Wednesday, December 30, 2020

My Corona Diary (Take XXV): The Trump Cult, Unmasked, At The Checkout Line

 

"Trump's First Detention,"
Take I/The Reckoner

I love it when the so-called "adults in the room," i.e., the mainstream media outlets, pundits and various talking heads, wrack their brows and wax in angst over the Trump Phenomenon. Examples include a recent headline that I saw in The Atlantic Monthly: "How Long This Can Go On?" Even such formerly Trump-friendly outlets, like the New York Post -- a/k/a, the Voice of the Cranky Old Man, who finds his world changing too fast for his liking -- seem to have finally grasped the whiff of hemlock wafting underneath this particular real life reality show ("How Long Can Trump Keep Contesting 2020 Election Results?").

Well, gentlemen -- because, let's not forget, it is mostly aging white gentlemen who always seem to stride atop these particular pyramids, and preside over the slaves toiling for them at the base -- furrow your brows no longer, and wax in angst no more, for I have your answer. 

Simply put, "it" -- whether you're referring to the Trump cult, the hypnotic spell that it exerts over its starry-eyed legions, or the long term threat it poses to democracy, such as it exists, or however we define it, in the United States -- will go on, as long as nearly half the country prefers to live in an alternative universe, in which COVID is a hoax, masks are the enslavement tools of the effete liberals who crafted them in their secret underground laboratories, and their cult leader, Donald Trump, continues to assert an electoral victory that exists only in the darkest recesses of their hindbrains (and his).

I got a taste of this myself at Matthew's the other night, when the wife dispatched me to pick up a few food items, plus the usual household supplies, like paper towels, and dish soap, that sort of thing.

I was getting ready to check out when I noticed the cashier had two Velcro bands wrapped around her upper forearms. I asked what they were doing there, and she responded, "Oh, that's because I have tennis elbow in the left arm, and every time I'm on the other machine..." She gestured at the lane behind her. "I'm in a lot of pain."

She explained that working the cash register behind us was more painful, because that particular model of machine requires more rapid arm and wrist movements. The newer ones, apparently, aren't as demanding, being more advanced models that don't require as much motion to operate. "Couldn't you just work the machine that you're on now?" I asked.

The cashier responded that no, she couldn't, because whenever the lines backed up, somebody had to work that particular lane, and that particular machine. Even though Matthew's has just installed six self-checkout machines, there aren't enough people to work the conventional registers that still exist. 

Got that? It's like saying, "You're a millionaire, but you'll still have to borrow to get through the holidays," or, "You can have artistic control, but you'll have change the name of the band." Are you confused yet? I don't blame you. So am I.

"They've been threatening to cut hours, for the part-timers," the cashier continued, as she rung up the last of my items. "They just put out our new schedules, but I haven't seen them yet. I'm not sure I want to."

"Why, how many hours are you working now?" I asked.

"Twenty to 25 a week," she answered.

I got ready to write the check. "Well, not to worry," I cracked. "We've finally got a stimulus check coming, so maybe we can cut some of our losses at the box office with that one."

"I feel bad for him," the cashier said, almost to herself.

"Who, Trump? Why, exactly?" I asked.

"Because he should be there in January. He proved that he got three million more votes."

"Really? How do you figure that?"

"Because they were Democratic judges, and they won't hear his cases," the cashier responded.

"Weren't there some Bush and Trump appointees in the mix, though?" I retorted. "At least, the last time I checked." 

Like the three Supreme Court Justices he got to appoint, I told myself. But I guess they too were part of the grand conspiracy against the Dear Leader.

This time, the cashier didn't answer me. Whether she was preoccupied with the check reader, or writing me off as part of the conspiracy, too, I don't know, but since we'd wrapped up our business, I didn't push the point, this time around.

As far as all the adults are concerned, though, I'll circle back where we started. How long, you ask, can this go on?

For defenders of democratic values, the answer is simple. For now, longer than we can imagine, as there is much work to be done. 

The sooner we see this, and stop clinging to some hypothetical notion of normalcy, or some temporarily interrupted social order, that we can restore, by just clicking our fingers, or flicking on a switch...the sooner we can start that work, and do what has to be done. I have seen the challenge with my own eyes. And the road ahead looks long, with no lack of hairpin turns to snare the unwary. --The Reckoner

Monday, December 21, 2020

My Corona Diary (Take XXIV): From Weird, To Just Plain Bad: Van The Man's Crotchety Anti-Lockdown Rock


<Irish News, 11/30/17:
See link below for a flavor 
of the interview -- he's a bit difficult,
as you'll find out...>

<i.>
It's fair to say, isn't it, that the gray viral dawn of COVID has pushed all of our adaptive capabilities to the outer limit. That's why "tired," I'm sure, is the word I most often hear, these days, from my friends and loved ones. Still, some of us are seizing the moment better than others, which is why I have some serious issues with Van Morrison's anti-lockdown musical crusade. 

He's just dropped the fourth single in that dubious series, "Stand And Deliver," complete with Eric Clapton on guitar and vocals: "Do you want to be a free man, or do you want to be a slave?" Spartacus should be so proud, I guess, with lyrics like these: "Do you wanna be a free man, or do you wanna be a slave?/Do you wanna wear these chains/Until you're lying in the grave?"

All proceeds will go to the Lockdown Financial Hardship Fund, an entity that Morrison has set up to help musicians who've fallen on hard times, now that COVID's taken touring totally off the table. It all sounds pretty conscientious and admirable, except...


<except...


except...


except...>


"Stand And Deliver" is dropping at a time of near-total panic, due to a new COVID strain that's reportedly 70% more transmittable than its predecessor. In response, Boris Johnson's government has shut down all nonessential businesses (bowling alleys, cinemas, gyms, hairdressers, and shops) for two weeks, with people restricted to meeting just one other person from another household in any public space. Considering that Johnson hasn't always taken the virus seriously himself, this news alone should give Van the Man pause.

You've got to be awfully tone deaf to drop an anti-lockdown ode on the eve of what will surely go down as Britain's most harried Christmas ever. Yet "Stand & Deliver" is  the fourth entry in this exercise, which includes "As I Walked Out," "Born To Be Free," and "No More Lockdown."

Sadder still, as Yahoo News has noted, both legends seem to be buying lock, stock and riff into the conspiracy theories and crackpot rebellions that have dogged the whole COVID tragedy since its beginnings, as if it's something they could somehow snap their fingers and slap aside, the moment that their (mostly, presumably) graying fanbase mobilizes to gatecrash the barricades: "Stand and deliver/You let them put the fear on you/Stand and deliver/But not a word you heard was true."

Clapton has explained his participation in Van's latest tirade against public health by characterizing it as a rally around the rock 'n' roll flag, as it were: "There are many of us who support Van and his endeavors to save live music: he is an inspiration. We must stand up and be counted because we need to find a way out of this mess. The alternative is not worth thinking about. Live music might never recover."

Eric, old man...If your worst case scenario is not strapping on a guitar for your paying customers, then you're even more out of touch than I could ever imagined. How about dying horribly, all by yourself in a hospital bed -- assuming they have one for you -- without anyone to see you off? That scenario sounds a lot more unthinkable than just not being able to crank up the music. We don't say, "See you on the other side," we say, "See you later." There's a slight difference, verbally speaking. But I digress.



<"Introducing...The Lone Unmasker"
The Reckoner>

<ii.>
Longtime Van Morrison watchers will remind you that this latest twist in his career is hardly a new one. That's not to denigrate his vocal abilities, which remain considerable, and remarkable. Where many of his '60s- and '70s-era cohorts often sound weaker and wispier, he's never seemed stronger, and the creative peaks of albums like Astral Weeks (1968), Moondance (1970) and Veedon Fleece (1974), to name three, are always worth revisiting. He's done some equally noteworthy collaborations with Georgie Fame and the Chieftains.

My personal favorites are Into The Music (1979) and Common One (1980), widely regarded as some of the most joyful and challenging of his lengthy discography, and I heartily encourage you all to check them out, plus the purple patch of creativity he experienced during the mid- to late '80s, with Beautiful Vision (1982), Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart (1983)*, A Sense Of Wonder (1985), and Poetic Champions Compose (1987). No dispute there from me.

Since the mid-'80s, however, Van has increasingly begun trafficking in a style I'd jokingly call Grump Rock, Grouse Music, or Grievance Pop, a tendency that began creeping out on songs like "Thanks For The Information" (No Guru, No Method, No Teacher, 1986), where he sternly takes popular culture to task: "It's living off dummy tech or MTV/And with her everything light becomes heavy/And everything heavy becomes light." Wonder who the lucky date was that night? Hopefully, it wasn't Debbie Downer From Derry, but presumably, that's what it takes to cope with the Bleary-Eyed Bard From Belfast, I suppose. 

As time has gone on, though, Van has elevated his Grump Rock brand to a distinct sub-genre of his style. It's one built around lightweight riffs, vaguely defined grievances and numbingly banal lyrics, whether he's scolding society at large ("You can't believe what you read in the papers/Or half the news that's on TV": "What's Wrong With This Picture," 2003), the media ("They've brainwashed the suckers again and perpetrated the myth," "School Of Hard Knocks," 2008), or one of his favorite targets, the music industry ("They sold me out for a few shekels," "They Sold Me Out," 2005).

At least "They Sold Me Out" boasts an insidiously catchy melody and vocal hook, a quality that seems far less evident on the former efforts, or his latest anti-lockdown broadsides. As Rolling Stone points out, it's downright weird to hear him crooning bitter couplets like "Don't need the government cramping my style/Give them an inch/They take a mile," over an upbeat country-soul backing track. It's as if the Carpenters had recorded an album of screaming, headbanging rock 'n' roll, or Metallica had taken the Bert Bacharach route over a double album.

Still, if I were only picking musical nits, I'd feel a lot less concerned about Van the Man's newly-minted curmudgeonly posture, one that he apparently feels comfortable enough airing more openly, as the years go by. My problem with it deepens when I read about him dismissing COVID-19 as some figment of some faceless bureaucrat's imagination, as he aired on a since-deleted post on his website, according to Rolling Stone: "Come forward, stand up, fight the pseudoscience and speak up."

The disconnect grows even more worrisome, when you consider Van Morrison's  status as a celebrity and certified legend with an estimated net worth of $90 million, which that means somebody out there listens to him, and takes some of his public pronouncements seriously. More than a few people here or there, as Northern Ireland's Health Minister, Robin Swann, told Rolling Stone, in critiquing Van's lumpen anti-lockdown rock outbursts: "I don't know where he gets his facts. I know where the emotions are on this, but I will say that sort of messaging is dangerous."

Context is everything, especially when you're dealing with a global pandemic that's claimed millions of lives. I do appreciate Van's willingness to raise money for fellow musicians who've slid through the COVID cracks, which someone in his position can do quite effectively. If he'd left it there as the bandwagon of choice for people to jump on, I'd have been happy.

But, instead, he chooses to undercut his own efforts by going about his current path of railing against COVID as some sort of conspiracy against him, saying that he doesn't want to play socially distanced shows, because they're not economically viable -- as if that disruption of his bank balance is somehow more important than  the social misery and suffering the virus has rained down on so many.


<"Spider Above Garage Door":
Take II/The Reckoner>

<iii.>
It's a story that I know all too well, having interviewed my share of COVID-19 survivors, like the woman who'd lost her husband of twenty-some years -- after suffering with him for three days. She didn't learn his fate immediately, because she recovered sufficiently to get discharged after her first day. When I asked how was doing, she said she wasn't crying all day anymore. But even with her faith, and her daughter helping out at home, the road back looked awfully dark, still. And long.

Or maybe Van could join Clapton and myself in talking with another woman who'd also logged time with her husband in the hospital. She had no idea how it happened, because they both committed to wearing masks, and following the other precautions, like social distancing. Even then, their recovery carried a tremendous cost. Both are experiencing side effects from battling their illness. Her husband lost his stepmother, who became their county's second victim of COVID. Both know other family members who are struggling to breath on ventilators, "fighting for their lives," Interviewee Two told me. "People are dying, left and right." The power of personal testimony doesn't come any starker than that.

Tone deaf as it is, Van's posturing becomes all the more offensive and self-aggrandizing when you see the likes of Rolling Stone giving it a platform. In researching this post, I took the trouble to listen all the songs I've mentioned, where -- guess what? -- you can get links to them, via the magazine. I suppose they're doing it in the name of journalistic rectitude, but why give them free exposure?

It's bad enough to see the mainstream media giving free rein to Trump's batshit crazy pronouncements, as they laboriously print them all in living color, syllable for sorry syllable, allowing him and his cult to soak up the resulting attention, and shove our democracy -- such as it is -- closer to the edge. It still amazes me that Twitter waited well into the twilight of Trump's presidency to slap factual warning levels on his Tweets. 

Maybe if they'd shown more of that initiative earlier, we might be in a less dangerous spot than we seem to stand now, but the horse has left the barn, as they say. Or, Van, presumably, if he's seeking another song title for his latest anti-lockdown blast (but I expect five percent, dear boy, if you use it). Whatever happened to the notion that crackpots aren't automatically entitled to attention?

I guess it depends how you define "crackpot," doesn't it, but let's put it this way. I'm old enough to remember when the Ku Klux Klan tried to give press conferences, and those stereotypically seen-it-all-done-it-all, crusty old news guys just laughed them out of the room, without bothering to write any of it down. Today, the KKK guys would probably get a police escort and an uncensored live appearance on CNN, or MSNBC. I could see the billing now: "No Holds Barred: The KKK's Plans For Caged Kids."

Sadly, I doubt that I'll get the chance to put on my Ghosts Of Christmas Past, Present and Future costume, so I can show Eric Clapton and Van Morrison what their flawed thinking has brought down on others. But if I could, I'd happily bring up one of my favorite song titles from Veedon Fleece, one that seems so apropos now: "You Don't Pull No Punches, But You Don't Push The River." Because, sometimes, the river has a way of pushing back. And slapping you right upside the head. Hard.--The Reckoner


<Footnote>
(*"Special Thanks" to Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard in the credits aside, Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart is a good album. Van was reportedly a serious Scientology believer at that time; like many celebrities, he's done the whole stereotypical search through the spiritual shopping mall to find the meaning of life. Still, four of Inarticulate's tracks are instrumentals, so you need not fear any subliminal brainwashing there. :-)


<Update: 5/10/21>
Evidently, Van hasn't gotten all the grievances out of his system yet, judging by the response to his new album, Latest Record Project Vol. 1, a sprawling, 28-track affair that doesn't feature any of the aforementioned songs, but a slew of equally grouchy ones their place ("They Control The Media," "Where Have All The Rebels Gone," and "Why Are You On Facebook?"). 

Other tracks, like "The Long Con," continue Van's other long-running preoccupation of some faceless, nameless "they" out to do him harm ("I'm a targeted individual," he carps), apparently lending some weight to the anxiety voiced by reviewers like InsideHook: "We were right to be worried. Latest Record Project, Vol. 1 is a total shame of a record, so bad that it actively taints the legacy of one of the 20th century’s finest musicians and makes the case that it’s time for him to hang it up."

Ouch! I've seen faceless opening acts get better reviews, though it's fair to say that Van the Man's current output seems fated to especially turn off those who have cut him some slack in the past. Apparently, InsideHook won't be among them ("Sonically, it feels totally phoned-in; it’s by-the-numbers Morrison fare that he could have recorded in his sleep.") But I'll let you be the judge. Just click the link, which joins the others below.


Links To Go (Or...Hey, Eric?
Hey, Van? Enough Already):

Daily Beast
Britain's Supercharged Mutant Virus
Expected To Go Global:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/britain-supercharged-mutant-coronavirus-expected-130447381.html

InsideHook:
Van Morrison's New Album Is An Utter Embarrassment:
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/van-morrisons-album-utter-embarrassment-040500848.html

Irish News: Van Morrison: 
"I've Got Nothing To Say
About Politics And I'm Not Going To Start Now":
https://www.irishnews.com/arts/2017/12/01/news/van-morrison-i-ve-got-nothing-to-say-about-politics-and-i-m-not-going-to-start-now-1199647/

Los Angeles Times
Eric Clapton's Anti-Lockdown Song
By Van Morrison Is Totally Worth Protesting:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/eric-claptons-anti-lockdown-protest-192907816.html

People
UK Prime Minister Cites
"New Variant" Of Coronavirus
As He Imposes Stricter Lockdown:

https://people.com/health/u-k-prime-minister-tightens-lockdown-mutated-coronavirus-strain/

Rolling Stone: Van Morrison Has Been
Complaining In Song For Decades.
This Time It Could Be Harmful:

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/van-morrison-complaining-song-decades-141156849.html

Variety: Eric Clapton and Van Morrison
Release Anti-Lockdown Song "Stand And Deliver":

https://variety.com/2020/music/news/eric-clapton-van-morrison-anti-lockdown-stand-and-deliver-1234867073/

Jobs To Nowhere (Take IV) You Fit The Suit

 

<"Work Till You Drop"/
The Reckoner>


Suggested Soundtrack: "In A Rut" (The Ruts)

<Storyteller's Note: The following account, though strictly personal and anecdotal, is true. The names have been changed, masked or omitted to avoid retribution from the guilty.>


<i.>
Unlikely as it sounds, the Daily Bugle sacking carried a silver lining. Before your late nemesis, Chief Tightly Wound, booted you off the island, you'd interviewed next door at its out-of-county rival, The Daily Retreader.  You knew the editor there, because she'd actually worked at the Daily Bugle, for a couple of months before the Chief's arrival. She soon regretted her mistake, and fled back to the Retreader.

Such games of musical chairs are standard fare at small town dailies. Don't like how So-and-So treated the expansion of the new industrial park? Wait a few months, maybe even a few weeks, and they'll throw up their hands, and move on. There's a sticking point, though. The interview went well, but Taylor fretted that the salary might pose a stumbling stock. It's little better than the Daily Bugle's pittance, "and I'm not sure if that'd be enough to keep you here," she worries.

Guess what? In an area flooded with Service McJobs, it'll McDo, for now. So you call Taylor, and ask if her offer still stands. Luckily, she hasn't hired anyone else, though you face down some skepticism (Why would you come back to the place you turned down, exactly?). But you don't have to lobby that hard. She needs someone, well, right now, and you're a warm body she knows. Those dynamics work in your favor.

Best of all, you can start in a couple weeks, citing the unused vacation time you've got coming. Actually, that's not true, either, but you can't reveal how Chief Tightly Wound never gave you a day off during that final, fraught year at the Bugle. Hence, the $2,400 in severance pay, on which you and the wife have lived, since that debacle.

So you ask Taylor not to call the Bugle, since you're "on vacation" (wink, wink, nudge, nudge). Now's not the time for honesty. On some level, it's all a giant game of, "Don't ask, don't tell," isn't it? In that sense, your new job is off to a flying start. It reminds you of the line from "Adios, Johnny Bravo," as Greg Brady's handlers prepare him for his rock star makeover: "You fit the suit."


<Teenage Graphic: 5/79:
Inspired via The Bells (Lou Reed):
"It was really not so cute
To play without a parachute..."
The Reckoner>

<ii.>
Everything goes well, at first. The overall atmosphere definitely seems way looser than the Bugle, and way less paranoid. People hang out together, away from work, and enjoy each other's company? What a concept! It's a welcome change from the Bugle, where departments barely interacted, outside of brutish necessity.

Better yet, the Retreader encourages your outside interests, which allows you to cover local punk and rock shows, as long as they end up in the paper. (Well, most of them, anyway.) The arrangement also builds contacts for your own musical aspirations.
Before long, you're booking, playing and promoting shows at The Connection, an alternative club that's sprung up only five minutes away from your apartment. 

You'd already been helping out there during those final months at the Bugle, but had to keep it under wraps, due to its owner's anti-Iraq War, anti-Bush leanings, the polar opposite of Chief Tightly Wound, whose lack of empathy for his galley slaves matched the indifference felt on Capitol Hill toward those who weren't white, or rich.

No such issues dog you now. Instead of reporting at 7:00 a.m. for the Chief's abuse every day, you can come in whenever you wish, depending on what needs doing. As an assistant editor, you're fleshing out whatever blanks Hunter didn't fill in during her day shift. The master print copy heads out the door by nine; whatever doesn't make it by then, you have to send over electronically, via the FTP connection -- those were the days, eh? -- by 1:00 a.m.

This schedule does wonders for your biorhythms and mental state, not to mention the new levels of autonomy you're suddenly experiencing. You're having too good a time 
to hear the thunderclaps nagging in the distance, and the sparrows chirping in the wilderness.


<"Teenage Graphic, 5/79:
Flipside/Take II":
The Reckoner>

<iii.>
The wheels start wobbling off the wagon, bit by bit. After the first week or two, you stop taking a formal dinner break. Some nights (Wednesday, Thursday) are slower than others (Monday, Tuesday, Thursday), On the slower days, you only have two or three pages to finish; on the busier ones, it's eight, nine, or even ten, for 16- to 24-page weekend editions. On the slow nights, you're home by midnight, or 1:00 a.m.; on the faster ones, not till 2:00 a.m. or so.

The biggest challenge doesn't come from editing and laying out the stories, but labor-intensive fillers -- like the stocks and comics -- that require filling in lots of little individual pieces. The comics page typically features a dozen or so strips, plus a crossword puzzle, that takes 10 to 15 minutes, right off the bat. At that pace, six of these fillers gobble 60 to 90 minutes, before you've edited one story, or laid out one page.

Your responsibilities don't stop there. Like many dailies its size, the Retreader publishes half a dozen or so weeklies in smaller towns, to maximize its reach. They're eight to 12 pages, and mostly recycle key stories from the daily paper, but still require you to add the relevant content for each one, tasks increase your workload exponentially. 

After the first couple months, coming home by 2:00, 3:00 or 4:00 a.m. becomes the norm. The only time you make it around midnight or 1:00 a.m. is on those slower Wednesdays or Thursdays, when the paper is mostly finished. You still have to cover local government meetings, though not as many as the Bugle demanded. Even so, most of your city council, school and township beats are in outlying areas, which means additional driving time, and writing a story for tomorrow's paper. If the meeting runs long, you're straining to make that final 1:00 a.m. deadline.

You soon reach a point where you're either eating at your desk, microwaving what the wife makes at home, or eating and running, via the usual suspects (McDonalds, Subway, or the local '50s-era drive-in: pick your poison). Even the weekends no longer feel so relaxing, because you spend most of them recovering from work, like most of your fellow unfortunates. 

The annoyances are piling up, but you don't see as the Retreader as the last stop. You periodically interview for other jobs, typically way out of town, but nobody ever offers enough cash or autonomy to make the risk worthwhile. At least Taylor leaves you alone, and lets you do the job, a welcome change from the Bugle. Staying put seems like the best option, for now, at least. Remember what fate whispered in your ear: You fit the suit.




<iv.>
A year or so into your tenure, the wheels fall off with a clang, and a thud. Your publisher calls everybody in for a sitdown to discuss the Retreader's dicey financial situation. Like nearly every paper at this point in 2005, circulation is seriously tapering off, by 30-35% or so, the publisher estimates.

You pay less attention to the P&L (Profit & Loss) charts that the publisher wheels out, than his conclusion. If the paper can't win at least some of that 30-35% back, layoffs are not only likely, but unavoidable. 
Makes sense, right? Two-thirds of any organization's costs are tied up in labor -- and you just got here. They don't say, "Last hired, first fired," for nothing, right?

Gas has just rocketed up to $4 per gallon, too, and you're really feeling the pinch, as someone who makes a 40-mile round trip every day. Your wife estimates you're losing about $20-25 a day, before you show up to work. (This is a good decade before Uber and Lyft hone that model to perfection.) That's a pretty demoralizing proposition, but if you don't want a McJob, you'll have to McMove, because the McBetter McPaying ones aren't here. 

Neither you nor your wife can cope with that idea right now, so you do what comes naturally to people stuck in these mousetraps. You clench your jaw a little tighter, and hope, no matter how irrationally, that things will work out, somehow. After all, the Retreader's just launched a new weekly youth section, and named you to run it. Though your plate's plenty filled already, this new task matches your music and pop culture interests, so at least it's fun. And hey, they just gave you another thing to do, right? How could they get rid of you?


<"And So It Begins...
Carnival Of Bills"/
The Reckoner>

<Coda>
As it turns out, they can, and they do. Six months after that sitdown, Taylor and the publisher call you in for a meeting. They ask you to show up at 4:00 p.m., well before your typical preferred starting time (around 6:00 or so). Oh, crap, you tell yourself. That can't be good

Sure enough, your gut is right. You're getting the chop, all right, effective -- well, right now, basically. 

The way that Taylor explains it, "We'd have to cut you, or the other reporter, Dean, and he's been here way longer..."

"Yeah, a good decade or so," I finish. "I get the picture." You shrug your shoulders. "Well, what else can you do?"

"We won't fight your unemployment," the publisher promises. Even in this soggy scenario, that's another welcome change from the Bugle, whose management always fought everybody's unemployment applications -- a stupid move, actually, when you consider that, from a regulatory standpoint, they were paying for it all along. Then again, "logic" and "manager" don't always end up in the same sentence, as you know all too well.

To further drive home the point, the publisher slides your severance check across his desk. You pick it up and squint: it's comparable to what the Bugle begrudgingly coughed up, more or less. That'll do for another month or so, you tell yourself. 

None of you say anything for a minute that stretches like an hour. The atmosphere is cordial, but awkward, as it has to be. You're not getting shoved out for anything you did, or because the boss didn't like you. There just isn't enough in the kitty to keep you around.

Finally, the publisher stirs. "You're taking this well," he offers.

You allow yourself a wry smile. "Yeah, well, what other choice have I got? It's not like I got to vote on the matter."

Stale as it sounds, your witticism serves to break the silence. The three of you get up at last, trading the usual banalities about keeping in touch, wishing each other well, blah-blah-blah, and so on. The Beatles probably told each other the same crap when they broke up, you ruefully observe, as you head out the door, and into your van, for the last time.

You give full vent to every black-humored impulse on that final drive home. No more endless shifts, nor long commutes. Hell, what's not to like about that? All the time to read whatever you want, or watch TV, once you finally figure out what's on it.

You can give The Connection more of your time and energy, now that you're shed of that second/third shift schedule. Shit, you can play all the gigs you wantGot one coming up Friday, in fact.

Because you heard the sparrows chirping all along, even if you didn't admit it. Now that they're finally here, what happens next? You really don't have a clue, but that's okay. It's not like anybody expects you to figure out the answer right away. For now, you can just focus on immediate things, like the next benefit check, the next bill, the next gig, not necessarily in that order. Living on unemployment is like that sometimes. --The Reckoner 


Links To Go (Hurry, Hurry,
Before They Lay You Off For Good):

Jobs To Nowhere: The Series So Far: