The Next War

Another day, another exclamation-loaded flyer from Wally at Wally’s Intimida – home of the Sherpa Sport Utility Vehicle.

September is “Side With Sherpa” Month at Wally’s Intimida!

Believe it or not, Fall is just a few weeks away. And with Fall comes a change in the weather, but if the events of recent weeks are any guide, that means we’ll simply trade one violent extreme for another!

We’ve seen already seen Drought. Earthquakes. And Hurricanes! All bad!

Michele Bachmann thinks God is sending these calamities to get us to think more like she does. She’s entitled to her opinion, but that sounds a little self-important to me. If God really generates these storms to change our thinking, He’s clearly saying we should all stop being so stingy and buy a new Sherpa!

The Sherpa - It's a Butte!

Why? Only a Sherpa is big enough to withstand the worst that Nature can throw at us. And nature seems intent on emptying the arsenal! The Sherpa can straddle the largest geological fault. It can lean into the heaviest hurricane-force wind. And with 20 cup holders, there’s no reason to worry about drought, as long as you’ve got an extra bendy straw!

Yes, we’re under assault by nature! The Earth is trying to kill us! So why pretend everything is OK by putting yourself in a tiny “green” car that sacrifices comfort to placate the enemy? God is upping the ante and telling us it’s “on” in the Man vs. Environment Contest.

Yes, the Sherpa drinks gas. Yes, the Sherpa exhales carbon. Yes, the Sherpa drips oil. That’s what cars are supposed to do. It’s cultural! The Sherpa is Proud to be an Auto-American, unabashedly hostile to Air, Water and the Earth itself.

A Peak At Your New Sherpa!

Think about the happy times you’ve spent in nature, and think about the happy times you’ve spent in your car. Who wins? Be honest!

So it’s time to choose sides! You can cower while you’re crammed into your electric roller skate, if that’s what makes you feel secure. Or you can Sit Tall during “Side With Sherpa” Month, perched atop the World’s Largest Car!

Climb up and Hunker Down in a new Sherpa from Intimida from Wally’s!
It’s a Mighty Big Car!

It looks like Wally is going with the militant revolutionary class warfare script for his Fall sales pitch. Appealing to the base, or laying down the law?

When have you had to choose sides?

A Fondness for Fellows With Bellows

Today’s guest post is by Anna.

I will come clean – I like accordion music. I am even, sort of, a groupie. For a handful of seasons, my best friend and I have bought orchestra tickets for a few concerts. An integral part of the evening out is the accordion player in the skyway by Orchestra Hall. He’s always there, upturned hat on top of his case, slightly unkempt hair wrestled back into a ponytail, a smile lighting up his face. Once I happened to find him across from the Ordway on an opera night – walked through Rice Park, out of my way, just so I could put a little cash in his hat (Accordion Groupie behavior, I realized).

The first time I heard the accordion guy, it was a lovely surprise to hear a bit of a musical prelude on the way in to the hall from the parking ramp. Fairly quickly it became part of the evening’s routine to ensure my friend and I had a few singles ready for the accordion player. When one of us is without singles, we divvy up what we have so that we can each put something in the hat. He plays everything from French café music to opera to folk tunes. I have threatened to waltz my pal across the skyway; I have danced a bit on my own. My mother upped the ante one evening when she and I went to the orchestra and she admitted, while I was digging for ones, to singing along with the accordion guy when she was out with friends. (“He was playing ‘Nidälven’, I had to sing along…” Can’t fault her logic, really.)

The skyway accordion guy is as much a part of the concert experience as seeing the orchestra itself – he is a standard character in my Orchestra Night script, and I cannot imagine a concert without him (though once he was only there after the show…he confessed, somewhat sheepishly, that he had been on a date). He is one of a cast of thousands in my daily world; more than a mere walk on role, and still less than a supporting character. There have been others like him – characters in my world that I do not know, or know well, but who enrich the tapestry of my days: Taylor the Worm Man who rode the #3 bus with his plastic bucket, fishing gear and philosophies, departing with a nod and a reminder of his memorable name; the woman who came into the restaurant where I worked one summer who always wore a big pin with a picture of Barbara Streisand, ordered food that had never been on the menu, and refused to be served by the waitress with the white streak in her hair; the older fellow who I often see out for an afternoon walk when I drive home from work, always chewing on an unlit, but well used, pipe. Without this changing cast of background characters, life would have less texture, less color, less life. And no accordion accompaniment.

Who are the walk-on and supporting characters in your world?

With Smuckers It Has To Be Glue

Today’s poetic guest post is by Clyde.

This morning I had some orange marmalade,
Which I spread on my toast with a kitchen blade.
With my tea it was indeed quite grand,
But then some stuck to my dominant hand.

So I put the plate down on the table;
To let go of it I was barely quite able.
I felt some hanging on the tip of my chin;
On the rug if it dropped would be a great sin.

So I wiped it off with the tail of my shirt,
Which I threw in the laundry to be rid of the dirt.
But some was stuck in my scraggly old beard,
Which to tell you the truth really felt weird.

I went to the closet for something to wear,
But of the handle I did not take care.
And to the hanger it transferred with ease;
Of none of this my wife would be pleased.

So I went to the bathroom to sputter and fume,
Still doing battle with my marmalade doom.
The soap dispenser was empty of course.
Now things could only get worse.

Soon it was on dispenser and soap jug,
The vanity door my hand gave a tug.
I should have gone then to take a long shower,
But control of the stuff seemed still in my power.

I washed and I scrubbed, even the tap.
Even under my ring was some of the crap.
I retraced my steps washing as I went,
Of places I had touched I had hardly a hint.

I did the very best that I could,
But find some I knew my wife would.
Plate, jar, and toast I threw in the trash;
By then such an act did not seem rash.

Back to my office I went to relax,
After trying to trace my gelatinous tracks.
“Of my kingdom,” I thought, “I will again be the lord.”
But some had dropped on my computer keyboard.

I troed to wope it off with some poper towels,
Bot now I cen type only two of the vowels.

When have you fought a long or losing battle with a thing?

Exotic Animal Sighting

Today’s guest post was provided by a correspondent who wishes his/her identity, gender and species to remain confidential, due to the usual scorn that accompanies such reports.

THE CORNUCOPIA BEE

August 27 2011

Cornelia Copacetic
Gossip Columnist

Calls came pouring in to the Cornucopia Bee, as well as the Bayfield County, Wisconsin Sheriff’s Office reporting sightings of a group of baboons roaming the Bayfield Area Peninsula over the weekend. Five adult baboons and one small dog were reported at a cabin on Roman’s Point on the South Shore of Lake Superior, the Big Top Chautauqua near Bayfield Thursday evening, and the Village Inn in Cornucopia Friday morning. Sightings of groups of 2 and 3 baboons and the dog were reported at area trails, beaches and shops, as well.

Although all the callers noted that the baboons were very odd, they were not destructive to people or place and simply seemed interested in scenery, as well as sites of interest in the area. The small dog seemed particularly interested in one baboon, but our research regarding interspecies attachments have shed no light on this phenomenon. Callers did note that these great apes consumed great quantities of food, beer, wine and coffee, but that as long as they were supplied with the above named items they were placid and chatty.

Spies outside the Cornucopia cabin reported hearing singing, conversations about books, authors, music, baboon children, relatives, area history, and baboon divorces. Food also seemed to be of great importance to the apes. While no actual baboons were captured or photographed, the visitors pictured below confirmed the sightings and claimed they were under the impression that such creatures were plentiful in the region.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

L to R; Linda, Steve, tim, Krista, Jacque

Dear Bee Readers, should you sight baboons on the peninsula again, please give Cornelia a call first, then call the Sheriff should that be needed. As far as we know baboons are not native to the peninsula. Other speculation did reach my ears, however, that this may have been a group of Big Foot (or would that be feet?) invading our fair village.

If you saw Bigfoot (or Nessie or a Flying Saucer), would you report it, or keep mum to preserve your reputation?

Ask Dr. Babooner

Dear Dr. Babooner,

My brother, his wife and their two snotty kids are coming to stay with us for the weekend and maybe longer – refugees from their home in lower Manhattan.

They never miss an opportunity to tell us how wonderful and cosmopolitan it is to live in the heart of one of the world’s biggest cities, about all the restaurants they have down there, the transit, the music, the pulse and the pace and the privileges of having everything close at hand.

Wherever we like to go, they’ve been someplace nicer. Whatever we prefer to eat, they’re used to something better. However we decide to entertain ourselves, they’ve seen, heard or done something more interesting.

But now they and at least 369,999 others have been ordered to evacuate from low-lying areas of New York City. The transit system will shut down, and they’re coming to live with us in New Jersey.

Oh, and by the way, the storm is coming here too.

They say the system is so massive and full of moisture that the greatest danger will be from flooding. And it is possible that the wind will push over trees that can’t stand upright in the sodden ground, taking down power lines and causing widespread blackouts.

What’s worse, all the major league games have been cancelled.

Great. My brother’s family in the house, and we can’t even ignore each other by watching sports on TV. I’ll have to sit there and see their ugly mugs in high-def AND 3-D!

Dr. Babooner, I know I don’t have a choice because they’re family and they’ve been forced out of their home, but how can I survive the triple stresses of these obnoxious visitors, a hurricane AND a blackout?

Storm Victim

First off, Dr. Babooner doesn’t appreciate “ugly mug” references. Take a good look at Dr. Babooner herself! I’ve made my portrait unusually large today to mirror the size and intensity of Hurricane Irene. I believe you can grow to love any face, given time and a positive attitude. And a positive attitude is certainly lacking in this scenario. Storm Victim, you should try to look on the bright side of all the disruption, damage and despair that is about to descend on your extended family. Fallen trees and power outages are permanent memory-makers! Our typical day-to-day dealings quickly fade into the background and are eventually forgotten. Even people who are accustomed to a higher-than-usual lifestyle come to find the luxurious details of their lives rather dreary. By contrast, the weekend you are about to spend, staring at your brother and his family in the dim candlelight as an 80-mile per hour wind tries to tear the roof off your house, is one that you’ll never forget. Enhance the memories by creating keepsakes. Plan an art project everyone can work on – something that involves torn chunks of asphalt shingles, ceiling insulation and wax drippings!

But that’s just one opinion. What do YOU think, Dr. Babooner?

Goodnight Irene

It’s odd to see news about New York City preparing for a possible direct hit by Hurricane Irene. Even though the chances are still slim at this point, it takes time to batten down so many glittering hatches, so New Yorkers are taking the prudent course by calling off concerts, moving up the timing of sporting events and even preparing to shut down the transit system.

In Washington, they’ve regretfully cancelled the dedication of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial. Harry Johnson, the president of the foundation that built the memorial, spoke of disappointment and resignation. The dedication won’t happen on the anniversary of the “I Have a Dream Speech”, but there will be other opportunities to celebrate.

“The memorial is going to be there forever,” he said.

And Hurricane Irene will come and go. The sooner it goes, the better. Here’s a famous old song to send it on its way.

Favorite lullaby?

If A Rocket Falls in the Forest …

… I’m sure it still makes a plenty big sound.

The Russians launched an unmanned rocket loaded with several tons of supplies bound for the International Space Station earlier this week and while it got off to a good start, the delivery faltered and the mission fell back to Earth.

News reports explain that this event is cause for serious concern now that Russian boosters are the only reliable method we have for getting to the space station. The shutting down of the U.S. Space Shuttle program means the next American in space will have to get there atop a rocket similar to the one that just had an unplanned landing in Siberia. No doubt NASA’s decision makers are looking at this very closely. But before we point fingers, let’s remember that our own space program has suffered several genuine disasters that involved tragic losses, and yet we sent good people back up in what was basically the same equipment.

This recent Russian space failure resulted in no loss of life, so far as we know. But there were several intriguing line near the end of the article which forces me to hedge …

The rocket and Progress ship crashed in the dense Siberian forest. The Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations said rocket debris landed in three separate areas of the Altai region in southern Siberia, which borders Mongolia.

The regional governor, Yuri Antaradonov, said the police had cautioned people to stay clear of the wreckage, as it could be contaminated with toxic fuel. His only concern, he said, was that some people may have been camped in the forest at the time of the crash because “it is the season of collecting pine nuts” in that part of Siberia.

Forget the East Coast surprise Earthquake and the looming menace of Hurricane Irene. What if you were out in the beautifully dense Siberian forest collecting pine nuts when you noticed your reindeer was gazing up at a rapidly growing, rumbling speck in the August sky?

Does this mean pine nuts are going to be even MORE expensive?

What is the most surprising thing you’ve seen overhead?

Innie v. Outie

Today’s guest post is by Steve Grooms.

It is bizarre to remember the shame I used to feel about being an oddball. In my youth I thought of myself as an alien plunked down among normal people. My life was an elaborate ruse, me trying to imitate the look and behavior of normal people, trying to sneak by without being discovered.

You might wonder what quality in me convinced me that I was so weird. My deep secret was shhhh! that I was a “daydreamer!”

The word referred to a person who had something like a non-stop flow of stories in his head. Other kids would be sitting beside me in school, frowning with concentration as they confronted the multiplication table, while just a few feet away I was playing a sort of movie in my head in which I was fighting Communists. I couldn’t guess what was going on in the heads of other kids, but I was sure they weren’t thinking strange and inappropriate thoughts like I was.

When I recall them, the stories I used to find so compelling now seem embarrassingly conventional. In a typical story I might dive in front of a hurtling automobile to push some cute girl to safety. She would live but I would die, my head crunched on the grill of a Studebaker. My dying would let everyone in town contemplate how badly they had misunderestimated me. In my script there would be an older cop with a deeply wrinkled face who would observe: “Susie owes her life to Steve’s courage.” (Then—for the life of me I don’t know why—the cop would add, “The poor lad obviously didn’t know how this day would turn out, or he would have worn fresh underwear.”)

I might as well mention my favorite daydream in my teen years. It had me and Annette Funicello up in a tiny pontoon plane deep in the wilderness of Alaska. Uh oh! The engine would crap out, causing us to crash land on some unnamed lake. Annette and I would be unscarred, but all the adults died (ha! that eliminates all those pesky would-be chaperones!). In my fantasy I would have plenty of time to find out if Annette might be a bit frisky if I could talk her out of her mouse ears. And if not, I’d still enjoy the best fishing of my life until we were rescued. This was a fantasy with a built-in backup plan.

Because I was a daydreamer, I saw myself as an outsider. I wasn’t part of the school social culture like one of the popular kids who was a musician or debater or even one of the unsocialized dweebs in flannel shirts who ran the school projectors. I wasn’t a musclebound football player who strutted school corridors with a cheerleader draped on each arm. I was just me, a shy goofball with too much imagination. My image of myself was that of a lonely kid standing in some outer ring, staring wistfully in at kids in the middle of things, all those kids who enjoyed a degree of popularity I could only experience in fantasy.

Memories of this have come back to me recently, along with the stunning perception that many or most of the kids I admired in school also saw themselves as outsiders. Some of those kids were outsiders (in their own eyes) because they lived on farms and took a bus to school. Some were outsiders because they were tall or short. Some came from families struggling to maintain a lower middle class life standard. The Greek and Italian kids fought a subtle racism that most of the town would have denied existed. Some kids were just too damn bright for their own good. Our town was so lily white that Jewish families had to drive 30 miles to Des Moines to attend synagogue, and I know the kids felt like outsiders because of that.

I’ve been reflecting on the consequences of seeing one’s self as an outsider. The girl who was too Greek to be American and too American to be Greek became, in time, a sophisticated observer of both societies. The boy whose intelligence got him tagged as “an egghead” learned to appreciate the irony of the way intellectually limited kids so often taunted smart kids. Most outsiders stopped feeling freakish when they found people like themselves in college and they then could stop judging themselves by the narrow standards of high school.

Now I am amused to note that almost every close friend is a former “outsider” whose sense of life was enriched by loneliness and longing. I harbor no resentments toward kids who had it all their way in high school. They had the confidence and discipline to do difficult things when they were young. I don’t hold it against them that they got their act together a decade or so earlier than I did.

It is probably a good thing that so many youngsters see themselves as outsiders, for their ranks give us our writers, social critics and standup comedians. And it is surely a good thing some kids were insiders, too. They acquired leadership experience early in life, experience that is often difficult for a former outsider to learn. Maybe a healthy, integrated, fully functioning society requires the creative efforts of the naturally confident as well as those who felt condemned to a marginal life on the fringe.

Were you an innie or an outie or maybe something else? What has that meant in your life?

R.I.P. Jerry Leiber

The lyrical half of the legendary songwriting team Leiber and Stoller, Jerry Leiber passed away yesterday in Los Angeles at the age of 78.

What a shame, but what a great life he had, doing work he loved with his friend (and sometimes adversary).

Leiber was the lyricist, but he and Stoller worked as a team, sometimes quite quickly. Here’s a great exchange from a 1990 Rolling Stone interview:

Leiber: “Hound Dog” took like twelve minutes. That’s not a complicated piece of work. But the rhyme scheme was difficult. Also the metric structure of the music was not easy. “Kansas City” was maybe eight minutes, if that. Writing the early blues was spontaneous. You can hear the energy in the work.

Stoller: In the early days we’d go back and forth note for note, syllable for syllable, word for word in the process of creating.

Like telepathy?

Leiber: We’re a unit. The instincts are very closely aligned. I could write, “Take out the papers and the trash” [“Yakety Yak,” by the Coasters], and he’ll come up with “Or you don’t get no spendin’ cash.”

Everybody has a favorite Leiber and Stoller song, maybe several. There will be a lot of attention placed on “Hound Dog” and the work they did with Elvis, but my favorite from the L & S oeuvre is this one.

Here’s what Jerry Leiber said when asked what makes “Stand By Me” so appealing.

“It’s the bass pattern. There are lots of great songs. But that is an insidious piece of work. It can put a hole through your head. It’s not a great song. It’s a nice song. But it’s a great record.”

Here’s another favorite – the first act ending sequence from the Leiber & Stoller musical, “Smokey Joe’s Cafe’.” Simplicity and humor make Leiber’s lyrics stand out.

Song lists and accolades are everywhere today. What’s your favorite Leiber and Stoller song?

Ask Dr. Babooner

Dear Dr. Babooner,

Yesterday my mom told me she was taking me out for ice cream.

I got kind of excited about that but instead of going to Jake’s we wound up at some thing in a parking lot where all these geeky people were standing around talking and waiting in line to meet this one guy who looked like he just walked out of a magazine picture.

Somebody said he’s the Governor of Texas and I thought ‘What’s he doing here in New Hampshire?’ I know from school that Texas is a pretty big state, so you’d think whoever was Governor of it would have to be watching it pretty much all the time or he’d miss something.

Anyway, my mom told me we were going to wait in line and meet this guy no matter how long it took, and I said, ‘What about my ice cream?’

And she said I would get my ice cream after I talked to him and asked him how old the Earth is.

Beats me why she wanted me to ask the Governor of Texas how old the Earth is. What I learned in school is that people from Texas don’t care about much that isn’t all about Texas, and last time I heard, most of the Earth wasn’t, so why would HE know how old it is?

I don’t really care how old the Earth is either. But I do care about ice cream, so I said I would do it if it meant I could have a waffle cone.

And then she said if I asked about Evolution I could have a slice of cake also! Man! What sweet deal!
Or so I thought! But you’ll see in the video that I didn’t even get to ask that question.

With mom feeding questions into my ear like that, it got to be real hard to concentrate on what was going on around me. I got confused and didn’t even ask him why he didn’t believe in science like mom told me to. And then she said we weren’t going for ice cream ’cause I hadn’t earned it!

Dr. Babooner, is it fair to get punished like that for not asking questions that weren’t even your questions to begin with? I hear all those big TV anchors have something in their ear where somebody is always talking to them, and if this is what it’s like, I guess I don’t want to be Brian Williams or Wolf Blitzer anymore. It’s just too tough to concentrate! If I had been allowed to ask what I wanted, I would have asked to see a horse, or if he didn’t have one of those, a gun, because I hear that everybody from Texas carries one.

But instead I got all this whispering and arm squeezing, a real snootful of the Governor of Texas and his after shave, and no ice cream and no cake. Not even a candy bar or a bag of Peanut M & M’s. And definitely no horse.

Should I have done something differently? I feel cheated!

Respectfully,
Mom’s Mouthpiece

I told Mom’s Mouth that he had every right to feel cheated. His mom went back on her word because if I read the story properly, there were no conditions applied to the initial idea of going out for ice cream.
To add qualifying events as a trigger for the ice cream AFTER the arrangement has been proposed and agreed to is unethical, and your Mom should be told to stop manipulating you that way.

Next time your mom offers to take you out for a special dessert, get it in writing first, and be sure to read the fine print in case there are any weird conditions or expectations.

After all, learning from previous mistakes is what evolution is all about!

But that’s just one opinion. What do YOU think, Dr. Babooner?