Tuesday, April 14, 2020

All the News That's Fit to Slant

I did not vote for Donald Trump in 2016. In fact, I can still remember howling with laughter when he declared his candidacy, thinking he was a total joke suffering from delusions of grandeur. Things have changed, and I now consider all his attackers to be the jokes, and certainly suffering from delusions of grandeur.

The thing is, reporters don't actually do anything themselves. (Having been one myself for many years, I speak from personal experience.) They don't create any usable products or perform any usable services.  Instead what they do is annoy people by calling them on the phone or chasing them down in public to badger them about what they have been doing. Then they write it up as best they can remember and turn in their impressions to an editor who then edits the hell out of it, forever eradicating the thoughts, ideas and any shreds of intelligence the reporter may have included. The final piece is altered to fit the editor's or publisher's desires. The reporter is merely an errand boy or girl who brings the quotes sprinkled throughout (unless there are no quotes but instead a series of references to "reliable sources").

Gloria and her hair helmet.
On TV, it's all about the look, with reporters strutting their stuff like Hollywood stars on the Red Carpet. Anderson Cooper, who probably has perfect vision, dons his trendy glasses, then omits them when his outfit commands it. Average-looking women like CNN's Gloria Borger and Dana Bash spend hours every day having their makeup professionally applied and their hair professionally styled so they can appear glamorous on TV, just to do one thing and one thing only: Trash the President of the United States as they have been instructed by their bosses.

Joy and her African braids.
Meanwhile, over at MSNBC, Joy Reid, she of the formerly very straight, very short hair, has taken to sticking on a set of dreadlocks to make sure you understand she is an African-American before she trashes the President. As for Brian Williams, the former respected anchor at ABC News who disgraced himself with a pack of lies years ago during Hurricane Katrina but got a new job anyway, oh please.

So now, after almost four years of this non-stop nonsense, I will be voting for Donald Trump in November, as he is just about the only person I ever see on the news who is simply himself (with his real hair, as ridiculous as it is). And if you ask me, he's done a damn good job with this whole pandemic thing, despite the constant, ceaseless, never-ending bitching and moaning of those leeches who get paid a ridiculous annual salary (Anderson Cooper $11 million, Joy Reid $1.5 million, Brian Williams $10 million) to magnify Trump's every misstep and hide all his good deeds. 

Monday, April 13, 2020

Seize Your Pandemic!

Certainly by now we all realize this is not going away anytime soon, so it's best to stop the binge eating, binge drinking, binge gaming and binge Netflixing and grab ourselves by the collar and shake some sense into ourselves. Possibly a slap in the face is called for as well, either by our own washed hand or that of a willing friend or family member. The time has come to seize the pandemic, for this too shall pass and what will you have to show for it -- an extra fifteen pounds and an alcohol problem?

This is not an original thought but one plagiarized from my son, who worried that he was not seizing his pandemic but instead squandering it on senseless activities when he could be creating a stockpile of his handmade products he will need once his business starts up again. I related to his observation immediately, thinking of all the wasted hours I could have used to make great art, or at the very least clean my house from top to bottom, instead of alternating between playing Words With Friends  and sobbing.

While Covid-19 is robbing some people of their lives and others the ability to do anything but struggle for their next breath, we the uninfected have been given the gift of time. Time to fill with activities that surpass our usual running around with friends, going out to dinner and a show, traveling to foreign countries and rock-climbing aboard cruise ships. Instead we can finally read "Moby Dick" or learn a foreign language or take up knitting or paint the bedroom or master the art of meditation or clean the basement or work out and get stronger than we were before. Find your inner power and seize your pandemic, while you still can.

Friday, April 10, 2020

What Virus?


Today I learned an important lesson worth sharing, although I suspect that most people already know it and I'm just a slow learner. The lesson is this: Happiness comes when you're dealing with a big problem and then you get another one, so the first one gets put on the back burner while the second one makes you miserable. Then the second one gets solved and you only have that first one that was bothering you so much, but you're so grateful the second one is gone and just worrying about the first one is a huge relief.

The coronavirus has filled my head almost every waking second since it first appeared. It has robbed me of a two-week trip to Israel with dear friends that had been planned for eight months, kept me apart from my son who lives just 20 minutes away and denied me the comfort of socializing with friends. So when yesterday's innocent little spring snowstorm turned vicious and knocked out our power, I totally lost it. No hot shower, no morning coffee, food spoiling in the fridge, cell phone power dangerously low and of course a freezing cold house made me forget about the deadly disease possibly lurking on all our hard surfaces.

Waking up this morning was bleak. My husband and I managed to eke out one cup of coffee each from yesterday's ground remains. (We use fresh beans and an electric grinder.). The day wore on and the power company's website all but promised the power would remain out for at least a day or more as all of Maine had been hit hard. We discovered a tree down in our yard and six inches of snow blanketing the vegetable garden we started last weekend. Basically, boo-fucking-hoo.

Then, out of the blue, at 5:57 pm this evening, as I was walking around the house distributing the necessary candles and lanterns and flashlights to get us through until bedtime, the power came back. I was elated. And thrilled and relieved and more words like that. I experienced true joy for several hours, and actually still can feel the glow. As for the virus: What virus?

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Simon Says "Baaa!"

The typical American voter these days.
For the first time in my adult life I feel like a fool. While I may have been considered a fool by others before now, how I appear outwardly has never been my concern since the only person's approval we need is our own, and eventually that of our Maker. Surely that's a given. But recently I have lost my self-respect, and it sucks.

This sad truth hit me yesterday as I was unpacking groceries after picking them up at the market, having phoned in my order a week ago to avoid entering the store and possibly leaving with a deadly disease. Not only were several things missing, but the whole rigamarole I went through as suggested by the government "experts" seemed stupid and, to be perfectly frank, pointless.

After removing everything from the brown paper grocery bags out in my garage, I then disposed of all plastic and cardboard packaging and transferred foods to plastic bags or Tupperware. Next I sprayed the cans and jars with disinfectant and washed the produce and fruit as if they were teeming with unseen viruses that could enter my body and kill me. Holding my breath the whole time, then finally washing my hands with soap and hot water, it was the first time I ever did anything based solely on hearsay.

I have not met anyone with coronavirus. I do know two people who know someone who had it, but they recovered. Yet I am riddled with fear based solely on news reports, and since when are they accurate, trustworthy and without an agenda? Never. And now more than ever, the people shoveling that shit are insanely focused on inflating the horror in hopes of defeating President Trump at the polls next November, when a Democratic win would plunge us further into the sheeplike existence we find ourselves in right now, following orders: Stay home. Don't go to work. Depend on government handouts like unemployment and food stamps. Don't see your family. Avoid your friends. And above all, listen to Big Brother, or if their plan works and Joe Biden wins, Big Grampa.

It's downright chilling.

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

The Fakest Faker of Fake News

Hey, listen, suppose a disease far worse than the coronavirus is set to appear? If so, Donald Trump is doing nothing about it and that pisses me off. What a crappy president he is! He should already have a vaccine for this new thing nobody ever heard of, and another 20,000 ventilators in the national stockpile, and possibly even a treatment by now. Shouldn't he? I mean after all, he's everyone's daddy, right?

This is the thinking of CNN's anchor Anderson Cooper, who lives each day to ferret out some new thing Trump is doing wrong and then make his entire evening news show about that one thing. Sometimes he does it with a stern look behind big, black, trendy glasses, and yet at other times he doesn't need those glasses; that Anderson, he's so quixotic! And often so puzzled, as if he just can't believe how dumb our leaders are -- that is when they are Republicans. I would love an opportunity to ask Anderson some questions that might wipe that sardonic grin off his face.

For example, his older brother committed suicide by jumping out a window and going splat on a Manhattan street while Anderson was away in Washington. Did Anderson see how he was partly, if not mostly, responsible? Had he angered or annoyed his brother in some way? Had they fought recently? Isn't that why Anderson left New York City? How can we be sure? Is there any proof that wasn't the case?  Maybe if Anderson had been home at the time, his poor dead brother would be alive today. In fact, probably he would be. No, he definitely would be, according to people who are familiar with the situation.

So I guess, based on that information, we can conclude that Anderson Cooper caused his brother's death. He has blood on is hands! He more than anyone should have known his brother was depressed, yet he left town anyway. That would certainly be Anderson's spin if he were talking about Donald Trump. And his backup singers -- Gloria Borger, Jeffrey Toobin, David Gergen and Dana Bash -- would loudly chorus their agreement.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Event 201: Read It and Weep

 Event 201 swag: A cute stuffed coronavirus!
Hey, if you're stuck inside -- and who isn't?-- with little to do, and you're tired of hearing the same old news about how terrible a job Trump is doing and how he's pushing hydroxychloroquine, a drug that has worked well for many people but apparently not well enough for Anderson Cooper or any of the other Democrat talking heads at CNN and MSNBC who would never, ever say anything good about POTUS, get comfortable, grab a cup of coffee or maybe a glass of wine (depending on the time of day), Google "Event 201" and settle in for an interesting read that will keep you enthralled, amazed, stunned, confused and very pissed off that nobody in the mainstream media ever mentions it, instead devoting every minute to the alleged missteps of Donald Trump
(who is doing a hell of a good job if you ask me), his son-in-law Jared Kushner, and whatever crumbs they can unearth in hopes of winning the election next November.

Trust me, it's a real eye-opener!

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Something's Gotta Give

In case you haven't noticed, and you aren't paranoid enough yet, none of the people who supposedly know (more than us) about these matters appear to have a clue about how to handle the current global pandemic. Some say we should shelter in place and wear masks and do anything to avoid contracting the virus, while others say we should open up everything and come down with the virus in order to build up our herd immunity. You'll hear one thing one minute and the exact opposite the next.

First thing this morning I read that fewer people died in New York City yesterday than the day before, and then that the death rates there were "soaring" today. How could that be? And who can we trust? Does anyone know anything for sure? Apparently not. On the other hand, the scientists, journalists and government lackeys -- oops, I mean leaders -- are pretty good at telling us how bad things are and how much worse they will get, like that's helpful. I don't think it is, but that's just me.

So far what I have been finding slightly helpful is eating. Or rather, overeating. And not just any foods, but specifically unhealthy foods. For example, in the past two weeks I have ingested things I haven't eaten since my last LSD trip somewhere in my mid-twenties. I'm talking French fries, potato chips, ice cream, pizza and cookies, in large quantities and often simultaneously. Not to put too personal a slant on things, but this cannot go on: I have a limited wardrobe and a few things are already too tight. Something's gotta give, and soon. Seriously, it's almost bathing suit season.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Eat, Drink and Be Miserable



There's nothing like a little global pandemic to find out what really matters. Today, after sheltering in place for the past two weeks with nothing to show for it but my freshly-painted bedroom, my husband and I threw caution to the wind and drove into downtown Portland to see what a city on lockdown looks like.

We found out two things. First of all, suddenly there's plenty of parking; no need to drive around and around hunting for a spot. This is because you no longer require a spot since everything's closed but "essential" businesses. The second thing we learned was that liquor stores and cannabis retailers are considered essential businesses. Apparently we all need to eat, drink and get high to properly shelter in place. 

Friday, April 3, 2020

14 Days of No Nancy

You wake up each morning and instantly remember that it's still going on. For most of us it's the dull tedium of staying inside, not seeing friends or family, not going out for dinner or to a movie or  a concert or any of the myriad distractions we've devised to distract us from our common fate. But suddenly our common fate is a little too close for comfort and so we are, for the most part, freaking out and perhaps even acting irrationally.

One person who is acting very irrationally is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who rather than helping the current horrible situation chooses only to pour hot oil on an already raging fire by setting up a new House committee to investigate Donald Trump. And her creepy pal Adam Schiff is circling the Democratic wagons to begin another impeachment concerning the President's alleged "bungling" of the administration's coronavirus response, as if he is an epidemiologist who should know about such things.


I suppose Nancy can be forgiven since she is 80 and demented. Plus she is in a high-risk group for the virus. One can only hope she gets it and is forced to self-quarantine. Fourteen days of no Nancy would be a welcome respite.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Series Review: SCHITT'S CREEK

If I knew that COVID-19 signaled the end of our species I would handle things differently. For example, believing it to be temporary and wanting to avoid getting sick I am eating very healthy meals, healthier than usual, in hopes of boosting my immune system. But if I knew that in six months we'd all be dead I would go a different route, one involving chocolate babka, bagels and lox and Fritos and dip.

The not knowing is what's getting me crazy. Will I get sick and die? Will anyone I love get sick and die? Will we all end up homeless? How bad will life be after this virus is gone? And for how long will it be gone before it comes roaring back next year? These questions haunt me, causing random outbursts of intense sobbing. The only good that has come out of this nightmare is my discovery of the Netflix series Schitt's Creek.

The show debuted in 2015 but I was never drawn to it, mostly because of the off-putting title. Who wants to spend time in or up shit's creek, either with or without a paddle? But desperate times call for desperate measures, and so my husband and I tuned in to what has been a wildly popular show for six seasons and found out why. It is, simply put, hysterical. Each episode, which lasts only 20 minutes, is side-splitting, mostly due to the deadpan performances by the perfect cast.

Eugene Levy plays Johnny Rose, the patriarch of a super-rich family that is suddenly penniless. Like a reverse of The Beverly Hillbillies, this Canadian comedy follows the trials of Rose and his wife Moira (Catherine O'Hara), a former soap opera star, and their two spoiled-rotten grown children (Dan Levy, Annie Murphy) as they try to make do living in a crappy little motel in the nowhere town of the title that they happen to own. (Johnny bought it as a joke gift for his son years ago.) The most familiar face belongs to character actor Chris Elliott as the town's mayor, appearing for the first time in a starring role and nailing it.

So every night my quarantine partner and I eat our super-healthy meal, clean up after dinner and watch about 45 minutes of deeply depressing news, catching up on the current death rates, the seething hatred of politicians eager to find a scapegoat, and the grim forecasts pertaining to our country's financial downfall. Then, grabbing our only lifeline we switch to Schitt's Creek, where we laugh away our cares for an hour or so and where we wish we lived, with or without a paddle.


Wednesday, April 1, 2020

The Pillow Police

It sickens me that I am somehow in the same sphere of humanity as my husband's first cousin, a raging asshole and a bitch to boot, without a shred of common sense. I would much rather be distantly related to, say, Jackson Browne or Mother Teresa or Nat King Cole or Jonas Salk or Liam Neeson. But no, my husband's dimwitted, poisonous cousin -- and she's got an identical twin! -- is what I got.

Today the fully-grown idiot wrote on Facebook: "If you buy a MyPillow" (from Mike Lindell, who recently appeared on TV in one of Trump's afternoon briefings about Covid-19 and spoke from his heart), "I'm not going to harbor any like or respect for you going forward. This is really sick shit." Here is what she considers to be "sick shit":

“God gave us grace on November 8, 2016, to change the course we were on.”  (Lindell is obviously a Republican and likes the president.)
“Taken out of our schools and lives, a nation had turned its back on God.” (True.)
 “I encourage you to use this time at home to get back in the Word, read our Bibles and spend time with our families.” (All good ideas.)
“Our president gave us so much hope. Where just a few short months ago, we had the best economy, the lowest unemployment, and wages going up, it was amazing.” (True.)
“With our great president, vice president and this administration and all the great people in this country praying daily, we will get through this and get back to a place that’s stronger and safer than ever.” (Maybe.)

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