Thursday, December 3, 2015

Christmas of the Grotesque



It is the Christmas season--time to thrill the kiddies.  But what about the rest of us.  No worries.  Bill Murray to the rescue.  Maybe.  His Christmas special comes out this week (either tonight or Friday night--I've read conflicting reports) on Netflix.  I was looking forward to that as it is staged in the Carlyle Hotel in NYC, a symbol of something lost and not to be recovered.  But the reviewer for the New York Times has given the show a pretty good lambasting (link).  I hope he is wrong.

Of course he can't be wrong in the Present Era (P.E.).  Even the new Pirelli Calendar is taking heat.  Many are calling it a cultural shift (link) but some are already criticizing it (link).  I have no problem with that, though.  I can hold both ideas at once and not go mad.  I think Sherwood Anderson nailed it a long time ago in the opening chapter of "Winesburg, Ohio."  "The Book of the Grotesque" (link).  There are so many truths, and we pick one or a few of them to hold onto as our truth or truths and are made grotesque by it.  But there is nothing to do about it accept recognize it.  Cultural Truths are the same.

I got into another argument at the Y yesterday with a fellow who seemed "a type" to me, the wealthy contractor who believes "success" has proven he is "right."  One of the weirdest things about the Y is that they have televisions in the dressing room.  I have never understood this.  Do people go to the dressing room to watch their favorite shows?  They are mounted high on the wall, so maybe they are there to keep you from looking at the other fellows' peckers, I don't know.  Could be.  But the conservative motherfuckers at the Y always have the thing tuned to FOX.  So yesterday, they were reporting the terrible shooting incident in San Bernardino and the contractor type begins to opine to the room about how Obama is taking care of this problem at the Climate Summit.  Sometimes I just can't keep my mouth shut.  Ha!  So I asked him what he meant.  He got kind of lost in some conflation of Obama saying that they were going to stop terrorism by reversing climate change.  Don't ask me what he meant.  It was idiotic stuff.  So I said, "huh, he said that?"  The fellow didn't want to talk to me anymore, so I said, "You know the CIA has declared that global warming is the number one terror threat they face."  Oh, boy, that got him started again.  He said that was a lie, and I asked him if he had a phone.  We could Google it!  He said he didn't have a phone, and I was finished dressing, so I told him to look it up when he got home.  He was steaming by then.

I will be kicked out of the Y for good soon enough.  First I piss off the black guy and now the cracker.  I'm quickly running out of friends.  They already look at me like I have shit on my shoes when I walk in. Sometimes I just have to check.

The critic says: “A Very Murray Christmas” corners the market on gloomy. . . . It tries hard — too hard, really — to turn melancholy into a thing, and it winds up being a holiday special for the disillusioned and dejected, full of inside jokes but in the end kind of empty.

I hope that the critic is just not that well attuned to melancholy and emptiness, that he is a shallow grotesque who holds on too dearly to his the truths he has gobbled up--but I have a bad feeling that maybe he is right.  I will watch it and see if I am disappointed.  If so, it won't be the first time this year.  I'll tell you all about it later.  Now it is time for the factory.

4 comments:


  1. I like the old calendars. I like the new one. I find no reason to debate or argue with either. Just enjoy.

    To the best of my knowledge, women have not been physically forced to remove their clothing and have Terry Richardson or whomever take their photo in provocative poses for the calendars. And I don't think anyone could force Patti Smith into doing anything she doesn't want to do? Seems like personal freedom being exercised all around.

    All types of women should be celebrated because there are all types of women.

    And if there was a Pirelli Calendar that photographed men I'd say the same thing - all types. Hey! Maybe next year Pirelli will include men.

    Around here seems people are looking to twinkling lights and holiday greens to assuage the overall sadness that seems to be hanging in the air all over the world. I've never seen a faster start to holiday decorating than this year.

    I got my newsletter from Shakespeare & Co. today. Included was this:

    "It has also been heartening to see A Moveable Feast, Hemingway's memoir celebrating the city, become a best-seller in France this past week. How appropriate that, in a country of literature-lovers, an act of French defiance has been to buy and read Paris est une fête."

    Gotta love that Parisian spirit...

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  2. We must deal harshly with the language of patriarchy that defiles the brains of women--or something like that. We are now supposed to conflate the physical with the intellectual and spiritual, I think. To separate them out and deal with them individually is wrong. But it only works in one direction. You are not allowed to refer to physically beautiful women as intelligent in the same way you can say that intelligent women are beautiful. I'm sticking with the spiritual.

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  3. I find Patti Smith physically beautiful. It is probably because I find her intellect & spirit beautiful.

    I have found, over many years of living and many many lovers, people become more physically beautiful or at least through my lens of perception because of the beauty of their spirit and intellect.

    Paramhansa Yoganada taught that first you must love the spirit then the mind and only then will the physical reach into the realms of divine love.

    Hard to grasp in a world driven mostly by the look of the house that houses the spirit.



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  4. I find that people become more mentally attractive because of the beauty of their spirit and their bodies. Maybe I am kidding, but you know what I'm saying.

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