Showing posts with label George Carlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Carlin. Show all posts

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Seven dirty words & Buddy (No. 6) Guy


I don’t know why I feel compelled to defend amplified profanity at the Pittsburgh Blues Festival in a forum that is the blog equivalent of the “Peanuts” comic strip.

It’s innocuous, family-friendly and never resorts to profanity.

The key difference being that “Peanuts” earns millions while this blog earns peanuts.

But you’ll have trouble finding any profanity in either venue.

The closest I get to going blue is when I remind people the only time bitch, bitch, bitch turns into something productive is when you’re running a thriving dog-grooming business.

What’s funny is while I rarely type a profanity, I spew it verbally near ‘round the clock.

I try not to say swear words around the kids, but don’t lose sleep whenever I do.

In fact, I often do it with the intention of being funny.

That was the case just last week when one of the Showcase Showdown “Price is Right!” prizes was an all-expense paid trip to Phuket, Thailand.

Now, you sophisticates understand the resort town is pronounced FOO-ket.

I told the girls to pay attention. I said I wouldn’t want them to ever be in the position of having host Drew Carey say, “Do you want to bid or pass?” and have them be misunderstood when they say FUK-it.

I bring all this up because a renown Pittsburgh blues promoter Ron Esser, owner of Moondog’s blues club, took it upon himself to scold blues great Buddy Guy for using swear words from the stage. It was a big local story.

Esser — and he is beloved in the ‘burgh — is a nationally-renown blues curator. I’ve been to his club numerous times and spent a great Fourth of July afternoon drinking with him when he was in a Latrobe bar where I friend of mine used to feature great Pittsburgh blues bands.

He knows the blues. In Pittsburgh, you could say he is the blues.

That’s why the idea of him scolding a blues legend like Buddy Guy has me saying, “What the, er, heck?”


You see the spot I’m in. I want to share the nitty-gritty of some great profanity, but am shackled by feelings of propriety.

I don’t want to run afoul of the FCC-based guidelines so memorably satirized by George Carlin in his “Seven Dirty Words” routine.

The only solution is to provide a sanitized numeric key for the remainder of this post.

Here it is:

No. 1, manure; 2, urine; 3, from the Dutch word for “to penetrate;” 4, rhymes with “punt;” 5, a three-syllable pejorative for any male or female who does something most men find very appealing (hint: its initials are “c.s.”); 6, a person who does this to the maternal woman who gave birth to you, but is not your father; 7, a word that’s fine when farmers use (and squeeze) in relation to barned livestock, but improper when used to describe the same functioning part of a woman.


So on Saturday, Buddy Guy said good-naturedly to a fan who was pestering him about playing a song, “Will you shut the No. 3 up for a minute?”

When the crowd reacted to his use of No. 3, Guy said, “I know some will say, ‘My kid’s never heard that word.’ If they ain’t, then they ain’t got a No. 3ing television.”

This is what No. 2ed Esser off. He said there was no place for that kind of No. 1 at a benefit concert.

What’s funny, and what Esser must know, is Buddy Guy’s nickname is No. 6.

It’s true. He’s Buddy No. 6 Guy.

How do I know?

I heard it from Mick No. 3ing Jagger.

On the “Shine a Light” Stones concert film from a few years back, Guy steals the show with a blistering version of Muddy Waters’s “Champagne and Reefer.”

They play the song and at the end, Mick urges Guy to take a bow and says, “Buddy Guy . . . Buddy No. 6 Guy.”

I first thought Mick was just being a disrespectful No. 5.

Then I heard Guy tell a story about once when he was waiting backstage to meet Mick. The security guy probably had no idea who this great man was and was probably more interested in impressing all the girls with the really nice No. 7s.

But he says something like, “Don’t talk to Sir Mick. Do not make eye contact. He’s preparing for the performance and doesn’t like distractions. Be respectful to Sir Mick.”

So Sir Mick walks by and first thing Buddy says, is “What’s up, No. 6?”

And Jagger hugs him and says, “No. 6! How the No. 3 are you!”

Unlike the No. 5ing security guard, it shows Sir Mick can take a No. 3ing joke.

Guy says the nickname, in fact, goes back decades to when he was the session guitarist at Chess Records in Chicago for Muddy, Howlin’ Wolf, Little Walter and all the greats.

He said: “Back then at Chess Records, everybody was a No. 6. They’d say, “Hey, No. 6, you’re playing too loud!’ I’d say, ‘I thought my name was Buddy.’ But after about six months of that, someone would say, ‘Hey, No. 6!’ and I’d look up just like everyone else. That’s how I became Buddy No. 6 Guy.”

And that’s the straight No. 1 on what happened on the Pittsburgh blues scene this weekend.

I relate all this so if anyone asks about it, you won’t feel like a stupid No. 4.

Nobody likes that.

I mean, WTNo.3?



Related . . .

















Monday, August 3, 2015

Seven Dirty Words & Buddy "No. 6" Guy


I don’t know why I feel compelled to defend amplified profanity at the Pittsburgh Blues Festival in a forum that is the blog equivalent of the “Peanuts” comic strip.

We're both innocuous, family-friendly and never resort to profanity.

So the key difference is that “Peanuts” earns millions while this blog earns peanuts.

The closest I get to "going blue" is when I remind people the only time bitch, bitch, bitch turns into something productive is when you’re running a thriving dog-grooming business.

What’s funny is while I rarely type a profanity, I spew them verbally near ‘round the clock.

I try not to say swear words around the kids, but don’t lose sleep whenever I do.

In fact, I often do it with the intention of being funny.

That was the case just last week when one of the Showcase Showdown “Price is Right!” prizes was an all-expense paid trip to Phuket, Thailand.

Now, you sophisticates understand the resort town is pronounced FOO-ket.

I told the girls to pay attention. I said I wouldn’t want them to ever be in the position of having host Drew Carey say, “Do you want to bid or pass?” and have them be misunderstood when they say FUK-it.

I bring all this up because renown Pittsburgh blues promoter Ron Esser, owner of Moondog’s blues club, took it upon himself to scold blues great Buddy Guy for using swear words from the stage. It was a big local story.

Esser — and he is beloved in the ‘burgh — is a nationally-renown blues curator. I’ve been to his club numerous times and spent a great Fourth of July afternoon drinking and talking blues with him when he'd come to visit my good buddy Bill at his bar, B.C. Kenly's, in Latrobe.

So Esser knows the blues. In Pittsburgh, you could say he is the blues.

That’s why the idea of him scolding blues legend Buddy Guy has me saying, “What the, er, heck?”

You see the spot I’m in. I want to share the nitty-gritty of some great profanity, but am shackled by feelings of propriety.

I don’t want to run afoul of the FCC-based guidelines so memorably lanced by George Carlin in his “Seven Dirty Words” routine.

The only solution is to provide a sanitized numeric key for the remainder of this post.

Here it is:

No. 1, manure; 2, urine; 3, from the Dutch word for “to penetrate;” 4, rhymes with “punt;” 5, a three-syllable pejorative for any male or female who does something most men find very appealing (hint: its initials are “c.s.”); 6, a person who does this to the maternal woman who gave birth to you, but is not your father; 7, a word that’s fine when farmers use (and squeeze) in relation to barned livestock, but improper when used to describe the same functioning part of a woman.

So on Saturday, Buddy Guy said good-naturedly to a fan who was pestering him about playing a song, “Will you shut the No. 3 up for a minute?”

When the crowd reacted to his use of No. 3, Guy said, “I know some will say, ‘My kid’s never heard that word.’ If they ain’t, then they ain’t got a No. 3ing television.”

This is what No. 2ed Esser off. He said there was no place for that kind of No. 1 at a benefit concert.

What’s funny, and what Esser must know, is Buddy Guy’s nickname is No. 6.

It’s true. He’s Buddy No. 6 Guy.

How do I know?

I heard it from Mick No. 3ing Jagger.

On the “Shine a Light” Stones concert film from a few years back, Guy steals the show with a blistering version of Muddy Waters’s “Champagne and Reefer.”

They play the song and at the end, Mick urges Guy to take a bow and says, “Buddy Guy . . . Buddy No. 6 Guy.”

I first thought Mick was just being a disrespectful No. 5.

Then I heard Guy tell a story about once when he was waiting backstage to meet Mick. The security guy probably had no idea who this great man was and was probably more interested in impressing all the girls with the really nice No. 7s.

But he says something like, “Don’t talk to Sir Mick. Do not make eye contact. He’s preparing for the performance and doesn’t like distractions. Be respectful to Sir Mick.”

So Sir Mick walks by and first thing Buddy says, is “What’s up, No. 6?”

And Jagger hugs him and says, “No. 6! How the No. 3 are you!”

Unlike the No. 5ing security guard, it shows Sir Mick can take a No. 3ing joke.

Guy says the nickname, in fact, goes back decades to when he was the session guitarist at Chess Records in Chicago for Muddy, Howlin’ Wolf, Little Walter and all the greats.

He said: “Back then at Chess Records, everybody was a No. 6. They’d say, “Hey, No. 6, you’re playing too loud!’ I’d say, ‘I thought my name was Buddy.’ But after about six months of that, someone would say, ‘Hey, No. 6!’ and I’d look up just like everyone else. That’s how I became Buddy No. 6 Guy.”

And that’s the straight No. 1 on what happened on the Pittsburgh blues scene this weekend.

I relate all this so if anyone asks about it, you won’t feel like a stupid No. 4.

Nobody likes that.

I mean, WTNo.3?



Related . . .








Thursday, July 9, 2015

I'll always be broke


I was enduring the monthly drudgery of squaring both mine and my poor mother’s bills when I realized I’ll never be rich.

There were taxes, Comcast, medicals, utilities, blah, blah, blah.

I sat back and thought to myself, “Man, I’ll never get ahead.”

I didn’t feel defeated. Just resigned.

I’ll never be able to buy the things I want. I’m bound to go to restless sleep each and every night for the rest of my life aware that before dawn my little boat might spring a leak and I’ll be sunk.

Of course, I’ve had this thought since I became a wage-earning adult, but there was something different about this time.

This time, I realized it’s okay. I’m going to be all right.

In fact, I’ll be better than that.

I’ll be at peace.

I don’t know why I’ve spent so much time worrying about money I’ll never have when I have all I’ll ever need.

We have a nice home. It’s not big, but it is filled to the rafters with love and laughter.

I have so many friends. Sure, they’re the kind of friends who when I told them I’d need help moving my office this week all announced they were having simultaneous lower lumbar surgeries, but that’s just what true friends do.

True friends would never dream of imposing on one another. True friends call one another for golf, not kidney swaps.

I do what I enjoy. Writing like I do will never be lucrative, but it is so much fun. And writing offers opportunities to travel in ways that make many more well-off people envious.

Of course, like any responsible parent, my greatest concern is to provide for my darling daughters.

They will one day soon want to attend college. They will want to get married. They will want me to pay for these enormous expenses.

Now, this I’m sure is bound to sound callous, but here goes …

Screw ‘em.

My father was even more broke than I and I never once resented he didn’t pay for college or leave me a tidy nest egg.

In fact, I’ll never forget the awkward lunch he had with me and my brother where he shed tears about his failings.

“I’ve never been able to give you boys the things other fathers could,” he said. “But I want to give you this.”

He handed us brochures from a local funeral home that detailed what a gracious gift self-pay funerals were to family survivors. Through his tears, he said he was taking the steps to ensure we at least wouldn’t have to worry about being blindsided by the cost of a funeral.

“I just wish I could do more.”

He was a very emotional man.

He was also a liar.

He didn’t pay a cent toward his funeral.

In fact — and I don’t think (at least I hope) it was deliberate — but when we got into his car to drive to the funeral, the gauge was hard on “E.”

We had to pay to gas up his car so we could drive it to the funeral for which we eventually had to pay.

But, oh, how we loved that man.

And parking at his funeral was a real bitch, a standard by which you can judge just how beloved a decedent is.

There’s a post making the social media rounds about how it's all gone so wrong. It is attributed to George Carlin (which doesn’t mean it’s true).

It says we’ve succumbed to a mutual madness where we chase things that have no meaning while ignoring the meaningful things right there in the room.

The line that sticks with me: “We’ve added years to our lives, but not life to our years.”

It’s such poignant truth.

Well, I’m hereby announcing I quit. 

I’ll forever more be a conscientious objector to the rat race mentality that so consumes and ruins so many.

I’ll no longer feel like a failure because I don’t earn what others think I should.

I will celebrate the freedoms that come from not stoking the maddening ambitions that drive others so crazy.

My new motto is: 

“I am poor! I am proud! I will never have money. And I don’t care!”

Wish me luck selling that line of crap to Val and the kids.



Related . . .