Friday, May 30, 2014

Phone cam round-up


Kitties say, Come in money! Come in money! Come in money! and Buddha is happy.


You boys sit up straight and put your feet on the floor this INSTANT.

Yes ma'am!


Old school GPS.


RIP Joan and Don and Roger.


ARTS! and gas.


That's some bad pickle karma.


The heartbreak of pineapple foot.
 

Photo for which there is no caption.


Gee. Wonder where they will be Mon., Tues., and Fri.


Red door.


Space man.


Rosie and Red Fang in the goddamn gallows?


Amen, brother.

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Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Rainy day redux vol. five: ambivalence in the happiest place on Earth

From 2006 through 2009, I was a regular pop culture columnist for the now defunct Cleveland Free Times and later, the Cleveland Scene. The following "Rainy Day Woman" column ran on Aug. 13, 2008.

The Reluctant Mouseketeer

We slide the Disney World vacation-planning DVD into the iMac. My kid and I watch over my husband's shoulder as a diverse group of people talk about their dreams as Tinker Bell flits around them. "I grew up wanting to be Cinderella," says a skinny blond chick.

"I grew up wanting to change my name to Moose," I say.

Hostess saluting Cinderella castle
Then a pasty man in a uniform tells us, "There's just so much to experience."

I push pause. "Honey," I say, "take a good look at him."

"Why?" says my kid.

"Because that's what a flesh-eating vampire looks like."

The video gives way to happy children running toward an open-armed Mickey. Twirling princesses, not-so-menacing pirates, affable "cast members" and a sea of dazzled faces all aim to verify that dreams really do come true.

"It's like a death sentence," I say, then lower my voice. "Ms. O'Brien, we're sorry to inform you that you only have about six months until you go to Disney." My husband responds with The Look. I sigh, stand with resignation and totter off to the garage for a beer. (It was December. This is Cleveland. Where else would the Budweiser be?)

As the Days Until Disney dwindle, my dread and trepidation mount. All too soon, I am pried from my computer, dragged clawing backward through the house and muscled into the backseat of the car. I'm on my way to five days and four nights of Mouseketeer fun.

"The horror, the horror," I lament as we pull out of the drive.

One thousand miles later, we reach the acres of desolate Florida grassland that buffer the land of the Mouse from the rest of the world. It's like a penal colony, I think, you can't even run away. I am taken at once to a place called Hollywood Studios.

"Rock 'n' Roller Coaster!" cheers my enthusiastic party.

Goat and friend
OK, fine. We take a turn at the giant "Sorcerer's Hat," hurry down "Sunset Boulevard" and bustle past the menacing "Tower of Terror." Our frantic dash concludes at the line for the coaster, the corral for which is housed in a cavernous dusky-rose structure. Unseen speakers pump out Aerosmith's "Pink."

To my chagrin, something I never expected wells up in me: respect. My first bona fide Disney experience has me slowly penetrating a giant vagina with none other than sex-king Steven Tyler providing the soundtrack: "Pink as the bing on your cherry ..."

Soon enough, a blast of icy AC heralds the interior part of the line. More Tyler and flashing lights. We pass through a door fashioned from abacus-style beadwork. I run my fingertips along its inviting surface, as does everyone else - vrrrrrrrt. We spill out onto the loading deck and the ride is finally visible.

And when your humble author - whose childhood was punctuated by her father's mandate to watch every Indianapolis 500, Can-Am race and Grand Prix - sees a roller coaster tram take off from a dead stop to 60 mph in less than three seconds, she does exactly what her father would have done.

"Holy SHIT!" I bellow.

A family clad in identical "Donahue Disney 2008" shirts turns to see who just plopped a turd in the community punch bowl. I cast my eyes down apologetically as the bovine-like queue moves thankfully toward the blasting trams.

I am on my way.

Let's go again and wait! Space Mountain and the Haunted Mansion. Sure, I'll have giant turkey leg. Get a Mickey-shaped Dove bar while you're at it, baby. Splashing in a turquoise pool. Yeah, that's my face spreading into a dopey smile as fireworks explode above Cinderella's castle.

It is a small world, after all.

"Let's do the Kilimanjaro Safari!" Expedition Everest, DinoLand U.S.A.; Finding Nemo and Africa; Mr. Toad's Wild Ride and Tomorrowland. I throw open my arms and run through the glorious sugar-spun delusion as though I'm filming the montage sequence for my very own Erin Does Disney documentary. We spend our last day at Epcot. What could be inside the giant dimpled ball? "Spaceship Earth," says one of my compatriots. "It's a ride."

If the Rock 'n' Roller coaster was an unapologetic ejaculation, this is a gentle swim through amniotic waters. My daughter and I float along in the Omnimover car. We swoop past the Prehistoric Man, twirl around the Islamic Empire and glide by the Renaissance. Then all goes dark, save points of twinkling light above; call them stars. I gaze up and reach out, giggling in delight.

All too soon, the stars fade. The Industrial Revolution and animatronic Phoenician merchants diminish into memory. We are delivered unto the blazing afternoon sun. Within hours, we are on our way home.

I push my forehead against the car window and watch Disney, in all of its seamless perfection, recede into Neverland. Back in Ohio we'll relish the last of the summer's sublime sweet corn as the ice and snow of winter loom. In my house of wood and brick, I'll fall into the dimensionless splendor of my husband's bed while time chips away at the asphalt roof and the concrete drive. Then, in my simple wonderland of contrast, I'll turn to my right and weep tears of joy over my daughter's laughter; I'll turn to my left and weep tears of sorrow over my father's grave.

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Monday, May 26, 2014

Memorial Day

Anyone poking around social media today will find dozens of posts aimed at the armed services, but not in any of my feeds. I don't care for blanket Memorial Day wishes, thanks, etc. They do not make you a good American, nor do they convey the gravity of death or injury during military service. Vague observances are largely meaningless and self-serving.

If I have something to say on this day to a military member or family that lost one of its own serving this country, I do it privately. After all, it is a very limited number of people.

And therein lies the most overt American obscenity.

From this 2010 interview with Ted Koppel on the grotesquely uneven distribution of the burden of war:

By and large, 90 to 95 percent of the American public, probably more than that if you look at the real numbers, are paying absolutely nothing for this war. We are not paying anything additionally in money. We are not paying anything in terms of personal sacrifice.

We should not have one soldier serving five tours of duty; we should have five soldiers serving one tour. Because if the average American had a real stake in this country's military action, there would be a hell of a lot less of it. The hawks wouldn't be so quick to bray on if it actually meant something to their minions. I can only imagine the enthusiasm draining from the fist-pumpers if their calls to action involved their own children--or even their pocketbooks. (You better believe I support a hefty war tax payable by every American save for veterans, active military members and their families).

Lastly, there is nothing "happy" about Memorial Day, and the simple fact that a tiny sliver of our population bears the burden of loss of life and limb courtesy of our wars ought to give every American pause.

Our wars?

Yes, indeed. They are yours and mine and there is blood on all of our hands regardless of support.

*  *  *

Monday, May 19, 2014

Sweet love handles


Truth: you can't log on, tune in or turn a page without being bombarded with lose weight fast or this one weird fat burning tip or amazing weight loss secret.

It's all crap and we all know it, but we click anyway. The screen fills with some talking bubble head full of promises as empty as the calories in that can of Pepsi.

Yeah, yeah

Finally, someone's (ahem) shedding some light on what's really behind our burgeoning behinds. This is the single best article I've read about the obesity epidemic. From the article:

"The increasing amount and processing of carbohydrates in the American diet has increased insulin levels, put fat cells into storage overdrive and elicited obesity-promoting biological responses in a large number of people. Like an infection that raises the body temperature set point, high consumption of refined carbohydrates — chips, crackers, cakes, soft drinks, sugary breakfast cereals and even white rice and bread — has increased body weights throughout the population."

Word.

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Friday, May 16, 2014

Rainy day redux vol. four: Wear it Well

From 2006 through 2009, I was a regular pop culture columnist for the now defunct Cleveland Free Times. The following "Rainy Day Woman" column ran on Sept. 9, 2007. 

An Open Letter to the Person who Stole my Hat

You shitbag.

Go ahead and say I asked for it, that this is what I get for leaving the windows of my Mini Cooper open in the Famous Footwear parking lot. Were you teaching me a lesson by reaching in and grabbing my red and white bucket hat from the driver's seat headrest?

Erin O'Brien and hat in Mini Cooper
The Mini and I don't ask for much. We don't take more than we need. The hat looked good on me and when I wasn't wearing it, it looked good on the Mini. There was even a tiny Mini Cooper pin on it.

Who steals a floppy hat that you couldn't sell for a half-dollar at a garage sale? Did you take it just to be mean? You didn't take anything else, not the stack of CDs or the $5 in the ashtray. Nope, just the hat. Too bad it wasn't full of lice.

I hope that hat makes your coffee cold and your ice cream hot. I hope you have a squeaky little dick or saggy boobies or an embarrassing body odor problem. I hope that hat brings you bad luck. I hope...

Wait.

Maybe that's not quite right. No, it's not; it's not right at all. That's not who I am or who I want to be. Let me try this again. Let me take it from the top.

Erin O'Brien and hat, 2005
Here's a secret: I believe in magic. Not the rabbit-out-of-the-hat sort or the kind that compels skinny weird chicks with black hair to do chants and buy vials of patchouli-scented oil, but the sort that really delivers. My magic says if you don't clutch your money too tightly, you'll always have enough. It makes your cat purr and your dog's leg pump the air when you scratch his belly.

There is this shitty holiday cartoon Frosty the Snowman. The animation isn't very good and the music is irritating, but just five minutes ago, when I was typing about a squeaky little dick, some of that magic I'm talking about wafted over me and made me think of that cartoon. I won't go over the whole plot, but it's about a shitbag magician who can't do any magic and probably went around taking worthless stuff out of Mini Coopers when he wasn't failing at doing shitty magic. One day he throws his magician's hat away and it blows in the wind and lands on this dorky snowman. The effing snowman comes to life and dances around and makes all the kids happy.

You've got a hat and I believe in magic, so what the hell, why not try it? Go ahead, put the Mini Cooper hat on. Think of it as taking the "e" off of "hate." Presto! You're left with a hat. Don't be shy. Slap it on. I'll wait right here.

Anything happen?

Did your hair grow 2 feet long? Did you instantaneously become ticklish? Did you get the urge to sit cross-legged? Or blast Iggy Pop and dance madly backwards? So do it.

Do all of it.

Look at the grocery clerk's name tag and say, "Clara is a wonderful name." Why not? It's true. Smile at the crunchy old bus driver. I promise he will smile back. Abracadabra! He is beautiful. Gimme 50 cents and I'll show you how to make it rain M&M's.

No, no, don't take the hat off now. You're just getting started. Take a big breath, fill your lungs all the way up. Then close your eyes and let it out as you open those peepers slowly. It's not your imagination. Euclid Heights Boulevard really is a rainbow. Coventry is a pot of gold. The old shoeshine man is Frank Sinatra and the lunch waitress is Bettie Page. Of course those are real diamonds sparkling atop Lake Erie in the sunlight. Why don't they sink, you ask? It's the magic, you doof!

Calling you doof is more fun than calling you shitbag.

The falafel sandwich you're eating as you walk down West 25th Street tastes like the best thing you ever ate because it is the best thing you ever ate. And even though that guy sitting on the step can't play a tune to save his life, drop the change and crumpled-up bills from your front pocket into his guitar case. Now turn the other cheek, baby, and I'll give you a kiss.

I can't stop laughing either.

Blow out all the candles or find a glittering star. Make a wish. But the flickering flame and star are just for show. The power is in the wish.

What? You already knew that? Then the mojo is really smokin'.

Hey. I've changed my mind about the whole thing. Go ahead and keep the hat. When you're ready (don't worry, you'll know when you're ready), slip it over your driver's seat headrest. Leave all the car windows open while you go buy a new pair of shoes. Maybe you'll bring a snowman to life in Cleveland in September.

I just did.

* * *

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

A flat banana and other delights

Readers of this blog know I have a great affinity for jigsaw puzzles. Some of those readers keep a proverbial eye out for their humble hostess, and when they see a puzzle that has that certain je ne sais quoi, they snatch it up and forward it on to She Who Curates Puzzles. This phenomenon, of course, fills me with unprecedented joy.

And now for the puzzles.

This classic Springbok, Flat Banana, was sent to me by the Good Witch of Bay. What a great vintage puzzle hailing from 1979. I collect a puzzle like this for the box alone.


Next up, a sweet old Gennessee Puzzle, which was sent to me by an Improved Grinch:


I love this sort of puzzle, which no doubt was purchased at a five and dime for less than a buck back in the 50s or 60s. Maybe a kid bought it for his Gramp for Christmas. Maybe Johnny's mom sent him to Woolworth's with a dollar and the edict, buy Sam a present for his birthday party this Sunday. Kid buys the puzzle for 69 cents and has plenty left over for candy.

So it's missing a piece, who cares? I loved putting it together just the same--pure Americana.

~~

Oh dear reader, I am loathe to tell you what happened during the construction of this next one--a gorgeous and totally fun 2000-piece Jan Van Haasteren offering, which was gifted to me by He Who Rides the Mount of Vernon.


I was bent over the thing in my usual puzzling way when I reached for a piece and knocked over my adult beverage, which soaked a number of pieces. I (predictably) screeched and leapt into action, gathering up the damp pieces and carefully arranging them on cookie sheets.

I dispatched the pans post haste into my KitchenAid Superba combination convection oven, which I turned on to the bread-proofing setting (100 degrees with convection air circulation).

It dried the pieces perfectly, nary a one warped. I didn't even lose a piece in all the confusion.

~~

Imagine getting something like this from a purring minx of incalculable beauty:


I opened the glorious package only to find a 3D Qing Gardens Vase puzzle.

!

I was so excited, I started constructing it right away. The way the little plastic pieces snapped together was totally satisfying. And I loved the numbers and arrows on the pieces, as if the puzzle was worried I'd lose my way.


 Dearest reader, life is beautiful one piece at a time.

*  *  *

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Live free or die


Behold the Ohio State Reformatory in Mansfield, which housed prisoners from 1896 through 1990. Click on any photo to enlarge.

Mansfield Reformatory

Mansfield Reformatory

The first thing you notice is the care Levi Scofield, who also designed the Cuyahoga County Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, put into designing a place for society's most undesirable cast aways. The ornate exterior of the building, however, does not prepare you for what lay deep inside.

I was first met with the offices and formal meeting areas, which are opulent and echo another time. Easy enough.

Mansfield Reformatory


Mansfield Reformatory

The strangest things about the prison are subtle. This corridor leads to the cell blocks and other prison facilities. And while you can barely make it out in the photo, the happenstance of light through four windows in adjacent rooms forms a perfect X on the floor in front of this door.

The "X," Mansfield Reformatory

Everyone is quick to note that the Reformatory's massive all-steel East Cell Block, with its six tiers, is the largest free-standing such structure in the world.

Words, words, words.

You have to see this thing and walk within it to understand the implications of incarceration.

East Cell Block, Mansfield Reformatory

Things really went south for me after I stepped out of that stairway and began walking along one of the exterior corridors of the East Block.

The next photo does not convey the length of that walkway, which truly made my jaw drop. As I moved along it, my stomach tightened into a ball and the vague feeling of panic bloomed. Imagine the sounds and smells inside this place when it was packed solid with male human flesh, the sex and emanations.

Everything here is naked. The only thing that might have remained private within these five-by-seven-foot cages is the truth behind the twisted crimes that put men inside them.

Exterior corridor, East Cell Block, Mansfield Reformatory

I could barely bring myself to walk into the cells. It felt like stepping through some terrible plenum. Each time I tried, I gagged against bile welling in the back of my throat and had to step out immediately. That is not an exaggeration; my physical reaction was that strong and I was completely surprised by it. The cells in solitary confinement overwhelmed me so much, I couldn't even bring myself to take photos.

Inmate cell, East Block, Mansfield Reformatory

 Again, these next photos do not begin to capture the power of this massive human cage.

East Cell Block, Mansfield Reformatory

East Cell Block, Mansfield Reformatory

The guard tower is situated on the uppermost level between the East and West Cell Blocks. How strange and polite it is, with its orderly marble floor and Romanesque pillars.

Guard tower, Mansfield Reformatory

The West Block feels completely different from the East Block, probably due to the way the cement portions of the structure make the cells look more like dwellings than cages. On one of the touch screen info vids available throughout the prison, a former inmate talked about the endless clamoring and yelling within the East Block. Unable to sleep there, he requested a transfer to the West Block, which was all but silent.

The absence of noise drove him crazy. He opted to go back to the East Block.

West Cell Block, Mansfield Reformatory

Last pic, a pan of the chapel:

Inmate Chapel, Mansfield Reformatory

While a few errant pews are obvious enough, what you cannot see is the odd draft you pass through at the entrance of this room. There were several such mysterious drafts throughout the prison. They were the strangest thing, coming from impossible dark corners. They would carress my face and gently lift my hair into flying tendrils.

Call it a whisper, we are human beings.

* * *

Tuesday, May 06, 2014

Effin this and that

Dear Lord,

I have waited a long time for you to deliver unto me another effin discovery for this post so I could have the magical number of three effin photos to display.

Since that has not happened, I'm going to post the two effin entries I have because, frankly, I just effin feel like it.

Love, Erin

A bottle of Effen Cucumber Vodka. Thank you, effin Holland.

The home of the Effin Burrito, available in beef, chicken veggie or vegan.

An effin photo of some peoples' effin feet for no effin reason.

* * *

Monday, May 05, 2014

Captain Cleveland

I don't care if it was a silly movie and yeah, the problems the filming caused around town were horrible. But watching those big dumb action sequences play out on familiar Cleveland streets just plain rocked my face off. And Robert Redford sauntering through the atrium of the Cleveland Museum of Art? Priceless.



*  *  *

Saturday, May 03, 2014

Sweet defeat


Dearest friends,

My defeats and losses are so myriad that I rarely bring them to public attention because at this point, it's downright embarrassing. Since I did, however, publicize my entry in the 2014 Springbok puzzle contest, I thought it only fair that I announce my resounding loss therein.

Congratulations to Mr. Zehrfeld for his winning entry, "Americana."

Here is my image and the very last offering in the "top submissions" line up in the above link.


Note that while the candy looks attractive, it was cloying sweet and barely edible--and I had pounds of it, which I dispatched to Lil' OB, who in turn took it to school, where it languishes in a jar in the art room.

In the contest rules, Springbok reserves the right to make any of the submitted images into a puzzle without compensation to the entrant, so it's still possible my image will be elevated to puzzledom.

Yeah, yeah.

Now for the other images I submitted to the contest which did not garner honorable mentions. Regarding the last image, no one wants to know how much time I spent weaving pot holders like a frustrated nine-year old, swearing and tearing up my fingernails on the metal loom.

Thanks as always for your support.

Love, Erin









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