in this issue!
Transcription
in this issue!
# S your host —Ed E. Haskell— That is what I would look like if I had a pig snout editor's hello corner Okay so even without planning this issue turned out to have a kind of food theme, I mean like every conversation I had with anyone was about food and many articles mentioned it. I did not have a hand in this. Maybe it is because everyone is trying to store up fat for winter, which is still a thing I cannot do. Maybe that means in the past I would have died. I guess I'm just lucky that my genes got to the future, where I could be so unlucky in so many new, modern ways. Happy Holidays. —EEH IN THIS ISSUE! CORNELIUS BEAR Only one man is Cornelius Bear, and this is a careful look at him. This interview is tight and on-budget. No one can complain. MEMORIES OF CHINESE FOOD Chinese food is hella special to a lot of dudes. Here are their thoughts. OPINIONS ON THE CHINESE This ain't racist, unless you play it that way. MWY magazine ain't playin' it that way, but what about guys like Todd? Everybody knows about the Billboard Top Ten. But what about the Bottom Ten? Technically, there are a bottom ten. We went to the Library and found out the bottom ten for April 4th, 1984. This is literal. They don't print this end. Here Comes Tom Chime Greasewell and the Del-Tins Mansion of Blood M.I.S.E.R.I.C.H.O.R.D. I Can Hear the Coconuts Sleep Wayne Aoki She Taught Me to Ski in the Wintertime Rowell Gertrude Talk to the Taco Pini I Do The Rock Tim Curry Leap of the Mourning Hare Kell & Baxter (instrumental) The Dog Rap DJ Prince Howell and the 8th Street Kites I Get The Money I Get The Money 6?:ð6g (agog) NAME-A-BEER Ryddled Wyythe Promysse: Lancashyre Eyvensonge Actually, this is even more in-depth than that. We ask dudes their favorite beers, but we also ask WHY. Thank you to Tré-odor for drivin' us to the Library and for gettin' change for the photocopier. —E.E.H. IT PAYS TO HAVE WORD ABILITY Enrich — and BECOME rich — by using vocabulary! OFFICER WILSON: Get out of the car! NOW! GAS: [silent] m a This Week's Words! Af OFFICER WILSON: Oh well. I guess I'll have to get the gas out of the car by driving it. ou ss pea s k er d e m o n s t r a t e s h i ity abil Deppo (adj.) This word describes a young dude who works at kind of a low job with a uniform, like a tire person at Pep Boys auto parts megastore, or a dude who works at Kragen Auto Store, yet unlike the other guys he keeps pretty carefully done "rockabilly" hair with big chop sideburns and some real wet-look body around the sides and top. It is clean and immaculately maintained. Guys like this often also work as cashiers at Whole Foods-type grocery stores where the chicks have blowhungus (huge) tattoos on their entire shoulder, and sagged tits. Dudes like this are deppo. Usage: "Dude the guy who bagged our groceries was deppo. I bet his girlfriend has Bettie Page bangs and a kid in third grade." Meemotize (v.) When you are getting instructions from a boss, and they're kind of boring and you know you'd figure out the task anyway ("Carl, take these three different kinds of paper stock that got mixed together and separate them and put them in the paper assortment area, you'll know when you've got them all done because in each stack none of them will look different, the paper in each stack will look pretty identical"), you meemotize, not memorize. It's like taking a mental memo by grabbing only one or two basic bits of data ("separate this paper"). Usage: "Gary, that totally bloated dude from the Leavenworth office was talking, and I so meemotized. He wanted us to show up on time instead of late." Triple Jackson (adj.) Used to describe situations in which there are just way too many unnecessary, basically identical things. Etymology: The Jackson 5. There really needed to be only one Jackson*, and the rest are just sort of a jumble. Usage: "Man I would go to Baskin Robbins but it is just so Triple Jackson. It takes me a damn day to decide on Vanilla Peach With Microbiscuit Bundt Channel." Tumber (future v.) This is the word that will come to describe how most Americans will walk by 2025. Torso leaned back to counterbalance the enormous spilling gut, neck stiff from fitful nights of sleep apnea, stiff ankles, each leg swung slightly forward then planted before starting the process over, toes out at 45-degree angles from path of travel, arms barely moving at the sides. Anthropologists may wish to do early field observation of this evolution in the "gauntlet" (the twenty feet between the McDonald's and Taco Bell/Pizza Hut restaurants that live inside of every Wal Mart). *Jermaine, "The Regular One." historical@ agreement@ minuteZ@ Cyndi Lauper Cyndi Lauper is the Most Awesome Person in the World: A Treatise and Exploration of Facts. Alright, so you might think that scientists like Albert Einstein or Freddie Time Bomb were the most important dudes in history, but you'd be wrong. I am sorry to say this to you. The most important person in history is Cyndi Lauper. Before you start hitting your own head with some of the lighter volumes from the Encyclopedia Britannica, let me provide the following points. You at least owe me that. —E.E.H. 1) Cyndi Lauper continues to be an ageless babe. There are no bad photographs of her, even though she is 53. 2) You could not talk to her at a bar, because you would screw it up. Even though she is probably nice. 3) Gwen Stefani is not her kid, and also looks older than her. 4) You would be lucky to even get a hug from Cyndi Lauper, let alone a classy cheek kiss. 5) If you could happen to spend just one weekend with Cyndi Lauper at an upscale rental cottage on Cape Cod, it would be the best weekend of your life. She is probably even fun and full of character in the mornings. 6) If Cyndi Lauper had food poisoning in a motel room, I would charter a plane just to bring her a glass of water. 7) All the chicks you see slunking around in black bank pants and dry-clean shirts wish they had not lost track of the career path that would have made them Cyndi Lauper. ALL of them. Ask any one, guaranteed. 8) The video for She Bop begins with Cyndi jacking off in her car at a fast food restaurant. She jacks off so hard that the car is filled with steam and you can see her feet bouncing off the window. CASE CLOSED. What is Your Beer and Why is Your Beer That Choice Téodor I guess I'm into crisper beers, lately. Stuff like pilsner or lager. I don't know what it is. Well, actually, I do know what it is. Beers that are heavy and full of rich flavor make me feel even fatter. I don't want to drink from a bottle that says "stout" on it. I'm already stout. I'm a bear, for crissakes. I want to drink from a bottle that says...I want a shot of vodka and a smoke, actually. You don't get fat off vodka. I'm going to get a vodka right now. Thanks for reminding me that I don't have anything to do right now, and that I have some vodka. It was a birthday gift from Aunt Brezna, actually. We are from Minsk, so it's okay that it's 11:43am. TODD Beer? B-B-Beer?! Mother-wipin' beer? You gotta be kiddin' me! Who drinks frikkin' beer anymore 'cept as a waitin' thing! I gotta guy on 4th...whatcha pay, four bucksa' pint?...four bucks...he'll getcha frikkin' bloody for four bucks! Gimme the cash, I'll call up. Walk down Grant. Blue jacket. You, not him. Shaddup. a Commitment to facts by E.E.H the beer to put whiskey in. I'm not too sure that I care about any of this, though. I like to put the whiskey in the beer and I'm not a big "fusser" about it. How can I care about what you are asking at this point. I am at the point where I will do it [hang up]. [Hangs up] MR. bear LYLE Ah. Well. I have written at length (transcribed from phone, with a kind ear, by Roast Beef) The beer that I like is called Molson, or Weinhard's, or other beer. I like to use elsewhere about Fuller's 1845...that was over two years ago, however, and I'm not feeling as nostalgic at the current time. I've actually been keeping Budweiser lately, of all things. I know, I know. Lyle offered me one a few weeks ago, however, and it had been ages since I'd held one. I'd completely forgotten how powerful their advertising is. When I hold the bottle, I feel a good half my age, slightly more dangerous, and athletic. It doesn't even matter that the stuff tastes like a man's ear. At this age, I'll take any advantage the market puts forth. pat reynolds (recently gay) Oh my goodness, you're at it again, aren't you. Your silly little photocopy newsletter. Well, fine. What do I care. What beer do I drink? I don't drink beer. You can't waste calories like that. If you want to refresh your thirst, try some suntea made in a glass jar. Don't drink some fool beer. And DON'T make the tea in a plastic bottle. I don't have to tell you about sunlight and leeching polymers. I have to go now. You know I got a terrible rate plan from Cingular. I can't believe you even called me. Just email me this junk, okay? [Editor's note: Pat was this way even before he done gone gay. -e.e.h. ] EMERIL LEGOINEGASQUE Well it is funney you should bring it up at this time as I have just popped open a bottle of my favorite new beer Bard & Ladder Cheddar Porter. Spongebath was given it in his monthly sampling from the Artisanal Beers Society to which I joined him last holiday season. It immediately became our favorite new beer. In the bottom of each bottle they have placed three cubes of cheddar which manage not to lodge in the neck until the very end at which point they do slide out and provide a wonderful treat. Recipes ... of by Tré-Od or Histo ry Recently we did some studies here at Man Why You Even Got To Do A Thing and we came across several ancient manuscripts of recipes. (The more recent manuscripts are not ancient but rather from the October 1953 Sunset Magazine.) By Tré-Odor and the Library. flames. Secure the first rope at top and bottom with a second rope, should the first rope burn and drop the bird into ashes, ruining the flavour. When roasted black and crisp, chop immediately to shreds with a fine cleaver, and be not niggardly with the nutmeg. Appetizement of Macherel-fish. Roast of Beef (Middle English) Take two sprigs parssley, one fine Macherel-fish, and a horn of garlicke. Place them into a mortar, and work them into a slyme. Serve with bread dried over a slow hearth, nutmeg to taste. Eggs 1521 AD Lay two eggs in a sizzling pan, then drench them until well-covered. When the yolks have misted, remove the eggs to a plate strewn simply with purslane and cardamom branch. Add nutmeg. Eggs should be prepared in no other way. Guinea Fowl 1632 AD Take one fat guinea fowl, beat it and thrash it until it is dead, and pluck. Light three heavy oak logs and one of cedar. When dressed-out and seasoned, hang the fowl, with a moistened dray's rope, over the 1689 AD Choose one old cow, and run it through with spears and blades until quite dead. Burst the udder with a mace. Hammer the ankles until the many small bones are deemed broken, and reserve for soup. Taking the top of the cow, being the sturdiest meat, lash it onto a fine spit over hot coals, turning frequently, until the juices no longer run (1-2 weeks). Cut the cooked meat and toss with nutmeg at serving-time. Sorrel a la Anglíque 1904 Take one scant handful of sorrel leaves, and stir well into two pints of fine fresh mayonnaise. Spoon into center of highly polished salver. Garnish around with carefully alternating parsleyed toast points, vinegar-cured black olives, quartered hard-boiled eggs, smoked oysters, and shavings of black truffle. Over the dressed sorrel lay anchovy fillets to create a simple diamond pattern. In center top, mound a tablespoon of Pyke-fish. Do not use. Macherel-fish. minced onion and caviar. Serve with a side of whole roast chicken, behind the diner, to provide a pleasing aroma. Mock Steak Surprise! 1953 Hubby forget to tell you he invited the boss for dinner? You're not out of luck! With this simple recipe, you can have T-bones for three on the table by the time the third martini has whetted their appetites! For hubby and the boss, thaw and broil two juicy T-bone steaks, seven minutes per side. For you, form an Africa-shaped patty out of ground beef mixed with equal parts storebought bread crumbs and Hunt's ketchup, cut it in half down the center, and insert a blanched, tender plank of carrot down the line of the cut. Broil seven minutes a side. When cooled, "paint" the carrot white with frosting! They'll be none the wiser. Serve with Broccoli a la Shreveport, and a moulded tomato Jell-O in the shape of an adding machine. Dust off your ten-key and pretend to tabulate—what a gas they'll have! CORNADOES 2175 AD IN A WORLD WITHOUT WEATHER, IN ETERNAL DARKNESS, CORN DOES NOT GROW. THE SUN, HAVING BEEN DESTROYED BY CARDINAL LUTHER BANGERTER IN 2098, AT THE HEIGHT OF THE WAR OF GODS, CANNOT ILLUMINATE YOUR PATH AS YOU FORAGE FOR TINNED CORN FROM THE 21ST CENTURY. TAKE ONE FINE CRANK-LIGHT AND SCOUR THE BLIGHTED COUNTRYSIDE FOR THE TELLTALE REMAINS OF A CONCRETE FOUNDATION. WHERE GRAY-WATER PIPES RISE BUT NOT SEWER-PIPES, DETECT FOR METAL. UNEARTHING A CAN OF CORN, BRING IT HOME AND HEAT A PAN OVER TWO OR THREE TIRES, DEPENDING ON SIZE. STIR THE CORN UNTIL FRAGRANT, THEN ADD KETCHUP TO BIND. SPOON ONTO PLATES AND SERVE EACH "CORNADO" WHILE STILL HOT. view r e t n i Cornelius Bear — Interview by Ed E. Haskell m„” @Š› ™@‘”•ž@c•˜”ˆ’Œ›™@„™@„@‡›‡ˆ@‰˜•“@„˜•›”‡@š‹ˆ@–’„†ˆL@„”@•’‡@ Š› @ž‹•@„Œ”Gš@Š•š@”•@‰„“Œ’ @„”‡@˜••“™@žŒš‹@š‹ˆ@†˜ˆž@•›š@•‰@™Œ“–’ˆ@ –˜„Š“„†šŒ†„’Œš N@y•›@ž•›’‡@…ˆ@„’’@’Œ‘ˆL@Bo’‡@‡›‡ˆ@„Œ”Gš@Š•š@„@™†ˆ”ˆL@ ‹ˆ’’„@™„‡B@…›š@ •›G‡@…ˆ@ž˜•”ŠN@c•˜”ˆ’Œ›™@‹„™@…ˆˆ”@š‹ˆ˜ˆ@„”‡@‹ˆ˜ˆ@Œ”@ ‹Œ™@“•”š‹™@„”‡@š‹ˆ@‡›‡ˆ@‘”•ž™@š•@Šˆš@Œ”š•@„@–’„†ˆ@ž‹ˆ˜ˆ@‹ˆ@‹„™@ ž‹„š@‹ˆ@”ˆˆ‡™N@t›˜”™@•›š@‹ˆ@’Œ‘ˆ™@’ŒœŒ”G@žŒš‹@š‹ˆ@™–„¡¡M™–ˆ†š˜›“@š‹ˆ @ Š•š@Š•Œ”G@•”@„š@š‹ˆ@o”™š„‡@‹•›™ˆN@d›‡ˆ@’Œ‘ˆ™@‹Œ™@™–„†ˆL@…›š@„’™•@ ’Œ‘ˆ™@‘ˆˆ–Œ”G@Œš@‰˜ˆ™‹@žŒš‹@š‹ˆ@t•‡‡™@„”‡@…„…Œˆ™@„”‡@mᄁš˜•‡•˜™@„”‡@ ’Œšš’ˆ@•ššˆ˜@Š› ™N@hˆ@Œ™@„”@›”›™›„’@™•˜š@ž‹•@‘ˆˆ–™@„@’•…ˆ@•–ˆ”@‰•˜@ ’Œ‰ˆL@„”‡@™Œ”†ˆ@„˜•›”‡@‹ˆ˜ˆ@’Œ‰ˆ@Œ™@„”@„“…›’„”†ˆ@ˆšˆ˜”„’’ @†„˜šŒ”Š@ ™•“ˆ@‡›“…@Œ‡ˆ„@…ˆšžˆˆ”@šž•@–„™™Œ”ŠM•›š@…˜„Œ”™L@‹ˆ@Šˆš™@Œš@’Œ‘ˆ@‹ˆ@ ’Œ‘ˆ™@ŒšN@hˆ@Œ™@–„šŒˆ”šL@‹ˆ@Œ™@™“„˜šL@„”‡@‹ˆ@Œ™@†’„™™ N@hˆ@‘”•ž™@ž‹Œ†‹@ ‰Œ”Šˆ˜@š•@™šŒ†‘@•›š@‡›˜Œ”Š@šˆ„L@„”‡@Œš@„Œ”Gš@š‹ˆ@•”ˆ@ •›@š‹Œ”‘N@i@ŠŒœˆ@ •›NNNc•˜”ˆ’Œ›™@bˆ„˜N@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@i”šˆ˜œŒˆž@†•”‡›†šˆ‡@… @–‹•”ˆ@•”@o†š•…ˆ˜@QYL@RPPVN@@ Cornelius at the Badass Games ME: Cornelius what are you doing. Probably every moment is precious at your age. I'm sorry to take up some of them. CORNELIUS BEAR: I'm having a toaster waffle, actually. I've been enjoying these as an evening treat lately. Cornelius having a cup of hot water What death looks like ME: Are you serious. After all the chips have been counted, you like a frozen toaster waffle. Even though you have probably had côte de boeuf à la incendiènne done tableside at a place in Normandy in the 60s. CB: One wants different things from food at my age. I've pleasantly found that my palate prefers simplicity, the older I get. ME: Oh man don't say it. CB: Indeed. Some mornings, I don't even take coffee. A mug of hot water and a cold towel across the forehead serve as my liaison to the day. ME: Man now there is a thing. You ain't even need food. Your system is so fine and old that you just need temperatures. ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ meZ@w‹Œ†‹@‡•@ •›@ š‹Œ”‘@Œ™@š‹ˆ@‹ˆ„’š‹M Œˆ™š@c‹Œ”ˆ™ˆ@‡Œ™‹_@ cbZ@{™•›–} ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ CB: Well, I don't know if I'd put it quite like that. I am eating this waffle, after all. For lunch I had some penne with spicy sausage that was quite nice. ME: This is a question. After you eat a pretty hot bowl of soup, do you sweat so much that you have to change clothes? CB: No. Soup affects me very little, if at all. It rarely involves a change in wardrobe. ME: Dang then that must be my problem. I always get that Won Ton Soup In Deluxe Fashion from Favorite Wok, you know, for three people, 'cause that's the smallest size they offer. I eat the whole thing up then, 'cause ain't nothin' worse than a day-old won ton. But then I'm like two hundred degrees on the inside, and the yoke of my duds is sweated across like a jogger. CB: That could perhaps cause some organ damage. If you cook, you will see how readily organ meats respond to heat. I have to imagine it's much the same inside of one's self. ME: Man so I am cooking my own guts with food that can't be right. That is like backwards divided by two. CB: Well, it's not likely to be a problem, I just want to indicate that one can off-set one's internal temperatures through volume eating. ME: Oh man you completely got me in a chunder and that is not even a word from America, it is a word from Australia. CB: Chunder...do you mean that you need to vomit? I believe the origin of the word is nautical, and was employed by the sea-sick who wished to warn those on lower decks to "watch out down under!" At any rate, I don't mean to make you so nervous that you vomit. The body is remarkable about seeking equilibrium, so you needn't worry unnecessarily. Perhaps let the soup rest for ten minutes before eating it, next time. You may actually taste the flavors more deeply. ME: Oh man you can't get me around some hot fresh won ton soup from Favorite Wok and not have me just plowin' in there with like crazy pinwheels for eyes and spoons in both hands. CB: Very well, then. What else would you like to ask me? ME: Which do you think is the healthiest Chinese dish? ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ meZ@w‹Œ†‹@™•›–@‡•@ •›@Šˆš_@sš˜„ŒŠ‹š@ ž•”@š•”@•˜@‡•@ •›@ “ˆ™™@„˜•›”‡_ ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ CB: Hm. I think you're on the right track with soups. The broths are restorative and relative to stir-fries they lack oil. I would suggest vegetable dishes, also. Most Chinese restaurants offer a variant, usually called "Vegetables Delight" or some such encouraging descriptor. ME: Oh dogg you got me eatin' cold soup and carrots now man this is what happens when you talk to an old guy about food advice. Next thing you know I will be watering my front lawn in black socks and boxer shorts only. CB: [chuckles] Yes, well. You did ask. Vegetables are perfectly delicious -- their only apparent shortcoming is that they are not flashily-marketed hamburgers. Do you follow the Jacques Pépin cooking series that's airing on PBS right now? ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ meZ@i@„Œ”Gš@“ˆ™™@ „˜•›”‡@žŒš‹@wˆ™š@ l„‘ˆ@•˜@h•š@F@s•›˜N@ iG“@™š˜„ŒŠ‹š@ž•”@ š•”L@i@„“@„@™š˜„ŒŠ‹š@ ž•”@š•”@“„”N ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ ME: Ain't he that old French dude who cooks in boxer shorts and black socks only, with a cigarette danglin' from his lip, all like just one shrimp in a dirty old pan with a stick of butter? CB: Jacques is seventy years old, not that many years beyond me, and I have seen his style of cooking evolve the way my own tastes have. He began as a great French classicist, but now his dishes are subtle, simple, and highly understated. Certainly, in my youth, I wouldn't dream of ordering anything but the reddest cut of meat and potatoes drowned in cream, but these days I can appreciate a dish of nothing more than chopped tomato with salt, parsley, and good olive oil. ME: Oh wow you just described a dinner that I would react to like, "the chef forgot to put the dinner on top of these big salsa pieces! Dad blammit! No cash for THIS guy!" CB: You'll see, you'll see. ME: Okay, yeah, I know. I probably will. Meanwhile...uh, let me check my notes...[holds up both hands, wiggles fingers, proves that there are no notes hidden anywhere]...you have said in the past that you were married. Can I ask about that. my name, she was Iris Gambol Bear. I thought it was a poetic enough name originally, and that the addition of my own surname Bear made it a bit silly, but these were the fifties and that's how things worked. I saw her as she sat reading on a bench in a park in upstate New York. It was a lovely fall day, and I'm glad I acted on the feeling I had for her, because now I know that sort of thing only comes along once in a life. Rather, one can only feel that ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ meZ@y•›@Š•š@š•@ˆ„š@ š‹ˆ@ž•”@š•”™@—›Œ†‘L@ „’“•™š@Œ““ˆ‡Œ„šˆ’ L@ •˜@š‹ˆ @’•™ˆ@š‹ˆŒ˜@ Š„“ˆN ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ CB: Certainly. ME: I...I mean, I guess I just did. CB: Marriages are complicated things. Perhaps ask about a specific aspect. ME: Okay, I guess a reporter would first ask Who. CB: Her name was Iris Gambol, and when she took Won Ton soup. I ain't mess around with Sweet Corn and Chicken or Dragon & Phoenix. Sizzling Rice in a pinch, but almost never. (EEH) ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ way once, I believe. It's not unlike having the wind knocked out of you, when you see the face you're meant to love. I think you need to have had that feeling at the foundation of it all—that visceral, undeniable instinct—to make it work even when the going gets hard. Anyhow, there she sat reading, and after I'd collected my breath—all this happened in the span of no more than two seconds, mind you—I simply walked over to her, held out my hand, and she smiled as she took it. I was not myself at that moment. I had the great clarity, charm, and confidence of a man who has had two glasses of Scotch. I saw that the book she read was The Catcher In The Rye, which was still fairly new at that time, and which I'd finished just that morning in bed, so it was the centerpiece of our conversation, through which we ducked and darted and punched a few interesting holes in the shape of our own animated silhouettes. For two total strangers, our conversation was daring and bold. I loved her from the moment I saw her, but when I heard her voice, with its easy wit and charm, I knew inside of one minute that my life was a new thing. The rings and showers and drunken uncles were but foregone conclusions. That night at my apartment we roasted a buttered chicken without any side dishes at all, and washed it down with a cheap bottle of Bulgarian red that she ran out and bought at a gas station. Somewhere around the thigh meat we realized we'd never even learned each others' names. I agreed to call her Lady X and she dubbed me the "The Curious Hallfield Park Incident." We danced to Patti Page and blew our cigarette smoke out the window. I...I'm sorry. Are you still there? ME: Wow. Dang. On my first date with Molly, it went a lot like that. I mean, I roasted a bird with no side dishes, and she brought the wine. CB: Seems a fair enough sign. Cherish one another while you can. Over time, it is all too easy to come to treat a spouse like just another piece of furniture. ME: We ain't married, though. ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ meZ@t‹Œ™@•”ˆ@–’„†ˆ@ Œ”@š•ž”L@š‹ˆ @–›š@„@ ™“„’’@™‹˜Œ“–@Œ”@ ˆ„†‹@ž•”@š•”N@y•›G‡@ š‹Œ”‘@iG‡@’Œ‘ˆ@š‹„šL@ …›š@i@‡•”GšN@iš@™ˆˆ“™@ ”„™š @š•@“ˆN@i@ „’“•™š@”ˆœˆ˜@’Œ‘ˆ@ š‹ˆ@™‹˜Œ“–@„š@š‹ˆ™ˆ@ –’„†ˆ™N ‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚‚ CB: People your age are terrible about commitment. I'm not sure what it is. You really are a generation of turkeys. ME: Maybe you all got married too early 'cause you couldn't roll in the hay until God had been invited to watch. Which brings me to God's hobbies— CB: You operate with a remarkably chaste revisionism. Do you suppose that your Paid Advertisement elders, in their youth, didn't have as much or more fun than you currently have, regardless of marital status? Where do you think you "get it from," precisely? stone funk record label of the year ME: I mean like what I see is that old people are known to enjoy church over raves. That's only one thing I know, though. CB: Just because drug dealers weren't doing perverse things with drain cleaner and the periodic table of the elements doesn't mean that we weren't living souls who enjoyed kicking our heels up come nightfall. ME: Well yeah I mean I guess we get it from somewhere. CB: Oh, drat. I've been boiling eggs, and the timer's just gone off. Can you excuse me for a moment? ME: I ain't one of those dudes who holds on a phone for six minutes while the other party peels eggs, that is way old school. But I am also grateful to you for your time. I think we can put down the pieces here. CB: It has been a pleasure. Thank you for asking after my story. I'll be pleased to see the printed version. ME: Dogg you got all the classy lines. Sadly, I don't. Stay sweet, John Holmes' Helmet-Size Jockstrap. [hangs up] FIN. REPRESENTIN' your FAVORITE artists: Biloxxi Tah Kan3z Trik Pype FLU$H Nuno Ndaba Peach Club Tim King (Christian) Got a new sound? Contact Ray Smuckles! CELL # PRI-MTIM (774-6846) Paid Advertisement CHAPTER THREE We now know that Jesus Christ was married to Mary Magdalene. But was it going well? When last we saw Jesus and Mary Magdalene, they had just taken their seats in Jochebed's couples' therapy tent. ---------------------------------------- Jesus sat uncomfortably, wondering if he'd just said the one wrong thing that would cause the therapist to crumble his papyrus in a wad, toss his pen behind him, and blurt, "Divorce. You two. Now." He hated the idea of signing a bunch of forms. He'd had to sign thirty-five different places just to get married; how many to undo the marriage? At least twice that, in all likelihood. The government of Jerusalem didn't look kindly on divorce, and would no doubt require such a prohibitive number of signatures that the average guy would just give in and stay married. Jochebed put his fingertips to a point and pressed them to his lips. He seemed to think for a great while. Jesus refused to look at Mary-was afraid to. He wondered if, after this bombshell, she wouldn't hire Ezerel, the town forger, to sign his name to the forms without his knowledge, and go live with her mother, never to be seen again. The idea was escapist, and he felt guilty. "That's very interesting, Jesus," said Jochebed, re-crossing his legs. "Mary, what do you think could be improved?" She paused, which surprised him, because in recent months she'd flown into a verbal tirade at his slightest offense. He felt he'd endured so much endless scorn that at times he imagined himself trapped inside a boiling undersea forest of thrashing octopus tentacles. She began slowly, carefully. "I feel like I'm not there, in his eyes. I might as well be a chair or lantern. No—a lantern takes maintenance. I might as well be a chair." Jochebed this time merely pressed his index finger against his nostril and closed his eyes thoughtfully. Many seconds passed, and Jesus suspected that this was simply to give him time to reflect on his wife's words. Jochebed, for all he knew, was dreaming of grilled beef and peppers on lavash. He found himself resentful, and decided not to speak first. Mary, unwilling to weaken her point with extra talk, set her teeth and waited. Jochebed, growing concerned that his time-honored "pause" technique wasn't working, sniffed. He had often found that the slightest noise would provoke a nervous response from someone in the room. Not these two. The sniff hung in the air and ripened like a lie. Jesus and Mary, intelligent and anxious, saw through the tactic immediately, and in the following seconds, they strengthened their independent resolve to make him earn his money. No man should be paid to sniff his nose, they would have concluded, had they been speaking together privately. Jochebed, now tense, addressed Jesus. "You don't remember why you're together," he summarized. "She feels neglected. Why is that?" Jesus felt irked that someone was making money simply by listening to two sentences and then saying the sentences back to the people who said them. People didn't pay canyons, and canyons echoed. "Why does she feel neglected?" Jesus began. "Probably because we don't spend much time together. I'm busy with my friends a lot, and I've been working to make extra money." This brought Mary out. "Cards! You, selling cards in Kazzar's Card Baazar! Who ever heard of anything stupider than cards! I can't believe you." She looked at Jochebed. "You know what you do when you want to wish someone a happy birthday? You stop by their house and talk to them. He thinks that a piece of paper saying Happy Birthday, delivered by messenger, is going to catch on!" She turned to Jesus. "Either Kazzar has you duped, or you're just working at that stupid place to avoid me!" Jesus knew it was the latter, but he did at least derive some pleasure from the fine scented papers in the shop. Kazzar also told a great joke about a Roman who returned home after a long battle in Mycenae, only to find his wife screwing a road-maker. The guy could do a Roman better than anyone, and it always cracked him up. Chapter Four of The Braebicus Dict appears in the next issue of this publication. Answers from Questions by Ed E. Haskell Ray Smuckles You know, now that you mention it, I ain't think I ever seen one 'a those suckers in person! Daaamn! I mean, I can remember some big Christmas party down at the University Club, a black-tie thing put on by Mayor C and the Fire Department, but I ain't remember a harp! I think at one point I heard that a harpist was playin' in a smaller side-chamber, kind of a parlor, but in the main room they had these dudes cookin' up George Thorogood with a WAILIN' saxophone player and you can bet your money I busted my hams to those tunes for the better part 'a the night. I had chicks in front, chicks behind, just a quicksand pit of chicks in black and red satin, my tie all undone, shirt open at the collar, WHO...DO...YOU LOVE just mackin' my funk...no, I ain't seen a harp. Todd Squirrel What'sa fricks'a harp? That that thing they play when somebody in cartoons dd-dies? Yeah, I saw a harp in a frikkin' cartoon, so what? A dog croaked or somethin'. Whadda I gotta care? I'm glad he's dead! Peter H. "Nice Pete" Cropes If this question is to assess whether I am from low breeding, then fine, I will answer it honestly, because people of low blood can still have their integrity in place. But in knowing my answer you have aroused my defenses. Yes, I have seen a harp. It was in the window-display of a fine department store in the big city, Charleston, where we had gone to see an uncle die in his bed. It was a terrible trip, full of unbearable quiet stretches and an eventual burial. The harp served to advertise a lovely dress. Cornelius Bear I have seen a harp. Emeril LeGoinegasque Well if this does not come at an interesting time because as I type this a fine man in a tuxedo suit does play the harp on the television. We have upgraded our apartment's basic cable package and I do believe day and night this channel is devoted to that calming instrument.... Now this is funny, my memorey tells me Spongebath did himself upgrade the cable package for this channel in specific. He is a friendly fellow but at times his waters do run deep and dark and I believe he does take refuge in the firmament of the gently plucked strings. I admit I have enjoyed the music around the house as well. IF YOU HAD A HIDDEN BOOKCASE DOOR WHAT WOULD YOU PUT BEHIND IT? —E.E.H. Ray Smuckles Probably a record player, and when you pulled out the hidden volume that opened the secret bookcase door, the needle would drop, and the album would just play twenty minutes of fuzz and blitches. A blank album. Your terror would totally grow. You'd be like, "I should not have gone into this secret room. When the door opened, I should have just gone the hell away. Is there a skeleton?!" Téodor Orezscu A room with a big circular bed, and zebra carpet, and mirrored ceiling, and a switch, where if you flipped the switch the bed would start to pop, because it was a giant Jiffy-Pop package, and you could hop in there with a lady-friend just like in Real Genius. And the phone by the bedside would be Bang & Olufsen, maybe a red matte plastic with a gray base. The music? Yeah, you guessed it. The Sixteen Candles soundtrack. [Téodor's answer was written by Ed E. Haskell, Téodor was never called.] [Nobody N/A] [I was mainly interested in Ray's answer to this, which turned out to have less sluts than I expected. Therefore I made up Téodor's answer and then killed the piece here. -EEH] Talkin’ ‘bout The Curse of the Sea-Bitch The Curse of the Sea-Bitch returns in our next issue! These things take hella research and I ain't done research this time around. It takes like Library trips and index cards and bein' hushed even though you are laughin' because Tré-Odor wrote a word down and he won't show you what it is until a seven year-old kid walks by in a backpack and Tré-Odor holds up the paper and it says DOUCHEBAG. The responsible reader will appreciate my unwillingness to make up this year's hottest nautical fiction. What is Your Opinion on the Chinese? EXCLUSIVE TO MAN WHY YOU EVEN GOT TO DO A THING Ray Smuckles The Chinese? They're Chinese. Is this racist? I ain't down, dude. I ain't known you to be like this. Charley "Little Nephew" Smuckles Chinese be hella confusin', G-note. All like one way and nice in regular society, but then they got a special Chinese society, of Chinese people, all knowin' each other and maybe even givin' each other loans at no interest. I just think they help each other out, is all. I ain't sayin' nothin'. Téodor Orezscu The Chinese have a different idea about what personal space means. This is not inflammatory. All I'm saying is, I've noticed that in lines or crowded areas, they don't mind bumping into you. This may be the norm in China. I've seen pictures where it's crowded. I don't really like talking about this. I feel like anything I say can be dug up and work against me in a court case. Call me when you get to the next article idea, dude. Miss Lady Are they the ones that can't get the whole Internet? Because I feel that way. I need to change from AOL and get something better than this old gray PowerBook. I'm so mainland. I'm so Guangdong. TODD T. SQUIRREL Screw 'em! I got enough problems! Peter H. "Nice Pete" Cropes You are calling me again, this time about Chinese people. I feel you are trying to get at something, maybe regarding my upbringing. Maybe trying to make me say something off-guard. I will only say that Chinese people all have black hair and glasses. That is all I have seen "in innocence," it is what I have observed from cars and public lines. I am very curious about why you called me once again, Roast Beef. I need to start looking into you, maybe. Do I need to know what you think about Chinese? Ray's Uncle Marion Adonis Culpepper Roast Beef! Well, I do declare! I am afraid Paid Advertisement I am caught at asunders by your call...I was just about to mix up a good cup of scalded milk and rye before my morning nap...but no bother. Thank you just ever so much for givin' me a jangle, it is always good to hear from my nephew's friends! I...heh...I remember my trip out there quite well, don't you know! Ooh, oh, what was the question? I'm so sorry to ramble like this. It's almost time for my forty winks...though I make take the full Hippocrates' sixty...heh heh...the Chinese? Oh, goodness. Maybe you should call back in the afternoon, when I have a bit more time free. We lost an uncle in that most grievous and regrettable Boxer Uprising of 1899, the great Hercules Lane Culpepper. Oh, my milk is just about scalded. I really must go. Please do call me after supper, won't you. I need to consult my genealogies. Good-bye. Operator, please end this call. VLAD Heh! China. One of last true Communist countries, if even you can say that, though. Viet Nam, Cuba, Laos, North Korea, they do the total deal...and here we haf good oldt China. Does Communist need Google? I say very little on subject, because I am reformink, but maybe in this way I am like China. I am refusink to use Google for pleasure these days, only facts. Is like your Lent. I need to know when Elvis is born? Is pleasure. I walk to post office. Then I walk to library, because the post office takes down poster of commemorative stamp of Elvis his life. Elvis is born January 8, 1935 by the way. Sorry I was late for call. Bus was rejectink bus pass again. Was mess-up at home office of bus company. Then there is huge line at library. stone funk record label of the year REPRESENTIN' your FAVORITE artists: Biloxxi Tah Kan3z Trik Pype FLU$H Nuno Ndaba Peach Club Tim King (Christian) Got a new sound? Contact Ray Smuckles! CELL # PRI-MTIM (774-6846) Paid Advertisement Chinese Food Thoughts of Times From a Young Age by EEH Téodor Orezscu When we were a kid, I mean when I was a kid (sorry -- I'm on Beef's computer using a unix editor, don't have time or skills to learn how to delete in VI), we went to a place called Hong Kong. It was straight American Chinese food: fried won ton skins with that clear red sugar dipping sauce, chow mein with the baby corn in it (the tiny cobs were prized but never adequately explained), and chicken dishes with snow peas and water chestnuts, sauced in a clear viscous liquid that held well with the steamed rice. To this day I like basic Chinese food that probably bears no resemblance whatsoever to the "crab pooter in fermented hay water" they're eating in the mainland. R. Beef Kazenzakis (by private wire) Alright so it was a thing at our house that we could not have what we wanted. This being said, we could not have Chinese food. We could never have it. I had it a time or two down at Ray's and it was luscious and all so good. The won tons had hella silky textures and the paper cartons of thick-sauced meat were hella at home on a spoon with the insanely good dry-style nose-enchanting rice. Gramma K made horrible wet rice that she said would "make us proud one day" but I never knew what that meant. Once in a while me and Showbiz would get to clamorin' for some Chinese Food and she would pour soy sauce onto some of her wet rice and stir in some frozen peas and maybe sprinkle some of that green can parmesan cheese over the top. There you have it, Chinese Food Kazenzakis: wet rice, soy sauce, peas, and parmesan cheese. Ain't no Chinaman anywhere would turn down a steamin' hot bowl of that concoction. Ray Smuckles I have loved Chinese food since a very small age. Mom used to take me down to the old district south of the high rises, where the real-school joints dished up some hard-ass Asia on a plate. You just said "family special" and the waiter nodded and you never saw a menu. Total respect. They would bring an Egg Roll, then Hot and Sour Soup or Egg Corn Soup (Chef's Decision), and then the main event: Sweet and Sour Pork with pineapples and bell pepper and onion pieces. After that we would relish on some tea and fortune cookie and mom would ask about parking validation. You know, now that I look back on this, I think maybe we weren't getting all that great of stuff. I guess the sands of time and my own naïveté about the mysteries of non-pizza or -hamburger food kind of made me think this stuff was more legit than it was. Oh well. I guess, to my credit, that my favorite memory of the place was not the food, but the crazy bronze "water wheel" fountain sculpture they had in the lobby. You could put a coin into one of the water wheels and watch as the coin fell down through all the water wheels to the bottom, which was very deep and kind of murky. Refried Beans and Rice by Chris Onstad I'm not sure how old I was when I learned that my great-grandmother Rose died...probably four or five. I was sitting at our dining room table in Danville, scooping down a favorite lunch of refried beans and white rice, and my mom had been on the phone for a few minutes. It tells you something about the mind of a child that none of the details of the call registered with me as I mashed rich, earthy beans onto long-grain rice and shoved them into my maw. I'm not even aware of how long she'd been off the phone when she sat down next to me and said that greatgrandma Rose had died. It seemed like a mechanical relay of facts...in my life I'd only seen Rose a few times, and didn't feel much affected. She was a very short person with a little tight gray afro who had waved once from a front lawn. I remember that the front yard from which she THINGS CHRIS ONSTAD HAS DONE WRONG IN LIFE Intentionally fell out of touch with a friend (age: 31) Kicked his brother in the nuts and pretended it was an accident (9) Threw a dart at a kid he didn't like (7) Stole a candy bar at age five (5) waved was not a pleasant place to play, and that a male neighbor with a trailer that held two motorcycles was angry when I looked at the motorcycles too closely. I remember being told that I was "done" by a parent or grandparent, and whisked inside. To this day I consider refried beans and long-grain white rice my baseline comfort food, even though my earliest solid memory of them is rooted in death. Try them with a little shredded Monterey Jack or cheddar. oŽƒŸ@cŠ—‹˜@™Š‹˜@•‹‡…‡@Š‡‘‘@”ˆ@ Ž‹‘‘‡†@”š—@˜ƒš˜ƒ‰‡˜N@ ½mwy@s™ƒˆˆ@@@@@@@ Screwed up his dad's nice car because he was emotional over a lady (17) Drew a crappy picture and let his grandma buy him an expensive sketch pad that he only used two pages of (10) Made fun of poor people in front of his grandfather, who had grown up during the Depression (13) TEETH STUFF CHEERIOS PAPER PLATES AND EXTENSION CORDS STEEL RESERVE LIQUOR BASIC WINES WHAT IS THE SADDEST THING YOU (I) HAVE SEEN LATELY by Ed E. Haskell FRUIT --> DELI BOAT WITH NO HUMMUS MANAGER READING CHART entrance Map of chain grocery store, Blip Diddle, CA Oh dang man this is pretty sad I ain't even sure I should type it. But I was on this road trip (kind of small) with Ed E's girlfriend Miss Lady down the California coast and we stopped in some town called like Blip Diddle (?) or something for the night. We were up to tricks and havin' fun and decided to get some tasty snacks and maybe like some wine or Mike's Hard Ice malt beverage from the town's big chain grocery store. I was all The Man and walked over there even though it was at least 1/5 mile away. She was gonna take a shower and maybe put on no clothes. I was all about that so I strutted on over. It was kind of late, maybe 10:53 or so, and as I was walkin' into the store this kind of fucked up older beach-bum guy with no shave walked out with his purchase in a bag, maybe it was some bottles, I thought. The alarm went off but nobody did anything. What really stuck out was that he had some flip-flops on, and one of his big toes was hangin' way over the worn-out edge and bleedin' like crazy. Every time he took a step it just set down this big nasty bloody toeprint. I was kind of aware that there might be toe blood in the store so I kept my eyes on the ground and wouldn't you know it but the bloody toe dots led to the alcohol area. They went up the beer aisle, turned about-face near the Steel Reserve, then went up the wine aisle and did another about-face near the cold wines. From there they did another about-face and wandered off to the hard liquor, where all the hard liquor has that anti-theft magnetic cap on it. From there the path went back out the same door. It was like that Billy from Family Circus comic that traces his steps, only this time in bloody toe-dots that have a BAC of about .38 or so and could kill a gnat. Anyhow I kind of hopscotched around and over the bloody toe path and got us some six dollar wine (like I said I was being The Man) and then some of that nice cold fried chicken and stuff (bananas for her in the morning, Krispy Kreme for me). I also got nicer toilet paper for the motel room 'cause damn a dude ain't got to summon the nether lesions. And plus Miss Lady probably appreciated it. That is my sad story. A half-dead wino stole booze and reminded me of the Sunday Funnies. As told in two-ply-o-vision. PLAYLIST: Bee With Band-aid Wings / The Other Man Bought The Castle / Fried Surface / Green Eyes and Problems / George You Can't Fix That Car / The Richest and the Poorest Wear No Shoes / Under the Sunken Evening (Noiseless Taco Bell) / Those People Died Into The Future / Bodie