Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Cock on the Loose

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My new obsession is sitting around thinking about everyone I'd like to fuck with Brooke Hogan's dick. It would be like a public service.

How could it not be the most gorgeously perfect thing on Earth?!

Golden to the point of being almost cast from actual gold, with a perma-shimmer that's not quite bronzer, not quite glitter.

HUGE. Tall, thick (those two should go without saying, but I said it), maniacally straight, veinless. Majestic. Eugenic.
Fat plum (only in resemblance, NOT color!) of a head that makes the perfect cartoon popping sound when pulled out of anything (and everything). Could be mistaken for a dildo if it were not sooo, soooooo real.

Just the base is encircled by the softest tufts of white-blond down, for petting and nuzzling. And envying.

Shoots fountains of only the pearliest uber-jizz of the most desirable consistency. Not too sticky, not stringy, with countless untold health benefits (but much speculated to include anti-cellulite properties, and definitely what the Hulk was rubbing under her bikini bottom in those scorching porno pics). Pina Colada or Cocoa Butter.

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I want to rub Brooke's impossibly rigid cock all over my big titties. And wrestle it with both hands and sing karaoke into it. Get all intense, point at it, call it 'Brother' and tell it it's going down (right before I do).

I want to reward and punish my friends and enemies with Brooke's golden hulking Miami dick of the Gods.

COCKAMANIA.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

TV is King

I wish I was the man with the mechanical heart
I'd conquer all my enemies alone
I'd tear the guys apart
then scatter the pieces

I wish I was the man in the soundproof booth
I wish I had a chance to stump the band
or maybe tell truth
and maybe I could win a color television

I really love my--television
I love to sit by--television
Can't live without my--television

TV is king
You're my everything

I wish I had the girl with the bouncy hair
We'd ride off in a brand new car
or fly a plane somewhere
like probably Jamaica

I brush my teeth, shampoo my
hair, and shave my face
Apply the necessary aerosol
in the appropriate place
And we'll spend the night
together watching television

I can't turn off my--television
Don't really know why--television
I understand my--television

You got your works in a drawer
and your color's on track
You have to break away but you always come back
You make a hundred changes but
you're always the same
You make me so excited and you make me so lame
You're just a tube full of gas
and a box full of tin
But you show me your charms and I want to jump in
Oh if only your chassis was covered with skin
'Cause TV you're my everything

I really love my--television
I love to sit by--television
Can't live without my--television
I can't turn off my--television
Don't really know why--television
I understand my--television
I really love my--television

TV is king
You're my everything
TV is king


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I do a lot of work from home.

I always have a TV on. My first few months in Chicago, I bounced between two channels that would give me about 5 hours of Jerry Springer, Steve Wilkos, Maury, Montel and Tyra. They served me well, but I had to move on.

TiVO & On Demand were (and ARE) delightful, but required too much attention for work watching.

I discovered and fully surrendered to classic TV: Chicago's meTV (WWME) & meTOO (WMEU) channels provide 'round the clock reminders of why I know more about Shotz Brewery than state capitals.

I geeked out to Johnny Sokko just this morning.
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25 Reasons to love meTV:

21 Jump Street, All in the Family, Bewitched, The Brady Bunch, Cheers, The Dick Van Dyke Show, Get Smart, Good Times, Hawaii 5-0, Hogan's Heros, The Honeymooners, I Dream of Jeannie, The Jeffersons, Kojak, Laverne & Shirley, Leave it to Beaver, Mary Tyler Moore, Night Gallery, One Day at a Time, Quantum Leap, Quincy, Rockford Files, Sanford & Son, Svengoolie, The Twilight Zone.


A crazy ridiculous number of reasons to love meTOO:

The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Batman, The Brady Bunch (I'll take some overlap), Buck Rogers, Burns & Allen, Carson's Comedy Classics, Eight is Enough, The Facts of Life, Family Affair, Family Ties, Gidget, Gilligan's Island, Gimme a Break, Gomer Pyle, Greatest American Hero, Green Acres, Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew, I Love Lucy, The Incredible Hulk, Jack Benny, Johnny Sokko, Knight Rider, Laverne & Shirley, Little House on the Prairie, The Little Rascals, Lost in Space, Love American Style, The Lucy Show, The Monkees, Mork & Mindy, Mr. Ed, The Munsters, News Radio, Night Gallery, The Outer Limits, The Patty Duke Show, The Partridge Family, Saved by the Bell, Silver Spoons, Square Pegs, The Twilight Zone, The Twilight Zone Hour, Webster.

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Plus, they play vintage commercials and a modern (ish?) spot featuring Sean Astin for BoysTown USA.
Talk about Classic TV royalty!

Which brings up a good point: where the fuck is the Addams' Family?

Friday, August 29, 2008

Head Games

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I wanted to do something.

For horrible reasons designed to blow shit up.
I backed out and did nice things instead.

BARF.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Mamas, We're All Crazy Now

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I've always felt like I didn't make a very good female.

I didn't feel like a boy. Maybe boy-ISH. Or alien-ish. Or just wrong and uncomfortable.


This isn't where I announce my sexual reassignment surgery.

I got great boobs early (and often) and always liked dresses. It isn't like that.

When I did (and do) "feel like a girl" it was akin to "throwing like a girl" or "running like a girl" or everything else universally recognized as infinitely inferior to how the males - of any species- do it.

Mainly, I wasn't (and am not) very feminine. Nothing delicate or graceful or shiny. Certainly not my goddamn fucking son-of-a-bitch toilet mouth. Or my rotten, rotten brain.

All of this made me reflect recently on the three main women who influenced my childhood and whole life, really. The Big Mamas, all of whom were much more successful at being female than I, but each came with her own laundry list.

The Grandmother

My paternal grandmother is as good a place to start as any.

Quite the matriarch.
Four alcoholic sons, and a doting, saintly hen-pecked care-taker of a husband. Eternal petite, blue-eyed cheerleader.

She started life the only daughter of a Dutch farming couple in Indiana and spent her childhood days locked in the closet by her brother while her parents worked in the field.

The original doll-popping housewife. Hypochondriac, anorexic, tanorexic, vain. Funny and charming as the day is long. In Alaska. When they have nothing but daytime.

Will always love you more if you lose 10 pounds. Won't let you forget this.

Will tell you all night about the pot brownies she accidentally ate at a wild party hosted by her beloved 'Talian/Jewish friends in Connecticut. In her 50's.
And how her mother taught her tolerance by dancing with the town gay every week at a local social.

Claimed Chasing Amy was her favorite movie for several years.

Prone to fainting couch over-drama. And fads. Like, at age 80 she decided she was allergic to wheat gluten. And may or may not currently be addicted to pain medication. But definitely wants you to think so.

MOTHER OF A ROCK STAR, with the vanity plates to prove it.


The "Second Mother" AKA Aunt Penny

Penny could have been Marilyn Monroe herself to me (or at least an even poorer man's Debbie Harry).

After a glamorous young life singing with a band that played the hotel circuit and cocktailing at a Playboy Club, Penny returned to her hometown, our hometown, and became fast friends, best friends, with my mother. They worked together at a disco attached to a restaurant. Penny was the boss.

She could out-drug, out-drink and outwit anyone lucky enough to get pulled into her sphere.
Other people's husbands and boyfriends fell over themselves to get anything they could.

Beautiful with huge tits and a gorgeous smile. Worldly, intelligent, someone who knew how use all of her femaleness while going toe-to-toe with the Big Boys.

Penny lived and died in a tiny trailer that in my mind was nothing less than the finest dressing room of a Hollywood starlet. She would lounge in a silk kimono and apply her make-up, ready to step out onto the set of her next blockbuster.

But Penny turned 30.

She experienced and ultimately ended an unplanned pregnancy. The father undoubtedly had previous commitments. Penny slipped into a depression that she never escaped. She was convinced that was her last chance to be a mother and wondered what she was doing all these years.

It happens.

She checked herself out of Chez AirStream the manly way, but with a chic silver small caliber pistol. One tiny piece of lead in her pretty little temple, barely a trickle of blood. And a spectacular corpse.

There was even a miniature conspiracy theory surrounding her death involving "knowing too much" about one of the major players in town. It added to her glamour girl legend, but even I knew better. And I was 8 years old. Penny was tired and Penny was sad and Penny wasn't who she wanted to be anymore.

I remember seeing an old photo from her touring days in her early 20's. She was sitting on a rock in some sparkling body of water, soaking wet in a bikini bottom and simple hippie-ish cotton tunic. Her hair was blown into her face and shorter than I had ever seen it. Eyes closed, face pointed toward the sun. Everything all white and gold. She looked like the most amazing creature on Earth. And if you told me it was the happiest day of her life, I would believe you.

Penny bought me records and talked to me like I was the smartest and most clever girl she'd ever met. Gave me my first copy of The Little Prince and explained what it meant to her. She hugged me, she loved me and she left.

The REAL Mutha

My mother is nothing if not a survivor.

She's joked for years that the opening line of her autobiography will read, "I was born a poor white child in East St. Louis.." And she was.

The youngest of 8 children in a SUPER poor, violent, alcoholic Catholic family, she suffered the most unspeakable of horrors at the hands of her brothers. And their friends. As a 5 year old.

Her mother refused to acknowledge this, help or protect her. It's the cliche of the time: if you don't talk about it, it doesn't exist.

Her parents eventually divorced and my mother was kicked out of the house while still in high school. Her mother was done raising children.

She had a 23 year old boyfriend when she was 15.

Drove cross-country for a pre- Roe V. Wade abortion.

Pretty sure she met my father when they both walked straight out of Billy Jack's Freedom School. Crushingly adorable hippies, these two.

She got knocked up, they got married. Miscarriage.
I was born 2 years later when my mother was still only 21.

She, as they say, did "the best she could." Which meant working hard, ignoring problems at home, enabling, playing a victim, putting a child in the position of parent or friend, not being encouraging or affectionate.

The men in her life were always her priority. As a bartender, she was surrounded by her favorite kind.

She is on her third epically drunk husband. Bless her heart.

She's also struggling with her identity and legacy in the face of a terminal illness.

She's a brilliant artist and legitimate "idea person."

In my peri-puberty nightmare days, I couldn't understand how I came out of this tall, thin-legged, narrow-shouldered Annie Hall wannabe with perfect skin and small perky tits that still look amazing today (and I've looked).

She did the best she could. She still does. Someday, I will reconcile that as being enough.








What A Girl Wants

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It seems simple enough.
And I have at least one best friend who agrees with me.

All I want is someone to love me.
And like me.
And be my family.

And fuck my mouth & every other filthy sewage-seeping hole I possess that needs a solid plunging.

Probably biting. And manhandling!