Saturday, February 2, 2019

The Girl With the Modest Mouse Tattoo

“These guys suck,” I said to Amanda. She was adjusting the flower crown that she wore just to annoy me. Apparently, Coachella was still an influence here at the Boston Calling Music Festival.

“Yeah, they’re even douchier in person. They don’t even sound all that great,” she said. The guitarist, manbun and all, tossed his Strat up in the air. I think most of the crowd had hoped that it would hit him in the face. We weren’t that lucky.

“I don’t think they’re all that bad!” said my buddy Andrew. He was on acid or something, dancing by himself in khakis and the ugliest Hawaiian shirt I’ve ever seen. You really have to be a people person to deal with the crowds of people swaying and bobbing, some bumping, some grinding, I was starting to wish I had a hit of whatever Andrew was on to deal with it myself. He kept on rubbing his chest and snapping his fingers, happy as can be. No one seemed to really mind. I guess nothing could really be that bad when you were in his state of mind, bless him.

Boston Calling was smaller than most music festivals. It was compact for a music festival with only two stages and various food trucks all crammed in to a Government Center right in downtown Boston. The two stages meant it was kind of hard to avoid this sham of a band while waiting for Modest Mouse to come on the other stage and close out the night. Like with most festivals, I was annoyed by the thrush of people bumping into me, the (at least) 15-minute wait in line to get beers at $10 apiece and the heat that was already in full Summer mode despite it being just Memorial Day weekend.

 While Coachella took place in a desert, Lollapalooza in a park and Bonnaroo…wherever the hell that was, Boston Calling taking in place in a city wasn’t the most ideal location comfort wise. Plenty of bricks that made up the ground were either broken or missing and had likely turned more ankles than Allen Iverson in his prime. We were surrounded by high rise apartments, ugly concrete buildings that at one point were considered ‘state of the art’, and of course, drunk Bostonians. This festival served as the unofficial kickoff to summer, featuring the return of sundresses (delightful!) and flower crowns (terrible). I was already annoyed in the never ending beer line listening to someone named Chad in front of me complaining about this Cape Cod house not being ‘lit’ enough because his dad wouldn’t get new jet skis. Maybe I was just bitter I had another Summer with nothing planned. Or maybe it was a lack of jet skis in my life. Either way I was already kind of annoyed when someone tapped me on my shoulder. As one does, I turned around.

“Yo you wanna buy me beer?” said some kid swarmy teen in Rayban’s and an Oasis shirt.

“Sorry Pal” I told him, hoping that would be that. It wasn’t.

“C’mon man I got money I just need you to buy me some Sam Adams,” the youth said.

“Yeah Owen, buy the kid a beer. It’s a good deed to help the young and thirsty,” Amanda was tormenting me again. This had happened a million times since we were in preschool together. It was her favorite pastime. She didn’t even bother to hide the smirk.

“I THINK EVERYONE SHOULD BE HAPPY!” yelled out Andrew. Man of the people.

I looked at the kid. He probably wasn’t even 15 yet. That was me once. I thought back to how many times I successfully got someone else to buy me beer at that age. I quickly remembered I was  successful at that a whopping 0 times.

“Nah, sorry man.”

“Why not?” The balls on this kid!

“Because I just don’t want to,” I told him truthfully.

“Bro give me one good reason why not,” he said. I noticed there were a couple friends of his hiding behind him, hoping to ride his coattails for a couple sips each.

“I’ll give you plenty,” I got ready to unload. I cleared my throat and took a sip of my own overpriced Budweiser just to make him jealous.

“Number one, you may be a cop,” That one got a confused look out of him. “Number two, no one ever bought me beer when I was your age, so why should I do the same for you. In fact I’m envious that the only problem you have to worry about is getting beer at such a tender young age. Thirdly, and most importantly, Oasis fucking sucks and Blur is way better. Had you been wearing a Blur shirt, I may have taken pity on you, but you’re not. Now be gone with you, and good luck getting laid at Prom.” His friends laughed at his misfortune but they quickly moved on to the next target.

“Well now that wasn’t very nice,” Amanda said. “And I swear you will fight that Blur and Oasis debate until you’re in the grave.”

“It’s not even a debate. Blur was a game changer. Oasis was just poppier? Poppier is a word, right?”

“You’re the writer” she said.

“Let’s roll with it then. Anyways, millions of braindead people decided that they liked their garbage more than the genius that is Blur. The masses have terrible taste in music. Boring people like Oasis.”

“You think everyone is boring!” Amanda groaned. She wasn’t wrong.

“Exactly, and everyone likes Oasis. It’s a shame, really. So many perfectly good ears gone to waste.”

“Oh God Owen,” Amanda started, but I was on a roll.

“If you listened to more Blur instead of stupid Champagne Supernova on repeat every time you were feeling… I dunno. Wistful? Then you would know that I’m 100% right.”

“You’re an ass,” she said. I liked to think that this was her conceding the point.

“Thank you darling,” I said with a bow and a fake Queen’s wave to the crowd.

“I LIKE BOTH BLUR AND OASIS. BRITPOP FOREVER! WONDERWALL AND THE WOOHOO SONG! WONDERWOO!” shouted Andrew. People in our area were enjoying him and his dancing more than the boring sack of crap up on stage.

“Anywho,” I said as I moved aside for two girls dragging their wasted friend through the crowd, “Are you excited for Modest Mouse?”

“Yeah! As long as they play Float On I’ll be happy.” I was pretty confident that was the one song Amanda knew by them. She was never into the deep cuts, unless we were talking Justin Timberlake or someone like that. It dawned on me that this was very on brand as she was pro-Oasis.

The band on stage thanked the audience for coming out which was the cue for everyone to immediately rush all at once to the other stage to get ready for Modest Mouse, not even bothering to hear the last song. The herd of angsty cattle made a mad dash for it. Andrew went running like the maddest man of them all with his arms flailing and Amanda followed. She ran like 8 miles a day or something dumb like that so she had no problem tracking him down. The problem for me was that I wasn’t as nimble while trying to spill the least amount of beer possible, so I got caught in the shuffle of the others making their way to the stage. Of course, I didn’t have any service on my phone and not even Andrew’s garish Hawaiian shirt could help me spot them. I’d find them afterwards, or at the very least I’d talk to them tomorrow. We had plans to get breakfast for some reason tomorrow morning. I hate breakfast.

I walked up as far as I could without any plan of attack. I just moved towards dead center of the stage until I didn’t feel like asking people to move to let me get right in front of them, which is asking a lot in this situation. There’s only so many times you can say “excuse me” and “sorry” before you feel like a pain in everyone’s ass. I settled on my spot and hoped that I wouldn’t need to take a piss halfway through, which is a common problem at music festivals.

 The wind was starting to pick up and the sun was getting ready to say adios to everyone, getting darker every minute we waited for Modest Mouse to hit the stage. It was like the calm before a musical storm. I was pretty jazzed to see them play. The rest of the lineup was filled with rappers I didn’t care about, a couple DJ’s who did whatever button pushing they did, and a couple bands that ranged from blah to hey not bad, so this was definitely the highlight of the day. I was happy that I had enough left in my two beers to last the set and was admiring the giant apartment buildings that served as the backdrop rising behind the stage. I was lamenting how I’d never be able to afford rent for a downtown Boston apartment like these when an actual giant decided to park himself right in front of me. I hated him at first sight.

For whatever reason, let’s blame it on the earlier beers, Steve Irwin’s voice started narrating in my head, describing the species in front of me: “Oi, look at the pink shorts on this one with the thousand tiny palm trees on them! You don’t see a vintage green Shawn Kemp Seattle Super Sonics basketball jersey in the wild these days! What a perfect specimen this Bro is! Look at his flip flops, the backwards snapback ‘Worthington Lacrosse’ hat and those sunglasses with the stupid straps on them to really complete the perfect frat look! And the muscles! Look at him! Crikey!” He definitely only knew the words to Float On. There’s no way a guy dressed like that at a festival could know any other song that wasn’t their biggest hit. Not only did I loathe him for, well, everything, but he was at least 6’7 and was now blocking my view.

I wish Andrew was here so I could have him dance on Bro Montana in front of me and get him uncomfortable enough to leave. I looked at my surroundings. Things weren’t looking too promising since everyone was in their respective viewing positions, waiting for Modest Mouse to come out any second. The only nice thing that I saw as I scanned around was this chick that had just sifted to the crowd and was now on my left. I thought I’d need a neck brace after the double take I did when I saw her. Wavy blonde hair, tanned skin already in mid-Summer form, a couple tattoos and an Arctic Monkeys US 2016 tour shirt, sweet Jesus. Everyone in the surrounding area had noticed her gracing us with her presence. I don’t think it was physically possible for her to go unnoticed anywhere. She’d make a terrible spy. The Mega Bro in front of me even pushed his sunglasses down to the bridge of his nose to get a better look at her. It began to speak.

“Did you see them on that tour?” Lord Bro asked the girl.

His shot had been fired.

It did not land.

“What do you think?” she asked with an understandable hint of annoyance.

“I mean, yeah but like, are you a big fan?” Lord Bro asked. The hole he was digging himself was about to get a little deeper.

“Really? You’re seriously asking me if I’m an Arctic Monkeys fan? That’s really the line you’re going with here?”

“I was just…” That was all the Bro managed to get out. This rant was just getting started.

“Do you think I paid 35 bucks for a shirt of a band I don’t like?”

“No…”

“This is really funny coming from a guy in a fucking Shawn Kemp jersey. Did you even see the Sonics play a game in person?”

“Well, no but…” He was stunned. I was enjoying this immensely. She was quickly turning into my hero.

“Don’t you think it’s hypocritical that you, in a Shawn Kemp jersey are trying to question my fanhood when you never even saw the Sonics play a game in your life? I saw a 12-year-old a couple minutes ago in a Nirvana shirt, you gonna go harass him about if he saw them live?”

“Whoa, okay you don’t have to be a such a fucking bitch about it.” His pride had taken a hit, so he was now resorting to the typical tactic when a shallow guy like Lord Bro doesn’t get what he wants: call her a bitch. The line had been crossed.

“C’mon man, did you really have to call her a bitch?” I asked.

“Who the FUCK are you, Bro?” he said, turning to look down on me. As he turned, the Arctic Monkeys girl took the opportunity to take his beer from him and chug it all in about 2 seconds. I swear the city of Boston should put a plaque in her honor at this very spot. She gave him the empty cup back as everyone in the area looked on in various states of amusement, shock and awe. As he was attempting to pick his jaw up off the ground, I took the chance to take his stupid Worthington Lax hat and toss it like a frisbee as far as I could. He shoved me, muttered some swear words about my mother and ran away to find his hat. I was happy to see that whoever had caught the hat had decided to throw it again, even further from where we were. I turned to Wonder Woman on my left.

“I could’ve handled him on my own.” She said.

“Oh yeah, no doubt in my mind on that one,” I told her.

“Do you often butt into other people’s arguments?” She asked.

“Only when it can be beneficial to me, I guess.” She looked confused at that one.

“How did you benefit from that?”

“Did you see how tall that idiot was? I wouldn’t have been able to see shit with him in front of me,” I told her. “Plus, you know he was just going to pester you the entire show.”

“What makes you say that?”                                    

“Are you kidding? You’re so good looking it makes me want to puke. That frat guy wouldn’t have quit in a million years. He’d be there until at the bare minimum you’d get annoyed enough to bite the bullet and take a picture with him so he could lie to his fellow bros about how he nailed you after the show or something.” I wasn’t sure how she would take that but she laughed a little bit which I can only consider a win.

“Okay that’s fair. Well thanks, I guess. I’m Morgan by the way.”

“I’m Owen, and trust me, the pleasure is all mine.” Talk about an understatement. I noticed the tattoo on her forearm of a hot air balloon with an anchor hanging from the bottom of it. It was the cover of one of Modest Mouse’s albums.

There is a subtle art of bringing up the tattoos a girl has. On the face of it, it seems like a great ice breaker in certain situations, but it is much, much more complex than that. The key is the method of how to bring it up. If you just go with a “I like your tattoos” or “cool tattoos did they hurt” then you have to be very, VERY handsome for them not to scoff at your pathetic attempt to begin a conversation. I’m talking like Ryan Gosling level of good looking. If not, you’ll be met with eyes rolling harder than a kid at an EDM show. You will be considered lame and unoriginal if you go with a line like that. It’s a slippery slope, so I was glad I caught myself before blurting out something that would send things to a screeching halt. I tried to play it as casual as a dumb guy like myself could and nodded to the tattoo and said “So I’m guessing you’re looking forward to seeing them.”

“Hell yeah. They’re my favorite. Last time I saw them was like, 2 years ago when I was living in Germany. I’m overdue on seeing these guys.”
           
This stung as I had been trying to get a bunch of my friends to do a Eurotrip for years now. I’d always wanted to go to Germany. And also, London. And Italy. And Spain, Amsterdam, even France. Actually, I’d be willing to go anywhere at this point. I was in a severe need for a change of scenery.

            “That’s cool, how long did you live in Germany for?” I asked.

            “Just six months. I don’t like to spend a lot of time in one place.” Adventurous! “Where are you from?”

            “Boston. I unfortunately do spend a lot of time in one place. Without killing me from jealousy, where else have you lived?” I had never been so intrigued by someone else since I stumbled into Slash in a dive bar last year. I had other friends who traveled and posted how nice things were on Instagram, but she wasn’t just traveling, she was doing more than that. I immediately had an itch to travel to wherever she was going next. I didn’t even need to pack a bag at this rate. Just go to Logan Airport now and fly.

            “Well, I moved to San Francisco for a few months, worked a bit and went to Tokyo for a couple months. Then I visited China, and then….I think Moscow was after that? Yeah definitely Moscow. That was weird. Too cold for me. Never underestimate how cold it is there. I had to trade three pairs of jeans for a fur coat my neighbor Sergei inherited from his Grandmother at one point. I only lasted a few weeks and I had to get the hell out and went to Poland. Poland was okay besides having to wash dishes at the bar I was at my first night there because I forgot to exchange my money. Made friends with the guys there though and it worked out.”

            I got the feeling that she rarely had many dull nights. These days it’s hard for me to get people out for a drink past 9 on a Friday.

“From there I went to Germany which is where I saw Modest Mouse play at this secret beer garden called Wassmer’s. I actually got my tattoo that night! Or technically the next morning or whatever. I had some friends that got me into the bar Modest Mouse was at after the show and I hung out with them. We all got wasted and I told them I would get a tattoo right then and there and they said bullshit, so we all went to a tattoo parlor down the street. It was closed but the guy lived upstairs and we kept knocking until he came down and he said he would do it for me as long as we would shut the fuck up,” I think she took a pause to appreciate the stupid look I imagined was on my dumb face. I was just nodding the whole time trying to keep up. This chick was living my dream. I wanted to travel. I wanted to get drunk with bands I liked. I wanted to make stupid/long lasting decisions on a whim and piss off a German tattoo artist in the wee hours of the morning. I think I was in love.

            “From Germany it was off to London which was great besides the awful food, then I spent some time in Greece. I lived on a boat there for a bit working as a bartender. That was a lot of fun. I miss those tips. The Greeks loved me, I guess. Don’t miss the seagulls though. Those fuckers get nastier the farther out in the ocean you are. So cranky. Where was I… oh yeah, then I made it to Monaco. I had a great job as a blackjack dealer in this underground casino until it got shut down. I had to lay low there for a bit, but it was so beautiful I didn’t mind. I actually was dealing cards to James Gandolfini right before he dropped dead. Still have to watch the Soprano’s someday…anyways, then it was Miami and I’ve been living with some friends doing the whole couch-surfing thing the last 2 weeks, and here I am now talking to you!” She was proud to tell me all of this, which to me meant she appreciated how lucky she was. She wasn’t someone who would answer ‘not much’ when you asked what was new every time you saw her. She had all sorts of stories and secrets and I wanted to know them all. Girls like this only exist in Indie films with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, not talking to me at a music festival. You could have told me the world revolved solely around her, and I’d believe it. I was in such awe of her that I was almost speechless, trying to think of something, anything, to say just to keep this thing, whatever it was, going. To be fair, how could anyone follow up her brief yet amazing summary of her life the last few years? Fortunately, I was saved by some guy in a scally cap (as if his Dropkick Murphy’s t-shirt didn’t scream Boston loud enough) walking out to the stage.

            “What is up Boston!? Who’s excited for MODEST MOUSE TO PLAY BOSTON CALLING!?” This got the usual chorus of woo’s, yeah’s and applause. This guy was really playing it up to the crowd. That was about to change.

            “So, I just wanted to let everyone know that Modest Mouse WILL be playing! We’re just fixing a few things backstage!” The boo birds started chirping at this before he told us all to ‘sit tight’ as if there was anything else to do. Someone threw a beer can on stage which made the guy flinch and he started speed-walking off stage.

            “Talk about some good news for people who love bad news!” Morgan said to me with finger guns. I would’ve groaned if anyone else had made that awful joke to me. She got a pass. I just hung my head in mock shame.

            “Okay your turn! What do you do, Owen?” Just hearing that she remembered my name made my heart skip a bit. I think I might be going soft.

            “Get ready to be disappointed,” I started off, “but I’m a wannabe writer.” How the hell was I supposed to follow her up?

            “That’s not disappointing! What do you write?”

            “Oh you know, the occasional short story, a screenplay I’ll never finish because I dwell on what to name my characters, a novel that maybe I’ll finish 10 years from now, but I mostly freelance for music sites. Pays the bills, you know? I guess I’ll write anything but poetry. Can’t stand poetry.”

            “Is it because you don’t understand it?”

            “No…yeah.” I came clean. “I hate trying to figure it all out.”

            “I’m the same way! Just get out with it, ya know? I don’t want to try to figure out if you’re talking about a tree or your girlfriend in the first grade. What sites did you write for?” She was actually interested in this? What the hell was happening? I told her some of the sites, some of which she read a bunch and some she promised to check out, which meant she wouldn’t, but that was fine. I was just glad to keep this conversation going. Thank god Andy and his drug dances were elsewhere. This was a weird scene, getting to know someone with thousands of strangers all on top of us while some panicked tech guys move wires around on stage. Usually I would be bored meeting people because they didn’t excite me enough. Now I was worried if I was the one exciting enough to keep her from yawning. Apparently, I was doing a decent job.

            “That’s awesome. At least you get to write about an interesting topic,” she said.

            “I just like to rant and rave about dumb things in music. There’s plenty to rant and rave about. But I like to help bands I believe in when I can, and try to tear down Imagine Dragons any chance I get.”

“What’s the most recent thing you’ve ranted or raved about?”

“Well, a couple minutes ago my friend and I were arguing over Oasis versus Bl…”

            “Oh, Blur all day,” Morgan said, cutting me off. “No debate.”

            “Will you marry me?” I asked. It may have been a bit forward so I quickly tried to recover, “Why doesn’t everyone understand that Blur is better?”

            “Cause people are dumb and boring.” Holy shit. I was already pretty high on her, but with that statement she had officially became the greatest thing to ever walk this planet. “I feel like we need to ask someone from the UK though. They would have a better authority on the topic, you know?”

            “That’s a great idea. We just need to find a British person…” and I was cut off again, this time by Morgan shouting at the top of her lungs.

            “IS ANYONE HERE FROM ENGLAND?”

            A voice somewhere in front of us gave a questioning “oi?” Some people shuffled to let this monster of a woman through. The Patriots could have used her to help protect Tom Brady. I’d never want to start any shit at whatever bar she was probably bouncing at. “Someone lookin’ for a Brit?”

            “Yes! Hi, my name is Morgan and this right here is Owen,” She said offering her hand. Morgan’s hand was dwarfed by the British Girl’s as they shook hands. Morgan even grimaced a little from the grip. “As someone who survived the Brit Pop War, who was better: Oasis or Blur?

            “Oasis versus Blur yeh got goin on?” she gave a chuckle that could only be described as hearty. If I had to randomly guess her name, I’d put money down on Bertha and feel very good about my odds.

“Oasis is perfectly fine if yeh like your standard, every day sex. You kent really go wrong wi Oasis. But when yeh want to spice things up, that’s when yeh turn to Blur. If Oasis is sex then Blur is a proper shag in the arse. That fuckin Damon Albarn is brilliant, let me tell yeh. Like a musical karma sutra mastermind or somethin’,” she said, complete with a fist pump, hip thrust and lip bite combo mixed in to really settle the argument once and forever. It was very convincing.

As Morgan and I laughed at this, I noticed others around us shaking their heads in laughter or facepalming themselves. This was the first time I realized that others in our area may have been paying attention. There was a mom with a mean looking let-me-speak-to-your-manager haircut staring daggers at us, mouth agape with her hands over her 10-year old’s ears who seemed to be pretty upset.

“What?” Our British Hero said, nodding to the woman. “Not my fault you brought ya laddie here. You should give it a try sometime! Knock that bug right out ya arse!”

And with that, the mother dragged her son away and probably sent him straight to bible camp.

            Can’t wait to see Amanda blush when I bring this up to her next time Wonderwall comes on Spotify during one of her dinner parties. She may even spit out some of her Chardonnay. I would’ve liked to see her and British Bertha interact, maybe loosen her up a little bit. I think she even would’ve sobered Andrew up. I wonder if he could still feel colors or whatever.
            
“Thank you so, so much,” I told our new friend. “I’d buy you a beer if we weren’t surrounded by a thousand people.”

            “That’s alright love, this will do nicely,” she said as she grabbed one of my Budweiser’s and downed it in record time. She winked at us and went to rejoin her friends ahead of us.

            “Wow. She’s my hero,” Morgan said as she was rummaging through her green canvas bag. It looked well-traveled. “The world needs more Bertha’s to hit you with the truth like that.” I couldn’t agree more.

            The crowd was starting to get antsy. The wind was starting to pick up as it was getting darker and (thankfully) cooler. Morgan’s hair was flowing gracefully in the wind, almost in slow motion. I wish it didn’t make me think of Fabio in a shampoo commercial, but that’s all I could think of.

            “Alright so,” I started, “What song do you hope they play. Have to choose one.”

            “Dramamine.” She said. I gave her a look that I was impressed, which I absolutely was. That was a much-appreciated deep cut that she went with.

            “No matter where I am, any time I hear that song it, like, teleports me back to my bedroom at home, without fail.”

            “Why’s that?”

            “When I was little I was a big Indiana Jones fan. Absolutely loved those movies. Except the one with Shia LaBeouf. That one sucked. Anyways, I just wanted to travel to all these exotic places and go on adventures, find treasure, the whole nine yards,” she said, “the only problem was that I would ALWAYS get motion sickness, so I had to pop Dramamine like TicTacs. At one point I thought I was never going to go anywhere. I would hear my older brother playing that song from his bedroom and I finally asked him what it was called, and when he told me what it was I found it sort of funny. Now I hear it and it brings me back to looking at a map of the world on my wall, planning where I was going to end up. I’ll put it on while I’m on a train or waiting for a boat and I’ll immediately get this pit in my stomach. It still makes me feel something. It makes me feel like I’ve accomplished something, being so far from home.”

She paused for a bit after this. I was hoping they’d play it now just to see how this real-life Carmen San Diego would react. This was definitely the most reflective she had been in our brief encounter. It just added to her mystique. It had hit me that any moment the band would hit the stage and we would stop talking and I’d probably never see her again. I had to hold back a sigh when she asked me what song I was looking forward to the most.
            
“Bukowski,” I told her.  “I gotta go with a song by a favorite band about a favorite writer of mine. The lyrics just make me laugh cause they seem so accurate.”

            And with that we both started to mumble/grumble/sing the lines in our best Modest Mouse mimic: “But God who’d want to be? God who’d want to be such an asshole?

            “I like it. Very solid choice. Now I don’t have to question your fanhood,” she teased.

            “Oh like the Frat guy asking about your t-shirt?”

            “Exactly!” she said while smacking my arm. “However, we have to thank him and his douchbaggery on making us friends.”

            I’d take friends. I noticed some of the techs on stage were having a pow wow that featured a lot of shrugging. I already felt like I was on borrowed time so I asked the question that was near the top of my list.

            “So how the hell are you able to travel that much? It’s impressive as shit but at the same time I can’t wrap my head around how you’re pulling off this world tour of yours. Aren’t you ever worried about anything going wrong?”

            “Not at all! Why waste time worrying? It doesn’t help anything. I just want to see the world as much as I can. All my life I heard from my parents about how they wish they did this and did that when they were younger, so I’m just doing the damn thing. Don’t get me wrong, it was weird and scary at first, and it’s never the easiest thing going to a new place by yourself, but I’ve gotten good at making friends wherever I go. And in some cases, I even find a partner in crime to tell a frat boy to fuck off,” she said with a smile. “I just never want to be bored. Boredom is the enemy! You only get one life so why not try to cram in as much as you can, right? You could get hit by a Vespa in Rome one day and it could all end in an instant. I work the odd jobs and make connections, and things just always seem to work out. You should try it. It’d give you something to write about. Jack Kerouac’s kind of dated now anyways.”

            I had been in Morgan’s presence for like 20 minutes and she was already someone I’d never forget. It’s felt like everyone I’ve met over the past few years have just been a cookie cutter type of personality in a different body. Go to college, get a job, get a boyfriend/girlfriend, get married, get a kid and just keep working til retirement. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, of course, but most people are predictable. Morgan was far from that. She was a breath of fresh air. She’s the spice that saves the recipe. She’s an x-factor, a wild card, a shot of tequila. She’s a human plot twist in the life of anyone she’s ever interacted with. She’s living a life I could only dream of. Usually I’d be jealous of her but I can only sit back and applaud her because she’s actually going out there and doing what she wants to do, which is see the world. The travel, the lack of worry, the desire to make her life as interesting as she can…that’s someone doing things the right way.

            I wish I could join her on whatever adventure was next. She had me feeling invigorated and also slightly worried that I had already wasted so much time not going out and seeing the world. I wanted to see her next chapter, wherever the hell it was. I didn’t know, and I don’t think even she knew what was next. That’s exciting in its own right. What wasn’t exciting was that I knew exactly what was going to happen any second: the stage lights would go dark, the band would walk out to the stage, people would cheer loudly and they would start playing, and we’d likely get lost in the waves of people when they all rush up toward the stage to make things even tighter. My time with her was running out and so was my hope.

            “So, seeing as we’re friends and all now, what’re the chances we ever cross paths again?” I had to ask.

            “Well, that depends,” she said. I swear there was a glimmer there.

            “I usually don’t want to get too attached with people I meet in cities I’m only briefly in,” she started. At that very moment the lights turned off. Modest Mouse started walking out to the stage and those cheers I predicted started to pick up. Morgan had to start yelling, “but I’ll be at a certain bar tonight after this show ends. If you show up, maybe, JUST maybe you’ll prove to me that you’re actually adventurous enough to hang with me.”

            “That sounds like a plan. I’m serious when I say this,” I yelled, “You’re the most interesting person I’ve met in…well, maybe ever. I want to know more about your story.”

            “Fuck that! You’re the writer here! Write your own story.” The sea of people bumping into us made it a given that we would be separated at any point. “If you find me, maybe we can share some of the same stories!”

            “Fine! What bar?” I yelled. The human walls were definitely closing in. The band started playing “Fire It Up” off of the same album that Morgan’s tattoo came from. That had to be a good sign, right?

            “That’s for you to figure out. I’ve got faith in you,” she said with a wink. At least one of us had faith in me. She then tapped two guys in front of her on the shoulder and gave the universal thumbs upward to hoist her up.

            God dammit.

Was she really going to exit my life via crowd-surfing?

“Do you always make such a glamorous exit?”

“I just like to keep things interesting. Good luck writer-boy!” And with that she went tumbling and turning with her Chuck Taylors in the air bopping people on their heads along with the various pairs of hands shoving her forward.

            I just stood there, Budweiser in hand staring at her. All I could do was shake my head. Once again, she left me speechless. For a way too brief moment of time, I was with someone that truly amazed me. Now I was back to reality with a guy in his 40’s elbowing me in the ribs trying to take a video on his phone.

            I wondered if I was the only one that had felt their life had been cut up into two time periods: Before Morgan and After Morgan. I was now living in the AM.

            After the show, I was back on the dreadful Green line lamenting the impossible mission I had. It was hopeless. Pick a bar, any bar. It was a nice run with Morgan, but she will forever be someone I’d be wondering about for years to come. She had probably ruined Modest Mouse for me, to be honest. I definitely wouldn’t be able to listen to ‘Dramamine’ without wondering what she was up to. Another band I loved ruined by someone else that became a member of my past.

As the subway got further away from the giant crowds, my phone started buzzing with all the messages that were held up from the shitty service. I had a couple from Amanda telling me to meet her and Andrew at a bar near the festival, but it was too late for that since I was already on the subway. Another one came from her that instantly made a lightbulb go off.

            “Hey they played that Bukowski song you like!!” it read.

            I had to buy Amanda a bottle of wine for her being such a genius.

I knew exactly where to find Morgan. Or at the very least this was the best guess I could ever make. Leave it to Amanda to finally remember a good song suggestion I threw her way and help me out. It all made sense now!

            “Holy fucking shit!” I said to myself. It was at this point I noticed that the same mother-son combo that was scarred for life from that British chick was sitting right across from me.

            “What’s wrong with you?” the Mother asked while shaking her head.

            “More like what’s RIGHT with me,” I told her.

            “Not much, apparently.” She said. I felt bad for her kid.

            I refocused my attention and realized I had to get off at the very next stop. I sprinted up the stairs of the Hynes Convention Center stop and had to shove some guy with a sign that said the world was ending out of my way. My heart was pounding. I had a pit in my stomach now as I made my way out of the station and ran across the street with only one cab driver honking at me. I was feeling very anxious as I made my way under the familiar sign that read Bukowki’s Tavern. This was the only bar that made sense. She was testing me and this was my one giant swing for the fences. I had been to this bar a thousand times, a small narrow dive bar that is literally built into the side of a parking garage overlooking the highway. My kind of place, however I can assure you I had never felt this excited to get in.

            My eyes got adjusted to the dim lighting as I made my way down the bar. There wasn’t a lot of people sitting there which didn’t help my hopes. I passed an old couple bickering over Ronald Reagan, a fat guy who I think was a permanent fixture at the bar, three bros who could’ve fit in well with that jerkoff Morgan and I had encountered earlier, and lastly, as I made my way to the end, some hipster douchebag reading a book.

            Welp.

            I sat down on a barstool that had a fair amount of duct tape on it. There was a gameshow type of wheel that you could spin to select a beer staring right at me. I don’t think I had ever seen it used. I tried to recall the last time I felt this dejected. I thought about how ridiculous it was for someone I just met to have such an immediate impact on me. It wasn’t like I was actually going to with her on her journey with zero planning. I was just so curious of what was next for her. I hadn’t met anyone even remotely close to her. I imagined hanging out with her would include an endless supply of shenanigans and stories that could have happened. She was the shot in the arm I needed to get out of this boring funk I had been in. Shots. That seemed like a good idea now that I was at a bar.

            The bartender, bless her, came over. She had been working there a while but I never knew her name. Maybe she had just as interesting a background as Morgan. Probably not.

            “Can I get a Lone Star and a shot of Jameson, please?”

            “Sure thing,” she told me, and in a matter of seconds I had my ammunition to help ease this emotional pain.

            “Why so glum, Chum?” the hipster said looking up from his book. Fucking poetry. Even at Bukowski’s I wasn’t a fan of it. I looked at the hipster and loathed him almost as much as the Bro from earlier. I hated his beanie that was probably organic or fairly traded or whatever, and his stupid mustache. I looked at the book he was somehow able to read in the bar’s darkness. I know you’re not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but there was no way that The Philosophy of Margaret Thatcher was an interesting book.

            “Why so glum? I figured I’d be sitting next to the greatest woman I’ve ever spent 20 minutes with while waiting for a band to come on, and instead I’m next to you pretending to look smart by reading at a dive bar late on a Saturday night,” I told him. Maybe I need more Zen in my life or something.

            “I told him earlier that he looked pretentious reading that shit here,” the bartender told me. Her tip had just tripled.

            I took a sip of Lone Star and started to text Amanda to see where she was and what planet Andrew thought he was on. I got a tap on my left shoulder and was about to yell at the hipster but he was still pretending to read. I looked back over to my right and suddenly someone was standing there.

            “We have a winner,” she said.

            Prayers had been answered.

            “What took ya so long?” I asked.

            “Yeah sorry about that. I always forget this place is cash only and the ATM out front is still busted. Did I make you nervous?”

            “I figured you’d already be in Argentina or something by now.”

            “It’s on my list. Maybe next week,” she said. “I had a feeling you’d figure out where to go. This is my favorite bar here. Thought it was poetic when you mentioned Bukowski was your favorite song and writer.”

            That was the first poetic thing I’ve ever enjoyed.

            “Do you do this sort of guessing game everywhere you go?”

            “Sometimes. I just like to keep people guessing.”

            “So I really wouldn’t have seen you again if I didn’t figure it out?”
            She smiled as the bartender came over.

            “Well, you may have gotten a hint the next time you did your laundry,” she said.

            “What?”

            “Check your back right pocket.”

            I reached in and felt a piece of paper in there as Morgan ordered two shots and two more beers.

God dammit.

I pulled it out and it had her email and number on it. It was half infuriating and half hilarious to me. Morgan had already put me on a roller-coaster, and I wanted it to never end.

            “You know, just in case you didn’t figure it out and totally let me down,” she said. “Now, what are we drinking to?”

            I thought of a million things. Adventures, death to Frat boys, Britpop, Dramamine, British Bertha corrupting the youth of America, hell I’d even drink to the Philosophy of Margaret Thatcher at this point, but then the perfect topic hit me.

            “To keeping people guessing. And more importantly, to the girl with the modest mouse tattoo.”

            And with that, we drank.

Monday, September 3, 2018

Breakfast


I woke up on my side with a nightstand covered in beer bottles facing me. I blinked a few times and realized that it wasn’t my nightstand, although my head was telling me it was probably my bottles of beer. I looked over the sea of destruction of another late-night partying in this bedroom: clothes scattered, a record on a turntable spinning for what had probably been hours without someone picking up the needle, a traffic cone, the usual stuff for what was a…Thursday? No, it was a Tuesday night. I turned over in the bed and now remembered I was at that girl’s apartment. Good for me. I’m sure I’d piece the night together.

I did my best stealthy James Bond impression to get out of the bed without making a sound. I grabbed my very worn-out Chuck Taylors, got my black jeans off the floor and found my jacket before sneaking into the bathroom. I noted to myself that I looked like ass before splashing water in my face. It hit me that since it was apparently Wednesday morning, I had to go meet up for breakfast. I hate breakfast. I checked my phone and realized that I had to be there in 10 minutes, so I had to go now and hope that I was only 10 minutes away.

I went back to stealth mode as I made my way through the living room towards what I hoped was the front door. Years of waking up on various couches, floors and, if I were lucky, beds in various apartments that weren’t my own helped give me the skill to make a silent exit. I was thinking that very thing when my plan went to shit and I knocked over some stupid plant that was in the hallway. All that practice yet I couldn’t stifle the “oh shit” that was muttered out of my mouth. I listened closely without moving, but didn’t hear anything, so I opened up the door and turned to find another girl who was about to walk into the very apartment I was leaving.

            “One of Erica’s friends?” she asked, with a cup of coffee in her hand. I hated breakfast but could certainly go for some of that right now.

            “I’m the new maid. See you next Thursday!” I told her cheerfully.

            “It’s Wednesday.”

            “Terrific.”

            “I think you stepped on my cat last night,” she said.

            “Guess I’m fired then!” I told her as I finally got away.

I was thanking God that this building had an elevator. I checked my missed texts and realized that my 12% battery wasn’t ideal. That probably meant no Spotify on the post-breakfast subway. If Satan really wanted to punish us, Hell would be a never ending subway ride without music. I ignored the various texts asking what I was up to, when my next story could be expected, and the one calling me an asshole, but I did text back a “see you soon” to the girl I was meeting for breakfast, despite her reaching out to confirm about 14 hours earlier. She knows me well enough to know that I would never cancel on her. We all should have at least one person in our lives that we should never, ever cancel on.

The sun was so bright it basically punched me in the face as I made my way out of the lobby. It was a small miracle that I was somewhat close to our meeting spot at The Mug n’ Muffin. The hangover was starting to settle in, but that didn’t take away from my excitement from seeing Amanda. I hustled the final two blocks so that I would only be 3 minutes late to breakfast. I saw her sitting down at one of the tables outside. It was impossible to miss her. She’d make a terrible Where’s Waldo. I hopped over the short gate next to her table and sat down across from her.

            “Only three minutes late! That’s a new record for you,” She said with mock enthusiasm.

            “Thank you, thank you,” I said while waving to my fake cheering section. “How the hell are ya?”
            “Fantastic as always. You look like ass,” she said. She was right. Then again, she was always right.
            “I feel like ass,” I said. I guess I was still looking as banged up as I felt.

            “I see you haven’t changed from last night’s clothes. Just wake up?” she asked.

           “Well now how did you know that? Maybe I just own multiple Talking Heads tshirts. Ever think about that?”

            “Your Instagram story gave it away.” Dammit.

            “Okay fine, yes, it was another dive bar turned into after party turned into a rough morning. But I’m here now with you so things are going swimmingly. And you are lucky enough to not be hungover, looking sharp as always in that snappy pantsuit AND you even get to hang with me, so I will admit that you are the one thriving the most at this table,” I said.

The waiter came over with a pot of coffee, and a coupe of plates. He set the first one down in front of Amanda which had scrambled eggs, a piece of rye toast and 3 strips of turkey bacon. I didn’t even have to look at it to tell you what she had ordered. He then put down a plate in front of me that had 5 strips of bacon (the real stuff) and two Advil, with a Bloody Mary with extra green olives to wash it down.
            “I figured I’d order your usual. Wasn’t expecting you just being three minutes late. So where are you coming from?”

            “My apartment,” I said as I choked down the Advil.

            “It’s not nice to lie, Owen,” she said as she blew on her coffee. “If you were coming from your apartment wouldn’t you have approached from the other side of the street?”

            “Busted. Some girl’s apartment…” I tried to think of what her roommate said. “Erica. Erica’s apartment.”

            “Poor Erica,” she said. “Now the real question is how are you doing? Have you been writing?” And with this started the usual Owen Morrison welfare check.

            “You betcha. Working on a lot right now.” I have no idea why I bothered lying. I think it was more to feel good about myself.

            “You haven’t blogged in 3 months. What about that screenplay you’ve been working on for the last 2 years yet no one has seen a single line of?”

I was starting to not feel so well. I don’t think it was the hangover talking.
            “Eh, I mean it’s going. Just doing a lot of research still.”

            “Oh Owen come on. You’ve been claiming to be writing so much but you haven’t done shit in years! You’re better than this,” It was nice to hear someone actually think that about me for a change. “Seriously, what is holding you back?”

            “I dunno. Just stuck I guess. I just feel like being a writer isn’t quite as simple as I thought it would be. Am I still your favorite writer at least?”

            “That’s pretty funny,” Amanda said, as she checked the fancy shmancy watch she had recently bought herself. “Last I checked, you had to actually write something to be called a writer.”

            “Yikes,” I said. That one stung, but she was absolutely right. It had been sort of a while.

            “I think you’ve been living like a writer. I think you’ve been drinking like a writer and running around this city like a poor man’s Bukowski, but no, I don’t think you’re actually living up to your job title right now.”

            “Well, fine I’m a writer that doesn’t write. But you can’t take away that one time I got something published. You were even there for the party. The records will forever show you were at You’re Not Punk Zine’s launch party for their first issue.”

            “You’re right. What was that…2 years ago? I remember a lot of leather jackets, PBR’s and that band that broke up on stage while playing their second song. By the way, when should we be expecting the second issue of You’re Not Punk?”

            “Hey, that was a great time. And it’s not my fault Greg got hit by a bus.”

            “Did he really?”

            “No, but he had to move to like, West Virginia or something. I think he would’ve preferred getting hit by a bus.”

The bacon wasn’t too bad and Amanda, bless her, ordered my Bloody Mary extra spicy. We ate in silence for a little bit. She really was the most beautiful girl in the world. It made breakfast somewhat enjoyable. Despite the chewing out, the hangover and the fact that it was still early in the morning, this was bliss for me.

            “So, what’s the plan for you today? Gonna do any writing?” She asked me. She had a tone in her voice that was either curiosity or concern. I couldn’t tell, which scared the shit out of me.

            “Yeah, I mean, going to try to. Probably take a nap, you know? Then I dunno, walk around, find a coffee shop, fill out a couple pages in the ol’ legal pad…” I could tell she didn’t believe me at all. And that was even before she said anything.

            “Owen, you’re wasting this. I’ve known you since the 3rd grade. Even back then you had this unreal talent to tell stories and make up all these great characters. You have this ability to see things in everyday life and you can write about it when no one else can. You have an imagination unlike anyone I know. You are so infuriating it makes me want to smack you.”

Shit.
            “Every day I wonder how you’re doing. Aren’t you sick of hardly working and just spending all your nights drinking and doing your ‘research by experiencing life’? That’s all fine but you at least have to do the whole writing part. The last thing I want is for you to wake up one morning, hungover again after a night of partying, and you not being able to write down a clever line. You always have a response or a witty answer to everything but it would help a lot more if you wrote them down instead of just telling people you’re working on a bunch of projects that won’t see the light of day.”

I hadn’t seen Amanda this peeved since Carl dumped her the week of prom. This was like the verbal equivalent of being taken to the tool shed.

            “Well, I mean I have some things up my sleeve…” I don’t even know why I bothered saying that. I was digging my own hole of disappointment deeper and deeper.

            “You always have something up your sleeve. You always did! You need to grow the fuck up though and actually do the work. I know we have different outlooks on life but you’ve always supported me and I’ve always supported you, but it’s getting a lot harder to do that when there isn’t too much to support.”

I didn’t notice my hangover anymore. This was much worse.

            “I mean, I never felt cut out for a typical job…”

            “Oh trust me, I know. You’d be a disaster, and it would be a waste of your talent too. You should absolutely be doing what you’re doing, but just don’t fucking waste it. You don’t belong in an office. Me, I’m fine with the finance world, but I don’t have the same talent as you. I wish I were able to do what you do. I know you’ve had some success with it in the past, but that’s been a long time now. You need to just stop being a lazy piece of shit and write.”

The waiter came back with another Bloody Mary.

            “Oh I didn’t order a sec…”

            “I asked for him to have a second one ready before you got here,” she said. She really did know me better than anyone else on this planet. I hadn’t been so ashamed in my life.

I looked at the Bloody Mary. No sense in wasting it, so I took a sip. I had not felt so ashamed in my life. Letting people down isn’t the best feeling in the world, but letting down the most important person in your world, whether she realizes it or not, is just absolutely dreadful.  

            “Are you okay?” she asked.

            “Yeah. I think I needed this.” I said meekly. I never say things meekly.

            “Well good, cause I'm not done. Your self-pity isn’t going to save you here. Are you gonna be a little emo baby about this or are you actually going to listen?”

            “I’ll listen,” I said. As if I actually had another option.

            “Good boy. I just wanted to tell you that for being someone so outspoken about posers, you’ve been the biggest poser I’ve known the past 2 years.”

I fucking hate getting breakfast.

            “Ooooh look at me, I’m Owen and I’m the writer who doesn’t write. Let’s party and live life and go to punk shows and meet all these coooool characters and party some more and then wake up and not write about the crazy experiences I’ve had oooooohhhh,” She was having way too much fun doing this now. “I’m gonna meet girls then never settle down with any because life is too short and that would take away my experiences that I don’t write about anyways! Mer Mer Mer. Did you hear about this cool band no one else has ever heard of? I’m cooler than you because I blog about them twice a year mer mer mer. Let’s go to a dive bar Ooooohhhhhhh.”

            “I think I got it.”

            “You better have, Dummy.”

Had any other person in the world be giving me this speech, I probably would have left the table ten minutes ago by muttering a fuck you and knocked over the glass of water on the table just to be a dick. But with her, I couldn’t do that. She knew I would listen to her. As much as I hated, no, loathed everything coming out of her mouth, I couldn’t say shit because I knew she was absolutely 100% right. I just sat there looking at her with my mouth shut (which was rare), with my arms folded and a million thoughts going on in my head.

She took her designer wallet out of her designer purse to pay for the check. I grabbed my beat up wallet but she brushed that away instantly. She was right, we were extremely different. She was driven, hard working, dedicated at what she did and has always had a plan of attack for each stage of her life. We were so different yet we had always been the best of friends. We’ve had these breakfasts before where the usual welfare check would happen, but this was the first time she gave me a reality check. Holy hell did I need that.

She stood up, dusted some toast crumbs off the pants portion of her fancy pantsuit and came over to my side of the table.

            “I love you, but quit being such a little bitch and write me something,” she said as she gave me her usual kiss on the cheek.

            “Okay”, I said. The ‘writer’ was at a loss for words once again. She started to walk away but stopped.

            “Owen, you’re gonna be okay.”

            “I know.”

And for the first time in a long time, I knew that I would be okay. She put her sunglasses on and started to turn.

            “Amanda!” I shouted, running to catch up just before she had turned the corner on the sidewalk.

            “Yeah?”

            “Thanks.”

            “For the wakeup call?”

            “Yeah. And breakfast too, I guess.”

            “Yeah right,” she said. “You hate breakfast.”

She was never wrong. She gave me a smile and fixed the collar on my jacket before turning down the street. She’d go to her big corporate office, have a normal day where she kicked ass doing whatever finance stuff she did, and go home to her boyfriend and dog, and that would be that. Maybe she realized it then, or maybe not, but in my opinion, she had already done the most important thing she’d do that day.

Because I went home and wrote this.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Who is Riot Fest's Secret Performer?


I am a big fan of Riot Fest. I’ve been impressed by their lineups enough to fly out to Chicago with friends twice in the past (one instance even resulted in a Toy Story related tattoo for someone, but that's for another time), and I wish I could have gone in the years I couldn’t make it. Riot Fest stands out because they keep their festival lineup to the punk/rock/alternative genre with some hip hop mixed in, so there are more similar bands out there for the rock diehards still sticking around in 2018 (bless you all!). Back in simpler times, you would have to choose which lineup between Lollapalooza, Coachella, Bonnaroo, Firefly, etc you liked best. These days, it seems that all festivals have the same exact lineup, with just a few minor changes in the bands that hit are playing around lunchtime. Riot Fest does not fall into that awful trend, but instead thrives on having a jaw-droppingly good lineup each and every year. One added caveat (SAT word right there!) is that they have amazed people by getting bands to reunite when it seemed impossible.

Posting this just to make myself laugh
My first year at Riot Fest, 2013, I saw the Replacements play their first show since 1991. Since then, they got the Misfits to reunite with their original lineup for the first time in 33 years, and then, they pulled off the impossible last year by reuniting your favorite bands’ favorite band: Jawbreaker. To sum it up quick without fangirling too hard, Jawbreaker basically made it as close as possible without hitting it big, and eventually broke up amidst turmoil and the members hating each other, only for a cult like following to grow since their demise back in ‘96. I swear when the lineup was released last year, I thought it was a joke poster when Jawbreaker’s name was up there with Nine Inch Nails and Queens of the Stone Age for headliners. I hadn’t bought a plane ticket so fast in my life, and it was worth every penny and lower back pain from standing in a giant park for three days.


In addition to reunions, they get legends like Iggy Pop, Pixies, Taking Back Sunday, The Cure, System of a Down, Motorhead, No Doubt, New Order and even Snoop Dogg to perform. Basically, they’ve never had a bad lineup, despite Riot Fest constantly saying themselves that ‘Riot Fest Sucks’. So here we are in 2018, with an almost full lineup announced, with some actual question marks listed for surprise acts. The lineup already includes Blink-182, Elvis Costello, Interpol, Blondie, Sum 41, Twin Peaks, The Jesus Lizard, and of course, Andrew W.K. So who the hell is going to be the surprise this year? I have a feeling, albeit a pure gut feeling, but a feeling none the less that it can only be one band worthy of a shockingly good surprise headliner: but I’m going paint you a picture with words so you can envision it, or something like that.


If I’m Riot Fest, I’m keeping those ????’s up on the lineup and just wait for everyone to show up at the end of Sunday night to see who is going to close. Everyone will be waiting in suspense without having any idea who the hell it’s going to be. Maybe they can leave early, maybe they’ll want to stay for a third encore, who knows? They sure don’t. The crowds show up, with nothing but a black curtain with a white ‘?’ on it. The tension in the air is thick enough to hack with a machete. Punks, skinheads, dweebs, wastoids, riot grrrls, dad’s accompanying their 14-year-old obsessed with All Time Low, everyone is on edge waiting to see who this mystery headliner is.

Picture yourself there, there is a goth girl wearing a Cure shirt to your right with a stick n poke spider tattoo. On your left? A guy with a long beard, an Operation Ivy tee and a look that he only drinks craft beers and nothing else. People are ready to boo, complain or faint from happiness. Even the mysteriously banned CM Punk, who has snuck in under the name of Phil something or other, is ready to see who it is. 

The clock strikes 9:30 and a single spotlight hits the question mark on the curtain. It’s mostly silence, with a couple drunken woo’s that inevitably would happen anywhere. ALL OF A SUDDEN, THE CURTAIN DROPS. A bald guy with a guitar stands alone on the stage in front of a curtain with a banner hanging on it. It’s fucking Daughtry. Daughtry is the surprise headliner. You are at a Daughtry show. A chorus of jeers erupts in the crowd. You’re dumbstruck. You hear people cry out “BOOO!” “HISS!” and of course, “NOT A FAN OF YOU!”. The poser with the Joy Division shirt he bought at Urban Outfitters a couple feet in front of you is going wild, so pumped for Daughtry. Finally, an act that he not only knows, but likes! Somewhere out there, maybe by a merch stand, maybe watching backstage, maybe a thousand miles outside of Chicago, the Riot Fest Twitter Guy laughs to him/herself. It’s the greatest troll job he/she has ever done. It has almost made up for every single time someone on Twitter asks when the lineup is coming out, despite it coming out at the same time each year. He/she can take a minute to enjoy this, because they have earned it for the dumbness of people on social media.
This guy!

As Riot Fest is about to turn into an actual riot because of Daughtry, the banner comes down, revealing the word “SIKE!” on the curtain. It goes pitch black once again, and everyone is holding their breath. People who were walking for the exits stop in their tracks, the mob getting ready to tip over the porta potties freeze, and the bored girl with a shitload of eye liner and the septum piercing that kept sighing in front of you look up, with hope. All of a sudden, a single piano note plays. Hey, you know that note from somewhere, don’t you? Where do you know that song? The crowd starts erupting as the second and third piano notes hit, and everything starts picking up steam. The crowd starts singing along in the what is the most unified thing this country has seen since 2016 when they all scream out ‘WHEN I WAS. A YOUNG BOY. MY FATHER. TOOK ME INTO THE CITY.’

You’re damn skippy, you’re being welcomed (back) to the black parade. My Chemical Romance is back and you’re ready to get your goddamn emo on.

honestly, simpler times.
I mean, this is just pure guesswork here, but let me give me thoughts why: the band is on friendly terms despite the hiatus, which is extremely rare. They’ve been spotted hanging out in the past at Frank Iero shows, so it doesn’t appear to be a huge feud or anything. They’ve had time to do their own solo stuff and take breaks and whatever. I mean they’ve been out of action since 2013, so they are due for a comeback. MCR fits the bill for Riot Fest, obviously. Who wouldn’t be happy with that reunion? The Riot Fest audience is filled with the beaten and the damned, who want to say so long and goodnight and promising that they’re not okay. This is a slam dunk of a headliner, will add to the lore of Riot Fest booking amazing surprises, and add the perfect band to go with Blink 182, Beck, Interpol, Sum 41, Twin Peaks, The Wonder Years and such.

I may be way completely wrong here, but hey, I’m trying.

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

I Was VIP At A Music Festival And You Were Not


This past weekend I was briefly in the lap of luxury while attending the Boston Calling music festival, and it was sweet. This was all made possible by friend and Medford’s finest, Trace who got his paws on a pair of VIP tickets for Saturday, and I took full advantage of this golden opportunity to do learn about the lifestyles of the rich and the famous, as Good Charlotte always claimed to know about. How did Trace get the VIP tickets? I wouldn’t worry too much about that. It’s a long story involving Drew Carey, a dead moose and a Swiss army knife and you wouldn’t want to hear it so we’ll just skip ahead.

I’ve been to my fair share of music festivals: Gov Ball (once), Riotfest (twice (Hi Andrew!)) and Boston Calling (thrice) but this was my first time ever gaining access beyond the barriers, where the beers were a little colder, the bathrooms a little cleaner, and the crowds a little less…crowded. Last year I swore off ever going to Boston Calling after the mud filled disaster with me ruining a pair of perfectly nice Vans, and the fact that Mumford and Sons were a headliner. Seriously, I hadn’t had a pair of shoes ruined like that since my friend Wade’s bachelor party and SOMEONE WHO WILL REMAIN NAMELESS puked in my Sperry’s as I was in the shower. It was a hell of a bachelor party, and I know what you’re thinking: Jim in Sperry’s? I know, right? They were comfy though and I can’t knock Sperry’s for doing their thing. Anyways, the mud and lackluster lineup, along with the absolutely bonkers amount of lines and piss-poor cell signal led to more stress than I had hoped for on a relaxing weekend. Also I finally realized I was old and my body can’t handle drinking copious amounts of Miller Lite and my lower back not being able to handle standing on uneven ground for such a long period of time. I believe I even told my friends who I were with that they only way I would go back is if ABBA reunited, I got free tickets, or if they were VIP. Amazingly, all three things happened, it’s just a shame I didn’t specify ABBA reuniting for the actual Boston Calling event, but what’re you gonna do?
Queens of the Stone Age didn't kick anyone

I got the text Friday about possibly wanting to tag along, and I said oh hell yeah why not? Free and VIP are both things that sound nice, and I kept my unfortunate Boston Calling memories repressed for the time being. Things got off to a questionable start immediately as we were able to go through the VIP express entrance way. While this was great, there was also no one else in the general admission lines to get in, so this was kind of a moot point. It really saved us zero time being VIP, and I was starting to have my doubts about how great VIP was. This soon changed.

The actual VIP area was basically off to the side of the stage, so the wealthy and lovely could get up super close to see bands that they love or act like they know. Within the VIP area were bathrooms that were furnished bathroom trailers (brailers? Bathlers? Need to work on this) instead of the usual porta-potties. This was a fantastic perk of the VIP. Probably my favorite, as I did not have to wait in line for the men’s room whatsoever, and we had full sinks and decorative wallpaper. The part that I was most disappointed in was the VIP bars, because for some reason there was still like 30 volunteers (bless them) working the bar, and it became excruciatingly awkward as Trace and I made our walk over to them to order our $8 miller lite tall boys. There were so many of them working and so few customers to have that they were all staring at us hoping that we would choose them to buy our beers and tip a buck to. I felt guilty each time I went up there. I can honestly say I’ve never felt more awkward buying beers at any point in my life. I felt terrible for the other 19 bartenders I wasn’t buying from that it just became depressing for me. Thank god The Cure wasn’t playing or anything. In addition, there was a VIP Customer Support desk. 

As you can see from the picture, it was very reminiscent of Lucy’s “Psychiatric Help 5 cents” booth from Peanuts. Basically you could get some suntan lotion, wet-naps, and hopefully moral support at this booth. 

While I did not see a single fellow VIP-er take advantage of this perk, I am still kicking myself that I didn’t send Trace over there after a lot of beers to ask for one single wet-nap, or a fortune to be told. Oh, to have a time machine, you guys.

After checking out a band with two (2!) drummers, Thee Oh Sees, we decided to do some exploring with the other general admission peasants and see what other perks were out there so Trace and I could laugh at the people that couldn’t get in where we could. I was finally getting revenge for….I don’t know I’m sure there was some party or something I was mad about not getting invited to at some point. Anyways, we stumbled into some bizarre lounge area sponsored by IKEA, which was just as Swedish and weird as you would imagine something hosted by IKEA would be. Our brief time there was spent with our jaws on the ground in confusion as we watched people peddling $4 veggie dogs, and watching people hang on a bunch of hammocks that looked like they were suspended in the middle of a Jenga game that was half-way done. I haven’t seen A Clockwork Orange but this IKEA lounge seemed like it could be someone’s living room in that movie, with the awful DJ included.
this was the most normal area, assembly required.
After surviving that, we stumbled on in, sorry, gracefully were allowed in after flashing our VIP bracelets to some other lounge that had an arcade, chairs, and complimentary coffee. That’s right, complimentary coffee. For a second there I couldn’t tell if this was just the name of a tricky coffee roaster, but it turns out it actually was free coffee, so that was great.
kind of confusing

What was not great was losing a best of 3 series of Fooseball in heartbreaking fashion, and that fucking whack-a-mole wasn’t working. Boston Calling lost points as a whole for whack-a-mole not working. Maybe it just wasn’t plugged in, but I was VIP, I wasn’t going to stoop down and check for that.
bullshit

The bands were perfectly fine. In the early portion, we saw Royal Blood who was very good. Highlights included one of the better drum solos I’ve ever seen, and more importantly, the very same drummer put a huge dent via chugging into the bottle of Patron he had, which just the sight of made want to run to one of the trailer bathrooms. This was one of the few times that it sucked being VIP, as a group of teenybopper frat and sorority gals who were pretending it was East Coast Coachella (the worst!) started annoying us. I kept wishing on them to be tossed into a mosh pit at some point, but the lineup wasn’t in my favor in that regard. We saw Manchester Orchestra sing their angsty hearts out, Mount Kimbie play their weird keyboard solos and spacey folk rock (full disclaimer, I had no idea who they were either. We just wanted to check out the Blue stage), and St. Vincent give a performance that was exactly what I imagined at St. Vincent performance to be like, maybe with more robots than expected. Oh also we saw like 10 minutes of Brockhampton, who I had never heard of, and was extremely confused when this boyband of like 10 people ran out on stage in bullet proof vests. If I weren’t in VIP I would’ve been worried that we were getting raided or something. That was weird and now Brockhampton is in some trouble so they can go screw.

This was all a prelude to the double whammy of Queens of the Stone Age dripping their coolness over those nerdy fields of Harvard, and Jack White showing that he’s still very, very good at guitar to close things out. Both were great, however I was a bit dismayed when a fellow VIP brat was screaming the lyrics to The White Stripes’ ‘The Hardest Button to Button’, which is my personal favorite song. I don’t want to knock the poor gal for being pumped up like she got a prom date at the last second, but I could’ve done without singing the wrong verses at the wrong time. Get it together. This is VIP. In between QOTSA and Jack White, I came across a gentleman who had on the single greatest shirt of the festival. I was feeling spiffy in my own right, as I dusted off my cheetah print button up and Sonic Youth shirt, but I soon learned that I was playing second fiddle to this dude in the Celine Dion shirt that would make Iron Maiden jealous. 

maybe my favorite photo of all time

That’s right, a death metal-like tribute to Celine Dion, Canada’s greatest export, and her iceberg smash of a hit ‘My Heart Will Go On’. As a proud band tshirt aficionado, this man is my hero for wearing it, and I have made it my life goal to make it to his age and keep youngsters on notice with my tshirt game at music festivals. I don’t know your name, so let’s go with Bart, but way to go Bart. Way to go.

As the evening came to an end, I found myself ordering festival ramen which sucked, listening to Seven Nation Army, and pondering how there are so many Bill Murray Toon Squad jerseys from Space Jam and how it’s a shame I have yet to see a Monstars jersey at a festival, when it hit me just how truly blessed I was. 
here's Trace patiently waiting for me as I patiently wait for my crappy ramen

I had broken the barrier and invaded VIP at a music festival, surrounded by mostly older people there to see Jack White and had established bank accounts to spend the extra, like 60 bucks it took to do so. This is the kind of life I want to strive for. While it was nice to hobnob with the first class of the Boston Music Festival Scene, I really left it as a changed man spiritually. Now that I know how VIP’s live, I want to become a VIP everywhere I go, therefore I solemnly swear to become a VIP, or to somehow rely on Trace to get his hands on more VIP passes to things. Maybe this blog will be a stepping stone into the VIP life, but I’m guessing it will just be easier having friends in high places.

VIP, man. I can get used to it.

Except for fucking whack-a-mole being broken.

Monday, April 16, 2018

A PSA for B@J's

To quote the great Usher, this is my confession. Well, it's not really a confession, more like an explanation? Eh. A general understanding? Alright, alright now I'm getting further from whatever it is I'm trying to do here. For some time now I've been at a loss of what to blog about. It's not so much a time thing, or a question of if I still have my writing fastball, but its really more of what the hell can I blog about these days?

I started this blog back in 2009 because I couldn't fall asleep at night. Pecking away at a keyboard was like one of those rainmakers that help make you fall asleep at night. For clarification, I'm not talking about the Pacman Jones at a strip club type of rainmaker.

 Maybe it was being in college then versus being 27 now, but life was just simpler back then. In a way there was more quality material to work with, and fewer people watering things down. Jersey Shore was a fucking goldmine of blog material back when it came out. I can still remember people staying in to watch Jersey Shore on MTV (those bastards) before going to bars on Thursday nights (dollar drink night!) my sophomore year. We survived without opening Instagram and a hundred different meme accounts making the same joke with the same picture of Snooki making the boardwalk of shame, with each meme account taking credit for it. Get what I'm saying? There's a bit of overexposure that kind of takes away the creative juices to blog.
A gift to us all.

I've never really treated this thing too seriously. In fact, I'd even say most of it was plain stoopid, but it always made me pleased as punch when someone would tell me they enjoyed a post, got pissed over a post, or most importantly, laughed at a post. My senior year some junior who I had never met bought me a Bud light at a now defunct college hole-in-the-wall bar because he had stumbled across this thing and said it was funny. At that point, it was my greatest accomplishment from this thing. I had approximately 0 goals for this thing, and I had received a $3 Bud light out of it, so it was a real win for me. Fast forward a few years and it's kind of in a no man's land in the blogosphere. The motivation just hasn't really been there.

I did some spring cleaning today and stumbled across my big print debut for DOJO zine. I was on cloud nine when this dude Dylan generously agreed to my email request about wanting to write a music piece for him, and when I saw it up on a website and later in a magazine that you could physically hold (even with Kirwan misspelled) it really sank in that this might be something to chase after. After that, I toiled away writing for free for some British music site that seemed to be a rudderless ship. After a number of broken promises, despite me always living up to my end various bargains, I finally said it wasn't worth it and stopped writing for them. I know this is going to really make me sound like a total badass (I'm joking, because in today's day and age, someone will take that line seriously), but it fucking sucked being edited and getting my work turned into plain, ordinary, bland stuff. Who the hell likes bland? I fought the good fight for myself and told them that what I had written was good (it was, I swear) and that I have faith in my style, while they wanted it to be more 'professional', which really sucked the fun out of the whole thing. You compare one song favorably with an ADHD joke and suddenly you're being scolded. Jesus. It wasn't like I was getting paid for it. Personally, I believe in my writing style. I think it's kinda unique. I don't want to be the AP or using some cookie cutter format for how I write an album review. How incredibly boring. I liked my writing to be like how I enjoy my margaritas: with a hint of spice. That sounded much better in my head.

Many of my heroes have been able to take the boring and turn it into exciting. My Grandpa Kenny had the unique capability to somehow turn any situation into a fun time. I swear he never had a bad day or a boring moment in his 91 years, he was just one of those guys. It mystifies me to this very day how he could make things like long, hot car trips to southern Rhode Island  (insert joke here) exciting and funny. I'm saying this not only by going back in my childhood, but even still in my 20's. Things were always interesting when he was around. One of my favorite writers is Charles Bukowski. I love his writing because he's able to paint a picture without any flowery language. He just called it like he saw it, didn't bullshit anything, and it worked out for him beautifully. He could take a bar scene in a story and get 15 pages without using a single SAT word, and it would be interesting. Was he a dirty old man that drank waaaay too much? Absolutely! Was he an interesting character? You butter believe it. I hope to be able to take the boring and try to get a rise out of things.

These days, between everyone being pissed off at everything and everyone else in general, it feels like you have to walk on eggshells wherever you go. No one can say anything, no one can assume anything, no one is ever on the same page. I blame social media for this, but that's just the world we live in. Twitter was fantastic when it first took off. Tweet about a show, crack a joke about Madonna, tell a hockey player he sucks and he might just reply back saying that you suck. Now I open up Twitter and I'll see some recycled joke followed by a retweet of a report about something shitty that Trump did, then fake rumor about Tom Brady and these will be sandwiched between a tweet calling the Kardashians #goals and a tweet from someone thinking that Lil Uzi Vert is actually good. It sucks the life out of us mere mortals. Are we allowed to be funny anymore? It hit me about an hour ago that this is sort of a challenge. Why the hell not try to find things to make fun of still, like the glory days (?) of this blog. Coachella sucks these days, why not make fun of that? I think I can have some fun making fun of those flower crown wearing assholes who go to a desert to watch the Weeknd lipsynch in hopes of getting their likes on Instagram in the triple digits. Shit, I should write the rest of this rant in a new tab. Twitter may be a lost cause but I can still have fun on here, right?! RIGHT!?
seriously, what happened to Coachella?

Over the years on this blog I've covered head-scratching one hit wonders from Asher Roth's 'I Love College' to Rebecca Black's 'Friday' (still my personal favorite blog). I have done Pop Culture March Madness brackets, I gave out a Man of the Year award once (Bruce Jenner in 2010, by the way. Little did we know!), had a 3 blog installment on why Catholic School Girls Rock, wrote about my love for Carly Rae Jepsen when 'Call Me Maybe' swept the nation, tried finding my buddy Tyler a Valentine, somehow got 172,421 views on a parody interview about wigs, and shared with you all my pure, utter hatred for the Christmas Shoes song which resulted in an argument with my grandmother during Christmas one year. I've had some fun with this thing.

I admit, these days I've been focusing on a bunch of short stories and a screenplay (ambitious!), so the blogging has taken a backseat, but I oddly have a new ambition to make fun of things in pop culture again. Maybe it is due to the jinx removal Voodoo doll I just bought in New Orleans, or maybe it was the aforementioned spring cleaning that inspired me, but I'm going to really try to get this thing rolling again. There have been hits and misses over the years, and there certainly will be more of both to come, but why not give it another whirl? Maybe I'll even get another Bud light out of it.
He really pulls the room together.

All I know is, I'm gonna write what I want, how I want and just hope it works. With Voodoo on my side, how can I fail?