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April 14, 2008

Saudades of Things Past

-Posted in Backstory | Daily Grind

Jose in Chicago.JPG


(Photo: Desculpe, pode me dizer onde fica o Bean?)


It had to happen sometime. Last weekend, after five years of my Chicago life--and for the first time ever in his--Jose visited me in Chicago. That's "joe-ZAY", so pronounce it right in your head when you read it. My best friend from my adult years in New York. My Portuguese connection.

It was a little bit of a dream come true.

Any Midwest-living former New Yorker knows how hard it can be to get Gotham friends to visit you in alleged flyover territory. And if there is anything I regret from my own flight from New York, it's having turned my back on the Portuguese language and culture that had been so dear to me and is so prevalent on the east coast. (Apologies to the Second City's non-Lusitanian Lusophones, but an abundance of Brazilian steakhouses just doesn't cut it).

When we were both in Gotahm, Jose and I used to trip together. We've bummed around Portugal, Paris, and London and with the greatest of ease. That's likely because we tend to "trip" to the same things: art; museums; churches; and eating like local pigs (we qualify all vacation meals that involve only one course as snacks--and you know you want to adopt this policy, too).

Zay and I have seen each other every now and then since I left New York. But he, too, has long since departed the Big Apple for New Jersey's greener and suburban pastures. He's managed to get me to explore his new stomping grounds. Last weekend, finally, was my chance to show him where I've been for the past half-decade, and why.

Jose was here for a conference, so we only had Sunday, one day, and a rainy one at that, to see it all--and on top of that, my boyfriend, Chris, was under the weather and couldn't come out to meet Zay. (The gods of fado surely got a kick out of those annoying twists of fate).

It was a whirlwind tour of the Loop with umbrellas and wet shoes. It was a familiar setup, our rainy first day in Paris was like that in April 2000. At least this time the locals were nicer. We started with the 61st-floor roofdeck at my Marina City abode. To Zay's credit, the words, "It's so small," never emerged from his mouth in reference to the skyline. He was amazed by the quality and variety of Chitown's architecture. Being Portuguese, a man with seafaring in his DNA, he was in love with the lake. Or at least the sliver of it he could see through the mist.

Back on terra firma, I dragged him through the Loop to see that architecture up close, then plopped him on the 'L' for a slow train to Randolph to see the Art Institute. Ah, the good old days. Our three hours there recalled every hour we ever spent together at Janelas Verdes, the Gulbenkian, the Louvre. It was nice to know that Chicago art had European credibility for Jose. Those Lusitanians can be tough critics.

OK, art down. But what to do for churches in the Loop? First United Methodist's skyscraper-tall church is impressive from the outside, but the sanctuary is under renovation at the moment. The former Marshall Field's Tiffany dome and atrium and the dripping opulence of the Chicago Cultural Center served as wonderful stand-ins. (And the former provided a wonderful opportunity to introduce Zay to the Frango!)

Of all the things we did, though, most of all Jose wanted his picture taken in front of Millennium Park's most popular reflective giant glob of metal. I obliged, thankful he didn't say Navy Pier. We walked through the park talking about the funny contradictions that make up Chicago: an overly friendly big city; an international city where every local citizen feels ownership of downtown and inclusion in the city's cultural life. A city unlike our common former home.

As the day went on, I could tell Zay was getting it, starting to touch what Chicago is all about and why I found it so seductive that I gave up New York in almost record time to relocate here when I did.

But no one understands this town without deep dish, and no town makes deep dish like Chicago does. As any local who's ever been anywhere knows, supposed "Chicago pizza" outside of the Second City is nothing more than a dry, stale mess. So we ended our day at Due, after an uneventful walk up the inaptly named half-mile long Magnificent Mile ("That's it? I expected it to be longer").

Zay tore into the soupy, tomato-sauce drowned topping of our everything pizza. It brought back memories of every vacation meal we had ever shared. But times have changed.

"It's not the same as mussels and clams."

No argument there. I would have preferred to be supping with Zay on Mocambicano giant spicy shrimp at Baleal in the heart of Lisboa's Baixa, myself. But wise men take what life gives them and find the fulfilling in it if they can. I smiled and agreed. We both continued to attack the pizza.

Chicago dogs will have to be saved for the next visit. Knowing how long it took for Jose to visit this time, I may have to import them--and Chris--to New Jersey if Zay is ever to become familiar with either one. I hope he does. It would mean a lot to me if someday my New York and Chicago lives didn't feel so firewalled away from each other.

I said the same to Chris as I cried in his arms that night. Trying to find a way to help my heart reconcile what used to be with what is, saudade had come to find me. Another old Lusitanian friend, she's one I don't have to show around town. Like Jose and me, we go way back. She's the longing of Portuguese blues, and the only way out of her wily grasp is to resolve yourself to look forward.

So Chris and I resolved ourselves to take Jose up on his offer and visit him and his boyfriend, Anthony, in New Jersey. Eventually. I do have a boyfriend's mother to meet in California first (not to mention a trip to my non-Portuguese center of the universe, Disneyland). But we'll make it there.

And so will the Chicago dogs.

February 19, 2008

Tribune Goes News-Weak on Web

-Posted in Daily Grind | Media

old trib tower.jpg


(Photo: Back then they managed to build this building and fund a newspaper without the help of massively annoying web ads.)


What on earth is Bill Adee thinking? The Chicago Tribune's associate managing editor in charge of online operations announced today yet another slew of changes for the paper's website. If anyone misses 1990s-era websites, have no fear: the Trib has your back with these changes. From a clunky Times font and a space-wasting blocky layout, to big, ugly ads and ad boxes intruding in places they shouldn't, the new Trib sites has it all...except news, that is.

According to Adee, these are "nuanced" changes. Hmm. When I first clicked on the new site, I actually thought the Trib was having a server meltdown. It took me a few seconds to realize this was the look they were going for. Judging by the prominence of ads versus news items, that look seems to be "cash desperate blogger", not nationally prominent newspaper.

How prominent are those ads, you may ask? Below the "fold", news items get a single, inch-wide column, while ads, ad-driven videos, and paid content suck up the rest of the real estate.

That doesn't sound like a subtle change to me.

First they shut down their comment boards on all political articles, then they fire Trib Interactive chief Tim Landon. Now we get another newly retooled website with a look that screams rushed out, not carefully considered. Well, considered by the accountants, surely, but certainly not by users. These are, of course, the same users who could just as easily visit the Sun-Times homepage, which even the most casual visitor will notice is given almost entirely over to (wait for it) news. Imagine that.

How many Tribune executives does it take to realize that what web readers want is RSS feeds for Schmich and Zorn, not ad fatigue? Hoarding your star columnists content from RSS news readers to try and drive visitors to the Tribune webpage is annoying, not endearing.

Much like this news-weak Tribune homepage tweak.

February 11, 2008

Mausoleum of Science and Industry

-Posted in Daily Grind

MSI Old Skyline.JPG


(Photo: The modern Chicago skyline...at least according to one of many hopelessly outdated exhibits at the Museum of Science and Industry.)


Why are Chicago museums so inconsistent? It's always either feast or famine, a balance of the sublime and the craptastic. Sure, we have the world-class Art Institute, Field Museum, Shedd Aquarium, heck, I'll even throw in the Chicago History Museum and National Museum of Mexican Art.

But why must we continue to suffer through a contemporary art museum that is a legend in its own mind? A planetarium passing off 1990s technology as cutting edge? Or the biggest civic tithe of cultural mediocrity in the midwest, the Museum of Science and Industry?

I knew better when I asked Scooter to spend an afternoon with me at the MSI in January. But it was free week, and like many Chicagoans, I have an unhelpfully short memory when it comes to the less impressive side of Second City must-dos. I think it's that same gene that forces Chicagoans to eat over a garbage can, dodge kamikaze wasps, and pee in a porta-potty in 90-degree weather at the Taste of Chicago. Sure, every year we swear we'll never do it again, but like ravenous lemmings with Alzheimer's, a year later we always come back for more.

So it is with me and the MSI. Don't get me wrong, classic exhibits like the decades-old mine train, World War II U-boat, and Zephyr train, or the technology-forward new Earth Revealed, are worth the price of admission, themselves. That's the part I remember every time I make my annual visit to the last remaining building from the storied 1893 Columbian Exposition.

What I conveniently forget, however, is room after room of dodgy, laughably outdated, peeling, fading, and/or corroded exhibits that have sat neither renovated nor replaced seemingly since the Indians were defeated at Fort Dearborn. Besides the above, properly respected headliner exhibits, here's what else your almost-$20 combo admission gets the average Chicagoland family:


--Text-based computer games written in the 1980s and played on faded monochrome screens;

--A 1970s-era exhibit about sickle cell anemia that is illegible because half of the copy has fallen or been peeled off;

--Push-buttons that rarely do anything when you push them;

--Lessons about science that use outdated science;

--A cavernous bathroom that smells like it hasn't been cleaned since 1893; and

--An almost total lack of "wow" factors to engage the minds and expectations of contemporary kids.


The last bit is the most galling. In a world of Wiis and Playstations where virtual reality is old news and even the CTA can manage to deploy flat video screens, the best the MSI can do to try and elicit oohs and ahs is lighting up a wall panel of 30-year-old photos (witness the picture at the top of this entry) when a paint-flaked, dented red button is pressed?

You're kidding, right?

It wasn't just me. Chris had his fill of the place in about an hour, and frankly, so did I. But this time, I wanted to set my thoughts down while they were still fresh in my mind to save myself the trouble--and the trip--in 2009.

I'm firmly convinced this place lives on its laurels. There are far better, more modern science museums in this country (San Francisco Exploratorium/New Jersey Liberty Science Center, anyone?) The only reason I can come up with to explain why Chicago parents keep dragging their kids here year after year is that they grew up with these exhibits and remember them fondly.

Let me assure them, a "Networld" exhibit about the Internet that looks forward to a day when we'll all be making purchases electronically isn't doing 21st-century children any educational favors.

As a fan of Chicago history, I want to like this old place. It has the potential to really live up to its hype and be a world-class science museum. Right now, though, it's an unfortunate, unfocused mish-mash of irrelevant and new technology, with an emphasis on the former. (Hands up who else can't believe they're still trying to pass off a 727--a plane that first flew in 1963--as a modern jetliner?)

In a downright bizarre twist, as we were leaving, we found the most impressive, interactive, engaging piece of technology at the MSI in a bathroom. The lobby men's room, specifically. If it weren't for the 400 mile-per-hour goodness of the newly installed Dyson Airblade hand dryers, we would have had nothing fun to do at the museum at all.


Dyson Dryer.JPG


The best tech the Museum of Science and Industry has to offer sits next to a toilet and the worst part is I wasn't surprised. Anywhere else, that would be an ironic find. At the MSI, it's just a pointedly suitable metaphor for a particularly crappy museum.

January 12, 2008

Deliver Us from the Chicago Post Office

-Posted in Daily Grind

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(Photo: Chicago's old main post office, back in the days of postal credibility...)


To the masochists among my readership, for a good time, buy your stamps at River North's Fort Dearborn Station post office. In my experience, no other post office in the City of Chicago mines quite the depths of suckiness that Fort Dearborn does.

The top painful experience on offer, of course, is dealing with the surly, uncommunicative, half-asleep, and wholly disinterested staff. Do you enjoy having to explain yourself three times to an alleged customer-service clerk, only to be asked with a vacant, soulless stare, "What is it you want, now?" Fellah, you've come to the right place.

How about waiting on an interminable line while four (yes, count them, four) postal clerks do their best to move, walk, and talk as -- slowly -- as -- humanly -- possible in order to make sure that just because there is only one person in line in front of you, it will still take ten more minutes to get up to the counter? Sister, get here quick, and bring your leather restraints with you.

Enjoy a total absence of a stamp-book vending machine? Forcing you back to that interminable line to wait for a vacant stare? Unless, of course, you want to buy your stamps one at a time from a poorly conceived, slow-as-mollasses, 1990s-era, supposedly credit-card accepting "automatic postage meter"? My advice is to throw out your whips and slings, get thee here, and just sit on this contraption, instead. It imparts about as painful a user experience.

But don't fret those among you into actual injury. Just visit Fort Dearborn Station any winter day after a snowfall. You'll love the marks left after you tumble and fall on the three inches of ice that are never, ever cleared, salted, or otherwise admitted to along the post office's Grand and Ohio sidewalks.

And wheelchair users, you aren't left out either. Submissives among you will really get off on that half-hour of knocking on a glass wall that it may require for a postal employee to come to the door and let you in. Because in recent cold weather, the automatic sliding front doors have been locked during the business day. You know, the ones installed to satisfy the federal Americans with Disabilities Act that also serve as emergency exits and clearly state on them, "Emergency Exit: Do Not Lock These Doors During Open Hours"?

Yeah. Those.

Note to Gloria Tyson, Acting Chicago District Manager and Postmaster, installed last year in an attempt to reduce the embarrassment of Chicago having the worst mail delivery in the nation (most especially downtown Chicago): read above. Do you actually visit this city's local post offices/dens of inadequacy?

Fort Dearborn Station is a civic joke. Then again, so was the mailing I received last summer from Tyson's Chicago Postal Customer Council. In an effort to improve their delivery of mail to me, the Chicago post office sent me (and about three million other Chicagoans) a post card reminding me of my own address.

If the best you can come up with to improve the job that your workers do in delivering mail to me is to make sure I know what street I live on, Gloria, honey, you're barking up the wrong tree.

I know where I live. The problem is that half the time your employees don't. How does reminding me of my address make your employees correctly and accurately deliver mail that is addressed to me by other people?

Or make the workers in your main processing facility get off their collective ass and get each day's mail to the local carriers in time to be delivered that day?

Tell me, exactly how does telling me my address get Fort Dearborn workers to get my mail to me sometime before 7:00 p.m. in the evening seven days too late?

And while I'm on the subject, I know it might be too much to ask, but maybe, just maybe, could you please stop delivering other people's mail to me? You know, that correctly addressed mail that your workers misdeliver anyway? Those pesky envelopes and packages addressed to a different name, in a different apartment, occasionally on a different street?

On second thought, I'll take those misdelivered magazines, as long as they're interesting and not sports related.

But feel free to keep other people's bills.

October 21, 2007

10 Ways to Be a Chicagoan (and 10 Ways Not to)

-Posted in Daily Grind

chicagotheater.jpg


(Photo: Go, Chicago! Credit: RSNA.)


Much as I love being a carpetbagging Chicagoan, even after almost five years I confess I still don't fully understand the mercurial nature of Windy Citizens. Yet, after spending a month back in my native New York over the summer, I'm very aware that floating around in the core of me now is definitely a lot more Midwestern mellowness than Gotham swagger.

Regular readers may raise a doubting eyebrow or two to that disclosure, but it's true. There are many ways I act a lot more like a Chicagoan than a New Yorker.

I haven't completely gone native, of course. I don't think anyone who relocates away from their hometown should go too native--you risk losing the most interesting bits of your personality, that which distinguishes you from the culture in which you live now. But I'm sure not the New Yorker I used to be.

As my half-decade mark of being a half-breed "New Chicagoan" approaches, it's a little tough for me to pick out the changes. After all, I've come to rely so thoroughly on living in Chicago and, for the past couple of years, celebrating what that means on this blog.

But I'll give it my best shot. Here are the top-ten ways I--very happily--behave like a Chicagoan. Effortlessly, these behaviors are simply instilled in me now. For fullest disclosure, I've paired them with the top-ten ways I'm still not a full flatlander. The ways in which I still cling to my identity as an outside observer.

My behavior on any given day falls somewhere between these two extremes. (If you back through my archives, I bet you can tell in what city my heart was living on any given day).


10 Ways I'm a Chicagoan

1. The idea of a New York hotdog with ketchup makes me gag.

2. I can finally say a sentence like, "I have a taste for pop, wanna come with to the Jewels?" with a straight face.

3. I know that "alderman" and "comedian" are synonymous terms (even though only one of them is actually trying to be funny).

4. I will vote for Mayor Daley as long as there's a Mayor Daley to vote for.

5. I will visit the Taste of Chicago every year, because I love to eat over a garbage bin, swat at wasps, and pee in a porta-potty.

6. I can let others speak first and I can live without having the last word. (Can and do are, of course, not the same thing!)

7. The sight of the Chicago skyline makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside.

8. Margie's Candies makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside.

9. Trash cans belong in alleys, not on sidewalks.

10. It's Marshall Field's. Period. End of discussion.


10 Ways I'm So Not a Native

1. The following words rhyme with farthest: forest; orange; horrible; Florida.

2. This is a sidewalk. Get. Out. Of my way.

3. I find Italian beef sandwiches to be soggy and disgusting. (In New York, we preferred our hot dogs to be soggy and disgusting).

4. I immediately laugh at off-color jokes instead of waiting for others to laugh first.

5. I almost never give money to panhandlers.

6. The terms "viaduct", "speed hump", and "gapers block" still make me chuckle. (I grew up on "overpass", "speed bump", and…get ready for it…"rubbernecking delay").

7. I still think Milwaukee is a fun day trip.

8. I still think there has to be somewhere, somewhere, within a day of Chicago that really is a fun day trip.

9. I will tell you exactly what I'm thinking if you ask me to.

10. I will never, ever use the words, "Yes, but it's not New York."


For those Chicagoans reading this, native or newcomer, I'd love to know what local behaviors you think pegs someone as a Chicagoan. And for those carpetbaggers like me, I'd also love to know what quirks you just can't let go of from your lives before you became Windy Citizens. Please feel free to leave a comment!

October 12, 2007

How High the Cost of Living

-Posted in Daily Grind | Marina City

balconybombers.jpg


(Photo: If only Mrs. O'Leary had had an annunciator. Credit: Cushman Collection.)


On those nights when they burn the house down at the House of Blues, we shudder in Marina City condos above. Most of us are familiar with the midnight din of emergency vehicles looming loud and coming to a halt beneath our bedroom windows.

Older neighbors with so many moldy unwanted loveseats and bed frames crammed onto balconies that sound no longer gets through are excepted from this familiarity. So are the young. Primarily the persistently drunken college students who are frequently witnessed crawling on all fours down circular hallways to dump hot coals down high-rise garbage chutes.

Occasionally they lose their way back to their apartments and make the rounds in the hallways until collapsing into comfortable pools of sick sometime before the blue-haired ladies leave for their morning constitutionals. They could care less about burning to death. They think their livers are sufficiently saturated to protect them from harm, like a hosed-down roof in the face of an L.A. brush fire.

Several years of waking up to just such brush fires in garbage chutes haven't been enough to get the condo board to ban coal barbeques on balconies. They must enjoy the pleasant smell of lightly smoked sofa; I suspect certain members own stock in Febreze.

Leave it to the city council to bolster the safety of Marina Citizens. Chicago's 2005 fire-life safety code finally pushed the board's hand--at least somewhat. Considering what a fat and slothful hand it tends to be, any movement at all is not a mean feat by anyone's measure. All year, the percussive rhythm of fire-life safety equipment being installed in residential units has reverberated throughout the storied corncobs.

Of course, loopholes in the law allow buildings of Marina City's vintage to forego putting actual sprinklers in residential units. We're getting heat sensors and automatic "annunciators"--a fancy word for loudspeakers, instead. We may still burn to death, but once those annunciators go off, we will at least be assured of being wide awake when it happens.

Lucky for the installation crew I've been job hunting lately and have had my Fridays free. Life-safety-device installation crews only work on Fridays, you see. After spending Monday through Thursday scaring building managers into the need for their services--also known as business development--it's the only day they have left to do the actual grunt work.

Most of this year, I lived in awe of this business development. They must be very busy from it, they missed every one of their appointments with me until this morning.

I didn't move anything out of my dressing-room closet until Antony showed up at 9:05. I wasn't making that mistake twice, boxes of National Geographic unread since the early 1970s are heavy things to drag off shelves for no reason.

"You mind if I prop the door open like this?" asked Antony, as he stuck a stainless-steel dongle into the doorjamb.

"Well I have a cat so I'd prefer if you didn't."

"But I'm gonna hafta come in and out about 30 times to get this done."

"Can't you bring your tools in the apartment and work from here?"

"But then your apartment would get all dirty."

"Aren't you gonna be power-drilling big holes into my concrete walls and ceilings anyway?"

"What's your point?"

Camoes gave me a dirty look before I dropped him into the bathroom tub and closed the door. He knows giving up an argument on a technicality when he hears one, and frankly he expects better of me.

But I couldn't complain. Who expects repairmen to be on time? At 9 a.m., not Internet scribes like me. At that time of the morning, I still have a sinkload of last night's dishes, a pot of unmade coffee, and a still-open futon to attend to. I was just happy to have chores to keep me from hovering. I figured Antony suffered enough over-shoulder watching from the blue-haired set upstairs in the 50s.

I knew my karma would remain unblemished when Marge Tini peeked out from behind her next-door door.

"Can you drill a little more quietly, sweetie? That tool of yours is so positively loud."

"I'm sorry, these are concrete walls ma'am. What kind of a drill would you like me to use?"

"I dunno. Do you have anything manual?"

"Just my hands, ma'am. But I'm already using those."

Points accrued for Antony, while a befuddled Ms. Tini began her morning constitutional to the elevators on all fours. While down there, she bumped heads with my other neighbor, Ronnie Walker, along the way. Some nights I sit in bed wielding my TV remote like a baton and conduct the drunken wall-banging emanating from the apartment walls on either side.

Had I known when I moved in I'd get sandwiched between two classic Marina City cocktail-heads, I'd have opted to live somewhere classier. But I can't afford the rent they get in the non-Section 8 section of Presidential Towers.

"Okay, sir, I'm all done. Want me to tell you how this works?"

"Sure." I lied.

"Well, this is your heat detector. If it detects a fire, the annunciator will go off and someone downstairs will tell you your house is on fire."

"Good, good, because Marge has so much crap on her next-door balcony now that the sound of the emergency vehicles barely makes it through anymore."

"What you really need to be careful of, though, is this here smoke detector."

That's when the dread appeared in the pit of my stomach.

"Do you cook a lot?" Antony asked. "Take hot showers? Run the water to warm it up?"

"Yes…?" Now I remembered why I hated the condo board. When you lay down with low bids, you tend to get up fleeced. If the board ever replaces the elevators, I swear I'm going to start taking the stairs. God knows, my paunch could use the effort.

"Well don't do those things from now on. This thing is sensitive. Burnt toast, cooking smells, steam, hot showers, they'll all set it off. And the only way to stop the alarm is from downstairs, but you'll have to wait for building staff to come up and check your apartment first. But, hey, you don't have to put batteries in it, at least!"

"Well, that's a relief. And as I tend to cook big meals, I'll always have plenty to offer building security when they show up to test my doorknob for warmth…So is there any way to turn it off from inside my apartment?"

"Pretty much only with a hammer. Well…unless you rewire it."

I knew spending two years with a handyman would pay off sooner or later.

October 02, 2007

Sole Man

-Posted in Backstory | Daily Grind | Personalities

sole man donn.JPG


(Photo: Got what he got the hard way, and he'll make it better each and every day.)


"Remember people that no matter who you are and what you do to live, thrive and survive, there's still some things that make us all the same. You, me, them, everybody, everybody..."

"HELP!"

The Friday evening IM was as unexpected as it was emphatic. Fifteen hours til the movers were coming, and he wasn't done boxing yet. Good thing he was only moving next door. They say you learn a lot about a person when you help them move. Mostly, things you never expected to find out.

But after a summer of couch surfing with friends in my never-again Gotham hometown, I knew I was too perilously deep in karmic debt to say no. So last Saturday morning, with a short break to turn off my alarm early and wake back up again late, I set off from downtown on an express 147 pointed at the far end of Rogers Park. My new friend, Don, needed help.

Now, how I would have explained Don before the move bears little resemblance to the actual Don of pathos, sweat, and hyperactivity whose house I spent the weekend packing. But I'm getting ahead of myself. I arrived up on Jonquil to find the frazzled forty-something repeatedly self-medicating with mumbled words of encouragement.

"I'm so screwed. I shouldn’t have waited for the painters to finish. I'm so screwed."

He wasn't kidding. Eleven-thirty, and the movers were coming at one. He directed me to his guest bedroom and with a pleading look asked if I'd mind boxing it up. Being a hard-nosed HR attorney who in a less desperate mood would otherwise likely be smiling over a recent termination or stealing the souls of small children, I knew he was up against it.

I set to the task at hand while Don began prying the legs off an upturned sofa. I couldn't help wondering if he was fantasizing they were the legs of some unlucky insect. "You know," I told him, "I'm really sorry for blowing you off this summer. Trying to move to New York, I couldn't deal with looking back."


"Comin' to ya on a dusty road,

Good lovin I got a truck load..."


I met Don shortly after my ex-partner Devyn took a hall pass to the bathroom and never came back. I needed a diversion. Don needed someone to take him seriously. Two shy men with different agendas. It was a well-seasoned, pre-heated recipe for disaster. Two dates later and I was already ready to take a new number in the unending waiting line of suitors that I scraped up on the Internet to get me through the worst of the break-up shock.

Two more weeks later and I was job-hunting New York City. Not easily dissuaded, Don called almost every day--to remind me to keep up my Chicago job hunt, too (and in this he must have been prescient). And to make sure I was OK.

"I knew you'd figure things out," he responded. "We had a rough spot, but I forgave you for it. I'm glad we stayed friends."

"So am I." And I meant it, too, until I finished packing the office and Don led me to the shoe closet. With not a little awe I gazed at row upon row of Pradas, Coles, Ferragamos, a veritable smorgasbord of high-end designer goodness piled in multitudes so high that any apparent fashion sense was overshadowed by the sheer morass of it all. I knew in one Filipino grave, a former despot was surely smiling.

Don knew exactly what I was thinking. "This is going on your blog, isn't it?" I looked him dead in the eye. "We're gonna need more boxes."

"You see, it all started when my mom promised me a pair of shoes if I did well on an exam in junior high. Who offers an adolescent shoes as a bribe? I guess after that I learned to feel good about myself when I bought them. I know you must think I'm a little crazy."

I didn't know Don felt bad about himself in the first place. I began to pack and ponder. Fifty-six pairs of shoes, boots, sneakers, and slippers packed into any box that would have them. And me pondering how often it's the case that an outwardly confident person turns inwardly apologetic when you start to expose the layers of their onion of privacy.


"Six and three is nine,

Nine and nine is eighteen,

Look there brother baby,

and see what I've seen..."


At around the 40th pair of footwear, I heard, "You wanna take a break and see some stuff out here?" Um, yes. (And could I get a wet wipe with that to clean your soles off of my palms?)

Upending the box spring for the movers, Don had uncovered a small mountain of framed photos from 20 years past. "I can't believe that's you! You're so-"

"Thin, I know. I don't want to get into it. It's a bad subject for me."

"I was gonna say clean-shaven." Having spent two years of my life with a partner almost half-again my weight, my merely zaftig friend is not someone whose alleged overweight even registers with me. Anyhow, I've long given up the baseless belief that I'm not an inveterate flirt. "Frankly, I think you've gotten better with age."

And age is just what we did as Don's movers were stuck on a job in Waukegan until late in the afternoon. It was enough time to hit Wendy's, make a Home Depot run, and take a passing glance at packing the kitchen. But mostly we just talked. I sat and talked. Don talked and walked.

"You know, Don, I don't think you've sat down for hours. I know you're ADD, but you're gonna give yourself a heart attack."

He paused from pushing a giant swiffer for the second time around the living-room baseboards of the new apartment. "I know, I know. I'll sit for a bit." Watching Don sit is like watching a cat being hugged. No one's happy about it and you know it's not going to happen for long.

It didn't. "Did you hear that? Yay! The movers are here!" And with that, like a maniacal jack-in-the-box, up popped Don and down the stairs he bounded. I needed to exit back to River North to welcome hip-suburban-chick Val and her niece to Marina City for a special roofdeck visit, but I offered to come back and help Don finish up on Sunday.

So I did. The highlight of Sunday was not the deja shoe of watching Don unpack all 56 pairs into a new closet, nor was it riding shotgun while he enlisted additional moving help from two itinerant workers who ended up rooking him out of an extra $100. It was, finally, figuring out the backstory.

"Did you ever see a picture of Victor?" I hadn't. Don's personal Devyn, the man whom he loved, and who left him earlier this year. "I'm still in love with him. Can you bring another box in here." I knew by the time I made it into the room, there would be a fleeting glimpse of a photo before Don would be off and running again.


"Sometimes I feel,

I feel a little sad inside,

When my baby mistreats me,

I never never never have a place to hide..."


And then it struck me. "You've spent a lot of your life getting fucked over by other people, haven't you?" And I finally knew why I felt so comfortable around him. "Victor didn't deserve you, you know. He was a fool to leave you." The moment the words came out of my mouth, I remembered Don telling me the same things about Devyn, months before. Ah, grasshopper, the circular path of life.

Now, issue-laden as I can be, I'm the last person to criticize someone else's baggage. But two days with Don and I got the distinct impression that he has absolutely no idea about the measure of himself--although it is great. That touched me. I was like that before Devyn left. Now I know how fabulous I am--and I know I was like that, deep inside, all along. But I also know the fear Devyn left me with, that I may never feel brave enough to let anyone in again.

I see both of those things in Don. He's spectacular, at arm's length. In our own ways, me with my newfound gigolo nature, Don with his fear of sitting still with himself, we're both the sole stars of our currently necessarily solitary lives. Similar, if somewhat lonely paths, I think that's why we get along.

Late on Sunday, with everything moved to new digs except the beers in the old refrigerator, Don paused, finally. "I bet things make a lot more sense about me now." Indeed. Suddenly I was being hugged. "Thank you so much for being here. I couldn't have done this on my own. You don’t know how much having a friend here meant to me this weekend."

Lawyer or not, now that's a man with soul.


September 28, 2007

Sexual Perversity in (Downtown) Chicago

-Posted in Daily Grind | Getting Around

shrub of the month.JPG


(Photo: Found in April at the Morton Arboretum. Best. Signpost. Ever.)


Every now and then in my downtown Chicago life, I overhear something so ridiculous (yes, even more ridiculous than a Children's Museum in a cave), that I wonder whether I should blog it. This time, I just can't help myself.

Heading back downtown on the L from lunch in Chinatown on Sunday, these two characters plopped down in the window seat next to me. Dressed in Cubs regalia, two frattish guys on their way to watch the Cubbies pummel Pittsburgh 8-0. I thought they'd be confused since construction was causing the Red Line to "go over the top" along the elevated into the Loop instead of diving down into the subway. But they had more pressing problems to talk about, and they were obviously unconcerned about the potential presence of nosey Internet scribes.

As Kathy Griffin would say, listening to these two felt like a little gift from Jesus (and, boy, am I glad I figured out how to blog on my iPhone two weeks ago). In the spirit of CTA Tattler's "Overheard on the CTA", I give you a prime example of why your friends should take your SIM card away from you when you're drunk, along with your car keys...

"She's never gonna come out tonight, now."

"What the hell did you do last night?"

"She's not answering her cell at all."

"I thought you left the party and went home, bro."

"Did I look like I could freakin' drive?"

"Didn't Julia drive you home?"

"She didn't know where I was--I can't remember seein' her at all last night."

"Dude, she was at the party."

"She was?"

"You don't remember? You dropped a drink on her, for Chrissakes!"

"Oh crap. Oh crap. I remember. Oh crap."

"What the hell did you do?"

"I slept in my car--I woke up with my cell in my hand."

"That's never a good sign."

"I think I called her, man. I was blind drunk and I think I called her and said…some stuff."

"You're so screwed, man. What the hell did you say to her? What are you doing? Who are you calling now?"

"…Hello, Julia? Don't hang up when you get this. Listen, I'm sorry about last night. I think maybe I called you. If I did and I said anything naughty, or aggressive, or you know, sexual, like wanting you to rub the phone on your private parts while you were listening to the message, I'm sorry. It wasn't my fault, you know I was drunk off my ass from the party. I love you. I wanna see you tonight, honey. Call me."

"...Dude, get outta my L car."

September 27, 2007

10 More Things Brendan Reilly Should Stick in a Cave

-Posted in Chicago Children's Museum Controversy | Daily Grind | Politics

Alderman Spelunker.jpg


(Photo: Alderman Brendan Reilly, a man willing to get to the bottom of the Second City.)


Of all things I thought downtown's 42nd Ward Alderman Brendan Reilly would offer as a compromise in the ongoing controversy over the Chicago Children's Museum's proposed move from Navy Pier to Grant Park--especially after publicly calling out Mayor Daley on the issue--the last thing I expected was for him to agree with a reporter's suggestion to stick the museum in a cave. Underground completely. Nothing sticking up in Daley Bicentennial Plaza except, perhaps, for a periscope and an enigmatic staircase leading down to the nether reaches of the Second City.

At first, I agreed with Chicagoist's take on the idea: ridiculous. But the more I've thought about it, the more sense I can see in Reilly's spelunking strategy. Who knows, the Chicago Children's Museum might just set a precedent. Out of sight is, after all, out of mind. So in that mindset, I offer ten more things Alderman Reilly might want to consider sticking in a cave:


10. The CPS: Might as well put the Chicago Public School district down there. Saves the little kiddies from having to rappel down to get to the museum, don't ya know?

9. The 42nd Ward Website: Seriously, the campaign's long over. So why is there more useful content on Burt Natarus' old website than on Reilly's?

8. His Decision to Call Out Mayor Daley: Let's do the math. Mayor Daley, 18 years in office. Brendan Reilly, 18 weeks in office. Whom do you think has the upper hand there?

7. Navy Pier: Just because I'm tired of giving clueless suburbanites directions.

6. Lois Wille: Author of the civic bible of lakefront preservation, Forever Open, Clear, and Free, and a museum supporter, to stop her pesky nagging when her words are used against her.

5. Burt Natarus: Because these days he's batty enough to be in a cave, anyway.

4. Bob Fioretti's Hairpiece: Still fluttering in downtown's neighboring 2nd Ward since the day the man-who-would-be-Alderman begged for a piece of my birthday cake.

3. Macy's: For obvious reasons.

2. The Second City Greens: Who, for the first time ever, will have a 42nd Ward committeeperson on the ballot in the primary.


And the number one thing Alderman Reilly might want to stick in a cave...


1. Mayor Daley: If only he could. Because after publicly challenging Chicago's benevolent ruler, that's about the only way the freshman Alderman will have any peace for the rest of his term.


No word yet on the exact location of the cave Reilly had in mind, but you can bet they already have an opposition petition going on the New Eastside....

September 20, 2007

Out of the Box

-Posted in Backstory | Daily Grind | Daily Grind

groovy hanging lamp.jpg


(Photo: It's all about the lamp.)


I finally have a grown-up bathroom and I'm proud to say it. Four-and-a-half months is a long time to live in a cave, which is as much as I did this year. Separating in the middle of a move, as did I and my ex-partner in May, much was already boxed up, thrown out, or otherwise inaccessible when the deed went down.

In retrospect, there were signs that deed was on its way prior to my apartment prepping:


"Are you sure you want to throw away all your old picture frames now?"

"Don't spend too much money on a new catbox with a door."

"I wouldn't ask your bank for copies of your rent checks unless they're not gonna charge you for them."

"I changed the lock."


Hmm. My relationship myopia aside, I didn't mind living with bare walls and boxes while I searched for a new life in New York City over the summer. But when I finally decided to stay in the city I really love (you know, the one with the colder winters), boy did my gun-jumping undecorating come back to haunt me. When you decide to dig in your heels and settle into home, it helps to actually have a home to settle in to.

It also helps first impressions with potential suitors to have books on your shelves and not bankers' bins.

It took a friend with a car and a good sense of humor, a 20-mile trip to Ikea Schaumburg, a 10-minute bus ride to Target on Roosevelt, and a couple of days of a very confused Camoes (my Portuguese danger cat). But I finally have my home back.

Really, I have my home for the first time. There's no denying I spent most of my two years and change downtown living vicariously through Devyn's apartment and not my own. After all, I wouldn't need all my fingers to count the number of times my cat- (and commitment-) allergic ex-partner ever visited my Marina City studio during our entire time together.

But my life and neighborhood finally being mine now, like it or not, I figured it was time to like it. So my color printouts of world metro maps are back on my walls in freshly stained frames, new Ikea tchotchke goodness graces my surfaces, and for the first time ever (I know, it's a little pathetic), I have comfy, color-coordinated towels and a kick-ass cloth shower curtain.

And the hanging lamp that languished on the carpet for so many months finally hovers over my table. It's kludged up there (you try drilling into a concrete ceiling), but it's there. It's the nifty new centerpiece of my fabulousified, ghetto-tastic, high-rise, low-rent, downtown Chicago bachelor pad. (Though until I get my butt out on the balcony with a bucket and a squeegee, please ignore the window wall.)

It ain't much, mind you. And God knows, I certainly don't own it. But for the first time since I've been in Marina City--or in Chicago for that matter--my Second City apartment finally feels like home. I haven't had that feeling since I lived in Brooklyn.

A new acquaintance of mine (for those in the know, oddly enough a California Central Valley native first- and middle-named Kenneth Wayne and I am so not going there) reminded me of a quote from the end of The Wizard of Oz:


"If I ever go looking for my heart's desire again, I won't look any further than my own backyard. Because if it isn't there, I never really lost it to begin with."


In my backyard, home is where the balcony is.

Out of the Box

-Posted in Backstory | Daily Grind | Daily Grind

groovy hanging lamp.jpg


(Photo: It's all about the lamp.)


I finally have a grown-up bathroom and I'm proud to say it. Four-and-a-half months is a long time to live in a cave, which is as much as I did this year. Separating in the middle of a move, as did I and my ex-partner in May, much was already boxed up, thrown out, or otherwise inaccessible when the deed went down.

In retrospect, there were signs that deed was on its way prior to my apartment prepping:


"Are you sure you want to throw away all your old picture frames now?"

"Don't spend too much money on a new catbox with a door."

"I wouldn't ask your bank for copies of your rent checks unless they're not gonna charge you for them."

"I changed the lock."


Hmm. My relationship myopia aside, I didn't mind living with bare walls and boxes while I searched for a new life in New York City over the summer. But when I finally decided to stay in the city I really love (you know, the one with the colder winters), boy did my gun-jumping undecorating come back to haunt me. When you decide to dig in your heels and settle into home, it helps to actually have a home to settle in to.

It also helps first impressions with potential suitors to have books on your shelves and not bankers' bins.

It took a friend with a car and a good sense of humor, a 20-mile trip to Ikea Schaumburg, a 10-minute bus ride to Target on Roosevelt, and a couple of days of a very confused Camoes (my Portuguese danger cat). But I finally have my home back.

Really, I have my home for the first time. There's no denying I spent most of my two years and change downtown living vicariously through Devyn's apartment and not my own. After all, I wouldn't need all my fingers to count the number of times my cat- (and commitment-) allergic ex-partner ever visited my Marina City studio during our entire time together.

But my life and neighborhood finally being mine now, like it or not, I figured it was time to like it. So my color printouts of world metro maps are back on my walls in freshly stained frames, new Ikea tchotchke goodness graces my surfaces, and for the first time ever (I know, it's a little pathetic), I have comfy, color-coordinated towels and a kick-ass cloth shower curtain.

And the hanging lamp that languished on the carpet for so many months finally hovers over my table. It's kludged up there (you try drilling into a concrete ceiling), but it's there. It's the nifty new centerpiece of my fabulousified, ghetto-tastic, high-rise, low-rent, downtown Chicago bachelor pad. (Though until I get my butt out on the balcony with a bucket and a squeegee, please ignore the window wall.)

It ain't much, mind you. And God knows, I certainly don't own it. But for the first time since I've been in Marina City--or in Chicago for that matter--my Second City apartment finally feels like home. I haven't had that feeling since I lived in Brooklyn.

A new acquaintance of mine (for those in the know, oddly enough a California Central Valley native first- and middle-named Kenneth Wayne and I am so not going there) reminded me of a quote from the end of The Wizard of Oz:


"If I ever go looking for my heart's desire again, I won't look any further than my own backyard. Because if it isn't there, I never really lost it to begin with."


In my backyard, home is where the balcony is.

September 13, 2007

ORD to NYC: How jetBlue Won My Business (and ATA Lost It)

-Posted in Daily Grind

directv-jetblue.jpg


(Photo: The really friendly skies. Credit: TechLiving.)


Friends of mine in the airline biz always turn their collective nose up at even the mere mention of NYC-based discount carrier jetBlue. I haven't the foggiest idea why. Having spent most of this summer shuttling back-and-forth between Chicago and New York City, I've spent a lot of time on the great blue marvel and its main discount rival Southwest. Er, better make that "on this route we're really just our crappy codeshare partner, ATA". (Can you see where this post is headed?)

Sure, jetBlue tends to serve snarky gates and marginal airports (last time I flew them to Long Beach, CA, I half-expected a horse to pull the plane to the terminal). True, they've been renovating their longtime soon-to-be-new terminal at JFK since the Nixon administration. And certainly, no one's flying them for the (nonexistent) meals.

But have you checked out the 36 personal video channels lately? What other carrier offers such a tranquilizing benefit to otherwise anxious flyers between Chicago and the Big Apple? Certainly not the route's pretend-Southwest, ATA. Now all other things being equal, both the great blue wonder and pretend-Southwest offer similar low fares between the two cities (very sub-$200 round trips, anyone?). However, all things aren't equal between these two carriers--well, except perhaps for the crappy gate assignments.

For one thing, jetBlue has never lied to me. During one rain delay in June, an ATA gate agent made an enormous fuss about my inability to change my full-fare ticket without paying a penalty. (He was wrong).

For another, jetBlue has never cursed me out. During another of the summer's numerous weather events, I witnessed a different ATA employee answer an obviously distraught flyer's query with, "I can't reseat you because I'm a bitch! I am a bitch today, okay?!" (She was right).

And I certainly never had ATA bend over backwards three times in the same week to rebook and/or reseat me at no cost because of weather-related cancellations, even though by the book they didn't technically have to do so. (By this point, I felt jetBlue was really starting to over-gild the lily of 36 channels, but I did not complain).

Granted, jetBlue doesn't promise the moon, just low fares and a comfortable trip. There are no Southwest-esque singing cabin crews, to be sure. But that's the crux of the problem for ATA out of Chicago. Being Southwest's codeshare partner, you have a right to expect a certain level of customer service--a level that in my experience has been craptastically unmet by them.

Living downtown as I do, I'd prefer the shorter Orange Line 'L' trip to Midway, which ATA serves, rather than the slow-zone laden Blue Line slog out to O'Hare for jetBlue. But the extra transit time at least offers the promise of 90 minutes of TV Land from takeoff to landing.

And I'm pretty sure neither I nor anyone else is going to be publicly dissed by a gate agent.

Besides, ATA serves LaGuardia from Chicago, and unless you enjoy feeling like you're about to land in the East River followed by perilously slamming down onto the runway, who wants that? Give me the somnolent TV goodness of a jetBlue flight (on a brand-spanking new plane), followed by a quick, $5 trip on JFK AirTrain.

You see ATA, that's how I like to be treated as a paying customer. Well, that is. Let me know once you get that point. When it really seeps in.

Until then, don't expect me to help you pay that bitch's salary.

September 11, 2007

I Remember

-Posted in Daily Grind

view from wtc.jpg


(Photo: Forever lost view from the World Trade Center's Top of the World observatory. Credit: terraxplorer2.)


It's been six years since we lost the New York that was, but today we all remember. Yet, while we continue to remember those we lost, it's also important to move on. Life is for the living, after all. New construction has finally begun at Ground Zero, and even many New Yorkers have grown weary of the propensity of some people to perpetuate the sense of grief and loss generated on September 11, 2001.

Networks needn't carry a live feed of the reading of the names for the rest of time. Sadness must--and will--eventually end. But only if you let it. That, of course, is a personal choice. Especially today.

Anyhow, as I said last year on this day, you have better things to do today than to read a post from me. There are far more important people in your life and you know you've been taking them for granted. So get off the Internet, pick up the phone, and tell them so: husbands; wives; life partners; children; brothers; sisters; best friends.

A little embarrassment and a few lost minutes of productivity at work are no match for the regret that comes from never telling someone what you always intended for them to hear. And you know how long it's been since you remembered to tell them--from the heart, really, truly to tell them.

If there's one thing to remember from 9/11, it's that you'll never know when your final chance to say those things has passed. So before you forget and go on with your day, why don't you tell them you love them now? That's something you know you wont regret.

So you're waiting for what? Start dialing. Above all things, we must remember to love.

Just as we must never forget.

September 07, 2007

Lost in Space

-Posted in Daily Grind

adlerworst.jpg


(Photo: Seventy-five years folks. Can we dust the exhibits now?)


The folks at the Adler Planetarium are surely mad. According to their visitor map, the septuagenarian hemisphere on the lake is aiming to be the nation's premiere institution for helping common folk learn about astronomical science. Whatever Adler executive signed off on that aspirational announcement must think that 1990s interactive computer technology still packs them in. It doesn't. (Adler chair Frank Clark and president Paul Knappenberger, why do I suspect your office computers are still beige?)

I've lived in Chicago for four-and-a-half years. Yet, although I've visited every other Hogtown museum numerous times, it took me all those years to finally visit the Adler. Growing up in New York City, my childhood was packed full of trips to Gotham's Hayden Planetarium in tow of my Manhattan-loving grandmother. There's a limit to the number of plastic hanging planets a person can view in one lifetime, so that may explain my heretofore planetarium intransigence.

But my time left in Chicago potentially growing shorter, back in town yesterday I figured I'd finally give in and get me some Zeiss sky projector goodness. I expected an environment filled with children-aimed, science-light exhibits. Well I got that. But what I also got were rooms full of tired, old, dated, allegedly technically savvy exhibits that obviously hadn't been touched or, in some cases, dusted or potentially even plugged in since the Adler completed its much-heralded renovation and expansion...in 1999. Don't get me started on the occasionally dog-eared, faded signage.

I didn't expect the Hayden. Well not the new one, anyway. New York City's reconstructed planetarium truly is the nation's premiere planetary science museum. Astounding, cutting-edge architecture, technology, and programming make the new Hayden a tough act to follow. Unfortunately, the Adler barely held a candle to the old Hayden. Had I found a 1960s-inspired, dark-light, walk-through diorama of the 1969 moon shot at the Adler, I wouldn't have been much surprised.

Given the money that the Hayden gets given, maybe, just maybe I could have forgiven the Adler's tired upper tier of exhibits--the lower-level exhibits fare better, but really only marginally. But sitting through an overpriced, under-long (25 minutes??) sky show riddled with broken effects and boring pseudo-science really took the cake. The secret of Egyptian Nights: Secrets of the Sky Gods--they're boring! And that's when they appear and you're not listening to the hyperbolic narration while watching an unexpectedly suddenly darkened dome and wondering whether any maintenance monies were deferred from the Adler's operating budget recently.

Said one-half of the couple seated in front of me as we left the Sky Theater at show's end, "That wasn't exactly one of their better offerings." There's the understatement of the year. Had I actually paid to get into the Adler, by this point I'd have beaten a path down to the ticket counter and demanded a refund. (I'm a member of Pilsen's National Museum of Mexican Art and we get into the Adler for free--but don't become a member of the NMMA just for that dubious benefit--do it for the cool complimentary entrance to the Chicago History Museum instead.)

Yes, I know the Adler was the nation's first planetarium. But you can only live on your laurels for so long. I mean, let's face it. If the Museum of Science and Industry can finally stop pretending that a Boeing 727 is modern airplane technology, the least the Adler can do is install a few touch screens and hire a web developer with Director experience to snazz up the Atmospheres on Other Planets video kiosk.

Chicago deserves much better than a planetarium lost in space--or in the case of the Adler, time. Good thing the place is stuck all the way at the end of Solitary Drive. It saves the staff from having to hear the snickering from the more clued-in institutions that also call Museum Campus home.

My apologies to Sue and Sharks at the Shedd. Next time, guys, I promise, the day is all yours.

August 23, 2007

Neighbors Project to Throw Car-Free Block Party in Lakeview

-Posted in Daily Grind

no cars.jpg


(Photo credit: Jupiter Images.)


The new community-based environmental-justice group, Neighbors Project, asked if they could tell you about the Car-Free Block Party they're throwing in Lakeview this Saturday. You know they had me at "car-free" so here's their press release:

Since 2000, the nearly eight million citizens of Bogota, Columbia, have singled out Feb. 1 as Car-Free Day– a day when everyone ditches their cars in favor of walking, bicycling, or taking public transit. Sounds blissful, right? But, until Mayor Daley takes a cue from Bogota, all that the fine citizens of Chicago can do is take matters into our own hands...by throwing a party!

Check out the car-free Block Party this Saturday, Aug. 25, from 1 to 4 p.m., at Mystic Celt in Lakeview (3443 N. Southport Ave.). The Chicago-based nonprofit Neighbors Project will show you everything you need to know to throw a car-free bash on your block using locally purchased products. From advice from local aldermen on how to get a permit to grilling tips from the well-seasoned butchers at Paulina Meat Market – Lakeview’s self-appointed BBQ headquarters – Neighbors Project has thought of everything and will even send you on your way with a handy how-to booklet featuring tips and tricks culled from experienced block party organizers.

We'll also be launching a Web-based guide to throwing your own block party – which, by the way, is no reason not to attend the Block Party Party because you’ll miss the bean bag toss, grilling how-to video, and lawn-chair testing, not to mention complementary appetizers.

If you're still not sold, imagine this: your street free from traffic for one entire day. Now run – don’t walk, and for goodness’ sake, don’t drive – to Mystic Celt this Saturday.

For more details on Neighbors Project and the Block Party Party, check out the Neighbors Project website.

August 20, 2007

In NYC: State of Collusion

-Posted in Daily Grind | In NYC | Planning

love canal.jpg


(Photo: No-Entry sign at Love Canal, NY. This was a NYSDEC fiasco, too.)


[This entry is one in a series of dispatches from my recent trips to Gotham.]

What was I thinking? The first day of the first of my interview trips to New York City this summer, I wore my interview clothes from before my crack-of-dawn airplane ride, to my arrival at 20-year-best-friend Peter's house an hour after I literally walked out on my planned interview at the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Before I left NYC in 2003, I knew NYSDEC to be somewhat less than a class act. I'm surprised at how short my memory has become during my tenure on the shores of Lake Michigan.

I could give perilously putrid details of my past dealings with NYSDEC and their consultants, but my experience with them this month sums my understanding of them up more succinctly. NYSDEC was to be my first Gotham interview of several. A community relations position, too--the absolute heart of what I love to do. I envisioned reaching out to families and businesses in working-class neighborhoods and helping organize informational meetings to collect their concerns regarding open space and clean air in their communities.

I know, I know. But for some reason, I always give governmental agencies the benefit of the doubt. One bad apple--or experience--shouldn't be allowed to spoil the reputation of the whole barrel. Or state regulatory agency. I mean, not everyone at, say, the Post Office is, for want of a better term, postal. So all of NYSDEC couldn't be untrustworthy.

Feh. After the afternoon of my alleged interview, I am still awaiting evidence to the contrary. I arrived at NYSDEC's Long Island City, Queens office on time, prim, pressed, and prepared to give it my ethical all. I gave my name to the receptionist, sat, and waited. And while I perched on the tired, leather, government-issue waiting-room chair, fidgeting with my tie, I wondered about the culture of the agency that was about to interview me.

Very quickly and wholly unexpectedly, I got my answer. Into the waiting room strode another prim, pressed, be-suited individual. An off-puttingly stern individual, however, made even more off-putting by his loud snarling loosely aimed into his tightly clenched cell phone:


"You better listen, because your job is on the line, ok! You hear me? That reporter is coming to check up on the site and he better not find anything! You make sure it's clean enough for him to see it and not have anything to report or it's your neck! Are you listening to me? I don't care what's there. Make it look spotless!"


You're putting me on right? Where's the camera? Am I being Punked?

Sadly, no. The gruesome truth: as I sat in the offices of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation awaiting an interview for a job involving telling the truth to New York State residents, a Department of Environmental Conservation functionary was strutting around in full view of the public ordering another NYSDEC functionary to hide environmental contamination information from the same public. And my heart--and my estimation of NYSDEC--sank into the floor below me.

But what was I gonna do?

Let's face it, I need a job to be able to return to my Gotham hometown. And let's not mince words, I need a good-paying one just to be able to pay NYC's astronomical rent. I've had healthy interest in my communications-laden resume, but who wouldn't want a cush state job?

And when you get right down to it, isn't every state agency everywhere at least a little corrupt? The world we live in is an imperfect place, and those in power, or wishing to remain in power--sometimes at all costs--have the upper hand and ultimate say in official decisions at all levels of government, no matter what good-government minded individuals might like to believe.

I can't change the world alone, and I need an income to live in it. What choice did I really have? I might as well just muddle through the interview, maybe get hired, and see if NYSDEC was really all that bad. I mean, what could a few lies told here and there to the public by a well-meaning community-relations official really hurt?

All of this flashed through my mind in one turbulent moment as I got up, walked over the receptionist desk, and canceled my interview. Sure, I need a job, but I'd like one at an ethical organization, thanks. And there's no paycheck big enough to make me forget that I have to check my principles at the door in order to receive it.

As I walked back to the number 7 train, having for the very first time in my life walked out on a professional interview, I wondered whether I had made the right decision. When I got to the subway entrance, I paused, considered my career goals, and looked back at the NYSDEC building. I realized the conversation I had witnessed couldn't have been an isolated one. And with that light bulb flashing over my head, I realized one thing more about NYSDEC, this time with absolute certainty.

You couldn't pay me to work there.

August 07, 2007

No Exit: Two Years of CHICAGO CARLESS

-Posted in Backstory | Daily Grind | Recovery

u-turn.gif


(Photo: Chicago Carless has NOT left the building.)


No exit just yet, anyway. As I continue to sort through the potential to move back home to Gotham or remain here on the shores of Lake Mich. as an unexpectedly newly singleton, the best decision may be not to decide for the moment. More immediate is the fact that I missed the two-year anniversary of Chicago Carless, and a lot more than the fall of my relationship has happened in the past 12 months. So in celebration of the (belated) two-year anniversary of my life being an open blog, I give you a look at the past 12 months of Chicago Carless. And, boy, has it been a helluva time.

When we last checked in with our hero on the first aniversary of Chicago Carless in June 2006, Yours Truly was in the middle of admitting falling madly back in love with Hogtown after three grueling but glorious years here. Part and parcel of that Chicagoan happiness was beginning the second year of my relationship with my then-partner, Devyn, who had just re-launched his noted Chicago photoblog, Looper (now defunct as Devyn has moved on to New York City, himself).

But also part of the fun were the numerous local gaffes and gotchas that I managed to find myself in the middle of last year, including my August 2006 interview in Chicago Magazine's expose of Marina City's alleged pimp dentist, Garry Kimmel, and my scooping of Chicagoland media on erroneous signage inside the new Macy's-cum-Marshall Field's (earning me page one in the Chicago Tribune business section and being called a "newsmaker of the week" in the Trib's Sunday edition).

In fact, summer 2006 brimmed full of action here at Carless. From leading the seminally cool NYC out-of-towners Adam and Vicki on a two-day tour of Hogtown (oh, the high of it), to suffering through the dismal opening ceremonies of the Gay Gaymes (oh, the low of it), to battling it out on the Chicago blogosphere during the infamous big-box living-wage debate.

In Autumn 2006, all the drama finally took me by storm--literally--as the tornado sirens in downtown Chicago were sounded for the first time in more than four decades while I stood on my 38th-floor balcony. Summer's end also saw the return of my much-beloved Portuguese culture into my life...and the creeping suspicion that I might, one day, actually choose to return to my native New York City.

There was little time to sit and ponder that, though, as corporate public-relations silliness returned with a vengeance, first with a Macy's advertising campaign that completely snubbed Chicago, then with the Chicago Transit Authority--never one to be outdone in the race for lowest common PR denominator--which installed 4,800 typo-laden maps in every single Chicago 'L' car.

In December, Carless helped highlight even more public-affairs silliness by joining forces with my ex to get the city to remove injudiciously installed security cameras from atop Millennium Park's famous Crown Fountain, earning another Tribune page one for Carless, this time in the metro section (and an interview for Devyn in the New York Times).

But without a doubt, the biggest star of all, last year, was Jessica, the underdog mom who testified before America on the hardship of raising a family on minimum wage in a searing, heart-wrenching interview that I was lucky enough to film for the centerpiece of the AFL-CIO/ACORN-sponsored 7 Days at Minimum Wage videoblog campaign. The stories told by Jessica and her fellow wage earners helped raise the minimum wage in six states during Election 2006!

And then it was 2007, and little would I have suspected the transitions in store for downtown Chicago…or for me. For beginners, longstanding downtown residential noise battles were finally won (kind of). And, of course, at long last, the dinosaur of the Chicago City Council, Burt Natarus, was put out to pasture by far more clued-in pretender Brendan Reilly (hurray!).

But far more surprising to me was the miraculous and unexpected mass reunion, via the Internet, of 140 members of Gay and Lesbian Youth of New York, the nation's first gay-youth peer support group (founded in 1969), that kept me out of trouble in the 1980s and brought me the closest (and as it turns out most enduring) friendships I have even known in my life. And with my entire childhood knocking on my door to come out and play again, another unexpected thing happened: after four years as an adopted Chicagoan, I decided to return to my hometown of New York City.

I know, I was shocked, too. But I was even more shocked when, shortly before Memorial Day, my dearly loved partner of more than two years, Devyn, called it quits, walked out of our relationship, and moved to New York City without me. Without ever looking back. And very conveniently (for him) allowing me to take the blame for everything.

Which I did, until common sense, the love of my friends, and a healthy daily dose of St. Johns Wort finally allowed me to see the reality of my formerly rosily interpreted relationship. With rationality returned, I resolved to continue with my move back home to Gotham. But I felt that decision needed to be made anew--this time as an individual decision made by a suddenly single Yours Truly.

And that's a decision I felt needed to be made in New York City. Among my long-lost/newly found friends. On a job hunt. In August 2007. Which, as it turns out, catches you up on our hero right to this very minute.

More to follow…

July 24, 2007

Top-10 Favorite Phrases of the Emotionally Constipated

-Posted in Backstory | Daily Grind | Recovery

shit_fountain.jpg

(Photo: Chicago's famous Ukranian Village "Shit Fountain". For obvious reasons.)


For weeks now I've wanted to go there, against the better counsel of friends not the least of whom is Damned-to-the-Suburbs hip chick Val ("really, Michael, it's not really necessary"). Hmm...what to do, then, when you're still angry over your break-up, and you're an opinionated native New Yorker, to boot?

In this case, take your advice elsewhere. Stick me in the Pema Chodron school: it's permissible to be pissed when you're pissed.

And I'm still pissed.

So with that in mind, the bitchy Buddhist in me presents the top-10 favorite phrases of the emotionally constipated--and their translation into truer terms.

These phrases were repeated to me many times in the past couple of years, and not just by the one person who you may think uttered them all (I prefer to think of this post as an homage in pastiche, myself). Should you hear these phrases from friends or loved ones, my considered advice is to run. Fast.

Though of course, if you have a blog, take notes, first...


The Top-10 Favorite Phrases of the Emotionally Constipated

10. Best friend? I don't like to think in those terms.

(Translation: I am secretly in love with my best friend).

9. I like to compartmentalize people, doesn't everyone?
(Translation: I will never, ever, ever let you in).

8. Don't you think you should reconsider whether it really isn't all your fault?
(Translation: I blame myself for other people's neuroses).

7. Once I got over him five years ago, I never thought of him again, the fucker...
(Translation: I have no clue about my own neuroses).

6. No, really, I'm over it.
(Translation: I am so not over it).

5. I love separate vacations.
(Translation: Well, from you).

4. I'll deal with it in my own time.
(Translation: I will be dragged to my grave with fingernails clawing into the earth just so that I don't ever have to deal with it).

3. I know everyone thinks 12-step is a big cult...
(Translation: I am about to use 12-step to justify being an asshole to you).

2. I know you're unhappy, but I'm so tired of hearing about your life.
(Translation: Can we talk about me, now?).

And finally, the #1, favorite phrase of the emotionally constipated...

1. I already told you I loved you once today, you know the rule.
(Translation: None needed).

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I'll take a dish of cream with that if you've got it.