Election Eve 2008: A Bad Night to be White in Harlem

November 18, 2010

 

Published by Taki’s Magazine:

Two years ago, I was invited to an Election Eve party in Harlem. I found New York was vibrating with premature praise for our Savior. Centuries of cruel white hegemony would crumble beneath the “post-racial president.” Wisely, no one predicted an end to anti-white racism. They didn’t even consider it.

The moment McCain conceded, our multiculti party exploded into cheers and clinking glasses. I was passed from hug to hug around the apartment—black arms, Cuban arms, feminist arms, gay arms.

Our hostess, a lovely black actress, burst into tears, repeating, “We actually did it.” As if to dispel any doubt as to who “we” were, she suddenly exclaimed, “This is the Black House now, muthafuckas! Yeaaah!”

Total chaos erupted on the street outside. Victory cries, car horns, banging metal trashcans, and the occasional celebratory gunshot shook the windows. I went outside to test the post-racial waters. I was immediately accosted by a group of sistas hooting down the sidewalk. They swarmed in on me, asking where I was from.

“Tennessee?!” one shrieked. “You people voted McCain! You lost, boy!” I wasn’t offended by their gloating—hell, I didn’t even vote—but now I was on the radar. Jubilant blacks flexed on their stoops, yelling, “We own this shit now!” and “We took that shit!” Stink-eye all around.

This guy suddenly stuck a camcorder in my face, asking, “How do you feel at this moment? How does this make you feel?” Like I was McCain’s campaign manager. Like I had lost. He badgered me for half a block, so I gave him an honest answer: “I hope the new president lives up to your expectations more than mine.”

I had paused for too long. Two kids, no older than fourteen, came up trying to sell me some coke. My incorrigible documentarian wanted more answers. My path was filling up with onlookers. That’s when this beefy, dark-skinned Dominican jumped in my face. “Fuck you! This is our shit now, our shit!” He punched the corner store’s graffiti-covered shutters, then did a rooster strut back and forth for the camera, glaring at me. More angry faces gathered around. I was an amoeba in the T-cell Saloon.

Time to kick rocks. After all, this block wasn’t my shit to defend.

One might ask, why would a white guy get singled out in Harlem? It’s a tough question, but I’ll take a crack at it. How about: Because a lot of nonwhites are racists, too.

They have good reason to be…

Read the rest at takimag.com


Bonnaroo Love Pats

May 25, 2010

 

Bonnaroo and I have been indulging a warped, sadomasochistic relationship since the festival’s first year.  For days I prep and pamper her, get her ready for the big show, and what thanks do I get? She snaps at me on a whim, feeds me sickening meals, and leaves me to die of pneumonia in a moldy communal tent.  Still, I love her backstage, night after night, taking all that she has to give.

It might be shameful that I proceeded to abuse her in public.  Back in 2007, I published “How Bonnaroo Killed My Rock n Roll Fantasy” in the Knoxville Voice (another paper which has sadly gone the way of the fish wrapper.)  I was set to do a big write up again in 2008, but my touring schedule didn’t allow for my attendance.  Perhaps that was the Hand of God protecting her from my venomous tongue.

Last year, she finally lashed out at me.  Maybe she’d had enough of my shit.  Maybe I’d had enough of hers, too.  Either way, she kicked my ass.

What happened was, after working for days in the hot sun, getting fucked by production’s budget cuts and choking down the slop served in Plebian Catering, I needed to unwind.

There is this bridge out on the country roads of Manchester, TN, a little ways from the Bonnaroo site.  Like many young bucks before me, I leapt from the concrete wall over the catwalk and plunged into the river 40 feet below.  I splashed and hooted and paddled to shore.

I discovered a rope swing under the bridge.  I pulled it up to the highest bank.  Having jumped the bridge, I thought, What could be the harm in a 15 foot swing on a rope?

I have one rule when it comes to dare-devil activities: Try anything once, after you’ve seen someone else do it first.  Well, it turns out that the second part is the most important.

My feet gently grazed the rocks on the edge of the shore. But I found plenty more about 6 inches beneath the surface of the river.  As the pain shot into my guts from my knee and feet—making me want to puke and cry simultaneously, but unable to do either—I thought to myself, That wasn’t very graceful.

Not very smart, either, but so it goes with anything fun.  Not that hobbling up that muddy embankment on the battered purple soles of my feet was a blast.  Examining the cuts and abrasions and the blood pouring from a hole in my knee, my rigger buddies put it to me straight.

“You’re shit’s all fucked up, man.” 

Should I go home? 

“Don’t be such a pussy!  Just walk it off.”

That seemed reasonable.  So I walked it off all night, pounding drinks—and whatever—from one end of the festival site to the other.  Mile after limping mile, I just walked it off.

I woke up in my car the next morning, late for work, and as I stood up to piss out the door, it was clear that I wouldn’t be walking anymore.

Laying on my couch with an elevated leg, I missed Nine Inch Nails’ last show in America—or so it is said.  As I licked my wounds, acts like Rodrigo y Gabriela and Band of Horses took the stage for rosey-faced dolls and camel-backed jocks seeing the light.  I could have seen The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Mars Volta, or Erika Badu, but I had my swollen toe X-rayed instead.

Sometimes you act like you’re 19, then wake up feeling 40.

Of course, by Monday I was good to go.  Prancing across the empty stage, I climbed the steel all afternoon—one of my favorite things in the world—but even that had lost its luster somehow.  I blamed it on the 3-day old casserole, but it was probably jealousy.  Bonnaroo had loved her lovers, and forgotten all about me.

Fucking Bonnaroo. Maybe I deserved it for mocking her all those years.  It would be hypocritical to ignore the fact that I have lavished in the milk of her teet.  I thought that, since she was 100,000 times bigger than me, it was justified self-defense.  Well, apparently she knows how to defend herself pretty well, too.

I’m sorry, baby.  Be good to me this year, and I promise—we’ve all heard this one before—I’ll never hurt you again.

[The fruits of these domestic squabbles---"An Open Letter to Ashley Capps" and  "How Bonnaroo Killed My Rock n Roll Fantasy"---are posted below.]

 


Not Another Peep

March 27, 2010


I suppose they stocked nostalgia at Kroger’s this afternoon.  As I strolled past the hyper-chronistic-holiday-candy-aisle, I was reminded of a rare moment of Justice—my harsh encounter with Mr. Chunkyfuck and his burgeoning rack of Peeps.

It was around this time of year, nearly half a decade ago.  I was living in Miami at the time, visiting an old friend up in Orlando—we’ll call her Krispy, as she is quite fond of the doobiejuana.  The previous weeks had been spent rigging lights and sound for various Miami venues in preparation for the Winter Music Conference. 

A mutual friend of Krispy and I—we’ll call her Libertine Belle, as she is an unpredictable southern firecracker—had just escorted me on a brain-bending VIP crawl through South Beach techno clubs, courtesy of her UK dj admirers.  They were all in love with our Belle.  Thus I was invited to join their hedonistic cavalcade by virtue of association. 

Needless to say, I was totally spent by the end (I’m pretty sure I accidentally drank some glass shards one evening) and Libertine Belle was ready to head back to Tennessee.  We found ourselves at Krispy’s apartment in Orlando for a quiet evening of reunion and reminiscence.

Of course, it was essential that we do this over beers.  So we piled into Libertine Belle’s little blue car and drove to the usual convenience store down the road.

I had been confronted by this jackass clerk before.  He was one of those overly-aggressive types who get off on their authority, making me show ID every time I bought smokes.  It wasn’t that he asked so much as how he asked, or rather, demanded that I show him ID.  You know the tone.

“Let’s see some ID.”

“But I was just in here yesterday.”

“No I – D, no cig – a – rettes.  Un – der – stand?”

That guy.  A stocky, ROTC obsessive, masturbated-through-one-too-many-action-movies type of guy.  The sort who can sour a perfectly good day with a glance from behind the counter.

Tonight, he’s wearing sunglasses.  He has a hand-held tape recorder in hand.  Post-1990 Megadeth is blaring on the stereo.  I have my ID ready, but the pudgy bastard still demands to see it.  I wonder how he can read the date through those sunglasses.

I gaze at the rows of Easter candy as he rings me up.  Pastel M&Ms, Cadbury eggs, and bunny-shaped Reese’s fill a special rack behind me.  There are probably fifty Marshmallow Peeps packed into a rack on the counter.  I think to myself: Who needs all this sugary crap?

I pay up, sneer derisively, and take my six-pack out to the car to wait for Libertine Belle.  She’s taking forever.  Me and Krispy can’t see inside.  Finally she comes out and gets into the driver’s seat, shaking.

“What happened?” asks Krispy.  Libertine Belle swallows and shakes her head.

“That guy in there is seriously fucked up…”

“What happened?”  I ask again.

Libertine Belle tells us that Mr. Chunkyfuck started getting weird on her as soon as I was out the door.  He eyed her up and down from behind his gas station shades, saying nothing, not ringing her up, just staring.  Then he hit play on the handheld recorder.  It was a snippet from Silence of the Lambs:

It puts the lotion on its skin, or else it gets the hose again.

Libertine Belle just stood there, and again he played it back. 

It puts the lotion on its skin, or else it gets the hose again.

Then he said to her, without provocation:

“You know, my girlfriend was pregnant recently.”

“Okaaay…”

“Yeah.  I threw the bitch down some stairs though.  I guess that’s eighteen years of freedom.  Right?”

In retrospect, it’s possible that a light-hearted goth kid might have made our Belle laugh with those antics.  But this is Mr. Chunkyfuck behind the counter, and she’s not laughing tonight, and neither am I, so I say:

“Fuck that shit!”

I jump out of the car with the girls screaming after me and storm back into the store.  Mr. Chunkyfuck is looking at me all nonchalant through his nighttime shades, and I say:

“You like intimidating girls?  Why don’t you talk shit to me?”

Now he’s stammering, ordering me to get out.  He backs up to the Wall-o-Carcinogens behind him, but it isn’t far enough.  With no other choice, I start trashing the place, hollering:

“You feel like a badass now?!”

I kick over the special rack of Easter candy.  He starts to come toward the counter again, so I snatch up Peeps by the handful and start hurling them into his face.  I pelt him with dozens of these marshmallow confections, punching hole after hole into his over-inflated ego.  Satisfied that I had cleansed this consumer temple, I kick over another display and hit the door.

Mr. Chunkyfuck springs into action.  He hits the alarm and then scrambles over the counter like he’s gonna attack me.  “You’re going to jail, man!” he yelps.

I turn back and meet him at the door.  I calmly tell him to go back inside if he doesn’t want his ass kicked, stabbing my finger into his chest.  He stands his ground though, so I add:  “And take off those fucking sunglasses!”

I go to swat them off his face, but end up catching the side of his head as well.  There is a fleshy SHMACK!  The shades go flying, revealing his naked, panicked eyes, and he darts back inside.  The girls are screaming behind me:

“What the hell are you doing?  Get in the car!  Get in the car!”

I hop in the little blue car, yelling: “Go go go!” and we go, but not before Mr. Chunkyfuck bursts back out.  We watch him dialing the cops as we pull off.

“He got my plate number!” yells the Belle. Now the girls are pissed at me.  I suppose a chivalrous soul treads a fine line between knight and Neanderthal.

“It’s fine,” I assure her.  And I believe that—until I see the police cruising into Krispy’s apartment complex later that night.  Alone on the balcony, I watch them spotlight each blue car along the way.  The girls are inside, completely unaware.  With a heavy sigh, I go downstairs, telling them I’ll be right back.

The cops are standing around Libertine Belle’s car with a lot of questions.  I fully expect them to cuff me and drag me away.  But after hearing what Mr. Chunkyfuck said to my friend, these guys are more amused than abrasive.  Still, there is one nasty little technicality.

“So you never struck the clerk?”

“No,” I insist.

“The clerk says you struck him in the face.”

“Well, I pulled off his sunglasses.  I may have poked him in the chest.”

And so I was condemned by my own admission.  As it turns out, touching anyone without their consent is considered assault in the state of Florida.  The cops inform me that they have to take me to jail by law.  But they offer me an escape.

“If you’re willing to apologize—and the clerk accepts—we’ll just drop the charges,” the cop tells me.

Of course, this is a serious compromise of principle—but what’s a little white lie when faced with jail-time in Orlando?  I get into the car and we head back to the store. I wonder how long it will take for the girls to notice that I’m gone.  

The officers become unusually candid as we drive.

“You know, we get complaints about this guy all the time.  He’s harassed so many people, I’m surprised it took this long for someone to go off.”

“Yeah,” the other grunts, “what an asshole.  He’s lucky he hasn’t had his face smashed in.”

I couldn’t agree more.  When we arrive at the store, the officers immediately brace Mr. Chunkyfuck for being a creep.  I can’t believe it as I watch them wear him down.  Finally, he agrees to an apology and they get me out of the car.

“Forgive me, as I forgive those who trespass against me,” I say with a wry grin.

“I didn’t threaten that girl–”

“Just shake his hand,” the cop snaps at him.  I squeeze his hand and smirk.

I talk with my new flatfoot pals about Tennessee whiskey and Miami bikinis on the ride back to Krispy’s apartment, half expecting high-fives when I get out.

“Where have you been?” the girls asked me.  It took me ten minutes to convince them my story was true.  Maybe they still don’t believe me.

Looking back on it now, I have to wonder what ever happened to Mr. Chunkyfuck.  Was I the unwitting vessel of Justice?  Or did I simply bolster my own self-righteous ego at the expense of a socially retarded hobgoblin?  Did I teach him a lesson or just push him over the edge? 

Maybe he cried in his parents’ basement, turned himself around, and went on to volunteer at a shelter for battered women.  Maybe he’s weaving Easter baskets for orphans as I type this out.

Or maybe he just went home and kicked the shit out of his dog, thinking of me.  Maybe he added another name to his long list of people to torture to death.  Being unemployed probably frees up a lot of time for that kind of pursuit.

Either way, he no longer bothers the beer-buying ladies of Red Bug Road.  Krispy told me the Peeps were back in place the next day, but Mr. Chunkyfuck was gone forever.  So it is with some sense of accomplishment that I look back on my marshmallow assault—and look forward to the next time I have an excuse to chuck Easter confections into somebody’s face.


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