Who Bared Their Brains to Heaven Under the El

green_mill.JPG

If you’re in Chicago and you want to visit the home of the poetry slam, be sure to visit the Green Mill. But don’t bring your Visa, Mastercard, Discover, Diners Club, debit card or personal check, because the Green Mill takes anyone who wants to read their poetry, and they only take American Express.

Who the hell only takes American Express? The Green Mill, that’s who. The upshot of this situation was that I found myself about to face an open mike poetry reading only able to fortify myself with whatever five American dollars could provide. “Of all the things you can say to impress a cocktail waitress, “What’s the cheapest beer you have? is pretty low on the list.” This did not bode well.

I went to a lot of poetry readings in my younger years, back when I thought a beret was perfectly acceptable headgear for someone not either a British soldier or a Frenchman. I used to go to a weekly reading in Raleigh in the ’80s that started at the Berkeley Café downtown and soon moved to a store called The Paper Plant, owned by a poet and papermaker named John Dancy-Jones. It was a great scene and always interesting, especially when people like Bob Rogers and Ralph Dunn, the Cabdriver Poet, would read. Everyone was very supportive, and it gave me a weekly impetus to come up with something new to read to the group. But you know, poetry readings. You can never tell. I’ve heard my share of doggerel, not to mention the over-earnest style of highly affected angry poetry read in a shouted, hey-look-at-me cadence. And we also got a weekly dose of teenage girl angst. “We dubbed that category “Black Tears Dripping””

Despite the lack of a proper defense fund, the reading at the Green Mill turned out to be very cool. It’s run by Marc Smith, who in addition to being a hell of a poet himself, is also a perfect master of ceremonies, alternating between heckler and coach, with a big dose of stand-up comedian. We heard a lot of good stuff, some read by people who were practiced and comfortable, and a few by “virgin virgins “people who had never read at the Green Mill or anywhere else”, including a novice poet who had traveled all the way from Scotland specifically to make his “highly successful” public debut at the Green Mill, and one skinny young man in thick glasses whose hand shook violently throughout.

Unfortunately, the poet that stands out the most vividly was a guy in his late forties who looked like the kind of high school guidance counselor who truly believes the kids think he’s cool, and is horribly wrong. He pony-tailed his way onto the stage almost meekly, but when he got the mike in hand he turned into some sort of caricature white rapper, complete with excruciating hand gestures. He quickly invoked the name of Tupac, and declared that he was in actual fact not only black but a Rastafarian, which he supposed gave him the right to use The Word That Black People Can Use But White People Can Never, Ever. He also entreated us to “smoke the word and read the herb” which made me want to climb the stage and kick the ass.

The crowd was more than a little shocked, but once they recovered their composure, they expressed their displeasure in the approved Green Mill fashion, by snapping their fingers in ironic parody of a beat coffeehouse audience. MC White Liberal Guilt left the bar as soon as his set ended, which was probably about 20 minutes later than he should have.

It was a great night, though. Because we were sitting right up front “I mean, right up front: I wished I had brought a raincoat to shield myself from the plosives”, Jean got picked to be one of the judges for the poetry slam. During her introduction, Marc had the band join him as he created her impromptu theme song, “Jean, the Sexy Librarian” Once the judging began, she proved that she is not to be trifled with, poetry-wise. Let’s just say she has high standards. At one point I was afraid we’d have to spirit her out through a side door with a coat over her head.

I Yam What I Yeat

popeye2.JPG

In the common room of my new company is a giant table, probably eight feet long and four feet wide, and it is covered, no, I mean covered with snack food. Items currently on the table include:

a case of ramen noodles

a case of individual breakfast cereals

Snickers bars “size full, not “fun””

M&Ms, of two varieties

cans of applesauce

one “1” 3-pound tin of mixed nuts

one “1” 3-pound tin of cashews “whole, not pieces”

two “2” 2-pound buckets of assorted snack mix

a bowl of fresh fruit

cans of fruit

a jar of licorice

a convenience-store pack of Slim Jims

a case of mixed Frito Lay products

a case of Zone protein bars

a case of Power Bars

a tin of mixed candies that must be at least 10 pounds

This is just what I can remember off the top of my head. It’s amazing. They also provide breakfast for everyone on Fridays, and last week it looked like they hijacked a bakery truck.

If I still ate like a student, I could live during the week just by grazing from this table. The worst part though, is that I have finally, more or less, gotten a handle on my life-long love of junk food, so for the first time probably ever, this table does not appeal to me. “Well, of course it does, but I’m trying to act like it doesn’t.”

Even so, I can’t help but check out the selection whenever I walk by. Apparently someone asked the snack buyer for some healthier offerings, because we now have little cans of lima beans, corn and spinach on the table. I don’t think I will ever get healthy enough for a spinach SnakPak to sound appetizing.

RIP

rip_job_search.JPG

It is with great sadness that I must announce the death of a dear and treasured member of the Plooble family, the Job Search Theme. For those of you who have come to know and love it, I share in your grief. It has been a major part: perhaps the heart and soul – of Fistful of Plooble since the beginning, and it will be missed.

In other words, I am no longer unemployed. Starting Wednesday, I will be a Vision Guidance Leader at Huhcorp.

Okay, not really “although I’ve applied at companies that seem to share the same ethos”. I will be working as an editor for a company that publishes a wide variety of newsletters on topics including health care, finance and the law. Someone will once again be paying me to write, and to write things that don’t require the use of the words “extensible or “functionality” As you can imagine, I’m pretty happy about that “although I am sure there are unexplored countries of jargon I am yet to visit”.

It looks like a pretty cool place with a lot of creative people, and I’m very excited about working for a company that values writing above all. Everyone I’ve met seems to like each other and like being there, and last Friday night in Hell I ran into a group of my soon-to-be fellow editors, including the managing editor who interviewed me. It’s not every day that I get to list “having a drink named after me as a relevant job qualification. I’m sure it sealed the deal.

Job Search is survived by Found Absurdity, Fun With Words, Car Geekery, and the twins, Bitchin’ & Moanin’, who ask that you send wrinkle-resistant khakis in lieu of flowers.

80 Percent Chance of Weird

weird_weather.JPG

Do any of you know someone from say, San Diego who has moved to North Carolina? Does the weather make them completely nuts? I’ve heard people from less capricious climes say things like, “It’s nice to have four distinct seasons” Yeah, but three in one week?

Chapel Hill is once again in Severe Winter Weather Frenzy. The DJ on WXYC, the UNC campus station, has been reading a forecast that calls for snow, sleet, and six to 12 inches of accumulation through Friday “but his forecast calls for highs in the 70s on Saturday”. Once again the grocery stores are full of bundled-up soccer moms preparing for the siege of Stalingrad.

It’s weather like this “or at least the threat of weather like this” that makes SUV drivers feel superior and justified, but I saw something stuck under the wiper of an Expedition or Excursion or Canyonero in the parking lot of Weaver Street Market that might bring the driver down a peg or two. It’s from an organization called Earth on Empty.

L-Word Jackson

l_word_jackson.JPG

I like words, you like words, we all like words. Sure. But not all of them. Some words I hate, and I don’t mean “intolerance or “can’t” or anything like that. For years I’ve had a list in mind of words I cannot stand. I’ve recently discovered I’m not the only person.

One good friend told me that she hates the word “brouhaha” which disappoints me a bit, since that’s one of my favorites “along with “squeegee””. But yeah, it is kind of stupid. Her ex-husband hated the words “mighty and “tender” Naturally, she sometimes found it necessary to describe her meal as “mighty tender”

Jean has three words that make her shudder: “smock” “slacks and “subpoena” It’s hard to use all three in a sentence, but I’ve done it.

As for me, there are several words I don’t like – “delicious for one, and I would never, ever use it, but it’s not enough to put me off my food. I also could live without “lush” and you’ll never hear me express my longing for a lush lawn, or describe any of my friends as a lush, no matter how appropriate it might be.

So, lush and delicious. I cringe just writing them down. But there’s another word that’s even worse, and it’s basically a combination of the two. I can barely watch HGTV for fear of hearing the word used to describe a soufflé or an upholstery color. I managed to type it in my online quiz, and I’m far too traumatized to do it again.

Any words you have strong feelings about?