Money Jungle

Long Distance Dedications

This is Elwood Kasem, bringing you long distance requests from our listeners:

Elwood,

            My house has been invaded by flies. I’ve spent all week swatting them with the fly swatter and now I think they’re aware of me because they’re all sitting on my ceiling. I am a short woman, 5’1”, and cannot reach and I think they know this. They laugh and mock me. Tonight I’m buying a pair of boots with suction cups on them. I will walk up the wall, then onto the ceiling where I will swat the little bastards to death. 

            To send me up the wall and upside down, could you play Lionel Richie’s “Dancing on the Ceiling?”

            Thanks,

            Lady X

Dear Mr. Kasem,

            I work at an organ donor clinic in West Memphis, Arkansas. Many people are coming into the office looking for body parts, but, as you probably know, some are hard to come by. Right now I have ten applicants in the next room waiting for a new pair of eyes. Alas, here in West Memphis, inbreeding has led to eyes so crossed they eventually form a single eye in the forehead that needs to be surgically removed. The bad news for them is that I only have one set of eyes. I’m about to go into the room and break the news. Your program is playing in the waiting room, so it would help me a great deal if you could you play “I Only Have Eyes For You” by the Flamingos.

            With much appreciation,

            Dr. Horace Weatherbee , M.D.

Dear Elwood Kasem,

            You may have read about me in the news. I was on an elevator in Houston, Texas when a man got his head caught in the elevator’s closing doors. The elevator jerked up quickly and the man was decapitated. His body lay outside on the floor but his head was in the elevator car with me. For 15 agonizing minutes before I was rescued by firemen, I stared at this man’s face, at once full of expression and yet frozen at the instant of his death. To help me cope with these images, I was hoping you could play “Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell” by Iggy and the Stooges.

                                                            Your fan,

                                                                        The Elevator Lady

Dear Elwood Kasem,

            I have gastrointestinal problems. I shit three times before lunch and the rest of the day I could go at a moment’s notice, like a voodoo lady is poking my voodoo doll’s belly with a bottle of Pepto Bismol. I’m in here so often I’ve started naming each toilet. If you could play “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” by Jerry Lee Lewis, I think it would make me feel better.

                                                            Sir Shits-A-Lot

Elwood Kasem,

            I don’t know if you gonna get this or read it or like it or play it, but here goes: Me and my buddies, all combat veterans, got some shotguns and we’re going to break up a peace rally in Memphis today. These queer, college boy peaceniks have got it coming to them. Can you play Prince’s “When Doves Cry?” It gets me and the boys in the mood!

                                                Yers,

                                                            Gerald Fortesque

Dear Mr. Elwood Kasem,

            Well, it’s that time of the month again. I use Ultra Lights with wings mostly. Funny thing happened the other day. My religious group chose me this time for the fertility ceremony, so I had to spend all day tied to the roof of the barn naked. Boy it was a windy one. All I could do to get through the day was sing one song over and over. The ceremony has ended but I don’t think I can get the song out of my head until I actually hear it. Could you play “The Wind Beneath My Wings” by Bette Midler?

                                                Love,

                                                            Windy in Wyoming

Yo, Elwizzood Kielbasa,

            Me and my friends always play you in the mornin’, dog! We’re your biggest fans! We play you every time we move those bowels, beeoch! Anyway, last night me and my posse decide we gonna git it on with a eatin’ contest. Now my friend Pedro, we call him Petey Pickle cuz he got a tiny pecker, he says we should go low fat on this one to watch our weight. He gets us these Subway sandwiches and shit. So I’m all, “Let’s get our munch on, beeoch!” So we eatin’ and eatin’ and man, I dunno what my dealy-o was, but during the contest I couldn’t keep it down. My puke bucket was brimmin’ cuz, fo’ shizzle! My boys kept handin’ me Cold Cut Trios, Chicken Pizziolas and what not. Petey Pickle’s all “Eat more, beeoch!” I was pukin’ so much I couldn’t tell him, “Yo, I’m out like sauerkraut!”

            I know he’s listenin’ to you now, so you gotta play “We Don’t Need Another Hero” by Tina Turner off the Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome soundtrack.

            Thanx, Beeoch!

            Jizzared McSubwizzle

Dear Mr. Elwood,

            I work at a shitty company doing boring work. The mere sight of my boss makes me want to do unspeakable acts. I’m quitting someday soon, but I’ll need a good reference from him. Then I can do my unspeakable acts. Please play “Patience” by Guns N’ Roses all day, everyday, until I say it’s ok to stop. If you don’t, I know who you really are and where you live.

            I can’t wait to do unspeakable acts on someone.

            Regards,

            Sicotic Sammy

Dear Elwood Kaysim,

            I’ve heard other listeners write in to talk about strange cult behavior, so I thought I’d find a few sympathetic ears here.

            I was flying from the Fiji Islands to Utah this summer when a huge problem occurred. My religious sect, The Forever Ancient Order of Satanic Cow Herd Worshipers Against Right-Wing Zealots (FAOSCHWARZ), phoned me in Fiji where I was making acquaintances with young men. FAOSCHWARTZ needed a cow heart badly for the summer’s Feast of the Moo-Cow ceremony and demanded that I return with one. Their original heart was devoured by Sammy the Alpha Llama, the mascot of our neighboring sect in Utah, the Worshipers Alpha Llama Masquerading Arduously in Righteous Transcendentalism (WALMART).

            Long story short, my stopover at San Francisco International Airport was a problem: we didn’t pass inspection. The cult is not understanding of such things and my life is basically forfeit. But, since they’re Tony Bennett fans, perhaps if you played “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” they’d make mine a quick death.

            Yours truly,

            FAOSCHWARZ #106 (Billy W.)

Dear Elwood,

            Yeah, so, I’m this faceless DJ in a nu-metal band. I scratch a record during the intro and bridge of every song. During my down time, by which I mean the verses and choruses of every song, I’ve been taking a correspondence course in Clown College because I want to be a lead singer in my own nu-metal band some day. I figure I have the other prerequisites to be one — daddy abandoned me, mommy was a drinker, my stepdad fucked me. I just can’t seem to shake this sadness. If I could just stop crying and act the fool all the time, I could get to be the vocalist and get the real money and attention. Could you please play Smokey Robinson’s “Tears of a Clown?”

            Thanks man,

            Scratchy No-Face of the Twystud Brygayde

E,

            Can’t talk much (stop). Ate crazy cheese/hamburger/brawtwurst combo with no water (stop). Constipated beyond belief (stop). You must play “Push It!” by Salt-N-Pepa (stop it).

                                                                        Constipate Ed

Els,

            Hey, man! You’re the greatest, man! I’m speeding down the highway, doin’ 115 mph as I’m writing this! Ahhh! Goin’ to my doctor’s office to smash his shit up! What does he know about pills that cools MFs like us don’t, right man! I . . .

            Oh, boy, better slow it down. Slow it down. Gotta be calm here. I can’t keep doing this stuff. People see me as a freak. They don’t like me. I’m not normal. Things would be better if I just went away forever.

            Can you play Jimi Hendrix’s “Manic Depression”?

            Thanx,

            Bri Polar

Standard
Short Stories

Dulles

            The man in the stall next to mine hasn’t given a courtesy flush.  Neither have I.

            Nineteen eighty seven started out good.  Paul Newman won the Oscar for best actor for The Color of Money.  Prince put out Sign ‘O’ The Times.  That Iran-Contra thing was finally over and we could focus on the Democrats taking back the White House.  

            I feel stuck in 1987.  I feel stuck here.  I feel stuck.

            It started in 1960, the year I was born.  Really, it started a few years later, when I was too old for diapers and Mother made me go it alone.  

            Mother never let me stop till I was finished.  I couldn’t leave till I was done and if I did it badly, I had to do it over again.

            Like homework.  When I was in the third grade I had to redo my math problems.  She told me to finish my division problems even though they were already done.  I said I did the work just like the teacher taught me to.  Mother pointed to a problem and said, “Remainders are messy.”

            My father left when I was eleven, and I haven’t heard from him since.  In a fit of rage he hastily filled a few boxes with his possessions and split.  Father thought Mother nitpicked.  He said she was Miss Perfectionist.

            The guy next to me is talking about stocks over a portable phone.  They sound like good tips.  I’d make a few calls myself if I could get out of here.

            I met Molly when I was 25 and she was 22.  We fell in love.  Molly and I worked as computer programmers at IBM.  Molly had perfectly combed, chestnut brown hair and crystal blue eyes.  She and I made love on Wednesdays and Saturdays.

            And Mother didn’t know.

            I don’t know where Molly is now.  I hope she’s still out there, waiting for me.

            When Mother found out about Molly, she began acting strangely.  Calling me at  work, Mother would ask me to come to her house.  To shovel the driveway.  Clean the gutters.  Refinish the hardwood floors.  Polish the silver.  Wallpaper the walls, including closets.  Paint the ceilings.

            And if I didn’t do it right, I’d have to do it again.  I couldn’t leave until it was done right.

            Deja vu.  Repeat.

            Molly said that I was whipped by my Mother.  She said my Mother had instilled in me a “pathological tenacity” to serve her.

            I loved Molly and I still do and I think we could have gotten married.  Maybe we still can.  But I couldn’t stand the way she threw around these psychobabble nonsense terms like “pathological tenacity.”  Molly heard it all from a radio call-in show hosted by Shirley McCulloughssy.  All day and night it was “Shirly says . . .,” “That’s what Shirley’d say,” or “ . . . which is one of Shirley’s mantras.”

            I’m sure Shirley, or one of her ilk, is still making money by throwing around these sloppy musings on radio, on television and in print.

            But she had a point in that Mother was getting out of hand with her demands on my time.  When I was asked to do chores on Wednesdays and Saturdays as well, I knew a change had to be made.

            It made sense to stand my ground then.  Now, I don’t know.  1987 was a long time ago.

            That was the year I decided to propose to Molly.  I bought us tickets to fly to a little Manor in Amherst, Massachusetts.  I would take her on a horse-drawn carriage ride through the snow on New Year’s Eve.  And then I’d propose.  That was the right way to do it.

            I still have the ring in my pocket.  I take it out and stare at it all of the time.  I guess I should feel regret.  But I don’t.  I still feel that this is the right way to do it.

            During our ill-fated trip, Molly and I had a three-hour layover at Dulles International Airport in Virginia before our flight to New England.  To kill some time, I decided to do this new thing where you call your home phone from a pay phone and access the messages on your answering machine.  Very high tech for 1987.  (Not as high tech now, I’ve come to realize, as I’ve heard all sorts of beeps, bells and whistles emitted from the men sitting in stalls next to mine.  Full conversations.  Television shows.  Webinars.)

            A few messages were old.  Molly coyly saying, “It’s Wednesday night, and you know what that means …”  A few guys at IBM called with work issues.

            And then one from Mother.

            She said, “I called and called and there was no answer, so I called your neighbor, Mrs. Brown, and she told me you and that girl were taking a trip.  I can’t believe you.  You don’t tell your own mother where you’re going.  Don’t run away and abandon your mother like your father did.  That’s not the way to do things!  I don’t know what you and that girl are planning with your lives, but just know that I don’t think it’s right.  You should start over again with a new girl, the right girl!”

            I hung up the phone and proceeded to the nearest men’s room.  I entered a stall, closed and locked the door behind me, and prepared to defecate.  It seemed imminent.  I did what Mother taught me to do when I was two.  But I never seemed to get it right.  So I just … kept doing it.  That was December 30, 1987.

            A few years ago, someone dropped a copy of Rip Van Winkle on the floor of the adjacent stall.  God is funny.  No, I didn’t grow a 10-foot beard.  I kept a razor in my shoe – always on long flights.  Even if you lose everything you can still shave.  You can’t go into IBM looking scruffy.

            I suppose Molly left the airport a long time ago.  One day, when I do this right, I’ll marry her and have the right life.  

            I suppose my job at IBM has evaporated.  Not right, leaving without giving two weeks notice.  I’ve always felt bad about that.

            And about how Mother was abandoned again.

            I don’t consider this a waste.  No regrets.  This is just a long layover that will be over some day.

            When I do it right.

Standard
Nostalgias

1989

            As a young adolescent I wasn’t cool enough to know about anything cool.  The year 1989 was a breakout time for me – both in my interests and in terms of my acne.  Prior to that year it was all Weird Al and whatever I heard on pop radio.  Before 1989 all I wanted was to keep my toe in the water so that I didn’t fall completely behind in youth culture and wind up asking “What’s a Fresh Prince?” or not understanding that ‘bad’ was ‘good’ and ‘rad’ was radically better.

            What people don’t know these days is that the 80s didn’t end until 1992, so in 1989 we were definitely still into hair metal, hair spray, leather and denim jackets, hockey player and mullet haircuts, Paula Abdul and the mall.  The big event that year was Tim Burton’s Batman film, which had a soundtrack performed by Prince.  Every publication slammed this album, suggesting that he had lost his golden touch.  I was into everything Batman that year but Prince gave me a weird feeling.  I really liked “Batdance,” the lead single from the soundtrack.  I hated what that might mean.  As funny as I think this is today, I thought that liking Prince meant you were gay.  I was a fan of Guns and Roses, Poison, Van Halen and Mötley Crüe, all of whom flirted with or fully committed to androgyny, but Prince was a step over the line to me.  In my twenties, after Prince changed his name from a symbol back to being Prince again, I decided at long last that I could begin buying Prince albums.  In defiance of my 13 year old biases I remain a straight Prince fan to this day.  And I really like the Batman soundtrack.

            I entered junior high school in the fall of 1989.  My history teacher was the type of person who wanted the students to think he was still cool.  It got annoying.  A former athlete, he teased students like a jock does, pointing out things about their appearance they had little control over.  But he allowed one cool moment to happen:  he found out that a girl from Jamaica was an aspiring rapper, so he let her rap one day.  Somebody pounded a beat on a desk for her and she went for it, mixing in Jamaican patois with American slang.  Hip-hop was not used to sell laundry detergent like it is today, and you didn’t hear it in Disney movies or on Broadway.  This was possibly a first – a freestyle rap asked for and condoned by an authority figure in a public school.  I still remember how this normally quiet girl came to life as she rapped in front of the blackboard.

            I also remember that, for some reason, there was a collection of plastic WWF pro wrestling figures hanging from the ceiling over the students’ heads.  I had to take a standardized test under the watchful, cocked eye of one of the Bushwhackers*.

            The other unforgettable item in this classroom was an enviable hi-fi stereo and speakers, and most days while we completed worksheets we were allowed to listen to the rock station.  This is where I got to hear the B-52s’ “Love Shack” every day (like my Prince dilemma, it took me a few decades to admit that this is my all time favorite song).

            The other song that played every day that autumn was called “Love in an Elevator” by some new band called Aerosmith.  In the song, the singer seemed to be advocating the joys of making love inside the confines of an elevator.  I was fascinated.  After watching the music video, I confirmed that indeed this band was very fond of using this manner of conveyance in their love making.  It was then that I decided I needed to buy this cassette tape.

            This wasn’t just any other purchase.  This would mark the first time I would buy a tape with my own money, the first time outside of my comfort zone. 

            But I’d have to sneak it past my parents.  They were not very restrictive over content.  If they thought I’d enjoy a critically acclaimed movie I could watch it no matter what the rating.  No books were ever off limits.  On the other hand, they seemed to believe Tipper Gore and the PMRC** when she said that children needed protection from certain records.  One time, after reading a Newsweek exposé on the rowdy Beastie Boys and their degenerate fans, my father came to me inquiring if I too felt the need to fight for my right to party.  And he was serious.

            Now, as a parent, I understand the concern.  You don’t want your son to get any weird ideas.  And at 13 I was completely in the dark about sex.  I didn’t know what it meant when Steven Tyler sang “go-ing dooowwwnnn” suggestively on “Love in an Elevator,” but I knew enough from context clues that it was A) something I needed to know more about and B) something I needed to hide. 

            One Saturday morning I talked him into taking me to the record store.  I found the Aerosmith cassette tapes, but since I didn’t know they were around since the early seventies I had trouble locating the one I wanted.  I couldn’t ask the clerk – what if he and my dad were in cahoots?  I found the album Pump, saw that it had the track I heard in class, and bought it. 

            In the car, my dad told me to play the tape in the tape deck.  I was nobody’s fool.  This wasn’t a question.  I couldn’t say, “I can wait until I get home.”  This was an inspection and I wanted to pass.  I quickly scanned the names on side A to find a few tunes for the short ride home.  First side, first track:  “Young Lust.”  As a regular attendee of Catholic mass, I knew the definition of lust and assumed Mr. Tyler wasn’t going to be subtle on that track.  Further on that side I had to face “Love in an Elevator” and “Janie’s Got a Gun,” two tracks I had no way of defending on the spot.  The third single, “The Other Side,” started side B and it was an innocuous jam, catchy and empty headed.  My play was to fast forward the tape to side two and let the chips fall where they may.

            My father’s tape deck had a convenient technological advancement that allowed you to seek the gaps between songs.  Thus, hitting the fast forward button once would only get you to the next song, not all the way to the end of the side.  I had to pretend I didn’t understand how this fast forward button worked and press it five times while my father looked at me like I was one of the apes at the beginning of 2001: A Space Odyssey.

            Aerosmith became my new obsession.  I quickly realized that in my attempt to become cool I had become a fan of a very cool band.  I learned about their longevity, the drugs, the breakup and the comeback.  Every time I saved $7.99 I would buy a new cassette tape, starting with Toys in the Attic (because I had heard “Walk this Way” somewhere), then Permanent Vacation (because you couldn’t escape “Dude Looks Like a Lady”) and on and on until I had all of their output.  “Walk This Way” is one of the best rock and roll songs ever recorded, a perennial favorite for inclusion on my mixtapes.  I remember listening to their self-titled debut album on the bus one morning.  Imagine hearing “Dream On” for the first time and having to process that at 7 am.  It struck me at once as moving and profound yet depressing, as if life was already over.  In essence, if you think you’re going to be anything you had better dream on.

            Once I had obtained every studio and live recording released between 1973 and 1989 I had my opinion of what was the best.  The first four albums – Aerosmith, Get Your Wings, Toys in the Attic and Rocks – and Pump were the absolute best.  I could find no fault in them.  They swung harder than any band, the riffs were dirty and dynamic, and the sexual innuendo, from what I could understand, made me feel bad, as in good.

            But then came the nineties.  You know the story – Nirvana, Seattle, grunge, alternative.  Hair metal died a quick death.  Did that matter to my favorite rock and roll band?  Not really.  Pearl Jam was just as inspired by Aerosmith as Guns n Roses was, even though Eddie Vedder only wanted to talk about Neil Young and the Who.  Aerosmith still got love on MTV and from younger artists, like the Black Crowes. 

            My love for the band was tempered when they released a single called “Livin’ on the Edge” from their 1993 album Get a Grip.  I watched the video for this tune and immediately my heart sank.  “There’s something wrong with the world today/ I don’t know what it is …”

            Oh, no.  Steven Tyler, the man who told me about his young lust only a few years prior, was turning into an old man.  As a teenager, all you hear from older generations is that “kids don’t know anything,” “back in my day …,” “the country is going to hell,” etc.  The song was comfortably delivering curmudgeonnish tripe like this, and I hated it.  It didn’t help that the record’s three huge singles, “Amazing,” “Crying” and “Crazy,” were the same song rewritten three different ways with varying amounts of country music affectations.  At least “Eat the Rich” was cool, but in pre-iTunes times one did not simply walk into Sam Goody and obtain a record on the strength of one song.  That album was a hard pass for me.

            I did pay attention to the band, though.  Their MTV unplugged set was revelatory – proof that a band that played together for two decades had the chops.  A three disc box set, Pandora’s Box, revealed many treasures, including a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Rattlesnake Shake” that has to be heard to be believed.  A late career album, the awfully titled Honkin’ on Bobo, was exactly what I needed – proof positive that Aerosmith could still do it.

            Then again, you had to see Steven Tyler as a judge on American Idol.  Was that okay?  What about the band cutting back on touring and instead serving a residency in Las Vegas?  What are they, the rock and roll Rat Pack?  And how much longer did I want to see Tyler sassafrassin’ around on stage, singing about getting laid like he was still a teenager? 

            Meanwhile, I had gotten serious.  I had a corporate job (sadly, only a one story building, so no elevator).  I had begun listening to Radiohead.  I began denying that I was an Aerosmith fan.  Hiding it.  As I became more sophisticated they became synonymous with beer bellies, fireworks and monster trucks.  Aerosmith was dirtbag music.

            Then I figured out something that I had a hard time comprehending at first.  Steven Tyler and my father are the same age, born within months of each other in 1948***.  When the band released its first record, my dad was a newlywed.  The same year that Aerosmith had their first big tour, I was born.  And when Mr. Tyler was boogie-footin’ around in 1989 my dad was going to work.  As they aged in the new millennia, both were prone to embarrassing themselves, but Tyler was rewarded for it.  Nobody ever seemed to say, “Christ, you’re in your seventies now!  Stop singing songs about chasing women!”

            Then I reached my early forties, the same age as Tyler during the period of time between Pump and Get a Grip.  What am I like now?  I’m not a former athlete trying to look cool around seventh graders.  I’m also not some legendary musician that exudes coolness.  But you know what?  I’d like a little young lust back in my life.  I’d like to feel F-I-N-E fine once in a while.  And if somebody copped a feel in an elevator now and then, what’s the harm?

            Looks like I’m a dirtbag after all!

*The Bushwackers were a tag team from New Zealand that licked each other’s cheeks.  It seemed that the WWF were implying that they were inbred hillbillies.

**Out of touch Boomer organization that created Parental Advisory labels for albums with explicit language.

***Same year as Billy Crystal.

Standard