Radical Transparency

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Poop Ship Destroyer?

I sent an email this morning to Jon from The Spinto Band:

We had an awesome time at 1st Unitarian in Philly on Friday.  I was jumping around like crazy, and Kevin and Kevin, two of Parker's musician friends were 100% into it throughout the show.  After the show we discussed, and we all (Parker, Giuls, Zach, Kevin, Kevin, and I) think you guys should work a Ween cover into your repertoire.

He responded:

We've been working on a 45 minute version of Poop Ship Destroyer.  It's almost ready.

Ambitious.  And true to Ween.  I'd probably go with something a little more crowd friendly.  A bridge song, if you will.  You know, ease people into things.  But if Poop Ship is speaking to you, Spinto, play Poop Ship.  I respect that.

Regardless, Poop Ship or no Poop Ship, I'm going to take Jon's email response as a promise that The Spinto Band will be covering Ween, in the near future, at a smallish concert venue near you. 

I expect The Spinto Band to take this blog post as a challenge.

Back to Basom is track 7 on White Pepper.

Back To Basom by Ween  
(download)

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Filed under  //   bridge songs   challenges   covers   music   spinto band   ween  

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Robbie, Jerry, Michael, and Sarah Palin

At 10:45 pm EST tonight, I got a text:

U watch the debate?  Palin is so dumb.  But she gives me a boner.

Crazy world we have on our hands these days.

To be fair, however, the man that sent me that text is something of an extreme case.  He's a womanizer lunatic.  I can't help but absolutely adore him.  And he's someone about whom I wrote one of my favorite emails ever. 

It all happened about a year ago.  I was doing my back and forth between China and the USA thing.  I landed in Beijing.  I walked in on some drama.  I loved the story.  And I wrote it and sent it.  To a girl.  Hoping to impress her.

Names changed to protect the guilty...

--

The doorhandle was broken and the lock had been changed when I got back to the Beijing apartment the other night.  Robbie came to the door in a brand new white bathrobe and hotel slippers and told me the broken door was one of the objects and people least damaged by Michael's most recent dive into total insanity. 

I'd heard some grumblings over email from Robbie while back in the USA, and even Michael himself had a bit to say about a relapse a few of the times we talked on Skype, but it's hard to tell what's serious and what's dramatized when you're that far away.

I walked in, put my stuff down, the cat cruised up to say hi, and Robbie and I started exchanging stories.  We were meeting Jerry for dinner, and we had a few minutes to kill. 

Michael walked out of the shower.  He was originally a part of the dinner plan; he was certainly part of the on the road from the airport text message planning; but it's pretty par for the course to lose him to a girl last minute.  What surprised me was to which girl we'd lost him.  It was THE ex-girlfriend.  The one with whom he used to live.  The one with the car he'd steal and drive off on drunken infidelity binges.  The only one with whom the sex felt real.  The one that threw knives at him.  The one he loved.

He was gonna make it work.  He'd realized how crazy it'd been for him to run from something so intense (run to the refuge of our apartment and a free place to stay for the past 5 months).  He'd changed.  Again.  But it was for real this time.

Jerry called.  Robbie and I went off to have dinner.  The food was great.  We discussed Jerry's plan to get clippers and other agricultural simple machines manufactured and shipped to Mendocino County medical marijuana farms.  We paid the bill, walked home, and continued the discussion.

Robbie paused as we were sitting down in the living room and announced that, if it was ok with everyone, he'd be telling The Westin Story.  Groovy, said Jerry...

Last night Michael and the girlfriend had had another big fight.  Things were not happy.  Echoes of the last time they'd gotten back together.  Echoes of the time before that.  Echoes of every time they were ever together. 

So Michael did what's natural and called the last girl with whom he'd started to get "serious."  It had taken her about 3 weeks to sleep with him, and during those three weeks, homeboy was a saint.  He'd been giving me the rundown daily over email and Skype in fact.  All was so perfect.  She was smart, cute, fun to talk to.  Damn.  His days of crazy girls were over.  But the problem was that she did eventually sleep with him, and that was pretty much the end of that.  Or was it?  The old gf had been back for a while.  Things obviously weren't right there.  The nice girl still liked him.  Or was willing to see him at least.  He was to meet her for dinner in an hour.

On with the cologne, in with the earrings, and out the door he went.

Problem was it was raining, and problem was there were no cabs anywhere.  There was, however, a woman with a big umbrella that looked as though she might be willing to share.  When Michael got under there, he found out she was Japanese, in town on business, and going just about exactly where he was going.  Sweet.  He'd pay for her cab ride to thank her for the umbrella. 

They got to her stop.  They said goodbye.  And she invited him up.  Up to her room in the Westin

He did not call the nice girl.  He did not call the old girlfriend.  He did, however, wake up early the next morning, leave the Japanese businesswoman sleeping peacefully, go for a swim in the Westin pool, pack a bathrobe and a pair of slippers into his backpack, eat a beautiful breakfast, charge it to her room, and come home.

Robbie wrapped the robe tighter around his shoulders and flashed the embroidered seal.  The Westin.

That was last night?, Jerry and I confirmed.  Last night, said Robbie, Unbelievable, eh?

The door opened.  Michael.  And, yep, you guessed it, the old girlfriend.  They went straight to his room.

We giggled. 

The crashes, bangs, and screams began.  We listened, concerned for a moment.  But all was well: screams of pleasure.

We laughed.  And laughed.

And, doubled over and shaking my head in disbelief, I noticed the embroidery on Robbie's slippers.  The Westin...

--

The fake names belong originally to rock stars.  I chose them purposefully.  They're not obvious, but, if you know me, and you know the story, you can figure it out.  If you get all three on your first try, you win a prize.

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Filed under  //   beijing   challenges   china   emails   fake names   infidelity   rockstars   romance   roommates   sarah palin   sex addiction   storytelling   textual healing   tuna  

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The Inevitable Dissolution of POWER

After a day of DjangoCon and an evening of storytelling with a NASA sysadmin and a dangerously dressed Silicon Valley lawyer (who may or may not have been joking when she told us she likes heroin in moderation), Wiley and I started talking about politics, The Carrot Project, and the book he's reading.

He read me this excerpt about The Final Call (a newspaper published by the Nation of Islam), an attempt to change consumer behavior, and the realities of market economics:

The paper also carried a health section, complete with Minister Farrakhan's pork-free recipes; advertisements for minister Farrakhan's speeches on videocassette (VISA or MasterCard accepted); and promotions for a line of toiletries - toothpaste and the like - that the Nation had launched under the brand name POWER, part of a strategy to encourage blacks to keep their money within their own community.

After a time, the ads for POWER products grew less prominent in The Final Call; it seems that many who enjoyed Minister Farrakhan's speeches continued to brush their teeth with Crest.  That the POWER campaign sputtered said something about the difficulty that faced any black business - the barriers to entry, the lack of finance, the leg up that your competitors possessed after having kept you out of the game for over three hundred years.

But I suspected that it also reflected the inevitable tension that arose when Minister Farrakhan's message was reduced to the mundane realities of buying toothpaste.  I tried to imagine POWER's product manager looking over his sales projections.  He might  briefly wonder whether it made sense to distribute the brand in national supermarket chains where blacks preferred to shop.  If he rejected that idea, he might consider whether any black-owned supermarket trying to compete against the national chains could afford to give shelf space to a product that guaranteed to alienate potential white customers.  Would black consumers buy toothpaste through the mail?  And what of the likelihood that the cheapest supplier of whatever it was that went into making toothpaste was white?

Wiley has always been worried about this.  He thinks it's all about those mundane realities, all about fundamental economics.  Farrakhan's message didn't fail because of ideological flaws.  The old Buy American campaign didn't fail because of ideological flaws.  They failed because of the practical realities of the marketplace. 

The Carrot Project has to face that same marketplace.  And, in Wiley's opinion, it can't rely on ideology. 

And that's fair.  And scary.

But it's a challenge we might as well embrace.  It's something we think we're addressing, in a preliminary way at least, by featuring main stream brand to main stream brand comparisons, by helping people choose between Crest and Colgate or Pepsi and Coke.  Will that be enough?  Might it be a source of competitive advantage?  Maybe.  Maybe not. Either way, it's a challenge to keep in mind.

Another thing to keep in mind is the author of the book Wiley's reading, the man that wrote that passage above.  Barack Obama.  Not bad for a politician.

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Filed under  //   barack obama   carrot project   challenges   consumers   djangocon   wiley  

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Crazy as a Billygoat

A couple of plans changed this afternoon, and I found myself at the Phillies' game with my grandfather.  First time I've done that in a while. 

Great little nostalgic moment as we had our traditional pregame conversation.

Hal: You got your raingear?
Jake: I'm pretty sure it's not going to rain.
Hal: It might rain.
Jake: Yeah it might.
Hal: And if it does, you'll be sorry you didn't bring raingear.
Jake: Nah. I'll be alright. I don't mind getting wet.
Hal: Suit yourself, but, if you ask me, you're crazy as a billygoat.

And equally great text message from one of my cousins during the game.

My grandfather's seats are about 10 rows back between first base and home plate, and when left handed hitters come up to the plate, and the TV people put that little banner across the bottom of the screen that says Jimmy Rollins, 2-3, 2B, SB, 2R, people watching TV can see whoever's sitting in the seats.

Beginning of the second inning, Parker texts:

Guy in the maroon next to you is a goon.

A goon he was.  A goon with a totally sweet mustache.

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Filed under  //   baseball   challenges   facial hair   goons   hal   metaphors   parker   raingear  

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