Monday, November 4, 2013

April 14

"I'm afraid someone will accuse me of tainting a platonic situation.
Are you satisfied with the present condition?"

-- subtitles to maudlin pop ballad on Myanmar TV, which followed a brilliant ad for the city of Nay Pyi Taw -- "Come visit our capital". Sung to a bouncy rhythm by a bouncy woman with colored lights chroma-keyed into the background; wavy arms and gyrations, a sort of budget-Bollywood aesthetic.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Travel Sketchbook - Sui Dragon


Detail from a stone bridge balustrade. At the National Museum in Beijing.

Friday, October 25, 2013

New Theme Song - "Motorcar Madness", by Everyone Involved (1969)

New theme song.
http://www.awakeman.co.uk/soul/either-or/motor%20car%20madness.htm


I've travelled the world
and everywhere it's the same
It's the motor car madness
Is driving the people insane
Have people forgotten
that cities were meant for them?
Have people forgotten
that cities were meant for living in?
 
It's the motor car madness
is driving the people insane
It's the motor car sadness
The motor car.

I was once a happy human
Used to love that city heat
Now I'm just a traffic nuisance
Made to cross beneath the street...
While...

There's my brother
My wonderful warm
Car-clad brother
At fifty miles an hour
Well-protected
Unaffected
Fuel-injected
It's all right for him.

It's the motor car madness
is driving the people insane
It's the motor car sadness
The motor car.

A pedestrian is a woman
Made to stand in the rain
A pedestrian is a man
Made to suffer traffic pain.
A pedestrian is a woman
Driven under the ground
A pedestrian is a man
Made to walk the long way round.

It's the motor car madness
is driving the people insane
It's the motor car sadness
The motor car.

A pedestrian is a woman
Without a car round her
A pedestrian is a man
A man without a car
A pedestrian is a woman without
A pedestrian is a man without
A pedestrian is a woman
A pedestrian is a man.

Music by Michael Klein ~ Lyrics by Alan Wakeman
Arrangements by Everyone Involved
All words and music copyright © Arcturus Music Ltd. 1969 & 2012

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Travel Sketchbook






Burly military guy slumbering with his AK on the overnight, windowless train from Yangon (Rangoon) to Mandalay. This guy was across the aisle from our seats, facing our direction. Got nervous whenever he'd rouse himself to slap a mosquito.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Behold

TO THE LEFT is a tablet Maps screen capture
TO THE RIGHT is a laptop Maps screen capture

This is part of Staten Island.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Happy Hour in Bridgeport, CT



Two-dollar Bud draft at the pizza place; plus they got Pepperidge Farm Goldfish crackers in baskets on the bar, right out of a bulk container of Goldfish that looks and pours like a giant milk carton. All the liquor behind the bar is economy size. R asked, “If you were a small person, how would you be able to pour those?” These are hefty jugs. “I’ve never seen bottles that big in a bar before.” The man does a hefty pour for the yapping dads-on-the-loose in here.  He seems like he’s not getting around to us, he’s ignoring us, but he isn’t. He’s there right when we need him, without making a big deal about it, like a good father. He discounts our drinks for no reason.

Vampire Bats (At the Zoo)



All asleep in the corner where the wall of the cage meets the ceiling. Some half-hearted stucco detail suggests “cave” but it’s a cage. The animals are prisoners. Some, like the seemingly friendly toucans, are less put out than others. The toucans sit on the wooden railing that crosses the duck put, right at chest height so you could pet them, if you were an idiot. The two toucans sit side by side and occasionally one of them clacks its great loud beak over the other’s. Their eyes, within their little neon rings, are like little rave-hipsters’ eyes. The eyes are incongruous next to the giant protuberance of beak.

But the vampire bats huddle together upside-down like stressed mice. They make shivering movements, tiny yawns with needle teeth, twitch their oversized delicate ears. They’re living dustbunnies hungry for blood. How are they fed? For the bats there can’t be much pleasure in the process, whatever it is.

Maned Wolf (At the Zoo)


A scary animal from South America. From the age of the strange South American mammals. The last representative of its category of animals, it lopes across its fake pampas. It looks like a wolf in a nightmare: lean, shaggy, with sway back and snaggleteeth. A monster wolf running laps around an unmowed lawn.
When I used to have dreams about animals, I considered them important. I wrote them down, under the heading: ANIMAL DREAMS. I can remember being the person who considered these meaningful enough to record, but I can’t remember how that person felt about the list, or about the self-assigned task. The meaning of this documentation has been lost. Lost and now given over to a weird private archaeological investigation. Like lots of junk, lots of stuff I’ve either found or remember doing but can’t find or don’t care about finding.

Orwell Quote



“For minutes at a time this kind of thing would be running through my head: ‘He pushed the door open and entered the room. A yellow beam of sunlight, filtering through the muslin curtains, slanted on to the table, where a match-box, half-open, lay beside the inkpot. With his right hand in his pocket he moved across to the window. Down in the street a tortoiseshell cat was chasing a dead leaf’, etc. etc.”

-- Orwell describes a youthful compulsion in "Why I Write”

Something I feel like I've written thousands of times

(from a text message, 8-22)

"I think u have part of the camera charger there? The usb half, i found the half that plugs into wall w usb port at end"

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Prairie Dog (At the Zoo)



A special habitat I wanted to investigate because of “My Antonia,” in which observation of the surface life of prairie dogs – an exotic species that must be somewhat new to the world – underlines the great mystery of these animals’ underground cities, called “towns”, about which I guess nothing was known. Now we know all about them, for all the good it does us and them, and we can walk around these “towns” and stick our heads up, or our childrens’ heads up, in the Plexiglas bubbles and pretend we are part of the exhibit. (I didn’t capitalize Plexiglas: the machine does.)
 
            The prairie dogs rear up and stand erect and dramatically alert, like tuning forks, each one pointing in a different direction. There are the “spotters”, a very high proportion of the total population, and then there are the others, who mill around, feed, and then pop up suddenly and become still, spotters. Are they less likely to attract predators if they stand there like that? They are precise little machines, the way they rear up and hold the pose. Modern dance. Could some hawk actually swoop down and pick them off? The concrete tunnel under their enclosure makes you feel like a child, confined in a magic world with blind turns. Then you’re out of there before you know it. What are you supposed to learn by standing up in the Plexiglas tube, inside a ring of alert prairie dogs? Can you scan the horizon with them? 

Friday, July 12, 2013

Monday, May 13, 2013

It was the best of times etc.

Two front-page headlines from today's Bridgeport paper:

  • "DOWNTOWN REBIRTH:  City Officials, Developers Tout Plans for Economic Renaissance"
  • "LOCAL NEWS: Bridgeport  Man Dies in a Hail of Gunfire"

Friday, April 12, 2013

Word to Jello Biafra:
Right Guard will not help you here.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Note

Throwing away all the scraps of paper in the apartment, ahead of a frenzied moving-out.

List of 'thematic angles' of something I scribbled down to try to begin writing about China:

  • 18th PARTY CONGRESS
  • POLLUTION
  • TRADE WARS AND ELECTION
  • CRACKDOWN ON LAOWEI
  • FOOD SAFETY
  • CROWDING + ALIENATION
  • NOUVEAU RICHE + ENGINEERED CONSUMERISM
  • URBAN TRANSFORMATION
  • MIND CONTROL: LIVING UNDER AUTOCRACY
  • CHEAP PAPER, FOOD