipating the moment of contact. He’s very different from me, raised in a different culture, with a large family who don’t even know I exist. I can tell we differ in our political and social views–but then, I have the same problem with my adoptive family, and we somehow manage to avoid killing one another at Christmas. So I’m guessing that Mr. ___________ and I will gradually get through it.

I think things would be easier if I weren’t gay. ____________ seems fairly religious (Christian, fyi), and when I bring up Jonno in coversation, the subject changes pretty quickly–though that might be my own doing, to avoid making him uncomfortable. Still, his children sound pretty cool and laid back, and they get along with him, so he can’t be a total ogre. In fact, I have to agree with Callie: he’s a very warm, inquisitive, and talkative man.

Bottom line: Mr. ___________ has clearly indicated that he wants to keep talking. And in our last chat, (we’ve had three now), he even mentioned a possible meeting in the not-too-distant future. So it may not be as easy and immediate and open as my relationship with Callie, but it’s happening. And I’m happy.

Stay tuned….