Thursday, March 16, 2017

"No One Dies Tonight."

At KGCX I learned that people dislike having their names mispronounced. Especially dead people -- or, rather, their relatives. The Everson-Coughlin Funeral Home handled most of the stiffs in Williston and paid ten dollars per obit announced on the air, as long as they were handling it. One of the first obits I read was for a Richard Sylvester Koch. I pronounced ‘Koch’ as cock. Even mild mannered Oscar got on my case about that. So I learned forever after that Koch is pronounced like the soft drink -- Coke.  Except, apparently, in New York, where a Koch is a Koch, with no apologies.


Another thing I quickly learned was that there’s news and then there’s news. The real news was handled by the Williston Daily Herald and KEYZ Radio. The paper had six full-time reporters covering everything from church basement suppers to murders. KEYZ had Ben Innis -- the Wise Man of Williston. Born and bred in a log cabin on the Missouri within a stone’s throw of the town’s Pioneer Park, Ben knew everyone -- and everything. He was more familiar with the skeletons in the closets of the elites than he was with his own wife. Sometimes he seemed to announce the news before it actually happened, such as the time he said on his evening broadcast that the city council had voted unanimously to reject a zoning change for the Maisy Building. The council meeting wasn’t until eight that night, but Ben told me “those idiots won’t pass it just because old man Maisy is from Idaho -- he’s not a local.” And Ben was right -- it didn’t pass.


I, on the other hand, was not expected to handle any hard news. Not if it interfered with business. This was brought home to me when a prominent furniture store owner killed himself. He’d been ill for a long time and his store was going into the toilet, so one evening he pulled out a hunting rifle and drilled himself. “Self-inflicted gunshot wound” is how the paper and KEYZ phrased it. KGCX didn’t phrase it at all, because, in the words of station manager Bill Anderson, “They’re one of our biggest advertisers -- we can’t air anything about it; otherwise they’ll yank their advertising.” When I pointed out that the paper and the other station were running it without any undue loss of revenue he just shook his head warily and said “You don’t understand the nature of the beast yet, Torkildson. Just kill the story.”


So I killed the story. And realized, in the parlance of today’s internet world, that I was to produce nothing but clickbait. I began wondering if maybe the clown academy idea was not such a bad idea after all. If I could actually get it up and running I could say ‘adios’ to KGCX and their faux news.


I was now having lunch with Becky Thingvold twice a week at the Service Drug Store. She lapped up the baloney I provided about the clown school I meant to open, and the paper published these fables with a straight face.


“Here’s why I became a clown” I told her at the beginning of our luncheon confabs. “I read a book by Harpo Marx when I was a kid, called Harpo Speaks!. In the book he tells about going to Russia in the mid 1930’s on a goodwill tour for the State Department. One evening he was scheduled to do a show in Moscow at 7pm, but the stage manager nervously told him to wait. Finally, at nine that evening he was told to go on. He immediately noticed that despite his best efforts at zaniness the audience sat like wooden statues and kept staring at a darkened balcony as if waiting for a cue. Finally a roar of laughter came from the darkened balcony and the audience immediately began laughing and cheering and clapping. Harpo couldn’t understand what was happening, so he just finished his show, took his bow, and got off. That’s when the stage manager told him that Josef Stalin, the brutal Soviet dictator, had been the one who held up the show and then burst out laughing at Harpo’s antics. In fact, he now wanted to meet Harpo up in the balcony. Harpo was understandably nervous, since this was right in the middle of the Great Purge, when Stalin had tens of thousands of Russians executed for no reason except he didn’t think they were good Communists. So Harpo goes up to see Stalin and they chat a minute through an interpreter. Stalin tells Harpo he enjoyed the show and that it took a lot of strain off him for the night. And then a clerk comes in, bows, and whispers in Stalin’s ear. Stalin smiles, shakes his head, and tells the clerk something that surprises him. The clerk leaves, Stalin shakes Harpo’s hand, wishes him well on his Russian tour, and leaves with his burly bodyguards. The translator stays behind and tells Harpo, with tears in his eyes, that the clerk was from the execution detail, telling Stalin that the killings were ready to commence. Stalin had replied ‘no one dies tonight.’ He was in too good of a mood after watching the clown perform. The translator then kissed Harpo’s hand and told him ‘You have saved hundreds of lives today!’”

Becky was visibly moved by this story. She knocked over the ketchup bottle to grab hold of my hand after I said softly: “That’s why I became a clown -- so maybe someday, somewhere, no one has to die.”  I thought perhaps we were going to kiss right then and there in Service Drug. But instead she said: “What a great line to end my next piece on your school! This might get me the Sevareid Award!” Then she hurried back to the newspaper office, thanking me for the fried egg sandwich I’d gotten her. I stuck around a while in the booth, idly breaking wooden toothpicks in half.



Bill Walsh, copy editor and authority on language, dies at 55

A copy editor has died and gone to his reward.
His punctuation strictures now can safely be ignored.
I’ll use a semicolon; if I like -- and desecrate --
Hyphens and quotation ‘marks”, and misspell fete as fate.
How beautiful the world now seems without his expertise:
My dangling participles, how lovely they increase!


Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Donald Trump Condemns Snoop Dogg on Twitter for Satirical Video

My homey Snoop has done the poop on my man Trump.
BUMP!
Yo yo, my bro, you is a ho 4 tryin’ 2 cap my man.
BEDPAN!
You act a fool, you just a tool; dis ain’t Old School.
DROOL!
This wanksta rap you did was crap; you do for Benjis, right?
SOUND BITE!
Back in da hood you ain’t no good; so don’t you bust my crib.
FIB!  


Neil Gorsuch Has Web of Ties to Secretive Billionaire

Supreme Court justice must depend on impartial decrees
That never are influenced by a monetary squeeze.
But Gorsuch and the billionaire Philip F. Anschutz
Are thick as thieves with many hidden Faustian-like roots.
Money often paves the way for judges to decline
To hear a case that might give rise to rulings out of line.


Unsealed Documents Raise Questions on Roundup Weed Killer

Monsanto says that glyphosate in Roundup is so mild
You can spray it ev’rywhere, from corn to orchids wild.
Of course they had researchers in their pocket to report
There was no chance of cancer when you used it by the quart.
And so the world sprays merrily from Bali to Duluth;
The only thing that’s being harmed is irritating truth.



The Circus Comes to Tioga

(continued from “A Letter to Tim Holst”)


I have always tried to avoid being snooty about my circus clown pedigree. I started with Ringling Brothers in 1971, and over the ensuing years worked with just about every other circus there was. I don’t say I was a runaway hit with any of them, but I worked ‘em nonetheless. Many great clowns did their best work away from Ringling, like Dick Monday, Barry Lubin, Bill Irwin, Steve Wolski (as Harpo the Clown), and Peter Pitofsky. Me, I just did the work.  


But I never could completely shake a patrician air when I visited smaller shows -- giving the impression, I suppose, that I was slumming. But some of those mud shows . . .


The glorious North Dakota summer of 1981, when I was stuck trying to impress Becky Thingvold with plans for my make believe clown academy in Williston, comes to mind. Despite the oil boom that began gnawing at the pristine prairie, the air still sparkled with the heady tang of sage as prairie chickens strutted among the morning glory vines like returning conquerors. It was a good time to be young, in love, and without a car. I loved hiking more than driving. If you ever get to North Dakota you should definitely do some hiking. Get a good trail book like the one below.




KGCX Radio boasted both a full-time news director and a full-time sports director. I did the news in Williston, and Dewey did the sports from the home office in Sidney, Montana. He had a car, and was unusually willing to chauffeur me to distant news events to tape actualities for the station. He prided himself on being a Company Man -- always willing to drive the extra mile for the good of the station. We had both gone to Brown Institute of Broadcasting together back in Minneapolis. That is why he and I drove fifty miles one summer Saturday up to Tioga to catch a matinee of the Hooper Brothers Circus. I figured it would make a good leading story on my newscast on the coming Monday, when there was always a paucity of gripping headlines.


You may never have heard of the Hooper Brothers Circus. I know I never had. It was one of those hastily thrown together ragbags that sprouted, and then wilted, like mushrooms after a rainstorm, in the rich alluvial plains of the Upper Midwest thirty-five years ago. It was a time when everybody had a little money and everybody had work. Various circus and carnival sharpers would stitch together a few circus acts for a quick tour of the hinterlands to gouge the hayseeds for a few kopeks and then mysteriously dissolve before John Law could lay his hands on them for operating without a license (or any talent.)


And Tioga was about as out-of-the-way as you could get. It had a gas plant (courtesy of the oil boom) and a small rural hospital run by three doctors from India -- all named Patel. It’s ten miles off the main highway and at that time was surrounded by yellow bursts of rapeseed.


Dewey parked near the big top (about the size of a modest rambler) and we flashed our KGCX business cards at the ticket taker, a pimply youth who seemed more interested in picking his scabs than in our media credentials.


“Three dollars admission” he said listlessly.


“But we’re from the biggest radio station in Williams county!” I protested. “We’re here to do a story about the show.”


“Three dollars” he replied stubbornly.


I paid for myself and Dewey. The bleachers were half full of youngsters who probably wished they had gone to the Municipal Wading Pool instead. I remember little of that performance. There was a lion act, with three arthritic creatures sluggishly going through their paces, looking ready to collapse at any moment. Some horses were trotted out to do next to nothing while their trainer bellowed and cracked a whip at them. A camel was paraded around. And the candy butchers swarmed about like flies, offering popcorn, cotton candy, hot dogs, pickles on a stick, lukewarm cups of melted ice with a little Coke added as an afterthought, and circus coloring books.


Then there was the clown. I had seen him earlier in the show, dressed in a dark blue jumpsuit, shoveling up after the horses and camel. He reappeared near the end of the show in a ghastly unpowdered whiteface and dressed in what appeared to be oversized polka dot pajamas. He walked around the tent with a suitcase that was stenciled with “The Morning Paper.” He stopped occassionally to open up the suitcase to reveal a roll of toilet paper.


After the show I sought out the owners for an interview, but was shunted from surly acrobat to sullen roustabout without ever discovering the perpetrators of this tanbark travesty. It probably didn’t help that I kept introducing myself as “Tim Torkildson, formerly of Ringling Brothers.” So I settled with recording some of the departing audience.


“It’s a circus” said one young girl helpfully. “They had lions. I’m going home to wake up mom to make me dinner.”


“Can I say hello to my girlfriend Janey on air? Are we live? Hi Janey -- it’s Mitch!”


“That wasn’t much of a show” said a mother manhandling a feisty three year old while attempting to keep the howling infant in her arms from plummeting to the ground. “I wonder why the Rotary Club brought this thing here in the first place. I bet they got fleeced on it.”


Dewey and I drove back to Williston, stopping at Service Drug where I bought him a fried egg sandwich, known locally as a “gut bomb.” Dewey went to a Little League game and I went up to the studio to cobble together my leading story for Monday. I decided to use Mitch’s recording as the closer. For comedic effect (I hoped.) Then I went over to the Red Owl supermarket, where you could pick out a steak from the butcher’s counter and they would grill it for you right there in the store. Becky was in Minot covering a political rally, so I read Dickens’ “Pickwick Papers” late into the night.


Next day, Sunday, I went to the small LDS chapel for services and then took a long Sabbath nap. At four in the morning on Monday I was at the station, feeling smug about my circus ‘scoop.’ Nobody else would have it. That’s when I learned, from the AP wire, that St.Joseph’s Catholic Church in Williston had burned to the ground on Saturday night. I still used my Hooper Brothers story as the lead. I wasn’t going to let it go to waste, especially since the station would not be reimbursing me for any of my time or money.


When the station owner Oscar Halvorson came in later that day he said “Nice story on that circus up in Tioga. Start the news with something happy, is what I say.”


His wife Faye had a different opinion about my morning newscast.


“Why didn’t you have more on the fire?” she demanded. “You’ve got no sense of local community! I don’t know why Oscar ever hired you.”


I spent a good part of Monday afternoon thumbing through my paperback Thesaurus, looking up synonyms for harpy: Shrew. Hag. Termagant. Virago. Xanthippe. I’d be using them all in my next letter to Holst.  

(to be continued)



Why You Will Marry the Wrong Person

The person that is right for me in marriage don’t exist;
Tall or short or thin or fat, of all the gals I’ve kissed
The only one that stands a chance of matrimony strong
Is the one who never tells me that I may be wrong.
Agreeable and pliant and attuned to all my moods,
She will never harbor any grudges, slants, or feuds.
And if there’s such a woman, and I don’t say that there is,
They’ll put her in an archive as a tantalizing whiz.


Thank You, Jeffrey Loseff!

Discerning readers deserve dedicated writers -- so for all those who liked my mini memoir “A Letter to Tim Holst” I wish to say “May the golden years be reflected in your bank account!”

Jeffrey Loseff; John Jay; Billy Jim Baker; John Rutledge; Mike Weakley; William Cushing; Matt Kaminsky; James Wilson; John Blair; Sue Ellen Yung; James Iredell; and the effervescent Bushrod Washington.

“You can make anything by writing.” C.S. Lewis


Tuesday, March 14, 2017

No Magic in How G.O.P. Plan Lowers Premiums: It Pushes Out Older People

There was an old man from Secaucus
Who said bitterly “So they block us
From medical care
Because of white hair;
Congress is out to just fock us!”



Jessica Farrar of Texas

Down in Texas legislators don’t have much to do,
And so they mess around with bills that really are cuckoo.
Farrar has got a doozy that she thinks is pretty sweet;
Onanism is the subject that she wants to treat.
She thinks that single-handed she’ll upset the applecart.
How much is she making to be flippant and so tart?
Texans, put your lawmakers on chain gangs for a change
Instead of paying them to make up laws so weird and strange!