Saturday, March 4, 2017

Banksy

To tell the truth. that Banksy’s work just really doesn’t thrill me;
When I wrote on Mother’s walls she really thought to kill me!
Reclusive and eclectic, he may be an artist great;

If so I hope he stops by and will daub my backyard gate!


I Got My Job Through the New York Times

I got my job through the New York Times,
Through the New York Times it came.
I lost my job through the New York Times
When reporting all went lame.
I used to write about the news
in an office plush indeed;
An algorithm does it now,
for no pay and great speed.
But still I read the New York Times,
to pass the time of day;
It makes me look important
While I sleep on the subway.


Pope Francis

Pope Francis says give to the poor;
Don’t worry about keeping score.
They spend it on booze,
So what do YOU lose?
Have you got one vice, maybe more?



Friday, March 3, 2017

Tom Hanks

Tom Hanks is an espresso fan.
He also likes reporters.
He gave the White House corps a way
To drink it at their quarters.

If I were giving things away
To Oval Office Sherlocks,
Considering the heat they take
I’d gift ‘em with an icebox.


Jeff Sessions Retreats

The doughty Sessions, making sweet,
Tells the Congress he’ll retreat.
No more Russian caviar
Will be served at his wet bar.
Someone else will foot the bill
When the Russians we will grill.


Thank You, Billy Jim Baker!

‘Kiitos’ to the many readers who like my mini-memoir “The Lazy Clown.” You restore my faith in good grammar!


BIlly Jim Baker
Anna May Wong
Leo Acton
Alberto Ramirez
Joe Giordana
Sandy Weber
Mike Weakley
Herberto J Ledesma
Victor Ruiz
Chris Twiford
Mike Johnson
Robert E. Handley
Gabriel Romero Sr.
Tony Chino
Andrew Fronczak
Glenn Godsey
Norm Thomas
David Orr
Paul Dymoke
Neon Green
“There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed”


Thursday, March 2, 2017

The Lazy Clown

The summer before I left home to attend the Ringling Clown College in Florida I rebelled against going to Mass on Sunday. I told my mother it was all a meaningless rigmarole in Latin. She gave me a glare that would've bored a hole through duranium, but didn't insist on my attendance. She must have realized that at seventeen I was ready to make up my own mind about such things.

So every Sunday that summer I took a stack of books, a pitcher of lemonade, and some sandwiches out into the backyard, where I could lay in a hammock made of green canvas with dull brown tassels down each side and read to my heart's content.

Despite hormones, acne, angst, and bone-deep intellectual laziness, reading books was my biggest ambition as a teenager. Next to making people laugh; but that pursuit usually ended in people gawking at me in alarm, not guffawing in good humor. My sense of humor needed quite a bit more work before it reached the professional levels finally achieved with Ringling Brother. 

A day spent in reading was a day spent in bliss. Now that I'm retired and in my own little apartment that is only four blocks away from the Provo Public Library that same happy obsession is overtaking me once again.

I started my Sunday summer reading spree with Dickens' Pickwick Papers. I relished each page of sprawling nonsense and came to love the beautiful fools Dickens led about on an affectionate leash.

I positioned the hammock under our weeping willow for shade, where I constantly battled the wasps that liked to crawl mindlessly up and down the drooping willow branches and fall into my lemonade pitcher. Instead of being rendered speechless with joy at finding an ocean of sweet stuff to guzzle, the wasps would hum angrily while crawling out and then make a murderous attempt on my bare arms and legs. I kept an old splintered ping pong paddle handy for these attacks, sending the brutes off into left field (and kingdom come).

Next I almost got a hernia from trying to hold up and read The Complete Stories of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It was about as big and heavy as the telephone directory. And that is where I got my first taste of Mormonism, from A Study in Scarlet -- wherein the brainy Holmes attempts to foil the sinister machinations of some Latter Day Saint vigilantes from Salt Lake City.

How well I remember starting a paperback copy of Cervantes' rollicking Don Quixote! Sometimes you can just feel the awesome imagination inside a book, even a shabby paperback like I had, and you can't wait to dive in. That first Sunday with the knight of the woeful countenance was all I had hoped for -- I wriggled with glee in my hammock. And something whispered to me that I, too, would someday play the Sancho Panza to a rollicking crowd somewhere. 

But storm clouds were gathering about my literary Shangri-la. It started with a casual remark from my mother as I carried out a tray of pimento loaf sandwiches and a pitcher of lemonade to begin my second Sunday with Cervantes:

"Why don't you take an hour to mow the lawn first?"
  
I silently shook my head no; I was in a fever to find out what happened next to Quixote and his stooge Sancho Panza.  

And so it began.

Mothers, I have since learned, are congenitally hostile to their offspring taking it easy in a hammock on a peaceful Sunday afternoon. They don't like it, and they intend to put a stop to it. And Catholics have no compunction about mowing lawns and painting fences and such like on Sundays. I imagine the Pope weeds his garden on Sundays over there in the Vatican. 

My mother began to nag me every Sabbath:

"That lawn looks awful; it's an embarrassment to your father and I! The whole neighborhood's talking about it. Please, I'm begging you -- just leave those old books alone for an hour and give the lawn a quick going over. Is that too much to ask?"

"Can't it wait until tomorrow, mom? I'll do it then -- I promise!"

"Oh all right -- I'll put up with the humiliation one more day . . . somehow." This statement was followed by a martyred sigh that would have won her an Academy Award if we had lived in Hollywood.

One Sunday she actually came out and started doing the lawn herself, on the theory that it would shame me into taking over. It didn't. I simply waved my book at her in serene greeting.

Not a smart move on my part. She put the mower away with the lawn half-done and stomped back into the house, where I could hear her expostulating with my dad in ringing tones that shook leaves off the elm trees as far away as Como Avenue. By this time I was chuckling over the inspired inanities of P.G. Wodehouse in Carry On, Jeeves. Nothing in the world mattered to me except how Jeeves would extricate his master Bertie from the next contretemps.

I also discovered a wonderful book called
">Center Ring, written by Robert Lewis Taylor. Not much info on clowns, but a wealth of quirky detail about Ringling circa 1954. 


Next Sunday when I went to make my sandwiches I was met with someone I dimly recognized as my so-called mother, in, as she would have put it, 'a snit', standing in front of the fridge with her arms akimbo.

"No you don't, buster!" she snarled. "First mow, then you can stuff your face."  

I was stunned at her heartless determination to let her own son starve to death rather than allow him to cultivate his mind. As gracelessly as possible I slammed open the garage door, started the mower, and ran over all the lawn furniture and the little brown garden gnome statue by the rosebush in my sullen determination to get the damned work over with. 

Had I been a weaker person the triumphant glare my mother gave me when I came back in to make my sandwiches would have stolen my appetite -- but the blood of a hundred adamant Norwegians ran thick in my veins, so I made double the amount of sandwiches and choked every last one down as I lay in the hammock, my distended stomach as hard as a basketball. 

After that confrontation my Sunday reading marathons didn't have the same charm as before. The last book I read that summer of scintillating Sundays was John McCabe's Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy. 

It gave me very definite ideas -- and a few weeks later I was on my way to Venice, Florida to try my luck as a circus buffoon . . .



Oprah Winfrey

In the fairy tale a fishwife thinks it must be fate
Her domicile and consequence to now redecorate.
Ms. Oprah’s got that same itch; TV fame is not enough.
She’s thinking of the White House -- with a white chinchilla muff.
Take heed, Ms. Winfrey; overreaching in the fairy tale
Led the fishwife back into a life of rummage sale.  


Abraham Lincoln

The scholars and the writers say that Lincoln’s melancholy
Stemmed from early trauma (his ma run down by a trolley.)
These intellects surmise that Lincoln told so many jokes
To keep from going crazy (and to cozen up to folks.)
When I write books on Lincoln I shall emphasize the fact
He was a standup comic (aren’t they all a little cracked?)


Marissa Mayer

I wish I was a CEO and played golf all day long,
Or walked on tropic beaches with a merry little song.
I’m good at ducking issues of security and theft.
I’d take my loss of bonuses with manly stoic heft.
Who cares if I am sued by Yahoo customers today?
I’ll dump ‘em on Verizon, then go take a holiday!
We CEOs are slippery, as Mayer clearly knows;
We sail our yachts quite close hauled even in the strongest blows.