Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Someone keyed my car! Suspects abound


I’ve been reluctant to share the news for fear it might upset your feelings. I know a few of you might be under the impression that I’m absolutely beloved here in Latrobe.

You might feel this way because of my propensity to embellish even minor achievement -- flattering profiles in the local paper, TV & radio appearances -- while blithely ignoring contrary vibes.

So brace yourself because here comes some disturbing info: 

Somebody keyed my car!

Can you believe it? In Latrobe, that’s like TPing Arnold Palmer’s house.

Me! Who would do such a thing?

Well, in fact, the list of suspects is long and lengthening.

First a little background.

My 2007 Saturn Vue is not the first vehicle to have been keyed in The Pond parking lot.

John is one of the other two tenants above the tavern. He has no job, no stability and no prospects -- give the guy a pointless blog and a hefty bar tab and in some ways we could be twins.

His is becoming a complicated story. He moved in with previous tenants and when they moved out he stayed behind to pay his meager rent from his monthly disability checks. Dave, the landlord, is too nice a guy to tell him to vamoose, but John’s apartment is beginning to attract an undesirable element.

John drives a dilapidated 1992 Chevy Blazer. Well, that’s not accurate. He owns one. Like its owner, the vehicle is disabled. It hasn’t moved an inch in four years. It just sits there by the dumpsters, a space-devouring eyesore, again much like its owner.

Recently Dave told John he had to move it. And John did. Vertically. One foot. He put it up on blocks.

Maybe John should think about becoming an attorney.

It was last year somebody keyed his vehicle with a gouging two-word profanity -- both words were misspelled -- across the driver’s side door. He has many enemies.

Compared to his, mine is a mere doodle, difficult to even detect. I may have gone a month or two before it even registered.

It’s like some bored artist was walking past and just tried to trace the outline of the rear wheel well with their key.

For a moment I thought it could have been one of my daughters -- and talk about suspects with obvious motives.

But if your own daughters did something like that, the offense would go from criminal vandalism to charming folk art in an instant. I logically concluded, however, my darling daughters could not have keyed Daddy’s car.

How do I know?

They don’t have keys!

Case dismissed.

So these days I’m a little more vigilant about gazing out the window into the parking lot.

It was there last week I first laid eyes on the man who screamed he wants to kill me.

It was about 3 p.m. He is a friend of John’s. The big guy was nearly falling down drunk from over-consuming elsewhere (John and his friends aren’t allowed to drink in The Pond).

He was standing in broad daylight urinating in the parking lot!

I probably should have thought about it first, but instinct took over. I often prank unsuspecting restaurant customers by remotely deploying the horn alarm on my car fob the instant someone shuts their own car door.

It’s very childish, I know, but it’s hilarious to watch from behind drawn curtains as confused strangers begin fumbling with their own keys trying to stop my car horn from obnoxiously beeping, often setting off their own in the process.

It’s very funny (read the “trash man” link below).

So without pausing to consider the consequences, I reflexively hit the fob’s red button triggering my horn not 20 feet from the offending urinator.

“Honk! Honk! Honk!”

He shrieked and for a mere instant I was overcome with joy. His shrill reaction seemed to indicate he’d peed his pants.

But I had no time to revel in the moment because he went instantly insane. He began screaming he was going to kill whoever did it.

It was all profane and frightening. Luckily for me, he was too drunk to puzzle out what had happened. I’m convinced if he’d have found me he would have ripped me apart with his bare hands.

There cowering on the floor, I thought, “Oh, this is going to be very embarrassing if any of this makes the newspaper.”

But he never found me. After about 20 harrowing minutes his driver appeared and spirited the still-ranting inebriate off.

So now I have to keep a weary eye out for old pee pants everywhere I go.

But it wasn’t until yesterday that I realized how many people I once thought were friends think of me as someone worthy of cruel contempt.

It was Happy Hour. Dave was passing around a $10 FedEx Cup golf pool. Fill out the names of 10 golfers and the sheet with the best overall result wins the pot.

I spent about 10 minutes on my sheet and turned it in. One problem: So absorbed was I that I forgot to include the one name that matters most.

My own.

I told Bill, the bartender, of my oversight. I’d need my sheet back so I could scribble my name.

An evil grin slid over Bill’s face. “Oh, no problem,” he said. “I’ll fix it for you.”

He retrieved my sheet from the file and dashed to the other end of the bar where he commenced to cackling. After about a minute, he took the sheet and with a flourish handed it to my buddy about 10 stools away.

And there my friend began to roar with laughter. He was still laughing as he passed the sheet to the next guy.

A wave of raucous laughter swept the bar as my sheet was handed down from one to another.

When it finally arrived to me, I saw what was so funny.

On the line next to where it said “NAME,” Bill had drawn a crude two-inch penis and hairy testicles.

How humiliating.

Day by day I’m learning I’m not as beloved as I once believed, that, in fact, many people consider me an object of scornful ridicule.

That I can at least live with.

But there’s one thing I’ll never forgive.

Bill got the scale all wrong.



Related . . .



Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Why'd they cancel the baseball game?


Another mass slaying; another round of questions.

Thoughtful observers are again asking what we can do to prevent more killings. Who’s to blame? Where any loopholes evaded?

Me, I have just one question:

Why did they bother canceling the baseball game?

The Washington Nationals were scheduled Monday to play the Atlanta Braves in National Park one mile from the kill site. The Nationals are in the thick of the National League wild card race.

With a record of 9-1 the last ten games, the Nationals have been murdering their opponents, metaphorically speaking, of course.

My morning paper described the spree as “horrific,” hinting, I guess, I should be horrified.

Sorry. Not even close. Being horrified by yet another American spree killer would be like an Eskimo being horrified by snow.

It takes a hell of lot more than 13 dead to horrify most of us anymore.

To me, being horrified implies we’d all be saying, “My God. This is truly horrific. This is something none of us could ever conceive happening right here in America, in the nation’s capital for God’s sake! For the love of all that’s holy, let this be the impetus for sensible action. Surely, we must act now. Because if we don’t, this kind of thing could -- God forbid --happen again. And next time it might happen right inside one of our schools!”

Been there, done that.

In the realm of spree killers, it takes a lot more than 13 dead adults to horrify those of us who pay attention to the news.

I wonder what the over/under is anymore to get a spree killing on the front page. Is it five? Four? Kill just three and, guaranteed, your story will get buried back behind the Colorado floods and California wildfires.

Horrified? I’m no longer even numb.

After Sandy Hook it seems we in America became comfortable absorbing what many consider an acceptable body count. If we did nothing after the deaths of 20 children, why does anyone think we will do anything after the deaths of just 13 adults, ages 46-73?

Unless the bullets are flying at you or ones you love, what’s the point of caring?

As you’ll see in the Bob Costas link below, I’ve offered gun violence solutions that run the gamut from no one having guns to everyone having guns. I’ve suggested all public places have wall-mounted armories of loaded weapons right beside the fire extinguishers: “IN EVENT OF SPREE KILLER, BREAK GLASS.”

I’ve said I’d even be happy turning over the enforcement of the 2nd Amendment to the NRA and let them see if they could reduce gun violence.

I’m just fed up waiting for someone to try something.

So, sorry, I’m done grieving for strangers.

Because it’s a safe bet canceling last night’s baseball game will be the only concrete action to result from the Navy Yard slaughter.

And the body count will continue to rise.

Play ball.



Related . . .




Monday, September 16, 2013

Hollywood hoo-hah: "The Butler" & me

(784 words)
Here’s how skeptical I am over the historical accuracy of “The Butler:” I’m no longer sure the actual butler was black.

Being a black butler is a key part of Eugene Allen’s compelling story. Allen died in 2010 at the age of 90.

Born on a Virginia plantation in 1919, he ended up serving as butler for eight U.S. presidents from Truman through Reagan over the 34 years that encompass the tumult of the Civil Rights era.

The movie stars Forest Whitaker as Allen. He’s great, as is Oprah Winfrey, although every time I saw Oprah on screen my first thought was always, “Well, there’s Oprah again trying to act like she’s someone who isn’t Oprah.”

I took Josie, our soon-to-be 13 year old, to see it Saturday. She indulges my reverence for history and unlike many children her age will see movies with her father that have nothing to do with talking airplanes, boy bands or animated superheroes.

So I wanted her to see “The Butler” because it was about inspirational men and women who are to me actual superheroes.

I contend the American freedom riders who were at the forefront of the Civil Rights movement were every bit as heroic as the men who stormed the beaches at Normandy.

The men at Normandy were armed and encouraged to fight back.

I won’t spoil what happens on film for you because it is entertaining. Josie liked it, and I was pleased that she got a real sense of some of the Civil Rights struggles.

I liked it, too. At least I did until I made the mistake of sleuthing around for the truth about the butler. Turns out “The Butler” and the butler could be different people with the same name.

I don’t understand Hollywood’s eagerness to tinker with the truth. Isn’t Eugene Allen’s story compelling enough?

I felt the same way about last year’s “Argo” when I learned that otherwise outstanding “based on a true story” movie tricked up the ending.

I wondered what the real butler would have said had he known movie producers would distort so many basic elements of his life. At first, I thought this apparently proud man would have been appalled.

Then I thought about it a little more.

Maybe he’d have been flattered.

After all, 72 percent of www.RottenTomatoes.com critics like “The Butler” and the movie’s earned $100 million. It’ll likely take some bows at Oscar time.

Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe Hollywood’s right to change basic facts about historical figures for entertainment purposes.

With that in mind, I’d like to make some basic plot suggestions for whenever Hollywood gets around to filming “The Honest-to-Goodness True Story of Chris Rodell,” which might happen about the time they realize the 32nd sequel means the X-Men franchise is running out of steam.

First of all, I’d like to be an orphan. I love my parents, but burying one and caring for the other while she’s in her dipsy decline is no fun. I’d rather Mom and Dad not be part of my story. 

Dittio plot-cluttering siblings, too. Remember, this was done in “Happy Days” with Richie and Joanie Cunningham’s older brother, Chuck. He made some token appearances in the first season and then just simply vanished, a confounding disappearance that bothered no one even a little bit.

My family today is an essential part of my story and I’d like to keep them intact with some key adjustments.

First I’d want one of my daughters to be a piano prodigy. They both labored at piano lessons -- did quite well, in fact -- but they took no joy from their efforts. So I’d like one of them to fall in love with playing the piano.

The other I’d like to fall in love with doing yard work.

And for commercial reasons regarding appealing to that demographic, I’d like one of them to be Asian.

I think my story would be enlivened, too, if I had a bunch of pretty stunt wives.

These gorgeous women would not take the place of my own darling wife and they wouldn’t be able to make tactful suggestions about how I should be spending my time, as my own wife is wont to do. Stunt wives would be there to do the things my own wife refuses to do when she believes I’m becoming redundant.

And I think the story would be better, too, if I did a lot of flying.

Not in an airplane, either.

I mean like Superman.

You may think these stupid ideas would fundamentally alter the story of my life.

Well, maybe, but so what?

It’s bound to sound cliche, but “The Butler” did it.



Related . . .






Friday, September 13, 2013

Raising hell? Lowering heaven? Our idiomatic afterlives


What does it say about mankind that most people would rather raise hell than lower heaven?

I guess I’ve been raising hell since about sixth grade when I first began giving my teachers a devil of a time.

Never in my life has anyone invited me to lower heaven.

You’d think Pat Robertson, a man who’s raised far more funds than hell, would have thought of it. Or maybe he’s fearful it might succeed and some homos might sneak in while God wasn’t watching.

News outlets are right now reporting that all hell’s breaking loose in Syria, the Philippines, Somalia and dozens of other places.

I’ve never seen a single story hinting that all heaven’s breaking out anywhere.

I’ve heard of places being described as heaven on earth, but they soon become so swamped with tourists that trying to anywhere near there is pure hell.

The Free Dictionary lists 90 idioms relating to hell, three times more than ones describing heaven. 

We all know the road to hell may be paved with good intentions, but no one ever mentions all the billboards you see along the way. 

Let’s just for the hell of it list a few of them.

There’s musical ones: Hell’s bells.

There’s meteorological ones: till hell freezes over, come hell or high water, it’ll be a cold day in hell and a snowball’s chance in hell. 

There’s directional ones: we can go to or through hell in either in a bucket or a hand basket. Behave sordidly and you’ll be Hell on Wheels.

We ask what/who/why/where/how the hell. It’s questionable enough to have me at least wondering WTF.

It all makes for one hellacious metaphor.

I like the phrase “Bat Out of Hell,” but am confused by its spiritual implications.

We’re taught that hell is where evil souls go for all eternity. I’m all for that, but why is it bats have license to come and go as they please?

If you were thinking, hey, you really should address the 1977 Meat Loaf “Bat Out of Hell” album that sold 43 million copies, well, you took the words right out of my mouth. Did you know E Streeter Roy Bittan plays the keyboards on three tracks, including “Paradise by the Dashboard Light?”

The hell you say? It’s true.

Song writers seem to find writing about hell irresistible. One of my favorites is the great Ray Wylie Hubbard who in 1999 released “Conversation with the Devil” about a dream in which he was cast into hell and scored some face time with Satan.

Protesting there’s been some mistake, the Devil points out the singer did an awful lot of blow. Hubbard responds: 

But that’s no reason to throw me in hell
I didn’t use the cocaine to get high
I just liked the way it smelled!


For some reason, heavenly expressions are far fewer and less colorful than the ones about hell. For instance, Hell has Angels, but heaven has no counter equivalent. In heaven, you’re either good or you’re gone.

Ambitious men and women will for heaven’s sake move heaven and earth to achieve their mortal goals.

Marriages are said to be made in heaven, which makes sense at least up until the honeymoon is over, but I have to think hog heaven would stink to high heaven.

Having sat way up in peanut heaven at many sporting events and music concerts, I’m turned off by the idea of Seventh Heaven, a concept shared by both Islamic and Hebrew believers -- and if both faiths are correct about that one then heaven’s going to seem like hell for many bitter believers.

The idea of seven graded heavens means about 99 percent of us will spend eternity being envious of the same Hollywood glitter shitters we all resented behind the velvet ropes here on earth.

Of course the idea of seven heavens would help explain one of the most confounding afterlife phrases of all.

I’m talking, of course, about “Heavens to Betsy!”

Think about it. There once was a woman named Betsy who was so magnificent at least someone thought her worthy of multiple heavens. 

I couldn’t find anything on the origins of this phrase, who Betsy was, where she lived and if she’d even met Murgatroyd, the two of them being a match made in heavens.

All I can conclude is this:

Betsy must of been one hell of a gal.



Related . . .



Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Buddy Holly & The Crickets! But not the cicadas


I was upstairs with a mouthful of bedtime toothpaste when my wife shrieked there was a huge cricket in the basement.

I finished brushing, spit, looked up in the mirror and thought, man, this will be really cool if that huge cricket turns out to be Buddy Holly.

The Texan was said to be in a plane that went down in Clear Lake, Iowa, farmland February 3, 1959, the day Don McLean says the music died.

But was he?

I tingled with anticipation as I descended the stairs. You can argue he wasn’t really a Cricket, that being the name of his band, but that’s nitpicky. I’ll bet his bandmates considered him the biggest Cricket of all.

I thought if Buddy Holly is right now in my basement I will in 24 hours be famous around the world.

Right.

That’ll be the day.

It wasn’t Buddy. It was just your average cricket.

And I in no way say that to disparage your average cricket, an insect with surprising reservoirs of meteorological intelligence. Did you know chirping crickets are capable of conveying the outside Fahrenheit temperature?

It’s true. Count the number of chirps they make in one minute, divide by 4 and then add the number 40 to reach the temp.

Or you could just once tap the weather app on your smart phone.

Being a pacifist, I, of course, didn’t squash it. I instead gently cocooned it in a Kleenex, took it outside and set it free. It thanked me by serenading me to sleep with one of summer’s sweetest sounds.

I adore crickets almost as much as butterflies.

I tend to judge insects on the sounds they make and the chances that one of the nastier little bastards is going to sting me. So I hate buzzing bees, wasps and hornets. Spiders are just sneaky. Why God didn’t think to have them come with tiny sirens is a mystery.

I’ve spent a good deal of this summer thinking of insects mostly because I was eagerly anticipating the promised emergence of the 17-year Brood II cicadas.

What the hell happened to them?

We were told this year we in western Pennsylvania and throughout much of the East Coast would be inundated with them. 

How can something that emerges like clockwork every 17 years just not show up? Could it be climate change? Fracking?

I prefer to think they’d heard all the buzz about “Breaking Bad” and decided to stay underground until they could catch up on NetFlix.

It’s a huge disappointment. I was so looking forward to the cicadas. I feel like I’ve been stood up on a date with a beautiful woman.

Or more like a couple billion really ugly ones, and when you put it into those numbers quantity versus quality becomes a real factor.

Fall of 1981 was the last time I laid eyes on a cicada. The last time, too, I had one fly into my mouth and up my nose.

I was a freshman at Ohio University when the brood took over campus to engage in their 17-year mating cycle, ironic because that was just about precisely what my batting average was in those days.

What was funny was it looked like those odds were about to change. I started off dating a pretty junior and was hoping this more experienced older woman would soon bestow the sort of education not mentioned in any of the stuffy class syllabi.

It was not to be.

Blame the cicadas.

There was this one tall, skinny poplar tree outside our dorm. Me and my buddy figured we could climb way up near the top, give the branches a good shake and unleash the kind of plague not seen since God and Moses began punking the Pharaoh.

And that’s exactly what happened. Cicadas filled the air. Some flew into the dorms,  some into the classrooms, some into open car windows

I’m convinced one particularly adventurous one found it’s way into an intimate region of that girl I so desired.

Because as I gazed down through that magnificent swarm of insects, I could discern the faint outline of that very girl glaring up at me with a look of scornful contempt.

It was the look of a woman who had a real bug up her ass, and it occurred to me that was maybe the first time in history when that phrase was put to non-metaphorical use.

I saw her a few days later and she told me to buzz off.

Didn’t bug me a bit.

If biological patterns about the timed emergence of that particular cicada held true, she wasn’t going to be any real fun until the year 1998.



Related . . .



Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Pirate wins, unruly fans, skinny dipping & other random thoughts


• A friend of mine -- he was my first editor down in Nashville -- said he thought yesterday’s post was a “great column.” He then amended the compliment and scolded himself for calling it a column, a column being a soon-to-be archaic designation stemming from vertical newspaper layout. I got into writing because I so enjoyed reading Mike Royko’s Chicago Tribune column so I was very pleased. For the record, I usually call these posts, stories or essays and I’m relieved my old editor didn’t so fuss that he’d described the piece as “great.”

• I usually try and go to sleep with one potential blog topic on my mind and let it marinade until dawn. Then I can usually drive to the office in a foggy enough state of mind that I can write the thing in about 90 minutes. Whether it was because we watched about an hour of “Ted” starring Mark Wahlberg and the animated stuffed bear last night or some other reason, I was totally blank this morning. Thus, today’s round-up of various thoughts and news.

• Have you noticed how rarely I write about politics anymore? Maybe it’ll change when the next election heats up, but I became fatigued contributing to so much pointless bickering. And I figured no one on earth clicked onto my blog thinking, “Well, let’s see what Rodell thinks about how Anchor Babies figure into Tea Party immigration reform proposals.” So until I have something unique to say, I’m holding my fire on topics like what to do about Syria. I will say this: I miss it when Henry Kissinger was Secretary of State. Not because I believe he had any special insights. I just liked it when the name of our nation’s top peacemaker began with “Kiss.”

• We still have about 30 minutes left, but “Ted” is a riot. Val and I are loving it.

• As she has joined the swim club, I’m spending a lot of time watching our 12-year-old daughter swim laps. She’s great, already a much more accomplished swimmer than I’ll ever be. Of course, that’s not much of an achievement. I like being in water, but I dislike moving around in water. My favorite thing to do in water these days is sit in a submerged chair about neck-deep with one of those inflatable little life preservers around my glass to keep my bourbon from spilling. My favorite thing to do in water used to be skinny dipping with naked college girls. I realize that’ll never happen again. But I guess that’s the life trade-off I get in exchange for being incrementally bestowed with all this lousy wisdom.

• Apple fans are geeked over the release of new iPhones. Me, I won’t care until Apple makes an iPhone that cures all the cancers I’m convinced they cause.

• Lots of nice sentiments on-line and in the papers about the Pirates snapping a 20-year losing streak in Texas last night. I kind of feel like the team does. This is nothing to go too crazy over -- and certainly nothing to get arrested over. That’s what happened to one Pittsburgh fan who ran out onto the field after last night’s victory. The paper said nothing about his age, level of sobriety, etc. But I’ll wager he was young, drunk and stupid.

• Having said that, it’s probably a safe bet that sometime in the next year or so that drunk young idiot will get to enjoy a moonlit skinny dip with some college girls so he’s at least got that going for him.

• At this very instant, my blog stats page says there are 27 people in the U.S. reading my blog; 10 in France; 6 in Russia; 2 each in Brazil and China; and one each in Sri Lanka, Taiwan and the United Arab Emirates. The stats page is highly unreliable, but if even half of that is true then I find it very cool.

• Instead of writing about Syria, federal budget showdowns or immigration reform, in the last month or so my blog topics have included human bladder size, trans-oceanic tugs-of-war, corn puns, and Hilary Swank’s nipples. Take that, George Will.

• I disparaged that Bucco fan for running on the field last night, but I’m always chagrined they never show it on the news. I swear, watching a drunken fan trying to elude paunchy middle-aged field security guards is as entertaining as anything I’ve ever seen actual athletes do. Makes me glad they’ll always serve beer at ballgames.

• We had a tragedy in Pittsburgh Monday. A 50-year-old city police officer shot and killed his life-long best buddy in a silly bar dispute. The details are yet to emerge, but I can guarantee you it was utterly pointless. It makes me glad that me and my buddies never fight over pointless crap. And that most of my buddies keep their guns in their glove boxes.

• As I said, we still have about 30 minutes left in “Ted.” It’s uproarious fun. But if in the last half hour either or Ted or John pulls out a pistol and shoots the other I’ll be very disappointed.

• Looking for a day-brightening nostalgic listen? Hit “play” on Boz Scaggs’ “Silk Degrees” from 1976. “Lowdown,” “Lido Shuffle,” “Georgia,” “It’s Over” -- what a great catchy collection. 

• The very best fan on the field incident I can ever recall was in 1986 and it didn’t even involve a field. Then 20-year-old Darren Crowder  stole the pace car at NASCAR’s superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama -- and drove it for a one-lap joy ride with speeds up to 100 mph. I don’t know how he thought it was going to end, but here’s what I remember happening: He crossed the finish line, safely slowed to a halt, smiled and put his arms up outside the window like he was saying, “It’s all good. I was just having fun. No biggie!” Then these five or six enormous Bubbas pulled him from the vehicle and began delivering one of the most savage and methodical beatings I’ve ever seen. It was like they’d choreographed each punch. They were like railroad gandydancers taking timed turns driving the spike into granite. Had I not known the doomed recipient of the pounding was a NASCAR fan, I’d have been appalled.

• 8days2amish tweet of the week: “Told 7 year old if you squeeze coal hard enough it’ll turn into a diamond. She squeezed a piece so hard she almost made a turd.”

• Thanks for reading. There’s lots of encouraging evidence that people everywhere are enjoying the blog and referring it to friends and neighbors. There’s just no evidence it’s happening in Sri Lanka, Taiwan or the United Arab Emirates.



Related . . .