Épisodes

  • The Most Gullible Man in Kansas City
    Sep 5 2024
    I’m putting a call out to any confidence tricksters who subscribe to this newsletter, or to anyone reading this who knows a good flimflammer. I may have identified the most gullible man in the greater Kansas City area. I don’t know his name. I know one place that he goes to, though, and he’s easy to identify. A resourceful scoundrel could learn his name with ease. I was at the YMCA, some days ago. I went swimming, and then stepped into the adjoining sauna. The facility would close in fifteen minutes, and I wanted to feel hot. The sauna was filled with men. One was younger than I, the rest my age or older. Men of certain ages say incredibly stupid things, especially when no women are around, and so I knew all I had to do was sit tight and keep my ears peeled. I heard a man outside the sauna, telling yet another man a thing he liked about Donald Trump. He said that Trump had promised to reinstate anyone who was removed from military service for refusing to get a COVID vaccine. “That probably doesn’t affect many people, does it?” asked the second man.“Probably not,” said the first man. “But still.”The first man stepped into the sauna. He said hello to the younger guy, who asked what he had been driving.The guy who had just entered, the “first man” from before, said he had been driving his truck around town, which was frustrating.Frustrating how? asked his friend.“Well,” he said, and I’m paraphrasing: “Kids yell at me when they see me. A lot of people take pictures, like when I’m at a stop light. They just lift their phone cameras and point them at me, you know? And I’m sitting there like, at least stop and say something nice about the truck before you take the picture! You don’t have to talk to me. You can say the nice things to the truck!”It was something much like that. I was so confused. It was like when I read The Expendable Man, the 1963 novel by Dorothy B. Hughes, at the start of which the protagonist (spoiler alert) has just driven away from a small town where a crowd of people shouted at him and drove him away, rattling him, making him afraid for his life. There is no immediate explanation for why they’ve done this, and it’s peculiar. The reason it’s bewildering is that Hughes delays indicating to the reader until page thirty or forty or so, that the protagonist is a Black man. People drove him out of town because they were racist white shitheads, but she doesn’t make that so obvious at first, and it makes the whole thing even stranger and more unsettling than it would be otherwise. The realization I came to, some seconds after this man in the sauna complained that people were yelling at his truck and taking pictures of it, was that he owns a Cybertruck. I had seen one around town, and laughed at it. Now here he was, right in front of me: the guy who was sitting behind that ridiculous Cybertruck steering wheel. He said he was looking to get a new car. He has a Model Three, which I guess must have been his other, smaller Tesla. The conversation broadened to other subjects, and included other men in the sauna. It’s something that happens when you get a bunch of men together. Everyone feels like they’re part of the conversation, and all of the men seem to want to participate. Everyone pitches in, to guarantee quality colloquy. I never say a word when this happens. I have never felt like I belong in these impromptu conversations with groups of strange men, and it’s happened a few times in my life that someone has confronted me about that. I’m not kidding. It’s not cool.Anyway, the Cybertruck man shared with another man something he had learned the day before: if you spend ten minutes in an ice bath, it burns 1,000 calories. The other guy shook his head. “There’s no way,” he said. “1,000 calories? No. Maybe, like, fifty.”Everyone agreed that it was nonsense to think ten cold minutes could burn 1,000 calories. You might burn some calories, sure. But there was no way they would add up to 1,000. The Cybertruck guy then said that he noticed the other day how his phone kept showing him things he hadn’t looked up online, but had been thinking about. It was like his phone was reading his mind, it was so weird. Another guy said that had been debunked a long time ago, that your phone only seems to read your mind because it’s reading your eye movements. It’s tracking what you’re looking at and showing you more of it. If you were thinking of something, it was probably because you saw an ad for that thing, and you’re only seeing another, similar ad.From there, the conversation went on in this same vein. This guy would say something that wasn’t right, and the other guys would correct him. Then I left. I was getting too hot.So, yes, if anyone who knows how to rip guys off wants to travel to Kansas City, I will help you to identify this man in exchange for a modest finder’s fee of 5 percent. That’s all. If you want me to help with the...
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    22 min
  • Dogs: They Are Our Canine Companions
    Aug 19 2024
    A lot’s been going on, lately, that involves dogs. I don’t mean in politics or culture, I mean in my life, which is what actually matters.I saved a dog’s life the other day. I threw myself to the ground in order to rescue a pug that belongs to a friend of my younger daughter. I could have been killed, but instead I saved a life. And maybe, in doing that, I saved my own.Since this event took place, the other day, I’ve been thinking of writing a longish work of autobiographical nonfiction about saving the dog. I could self-publish it as a standalone book, and call it something like SAVING BETSY: HOW I RISKED MY LIFE FOR A FAT PUG AND WHERE PRIAPIC ORTHODOXY STANDS TODAY. I could do whatever I wanted with it. That wouldn’t have to be the title. It definitely wouldn’t be the title. I looked up what the word “priapic” means. But I could use the tale of my heroics to launder horrifyingly misguided ideas concerning society at large and how other people should lead their lives. Or I could just make it a comically self-indulgent account of something I did that only took half a minute, impressed no one at all, and is not significant. But I would do a really good job. I asked an image generator what a book with that title might look like. It created a man who doesn’t look like me, to go with the book that also does not exist:Who is this man? What necklace does he have on? Why is he wearing those rings? Is he supposed to be a Priapic-Orthodox clergyman? Is that how they dress? Are the beards mandatory? Why does he have that car?And is he taking credit for rescuing Betsy the pug? If so, I will be upset. In fact, that may have to emerge as a SAVING BETSY subplot.Wait a minute. That’s not the title, this is:The real title of my book will be HEAVENS TO BETSY: HOW I SAVED A FAT PUG by Begvey Belsh Bigg. That will be my nom de plume.Also, those things surrounding the pug do not appear to be clocks. What, I wonder, are they there to measure? Chewing GumI don’t like AI-generated stuff. I know I’ve used two AI-generated images in this Hoedown so far, but that’s because they came out looking incredibly stupid, and to me that’s very funny. The audio Hoedown sometimes features an AI-made theme song. But things made by AI are not good. My old friend Nick Perry said online the other day that an AI-generated video he saw was like fast food, that the way it looked cool but was also empty was like the way a McDonald’s hamburger may taste all right but won’t be good for you. Stuff made with care, attention, and maybe even expertise can be good for you. AI has none of that going into it. Not really.When I saw Nick make that analogy, I was like, “That analogy is tight. Hell yeah.”Nick is a great artist—far superior to any computerized image generator—and he’s got some prints for sale online that everyone should check out.Reservoir PogsOne thing that I haven’t lost is the ability to walk dogs. I have been doing quite a lot of that, lately, at the Kansas City Pet Project, a shelter for dogs and cats here in town. They take the occasional other sort of animal, too, like the alligator that escaped from an unlicensed traveling petting zoo that appeared at a middle school earlier this year. The alligator was a baby, with its mouth taped shut, and our older daughter goes to the school the reptile disappeared from. It was exciting.There are lots of theories going around, concerning how the alligator got away from the school, and why it reappeared just outside the same school exactly one week later. Actually, there’s only one theory I know of, which is that a kid from the school stuck it in their backpack and took it home, then returned it when they didn’t feel like having it anymore. There’s a main building for the Pet Project, which has well over a hundred kennels, each of them stuffed with one dog, and with a dedicated dog-walking outdoor zone with a pond and lots of grass and air and stuff. Closer to where we live is a satellite location at an outdoor mall. Since I registered to volunteer, and got trained and stuff, I can go to the shelter and walk the dogs they have in their kennels. There are around fifteen of them at any given time, puppies not included. They spend nearly all of their time in the kennels, and so if someone can come and take them out, one by one, it’s really good. That way they won’t go to the bathroom in the kennels, and they can destress a little before being restressed when they go back in. I can bring the kids with me when I do this. They give them treats. One thing a staff member told me, when she trained me to do this work, was that I shouldn’t hesitate to spoil the dogs. The whole point is to spoil them, to let them sniff what they want, give them treat after treat, and generally waste time walking around outside. This is the best part of a dog’s day, the trainer said. Make it as good for them as you can. Make them feel special.This is, I realized, once I...
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    22 min
  • Deadpool Wolverine and the Extrapolator of Thought and Mind
    Jul 31 2024
    If you listen to the audio version of this newsletter, then before the usual newsletter content, in which I read the newsletter, and talk about my life, you will hear about the Extrapolator of Thought and Mind, and the chamber that I, Robert Long Foreman, have been inserted into, so that I can get some rest while the Extrapolator writes and says in my nasal voice the things I would be writing and saying if I were still outside the chamber. How I ended up in this chamber is complicated, and not entirely something I volunteered for or consented to. But the Hoedown Quarterly Review marches on, and if you listen to the audio newsletter you may understand what this is about. I make no promises, except that my voice is indeed nasal and unpleasant to hear.If you change just three letters in the word NASAL, you get the word LASER, but the important thing is that everything you read or listen to here is real and new. It’s clean and it’s good, and it’s made by a man. It’s the Pig City News Weekly Register Hoedown Quarterly Review Times a Thousand.Deadpool WolverineI went to see Deadpool Wolverine, the new movie that’s taking up a lot of theater space right now in the land of freedom. I don’t go to movies much, and if it were up to me I would see better ones when I do. For example, later the same evening that I watched Deadpool Wolverine, the local theater was showing a fortieth-anniversary edition of Terminator. That would have been a fun thing to see in a movie theater. It brings me no joy at all to report this, but when I walked into the Deadpool Wolverine theater the smell of unwashed hair, skin, and clothing nearly killed me. Like, I almost died from how it smelled. I’m surprised I didn’t come out of there with fleas.I don’t go out much, so I haven’t smelled that smell in a while, the unmistakable odor of someone’s body when it hasn’t been cleaned in a long time. At first, I thought, Holy s**t, someone has not taken a shower this year. After sitting there for an hour, that smell going nowhere, I wondered if more than one person in the theater had not showered this year. I don’t doubt that’s an insensitive way to start the Pig City News Weekly Register Hoedown Quarterly Review Times a Thousand. I already feel bad for mentioning the way those people smelled. But come on, man. This is not the eighteenth century. It’s not even the twentieth century. The people in that theater didn’t smell awful because they were so poor they lacked access to indoor plumbing. They were at a Deadpool movie. If they can afford that ticket, they can get their hands on soap and water. But there really could not have been an audience more receptive to that movie than the one I sat in the theater with. They laughed at every joke. They got every reference to other Marvel films and comics, and they made sure everyone else in the theater knew they got the references. They hollered. They clapped. When that storefront appeared in the background of one shot, with the joke about artist Rob Liefield drawing feet, or whatever, they freaking lost it—even though they must have all known they would see the joke at some point in the film, because even I saw a photo of that storefront with the Liefield feet joke, months ago. I don’t know where I saw it. I imagine it was someplace online that sucks.But I didn’t hate watching the movie. It had its moments. My response was net positive. Emma Corrin was great. Matthew MacFayden did a fine job. You can always count on the English to elevate the substandard material they have to work with. Corrin plays a bald woman who reaches into people’s heads with her hands to read their minds, and the effects they used for that were weird and worth seeing. Whoever made those effects should get a raise. And I liked Wolverine’s hat. They did a great job making that hat.But I didn’t enjoy the movie nearly as much as everyone else in the theater did, and I never went to any Bible camps growing up, but I felt partway through watching Deadpool Wolverine that the movie must be what it’s like to watch your friends at Bible camp perform skits on the last night before everyone goes home so they can start school in the fall. In order to get the jokes made in the skits, you have to have been at camp all summer, because all of the humor refers to things that happened at camp. The jokes have the appearance of irreverence, too, because irreverence is fun. But they don’t cross over into anything like hazardous territory, or—heaven forbid—actual comedy. If you did anything like that at camp, like if you questioned how well the director was doing their job, or whatever, you might get in trouble. It’s not unlike how you can have Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool break the fourth wall and refer cheekily to how Disney owns Marvel, but you’ll never see him, let’s say, pissing on an image of Mickey Mouse. Something like that would be consistent with the quality of humor you see in Deadpool ...
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    35 min
  • Stop the School to Sunday School Pipeline
    Jul 4 2024
    It’s the fourth of July. It’s time for you to watch this video again, or for the first time if you never saw it:You may have heard that SEMO Press, publisher of my novel Weird Pig, among many other books, is shutting down. It’s a terrible thing, and I’ll never forgive the creeps in charge who destroyed an organization that brought good things into a world that doesn’t have enough of them. But I have good news. Thanks in part to the fanatical machinations of SEMO Press director James Brubaker, Weird Pig has a new home: Black Lawrence Press. This is also thanks, of course, to the hard work of Diane Goettel, BLP’s Executive Editor—for which I am thankful. So now you can go to BLP get the copies of Weird Pig that you are so desperate to have. If you haven’t read it, let me recommend it to you now—almost four years after its release. Even after all this time, a lot of people still don’t know Weird Pig exists. But the people who have read it report laughing during the experience of reading it, and otherwise finding joy in its pages. It would make a great gift for Father’s Day, but then that’s already happened this year. So why not start a tradition of giving gifts on Labor Day? Why don’t you give someone Weird Pig, as a reward for their backbreaking labor?If you have a book club, now would be the perfect time for you to force everyone in it to read Weird Pig. If you don’t have a book club, now would be the perfect time to kidnap a handful of strangers, duct tape their hands together, sit them down in your sunroom, set mimosas before them, with straws for them to drink the mimosas through, since they can’t use their hands, and with God’s light shining on their faces make them talk about Weird Pig as if they read the book, which they have not done at all.Or, get this: you could go to Costco.One thing that upsets me about the publication of Weird Pig is that, even after all this time, no one from SEMO Press, or any other press, has taken me to Costco. I saw this video online last week that had Colm Tóibín in it. I’ve never read anything by Colm Tóibín. I’m sure I will soon, because this is one of those moments where I write a sentence like, “I’ve never read anything by Colm Tóibín,” and realize it’s kind of embarrassing. I should have read some Colm Tóibín by now. I don’t know why.I guess he just published a new book, which is not the one I will read—and why is that, I wonder? How did I decide, without even thinking about it, that his new book will not be the one I read? I imagine it’s the one he would want me to read, since he’s just published it. Sometimes I’m a mystery to myself. Because Colm Tóibín has a new book out, his publisher made this video of him going to a Costco. I don’t know what Costco it was, but I guess he’d never been to one. And that makes me feel better about not having read one of his books. Everyone in the world has at least one thing they’ve never done. I guess they thought it would be adorable and fun, to take this Irish novelist to a place that’s so utterly American. They filmed him walking around and getting free samples of different things, the way people do when they visit a Costco. I’d say he looked like a fish out of water, but he didn’t. Everyone fits right in when they go to Costco. I didn’t watch much of the video, though I would go back and finish it if I knew he had one of those giant slices of Costco pizza. I’d like to see the Irish eat that pizza. It’s so greasy.But the video made me want to publish another book. I was kind of on the fence, before, about whether it would be a good idea to do that again. The last time I published a book, a pandemic happened. Who knows what the next one might bring. I didn’t realize that when you publish a book now you get to go to Costco. I’ll bet Colm Tóibín didn’t even have to drive himself over there. I’ll bet they took him in someone else’s car. The Culture You DeserveThis Friday, I will have an essay on another Substack, The Culture We Deserve. Every Monday, Jessa Crispin publishes an essay over there, and they publish one by a guest writer every Friday. My essay, this Friday, concerns The Way of the Househusband, an anime show and manga series by Kousuke Oono, which is about a dangerous Yakuza gangster who gives up his violent life, gets married, and devotes himself to cooking and cleaning, but persists in being a frightening and intense, if nonviolent, man.You have to be a paid subscriber to The Culture We Deserve to access my essay, but it’s worth it. It doesn’t cost much, and Jessa and her husband Nico Rodriguez do great work over there. They even have a podcast.Church of the LibraryMy brother Jim wrote in his newsletter recently about what it’s like when atheism softens into agnosticism, among other things. And I was interested to read about that, because I think I’ve traveled on a similar trajectory to his. As a teenager, and for ...
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    20 min
  • All Eyes on Ian Fleming, Etc.
    Jun 21 2024
    We need to do something about this James Bond fellow. Let me explain what I mean. Because I’m not saying it in a fun way, like maybe I’m pretending to be Goldfinger, having an incredible time on a private jet with my golden finger.No, I’ve been reading Ian Fleming novels. I started with Dr. No, moved on to On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, and have just finished Casino Royale, the first installment in the series. You don’t have to read the books in order. No one checks. I started reading them in the first place because I saw one in the New Fiction section at the library. Dr. No wasn’t new, but it had been reprinted, so, close enough, I guess. I thought if I checked it out I might have a good time reading a book. I thought it could be a reading adventure, like what those kids have on Superwhy whenever they read books.I had, also, been thinking about James Bond. I had been comparing him, in my mind, to Ethan Hunt, the hero of the Mission Impossible films and TV show.When I compare any two characters in my mind—which I do only on occasions that demand it, as it is a laborious process that leaves me exhausted for days afterward—I shut my eyes as tightly as I can and picture one of the characters. Then, with great concentration, I imagine the image of the other character, some distance from the first, for safety’s sake. Through painstaking mental effort, I pull the first character closer to the other, and then do the same with the second, until finally they are side-by-side, no space between them at all. This can take hours, and someday it will kill me. But it’s the only way to go about this work that I know of.In the end, I felt like Ethan Hunt was a much more interesting character than James Bond. He just seems like he does more things. He climbs, he runs, he puts on masks. He’s usually dressed for movement, and he’s good at pretending to be people he’s not. What does James Bond do? Well, he looks good in a suit. He’s particular about how he likes his martinis to be served—so he has the formidable trait of being finnicky about drinks.He doesn’t wear disguises, that I can recall. He rarely uses an alias. In fact, one of the things this international superspy is most famous for is the way he tells people his actual name, repeating his surname so as to give it extra emphasis and make sure everyone remembers to call him James Bond, which is his real name. It’s an intriguing quality to have, when you’re an agent of something called the “secret service.” I went into reading Dr. No, the first 007 novel I picked up, with an open heart and an open mind. I wanted to have fun. I think it was printed on the back cover that none other than Raymond Chandler said Ian Fleming was the best suspense writer around. That’s quite an endorsement.Raymond Chandler wasn’t wrong. Ian Fleming knows how to show readers a good time. The pace of his novels is consistently high. His hero travels to exotic locations. He eats great food and drinks a lot. The drinks are always good, and so is the food. He has hot sex with beautiful women to whom he is not attached in any way. They’re either provided to him by the secret service, as colleagues that he then sleeps with, or they appear out of thin air, like the woman whose name I forget from Dr. No. Bond arrives on the shore of an island, near Jamaica, where he suspects Dr. No has built his secret hideout. As he plans his next move, a woman walks over to where he is. She is startled to see him. She is beautiful and not wearing any clothes.Now that I’ve read three Ian Fleming novels, it seems to me that the appeal of James Bond is that he’s a man who has everything handed to him. He messes up fairly consistently. He gets his friends killed, he gets captured, and he loses at baccarat when it’s his mission to not lose at baccarat. But somehow, by god, he wins, usually thanks to someone else intervening on his behalf, and in the end M begrudgingly congratulates him. 007 has done it again! The women he falls in love with, and to whom he comes around to feeling he could perhaps actually devote himself to, conveniently die, so that he never has to follow through with being tied down. The novels are a breeze to read, and it’s fun to read a breeze. But let’s face it: as a character, James Bond kind of sucks. To illustrate how much he sucks, let me cite a couple of passages from Casino Royale.In this first one, Bond has learned that Vesper, the woman who was assigned to aid him on his current mission, has been kidnapped, and is likely being used as bait to get to him:This was just what he had been afraid of. These blithering women who thought they could do a man’s work. Why the hell couldn’t they stay at home and mind their pots and pans and stick to their frocks and gossip and leave men’s work to the men. And now for this to happen to him, just when the job had come off so beautifully. For Vesper to fall for an old trick like that and get ...
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    22 min
  • Tough Guys Are Boring Unless They're Being Taken Apart
    Jun 13 2024
    My kids, wife, and I spent a recent week in Philadelphia and New York City, seeing family, seeing friends, making new friends, walking on the High Line, going to a show, and doing gymnastics in Central Park. We did other things, too, and we had a great time. I was not the one who did the gymnastics.What I can I say about New York City that hasn’t already been said? Absolutely nothing. That’s what. But what is new is a short story that was published just the other day at Bull magazine. Beware: it is, like other things I’ve published recently, highly sexual. Why have I been writing so much about sex? The answer is that I haven’t. It was in 2020 and 2021 that I wrote a lot about sex, and I think it’s because thanks to COVID I wasn’t around other people anymore. Like, not at all. I was with my family, but everyone else was inaccessible, because I didn’t want to get sick or make others sick. For the longest time, like so many people did, I felt the absence of nearly everyone on planet Earth, and my isolation expressed itself in this unlikely, weird antieroticism. I wrote about sex and how awful it can be, even when everyone involved is at least having an okay time. I was not the only one. I recall another writer on social media wondering publicly why everything she wrote at that time had turned abruptly sexual. She blamed the pandemic. I think she was on to something, and I don’t think it was just the two of us. Anyway. It’s only now that my antierotic stories are getting published. That’s how it is when you’re a writer. You write something, and unless you want to publish it yourself you have to wait sometimes a long time for anyone to see it. It’s not my fault. I don’t make the rules. I don’t even know how to make lasagna.A Tale of Two Adaptations of the Novel The Hunter by Donald E. WestlakeI have not read The Hunter by Donald E. Westlake, but I’ve recently watched its two film adaptations. Or, rather, I watched the whole of one of them, and the first half of the other, which I saw before, once, a long time ago.I watched these movies the way their creators intended: in increments of anywhere from thirty seconds to twenty minutes, over the course of seven to ten days, interrupted every time by the pressing need to go to bed so that obligations can be met the next day, or by a kid who wants to watch something else on the TV on which I have been viewing the film. I’m not complaining. It’s okay that I don’t get to watch whole things in one sitting. It’s a privilege to be one member of a household, to have demands placed on me by a whole in which I am one part. It can be vexing, but in this season of my life it’s where happiness comes from. The first of the two adaptations I watched was Point Blank, directed by John Boorman and starring Lee Marvin.As the poster for the film indicates, Lee Marvin plays a human head that has lost its body but grown a hand and bought a gun, so that it can talk to people and shoot bullets at them. Lee Marvin’s head is out for revenge, and for two hours it rolls around the city of Los Angeles, screaming about how great it was to have a body and how much he misses his arms and legs.I’m just kidding, of course—haha!—but not about the revenge. The story of the film is this: Walker, a criminal, is convinced by a friend and fellow criminal to participate in a low-stakes heist. But it turns out the stakes are higher than he was led to believe, and he gets double-crossed by his partner in crime and his own wife, who has fallen for the partner in crime. They shoot him and leave him for dead—but you’d better believe he’s not dead. He returns to the city, having convalesced, with all of his arms and legs, plus his torso and stuff, and gets to work.Here is one of the weirder parts of the movie, in which Walker has returned from his supposed death and tracks down his wife, intending to murder the man who betrayed him, who he has reason to believe is living with her: If you don’t feel like committing the minute or so to watching it, the scene at first consists of Lee Marvin walking through a cavernous hallway as his footsteps echo. The footsteps persist as we see his wife going about her day, and we see him driving around the city in search of her. The footsteps continue unnervingly through this montage until at last his wife enters her apartment and he bursts in behind her. He storms into the bedroom, where he empties his pistol into one side of the bed, which has no one in it. We can assume that it’s the side of the bed where he would be sleeping, were they still together. And so is he blasting away at the absence of his rival, or at the absence of himself? Whose blood is he really thirsting for? I watched that scene and couldn’t believe it. It’s a bizarre series of images and sounds. It’s the kind of thing that makes me feel like it’s good to watch a movie from time to time. It’s not long after that scene that the film ...
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    23 min
  • Studies in Urology, Scenario 761 - EXPLICIT
    Jun 2 2024
    This Hoedown will be a short one, because I really just want to read for the listening audience my short story “Studies in Urology, Scenario 761.” It was accepted for publication in a magazine several years ago, but I never saw a copy of the magazine. I’m not sure any copies exist. That didn’t bother me much, but then, I don’t know. I came around to liking the story more than I did when I wrote it. I’d like to share the thing. I should warn everyone that it’s pretty disgusting, and highly sexual. Beware. I will read the story after the standard newsletter content, the usual hoedown material. You can only hear it if you listen to the audio. If you are interested in the story, but not in the newsletter, you can skip ahead. When you hear the Pig City News Weekly Register Hoedown Quarterly Review Times a Thousand theme song, you will know I’m about to read it. I was actually going to send this out in the middle of last week, but I got scared and worried that the story would come across in worse ways than I anticipate. I hope that doesn’t happen. It’s supposed to just be funny. I swear that I am nice, and that all I want is for everyone out there to have a good time. That’s not wrong, is it? But then, all Jesus ever wanted was for people to have a good time, and look what happened to him.Book TitleI could use some help. I have put together a collection of essays that mostly have to do with fatherhood. No one has ever written a book like that before, so it’s pretty important that I get mine into the world. I have to give the book of fatherhood essays a title. I am torn between three of them. The first one is Fathers Die, which I like because when you say it out loud it sounds like you’re saying “Father’s Day” but with some kind of an accent. And what the title tells you is true. Fathers do indeed die. The second title is Happy Fathers Die, which sounds like “Happy Father’s Day” with the same accent as the first option. It is also, like the first title option, a true statement. The third option is Father’s Day Present Father Gift What to Get Gift Idea Father Day Best Gift List. This title would attempt to maximize search engine optimization (SEO). I could shorten it, and title the book Father’s Day Present, so that my book comes up immediately when someone searches those words online. I don’t know what’s best. I’m just looking to move units, here.Please tell me what you think I should do. Telling me I should quit writing and save myself further embarrassment is an option.I mean, it’s true that I shouldn’t have put this book together. There are so many collections of essays about fatherhood. The difference is in the pudding, and the pudding is in me. I ate the pudding. And this is what it’s all about. This is who I am. Physically I am a champion. Mentally I am a genius. Emotionally I’m available. It doesn’t get any better than the way it already is. Polo ShirtsI was at the luxury high school the other day, subbing again, and I asked the coordinator of substitute teachers a question. I said that at my substitute orientation I was told to dress business-casual for subbing assignments, but pointed out to her that nearly all of the teachers at the luxury school showed up there wearing jeans and t-shirts. How, I asked, am I really supposed to dress for the job? She laughed and someone joined our conversation. I don’t know who she was, but she said she was married to the person who was in charge of that sort of thing. I was confused. What did that mean her spouse’s job was? Who, at a public school, polices the attire of substitute teachers? Why have I not met this person? She said that as far as she was concerned I didn’t have to wear a dress shirt. I could come in wearing jeans and a polo shirt—as long as I looked, you know, presentable. I nodded, smiled, thanked the pair of them, kept what I was thinking to myself, and ate three slices of cold pizza in the hallway. They had been in a plastic bag in my backpack the whole time. What the hell is it with polo shirts? I haven’t worn a polo shirt in probably fifteen years. The one I wore fifteen years ago had stripes on it, and I put it on sometimes because I was in good shape, and in that shirt I looked like a man. People loved to see me in that shirt. They wanted to touch my chest and face. Only one of them got to do it, and today we are married.But aside from me when I wore that one shirt, which is long gone, do you know what grown men look like when they wear polo shirts? They look like they are all dressed up for picture day. Every man in a polo shirt looks like his mom made him put that shirt on before he left the house to go to school. And she combed his hair! It hurt! He was trying to play Bubble Bobble on Nintendo, and she kept getting in the way. He could barely see the screen!He would have put on a dress shirt, but it’s not the easiest thing for a little guy, to button all the buttons on a ...
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    40 min
  • If We Can't Get Rid of Guns, At Least Give Us More Ways Out
    May 15 2024
    If you live in or near New York City, you should go tomorrow to Amy Bennett's art show opening. It's at the Miles McEnery Gallery, at 525 W 22nd St. I would go, but I live in Kansas City. It's hard to get to places like New York from places like Kansas City. It can be done, but it’s not easy. I had the tremendous pleasure of writing an essay to accompany Amy's show, which is included in a digital catalog that you can access here. The nice thing about something being digital is that you can make it available to lots of people. So follow the link. Read my essay. Marvel at Amy Bennett's paintings. See the show in person if you can. Exits Exist, and Not Enough of ThemI should warn anyone reading this that partway through this section of the newsletter it gets pretty dark, and addresses the subject of school shootings. I was a substitute teacher, yesterday, at the luxury high school, which is my preferred subbing location. When I see on my substitute teaching app that someone needs to go there and fill in for a real teacher, I scramble to claim that eight-hour job for myself. I want to spend the day at the luxury high school. I want to make a little money supervising its well-behaved teens.You might be asking yourself what’s so great about the luxury high school? What makes the high school luxurious?It’s not a private high school. It’s not like that. I don’t think I’d want to go there if it were private. Those places tend to attract the wealthy, and while plenty of wealthy kids are lovely people, the ones who aren’t are worse than the not-lovely kids of the middle and lower classes. Or the rich ones bother me more, at least. The luxury high school is one of the public high schools in our district, and I don’t know how it works exactly, but apparently students can elect to attend the luxury school instead of one of the other two that we have. People tell me the luxury high school is “more project-oriented” than the other schools, but no matter how many times I hear those words, I can never seem to figure out what they mean. I nod and say, “Yeah, that makes sense,” but I don’t know what anyone is talking about. The thing I like most about subbing at the luxury school is that the students there are for the most part calm and focused. They do their work quietly, which means I can work on my own stuff. I take my laptop over there and do what I would do at home, except in this other location, and I get paid to be there. I have to stand up and walk around the room, and make it look like I’m a real authority figure from time to time, but mostly I can just sit and work. I get more done there than I do at home. Everybody wins.The luxury high school is more relaxed than other schools. When I’m in the room with students, the noise level increases from time to time, but it has not yet reached a point where I feel I need to tell everyone to quiet down, to focus on work. I can let them be. I may not love that they’re talking to each other about stupid b******t; maybe I would prefer it if they did their work. But they talk about stupid b******t at acceptable volumes, and years after I graduated high school, I remember the stupid b******t conversations more fondly than I recall any work I did there. Why not let the students generate those memories, when their usual teacher is away? Why not give them a couple hours off? It’s not like the teachers leave me instructions that forbid the formation of fond memories. It’s not like if the students did their work they would solve climate change. Having conversations with one’s peers is itself a kind of education. Everything you do in a school is part of your education—which is something that took me many years of schooling to really understand. The little things are as important as the big things. It all accumulates.The luxury high school is more like a college than the other schools, in that students have a little more freedom than they have elsewhere. Throughout the building are small rooms with glass walls and conference tables. You can walk past and see what’s going on inside, and make sure no one is making bombs or solving climate change when they’re not supposed to. These “flex spaces” are where students can get away from their peers, if they work better in isolation. They can work in one with a student from another class.I’m impressed with the architecture of the place, with the building itself and the atmosphere it makes possible. About a third of the classrooms don’t even have doors, they’re large recesses in the hallway with comfortable seating. I heard from someone that the luxury high school was supposed to be an office complex when it was built, but was then repurposed as a school. I don’t know if that’s true, but it would explain why, unlike most schools, it’s not a death trap.I’m impressed more than anything by how many exits the luxury high school has leading out of it. I thought of this yesterday when I ...
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    21 min