Thursday, May 4, 2017

Republicans to Kill Obamacare Today




WASHINGTON — After weeks of fits and starts, House Republican leaders plan on Thursday to try yet again to advance legislation to repeal and replace major parts of the Affordable Care Act. (from the NYTimes)

When voting today on the Bill
That’s making most people quite ill,
Republicans pray
That they’ll get away
With giving us naught but Advil.

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

The poor you will always have with you



As he toured facilities for the poor in Ohio last week, Mr. Carson, the neurosurgeon-turned-housing secretary, joked that a relatively well-appointed apartment complex for veterans lacked “only pool tables.” He inquired at one stop whether animals were allowed. At yet another, he nodded, plainly happy, as officials explained how they had stacked dozens of bunk beds inside a homeless shelter and purposefully did not provide televisions.
From the NYTimes


For comfort the poor have no need.
So let them a little bit bleed.
It makes them strapping
And keeps them from napping.
(Though Ben Carson hopes they don’t breed.)


Remembering Abe Goldstein, and Laurel & Hardy




When the Ringling Blue Unit played Los Angeles back in 1972 I noticed an old man hanging around the programme stand, talking to one of the last of the ancient concessionaires the show still carried. Because I had once helped him unload a truckload of circus programs without asking for anything in return, he took a shine to me. This particular day he waved me over to introduce me to his old pal, Abe Goldstein. The name meant nothing to me, until the concessionaire told me Abe had originally started with Mack Sennett’s Keystone Kops and had even worked briefly with Laurel and Hardy.

Now I was thrilled. Mr. Goldstein looked like he could use a good square meal, so I invited him to go across the street with me to the local IHOP -- my treat. He accepted with determined alacrity.

As we dug into our Swedish pancakes with lingonberry sauce, with a side of sausage AND bacon, Mr. Goldstein began to talk. And he could really talk. And eat. At the same time. Between innumerable refills of coffee he told me he was just waiting for something to break for him. He hadn’t had a gig in some time, he confided in me -- in fact, he hadn’t actually put on his Keystone Kop outfit since doing a cameo on Bowling for Dollars with Milton Berle. But he expected his agent to be calling any day now with something big. When I could finally get in a word edgewise I asked him about his affiliation with Laurel and Hardy.  

“Oh, that” he began, wiping up the last of the lingonberry sauce with the last of the Swedish pancakes. “Well, I was with the Hagenbeck Wallace show back in the early Thirties and we were out here playing some dusty baseball field when the call came in from my agent -- they needed a bunch of clowns to film a couple of scenes for a circus movie over at the Hal Roach lot.”

My eyes glittered and my mouth watered. I knew exactly what film that was.

“You mean ‘The Chimp,’ right?” I asked him. “From 1932?”

“Don’t know the name of it -- all I did was put on my Kop clown outfit and hit another gilliper on the head with an exploding mallet. We did it in one day. I got paid fifteen dollars for the day, plus a box lunch. Another refill here, hon . . . “

“You were doing the Lady Godiva gag -- Laurel and Hardy played the horse she was riding” I told him. All he did was shrug and look at the flyblown menu wistfully.

“Would you like something else, Mr. Goldstein?”

“Well, if you wouldn’t mind -- I’m kinda partial to a Denver omelette.”

I’d seen ‘The Chimp’ a half dozen times over the years -- it was a favorite at the Minneapolis Film Society back in the 1960’s in my hometown of Minneapolis. Stan and Ollie manage to bring down the big top after spoiling Tiny Sandford’s strongman act, and then get stuck babysitting a gorilla and being pursued by a lion. It all ends with the gorilla chasing the boys while firing a pistol at them.

As Abe tucked into his omelette I badgered him some more -- was there anything, anything at all, he could remember specifically about working with Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy?

“Yeah, one thing” he said between mouthfuls. “They liked to play checkers between takes. The fat one -- who was that, Hardy? -- always beat the skinny one, Laurel.”

And that was all I could learn from Mr. Abe Goldstein about his one day of reflected glory working with the world’s greatest comedy team. Of course who knew back then that Laurel and Hardy would be idolized years later by someone like me --  who loved to sit back in a large movie theater and just immerse myself in the waves of hysterical laughter that washed over me when those two wonderful clowns were doing their screen schtick. To Abe it was just the usual grind. Slapstick comedians were a dime a dozen back in those days.

Still, I couldn’t begrudge him his breakfast at my expense. Abe taught me a lesson that morning that I’ve tried to always keep in mind:  Remember everyone you work with, because someday those memories could become a cherished part of history.



Germany and Refugees



A refugee has to be stout
Barbed wire to constantly flout
To find a small breach
And Germany reach --
Then learn he must eat sauerkraut.

Is China Our Friend or Our Foe?



The decision not to challenge China’s territorial claims represents a remarkable deference toward Beijing from an administration that is increasingly turning toward President Xi Jinping for help amid the escalating crisis in the Korean Peninsula.


Is China our friend or our foe?
There’s nobody seems much to know.
A crony this week;
Next month they’re a sneak.
Our policy’s like a yo-yo.

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

How to be at your most ineffective



If you want to succeed in life you’ve got to have a plan. Not only that, but you’ve got to have a good plan. And above all that, you’ve got to have a good plan that works. Not that I have any of that kind of stuff. But since I’m just marking time until I’m thrown out of my apartment for non-payment of rent, I thought I’d share the secret of my interesting life with all who care to  read on --

Focus on food, not time


Never mind that important board meeting -- go get a bacon and cheese Butterburger! Blow off meeting with your accountant for a double dip cone at Baskin Robbins. Anybody can make money -- but how many people can get indigestion before breakfast?


Focus, schmocus!


Only a prissy martinet has room in their brain for one idea at a time -- I always try to cram my head with as many worthless facts and trivialities as possible so I can -- hey look, that stain on my carpet looks like Elvis!


Write everything down
That way I can toss it when no one’s looking. It’s a great feeling -- almost as good as when I pick my nose at a job interview.


Procrastination is the root of all fun


Here’s the best way to procrastinate: You just . . . nah, I’ll write it tomorrow.


Make time for important things


Like kumquat tipping and bowling with bricks. There’s never a good reason to go home to your family. They understand -- you just gotta be free! I can sleep just as well on a park bench as on my own coffee table at home.


Forget names, places, and dates


A blank mind is a productive mind. If something is really important write it on your arm and don’t ever shower again.


Hold lots of meetings


Go into conference as often as possible. That’s how I get all my bottled water and snacks for free.

Do the easy and unimportant things first


Then you’ll never have time for the important stuff, which usually involves hurting someone’s feelings or taking their money. Small may be beautiful, but trivial is always ethical.


Develop an office romance


I mean besides falling in love with yourself. Start stalking someone in your office and you’ll soon find yourself in all sorts of HR-mandated classes and won’t have to do another lick of work again for years.


Don’t delegate -- relegate!


File away everything marked urgent someplace where you’ll never go to again -- like your Aunt’s photos of her cute cat. Or simply delete. If the government wants to retrieve it to take you to court they can dig it up somehow. Let them worry about it.


Wear white gloves


It makes you look classy and eccentric at the same time. Chances are you won’t be bothered by your boss or co-workers for anything but fire drills. Plus, when you tell people you have a skin disease that makes you wear them, you won’t have to waste any time shaking hands anymore.


Fifteen hours of sleep a day -- max!


Eight hours of sleep is just enough to make it to the living room for a nap. Ten hours a day will turn you into a zombie in no time. But a full fifteen hours of sack time each day will leave you refreshed and wondering how to pay your bills.


Stop reading idiotic pieces like this


I only wrote the darn thing so I could get paid by a native marketing outfit that wants to put in some commercial links. You think I’d waste my time on this dreck otherwise? I’ve got to go catch up on my sleep!  
And by the way, there’s not even fifteen ideas here. Who’s got that much energy? Not me.  

Should Clowns Take Improv Classes?


My kids all got together one recent Saturday for a potluck. They had to invite me, of course -- because I’m the only one who knows how to make sticky rice (from my years in Thailand), and the grandkids all dote on my recipe. After the meal, while everyone was sprawled on a couch or laid out on the floor, a trip to ImprovBroadway was mooted about. It seemed like a splendid cap to the day, so babysitting was arranged and we all traipsed merrily out to the strip mall where they have their theater. To my critical eye the show was only so-so, even though my offspring guffawed so heartily they could barely keep down their Nicoise salad and grilled salmon.

*********************************************************************************************

For you see, I had once studied improvisation under the great Dudley Riggs at his Brave New Workshop in Minneapolis. I figured it would strengthen my ability to rearrange some of the clown routines I was tired of doing -- things like Bigger and Bigger, and the Broom Jump. The old corny stuff that killed Vaudeville and would never be seen in a Buster Keaton movie (although it appeared with regularity in the Three Stooges canon.) So when it comes to improv, I know my beans.

Dudley was not teaching too many classes personally when I took the course some forty years ago -- but he often popped in to see how pupils were progressing. And to put the bite on any wayward students who were behind in their tuition. Dudley was an old circus hand -- he and his family having worked for Ringling Brothers back in the 1930’s -- and he knew and cherished the value of making his nut.

I regret to say I was not a particularly apt pupil when it came to ad-libbing. I had lately found myself becoming timid and cautious when it came to performing as a clown. I needed something to bolster my self confidence. My normal response to being thrown into new scenarios was to take a pratfall. Especially off of a folding chair. I had a patented fall I did from a folding chair that left me spreadeagled on the ground, and then when I attempted to become vertical I would entangle my leg in the chair like a bear trap -- it was a sure fire laugh getter. But I quickly found out that my physical comedy expertise was not welcomed in improv class. I particularly remember one young lady who was teaching us the “Yes, and . . . “ improv technique, who blew up at me when I fell off my folding chair once too often.

“Stop using the f*****g chair to disrupt everything!” she screamed in my face. “You’re here to learn how to affirm your f*****g partner!”

It may have been overly graphic, but her point was made -- I stopped relying on pratfalls during improv class.

Still, I was considered a very backward pupil. The other members of my class had acting backgrounds, or at least enough social skills to interact verbally with their partners when told to become an eskimo in a laundromat or Ricky Ricardo on Jeopardy. I stumbled and mumbled my way through one improv exercise after another, until the day came when I was summoned to the office of Dudley Riggs himself. His white hair and black horn rim glasses gave him an avuncular air as he kindly bade me be seated. He wasted no time in getting down to brass tacks.



“You’re terrible at improv, Mr. Torkildson” he began. “Why are you wasting your money on classes here?”

I sheepishly told him I thought it would help me improve my clowning. He hadn’t known I was an alumni of Big Bertha, as was he -- and immediately his demeanor towards me lit up with glowing geniality. What were his idiot teachers doing with me to discourage such obvious talent? He invited me to lunch then and there, to “cut up jackpots” he cheerfully said. I cringed inwardly -- I have never liked the term ‘cut up jackpots,’ mostly because I rarely ever know any of the people in the long and involved stories I’m being told by other old circus troopers. Frankly, I’d rather discuss a good recipe for goulash than who was the catcher on the Pollack Brothers show back in 1954. Still, a free lunch is a free lunch.

We went to the Red Mill across the street from the school. It catered to the college crowd, so the pizza was mediocre and the cheap beer was served in gallon schooners that would scupper the saltiest sea dog. I had a hotdog and a chaste lemonade. After his first flagon of beer, Dudley began to unbend towards me.

“You really don’t need these classes at all” he told me. “Any good clown naturally knows how to improvise already. You do it all the time when you’re told to make the gag run long or short, or when something goes wrong with the blow off -- right?”

I had to agree with him. It was dawning on me that maybe I was paying good coin to reinvent the wheel.

When he asked me what my class was currently working on I told him we were doing the Cookbook exercise -- this is where you make up your own recipes for a cookbook from suggestions from the audience.

“What was your improvisation on that?” he asked.

“Uh, I couldn’t come up with anything -- so I sat and watched everyone else.”

“Balderdash!” he said to me with a grin. “Let’s do it right here. Gimme a recipe for snow soup!”

“Uh, add a cup of snow to two quarts of snow, and uh, stir until it turns to slush -- then add salt and pepper to taste.”

“There. Now how hard was that?”

I had to admit it wasn’t hard at all -- but that was because I felt comfortable with Dudley Riggs, not because I was an improv maven. I suddenly had the urge to take a pratfall off of my chair to see how he would react to that -- but decided against it. And then a memory suddenly came back to me -- when I first started clowning old Swede Johnson had told me “Pinhead, you always go for the jugular, don’t you?”

Riggs kept on talking, but I wasn’t listening anymore.

Yeah, the jugular. I was a certified zany and did whatever I damn well pleased in the ring or on the track. That was me, that was my clown character. And that’s when I performed the best, when I didn’t have to listen to or obey any rules or regulations -- like the dozens of rules my improv teachers were trying to enslave me with.

I threw down my cloth napkin and jumped out of my chair.

“Thanks for lunch, Mr. Riggs” I said briskly. “But getting my mojo back means I don’t need those fossilized teachers of yours anymore -- in fact, I never did!”  I waltzed out of the Red Mill and improvised myself a clown job with a ragtag circus out of Lakeland Florida by showing up on the lot and offering to clown for nothing so they could see how I did. That’s how high my self confidence had come back. Within a week  they were paying me a comfortable salary and I was doing old clown gags with new twists and new clown gags with old twists -- just having a ball and reveling in Laughter Lane once again. Laughter is my only real refuge and home in this cold sterile Waiting Room of a world we’re all stuck in. Waiting for Godot? Not me -- I’m waiting for the next big belly laugh!

***************************************************************************************************

I started to tell my kids all about my improv experience after the show was over, but they had to get back to put their kids to bed or walk the dog or wax the ceiling -- some piddling thing. So I’ve had to write it down here instead. If any of you know one of my kids you might tell ‘em to read this sometime -- if they ever want to know anything about me. Which maybe they don’t.   



Trump Follows Own Path, Not Establishment, With Overtures to Kim and Duterte




It used to be that invitation
From the White House to rogue nation
For leaders to meet
Was thought indiscreet --
Now it is Trump’s new vocation.

Monday, May 1, 2017

Shaming Children So Parents Will Pay the School Lunch Bill

The practice is widespread — a 2014 report from the Department of Agriculture found that nearly half of all districts used some form of shaming to compel parents to pay bills. (About 45 percent withheld the hot meal and gave a cold sandwich, while 3 percent denied food entirely.)

by Bettina Elias Siegel 

Don’t send your kids to second grade
If you have lunch bills still unpaid.
The luncheon ladies will assail
Your little ones with stalks of kale.
A guy named Guido will appear
And pinch your loved ones in the rear.
And all they’ll get for nourishment
Is a cruel discouragement.
An unpaid school lunch bill today
Is treated worse than KKK.


The Wedding Clown



One June day back in 1978, when I was ‘between engagements’ with the circus, I answered the phone and a young woman asked if I was the Tim Torkildson who was a Ringling Brothers clown. When I told her I was she asked me to clown at her upcoming wedding. I’d done birthday parties and schools and libraries and hospitals -- but no one had ever asked me to yuck it up at a wedding. Somewhat flustered, I quoted her an outrageous price for my clown services. She agreed immediately, got my address to mail the check, and gave me the time and place. And so I was suddenly in the wedding clown business.

The nuptials were held lakeside at Como Park in Saint Paul. It was a deep green summer day -- the kind of Minnesota summer day when you can almost make out pixies running through the luminous grass. Dozens of squirrels bounced around the wooded fields. The huge white reception canopy billowed in the spent-lilac scented breeze -- underneath it were many good things to eat and drink.  

And I had no idea what in blazes I was going to do there as a clown.

I’d dragged along a footlocker full of clown props, including my musical saw and pencil balloons. But what is a wedding clown supposed to do, exactly? In my case, I did some standard meet and greet prior to the actual ceremony -- making balloon animals for the guests and taking pictures with the children.

The ceremony was conducted by a Unitarian minister, with soulful music provided by a Donovan wannabe on guitar. The bride and groom exchanged vows written by themselves. I made funny faces at the horde of babies being jiggled by their sweaty mothers -- inducing them to scream and whine (with fear or pleasure, I couldn’t tell.)

It was a very short ceremony, and I was contracted to provide entertainment for three solid hours. And I’d already cashed the bride’s check.The crowd began stuffing their faces at the buffet while looking to me for entertainment. I felt like a tummler at a Catskills resort. As noted elsewhere, I was committed to silent clowning -- so jokes and sing-a-longs were out of the question. I settled down with the older relatives first, the ones who kept asking if there was any soup. I played the Anniversary Waltz on my musical saw for them -- not once, but several times, since they immediately got misty-eyed and kept calling for encores.

Then I tried a bit I lifted from an old Olsen & Johnson movie. Using a cardboard tube mounted on a tripod, I started handing out string and positioning people all over the place with said string creating all sorts of spiderweb designs -- each time I gave someone a length of string I made sure they stood completely still while I squinted at them through the cardboard tube and made notations with an oversized pencil. I had a coach’s whistle dangling around my neck, so when someone would try to cross under one of my lines I’d whistle them away. The gag succeeded in confusing the milling guests completely -- after I got my lines up, people were cut off from the food and each other in a very gratifying and arbitrary pattern. Very few actually thought it was a joke. I overheard people telling each other “This must be to keep us in line for the wedding photographer.”
I cherish gags where the audience provides the comedy, not me. In this case, the few cognoscenti who ‘got’ what I was doing began helping me put up more string while laughing hysterically as the crowd became more and more roped in. Finally the wedding photographer, exasperated at the lengths of cheap string befouling everyone’s profile, commanded everyone to take it off so he could get some decent pictures.

And then the trouble started. The children, with a singular malevolent intent, decided to gang up on the clown. It is my belief that the little nippers had surreptitiously gotten into the champagne, inflaming their naturally adversarial bent.

Whatever the cause, after the string came down my ‘Clowny Sense’ began tingling. The kids were no longer in awe of me, nor did they want to be amused by me. They were coalescing into a lynch mob. Professional entertainers have a sixth sense that tells them when an audience has turned sour -- it’s a terrifying experience, like being caught in the path of a tornado. At this wedding the adults were ready to forget about me to concentrate on the bride and groom, while the kids were bored of the whole thing and wanted to throw wedding cake at the clown. Which they did. I ducked the first few pieces, and then cut and ran. I had on an expensive satin coat and vest which I had just bought at Teeners Theatrical Supply -- and I was darned if I was going to let those little pishers ruin it with pink icing and white cream filling.

In theory, clowns are never in control of anything -- that’s part of their humor and appeal. But the reality is that when clowns work solo they radiate a commanding aura that keeps the crowd attentive and in place. When that mood is punctured there’s no earthly way to regain it. So I ran a marathon the rest of that wretched afternoon avoiding those miniature savages until my three hours were up. Then I collected my props and foot locker and got out of there, panting, faster than you can say ‘cardiac arrest.’

Strangely enough, my performance was considered a howling success by the bride and groom, along with their family and friends -- a dozen offers to liven up a marital event came the following week. I politely turned them all down. I had snagged a gig at Paul Bunyan Land up in Brainerd for the rest of the summer. That beat the heck out of dodging lumps of frosting. Besides, I heard the walleye were really biting at Gull Lake.