Monthly archives for June, 2005

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Half-assed entertainment review: The Washingtonienne (Updated! Thrice!)

Washingtonienne cover

In the spring of 2004, a Washington D.C. woman was briefly thrust into the spotlight because of the contents of her eponymous blog, The Washingtonienne. We later learned that the Washingtonienne is Jessica Cutler, a staff assistant in the office of Senator Mike DeWine (R-Ohio). Cutler's blog was the scandal of the moment because of her blunt descriptions of sexual exploits with Washington insiders. Her blog was only online for a few weeks before she was outed and fired, but D.C. was abuzz trying to figure out the identities of the men she identified only by initials. Cutler herself was never shy about her blog. She's never named names, but she continued to maintain that the events described in her blog are completely true. (Her blog disappeared during the scandal, but has been archived here.)

A year has passed and Cutler's 15 minutes are long over, but this month saw the release of her debut novel, simply titled The Washingtonienne. I can only assume that the long delay between scandal and novel is due to Ms. Cutler's complete and total lack of writing ability. When I'd first heard about a Washingtonienne novel in the works, I assumed there would be some kind of ghost writer involved. I believed there would have to be some anonymous wordsmith to make Cutler seem like a literary genius. I no longer believe this.

I loved Cutler's blog when it was a current event. How can you not love a blog that imparts such pearls of wisdom as "a man who tries to fuck you in the ass when you are sober does not love you?" I believed that I'd also enjoy her novel. I no longer believe this either.

The book isn't much of a novel. It's more like a memoir. In fact it's really not much more than an expanded version of the blog on which it's based. As far as blogs go, this book would make a very good one. As far as novels go, this book blows.

In her blog, Cutler came off as punkish and arrogant. A lot of us use our blogs to bitch about things, so in that context her arrogance seemed normal, even a little endearing. The expanded narrative in the book makes her seem like the most vacuous human to ever walk the Earth. Having read the blog, I already knew the basic framework of the story. The fact that I liked the story is why I bought the book. The story itself is interesting enough, but Cutler's character is absolutely repellent.

Here are a few quotes that define Jacqueline, Cutler's alter ego:

Jessica Cutler

"I knew something about posing for pictures: I watched America's Next Top Model every week and I owned Zoolander on DVD."

"It was a petty, immature thing to do, but I was a petty, immature person."

"If I wanted to be pragmatic I would have just worked as a call girl."

"Like I would want to snuggle up to an arrogant douchebag who made $30K a year!"

"I had reservations about letting someone from work butt-fuck me, but if he was game, so was I."

"Women! I don't know how men put up with us. Oh, that's right: sex. Otherwise, what good were we?"

" 'It's time to start making big money in the private sector.' With these magic words, Dan suddenly became potential boyfriend material."

"Well, duh, I'm shallow. Look [at the 'Sunday Style' section of the New York Times]. This is the first and only section I read, and I don't even read it, I just look at the pictures."

"Like, duh, of course I was immature: I was half his age! That's why he was fucking me instead of his wife, remember?"

I could go on. And on, and on. Nearly every page brought a quote irritating enough for me to want to cite it. My copy is already dogeared from the dozens of notes I made on every little deplorable detail.

The first three-quarters of the book is almost completely devoted to liquor and sex. Normally these are two of my favorite topics, but they're presented without anything substantial in between. Because there's absolutely no focus on any character other than Jacqueline, I had a difficult time keeping everyone else straight. I could tell you all about a scene, but I couldn't tell you who was in that scene. All the characters were reduced to sets of lewd actions, each indistinguishable from the one before it.

Despite the fact that nearly every word of the 300 pages is devoted to Jacqueline, that character is also surprisingly one-dimensional. She's been distilled so thoroughly, there's nothing left but an appetite for attention that happens to have a name attached. Reading the first three-quarters of the book was unusually laborious given the subject matter. I slogged through it with my eye on the eventual payoff. I imagined a metamorphosis, a life-changing realization, some kind of moral, anything. None of these imaginings ever materialized.

There was one brief moment when Jacqueline and her new therapist seemed on the cusp of doing something that might be satisfying to read. But then the therapist diagnosed depression and proscribed Zoloft. New drugs, same problems. That final 75 pages was especially disappointing when compared to my expectations.

There's nothing to learn in this "novel." There is no greater truth, no wisdom, no insight. The book is basically one very long drunken weekend. In part of the conclusion Jacqueline says, "I was prepared to leave Washington the same way I came: alone, heartbroken, but determined to get the most out of life while I still had time." I would say she's gone full circle, but that's not really true. There's no sense of personal progress at all. In one of the more memorable put-downs a former lover tells her, "You're the same screwed-up train wreck you've always been. Good luck with all that. Just leave me out of it."

Amen, brother.

 

Update: Wonkette has a new tidbit about The Washingtonienne. As you might imagine, Cutler's getting sued. She was served papers at her book signing. Nice. That must be a publisher's wet dream.

Wonkette also has a link to download a PDF version of the lawsuit. There's some interesting information in there. For example, this book's publisher, Hyperion, is a division of Disney. Sweet! That kind of makes this book Disney porn, doesn't it?

Update 2: Hipster sex writer women dig me for my mad Washingtonienne-bashing skillz. I know this because Lusty Lady at The Village Voice e-mailed me a link to her new column about Jessica Cutler.

True, she probably just Technoratied me and sent a cut-and-paste e-mail, but still, it's The Village Voice. Cool.

Update 3: Lusty Lady's stopped by a few more times. (Yes, hi! I see you. Say hello or something, won't you?) She keeps coming back to this post, so I'm beginning to feel bad that there's nothing new to read. So here's a new link for you all: Lusty Lady interviews Jessica Cutler for Gothamist.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Everybody else is doing it

So. About that Michael Jackson thing. I was thinking about the verdict today and I wondered about celebrity justice in general. As I'm sure you've noticed, celebrities accused of crimes tend to be found not guilty more often than poor nobodies.

Everybody knows why it works out that way. It's the money. Celebrities can afford to spend lots of money on lawyers. The fancy high-priced legal team then weasels their client out of trouble. Regardless of guilt or innocence, I think we can all agree that if Jackson had a public defender, he'd be on his way to prison today.

So this brings to mind one question. Do rich celebrities pervert justice, or is it that they're the only ones who can afford justice?

Saturday, June 11, 2005

The strangest pet I'll ever have

[Note: I originally posted this as an extremely long comment somewhere else.]

I had a pet squirrel once. Several squirrels, actually. The tree in front of my girlfriend's place housed a family of squirrels, at least five of them. One day we noticed an adult squirrel squished in the street. We thought nothing of it until three days later we heard a horrible squealing noise from the front yard.

Apparently the flattened squirrel was a mother. Her babies were starving and left the tree to look for food. There were four babies. Two of them went down the tree and ended up at the edge of the street where they were too small and weak to climb back up the curb. One of them went up the tree and was stranded on a high branch. The fourth didn't have her eyes open yet, so she just clung to the middle of the tree and wailed.

We collected the four of them and called a vet to find out what to feed them. A quick trip to the store and they were up to their eyeballs in kitten formula and baby cereal. We nursed all of them for a few weeks, then gave three of them to a friend in the country who had done this kind of thing before.

We kept the one who had closed eyes when we found her. A few days after we found them, her eyes started opening. The right eye opened first, followed by the left eye a few days later. Naturally we named her Popeye.

We kept Popeye for a few months. She'd sleep in a cardboard box in the corner of the dining room. She'd eat from a saucer on the kitchen table. We even had that squirrel housebroken.

We knew we'd have to let Popeye loose eventually, so anytime we were outside, we'd bring her with us. It must have been a few dozen times I answered the question "hey… is that a squirrel on your head?" I always felt so naughty when I'd respond "would you like to pet my squirrel?"

It was pretty cool having a pet squirrel. Strangely, the best part was also the worst part: the grooming. The squirrel really bonded with us. She identified us as family. So during quiet moments she'd climb onto out shoulders and pick at our hair. I assume she was trying to "clean our fur" or something like that. It was sweet, that unlikely bonding gesture. But it was also surprisingly painful. She'd grab a small bunch of hairs, four of five maybe, and yank in quick, sharp movements.

After "grooming" one of us, she'd then move to one of our laps. We finally realized that she was waiting for us to groom her. That's when we knew the party was over. Popeye needed to be with other squirrels.

We took a day or two to get a grip on the idea, then we put her on the back porch and closed the door behind us. Dumbasses that we were, we didn't check the weather report. It rained like hell that morning.

It made for a tough day, listening to our former pet scratching at the door like a cat and making chittering noises that sounded suspiciously like a squirrel version of "what are you doing? I don't understand."

My girl's grandmother was very disapproving through the whole thing, but turned out to be the biggest softie out of all of us.

Every morning Grandma would walk to the bakery and buy one plain cake donut. She'd put this donut on a saucer and set it on the back porch. Then she's watch through the window as Popeye picked at it throughout the day.

A few times we'd play dumb and ask what she was doing. She'd always make something up about checking the weather. That made us grin, and we never pressed the issue.

For a few more months, Popeye would still hang out with us whenever we'd go outside. Then we started seeing her with other squirrels. Eventually, she stopped coming near us completely. One day she stopped picking at the donuts.

That girl and I eventually broke up. But I never stopped scanning the trees in her neighborhood, looking for a squirrel I recognized.

Thursday, June 9, 2005

My new favorite artist

It's a slow day at work and I'm goofing around on the web. My news ticker drags by a CNN headline that catches my eye. Something about Michael Jackson and the Beatles catalog. I'm curious, so I check it out. The article is pretty much what I expected. Jackson owns a 50% share of the Beatles back catalog. He may end up selling it to pay his bills. Blah, blah, blah.

But what really stands out is the picture in the lower right:


Image credit: cnn.com

And here's what I got when I followed that link:


Image credit: cnn.com

So, yeah. I guess I haven't been paying attention. I missed the Scary Kabuki Phase of the trial.

Tuesday, June 7, 2005

The Legend of Fat Indian Bitch, part 2

When I moved in with Lazy Roomie, I was doing third shift work, 10 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. at a department store. I'd worked the night before moving day, and the night of moving day too. My plan was to move just the furniture and some clothes, then sleep for work.

Surprisingly, things worked out pretty well. LR was of course still sleeping when I went to get him, but we still got started earlier than I expected. That first day was pretty straightforward. Move the furniture, set up the bed, go to sleep.

That first evening, I woke around 8 p.m., took my shower, had some Ramen noodles, and then off to work again. I had a great system worked out for finishing the move. Every evening I would put empty boxes in the car when I went to work. Every morning I'd stop by the old place and fill those boxes with more stuff. After about a week or so of running around, I was pretty well settled. And that was when the fun began.

Those first few days I was so focused on moving stuff from point A to point B, I wasn't very involved with anything else going on in the house. Once I was a bit settled, I was spending a lot more time "just being home." TV, reading, video games, football with LR, whatever.

It was then that I noticed that Fat Indian Bitch was kind of… odd. On the first weekend I was home, she asked me what I wanted for dinner. I told her I was planning on macaroni and cheese or some other bachelor food. She said something like, "No, let me cook for you!"

I didn't quite know what to make of that. So I let her make dinner. She drafted Lazy-Eyed Nottie (who was mostly silent through this, as with just about everything else) and marched into the kitchen. With a shitheaded smirk on his face, LR says to me, "You know she's still into you, right?"

I was speechless. I never picked up on it. See, this would have been useful information to have before I moved in. Apparently, FIB had been crushing on me since she was ten years old. And now we were living together. Fuck.

This stunning revelation was almost immediately followed by the most entertaining moment I ever had with FIB, although it was sort of at her expense. LR and I were in the living room watching a rerun of The Sonny and Cher Show (Nick At Night's TV Land was our only channel) when he turns to me and says, "Is that onion?"

My eyes were feeling a little tingly too. I said, "Yeah, probably. Are you girls frying onions?" Apparently they were making some kind of fried onion and hamburger hotdish. They couldn't make out what I said over the frying sounds, so they both came to the doorway. They both had tears just streaming down their faces. They'd apparently been crying some heavy duty onion tears for the last several minutes. Red puffy eyes, wet cheeks, sniffly noses. I just said, "Uhh… never mind." They had the worst case of onion eyes in the history of humankind.

We waited until they went back in the kitchen before we laughed our asses off.

Monday, June 6, 2005

You've gotta see this

You must go check out this blog post immediately. It has the greatest photograph I have ever seen.

Or at least the greatest photograph I've seen today.

[Ed note: In case this guy ever deletes his blog, you can also view the image here.]

Friday, June 3, 2005

Table For Two, part 3.5b (a.k.a. The Part That Has Nothing To Do With Anything)

Joseph thought a moment then asked, "Why am I here?"

Karol grinned broadly. "Now we are getting somewhere."

An uncomfortable silence, seeming to last about six weeks, fell between them. Joseph realized it was his turn to speak. "So… why am I here?"

Karol gave him a strange look. "How should I know?"

"But… I thought you would know."

"What gave you that impression?"

"Well, you did, Karol. Through all of this you've implied that you know everything. You've made it seem like you're just toying with me, making me suffer for the answers."

Karol grinned. Cake crumbs fell from the corner of his mouth. "Yeah, I did do that, didn't I? I was just fucking with you. Sorry about that."

Joseph was stunned. He sat slackjawed for several minutes. How could his mentor do this to him?

The silence again became uncomfortable. Not knowing what else to do, he reached for a handful of candies.

"Mmm. You'll like those, Joseph. They're the best krowki I've ever had."

Joseph said nothing.

Most unexpectedly, a pig then began to hover at the edge of the table. Its ponderous bulk was impossibly supported by tiny wings beating slowly in the stillness.

The pig looked at Joseph and spoke with a nearly-human voice. "This story sucks. Don't you know that all the best allegories have talking animals? You don't even have any rabbits."

Joseph said nothing. The pig made a movement that looked suspiciously like a shrug, then took a poppy seed cake in its mouth and fluttered away.

"Karol, what was that?"

"Why do you keep looking to me for the answers? Ask that putz behind the keyboard."

"What keyboard? What are you talking about?"

Karol sighed heavily. "You just don't get any of this, do you? We are part of an unfinished story."

"I don't understand."

"You don't understand shit, do you, Joseph? There's this guy, right? And he's writing this story, right? The story is about you and me. You with me so far?"

Joseph nodded apprehensively.

"The story is unfinished. There's no conclusion yet. You and I must sit here and wait."

"Ok, I follow you so far," Joseph said, thought he wasn't sure he followed at all.

"We have the kind of freedom right now that we have never known. We're between chapters. We're not bound by morality, ethics, physics, history, or even time. For us, reality itself ceases to exist when we're between chapters."

"I see. I think." Joseph thought a moment then asked, "Why am I here?"

"Dammit! Haven't you been listening to anything I've said? The guy behind the keyboard doesn't have an answer to that question yet. We're between chapters! We're not bound to the narrow confines of one guy's story. We can do anything!"

"Anything? Really?"

"Yes, Joseph, anything."

Joseph's brow furrowed. He was obviously thinking very hard.

"Karol?"

"Yes, Joseph?"

"Can we get some hookers?"

Karol grinned broadly. "Now we are getting somewhere."

Episode I - The Refer Menace

Through the blogging world an unholy alliance has formed.
The authors of three blogs,
Ann Coulter Tossed My Salad, Nothing in Particular, and Think Bacon,
have joined forces in a venture of self-amusement
with the goal of exposing the strangeness of the internet.
Due to low traffic on their blogs,
these three are able to spend time actually looking at incoming stats.
What they have seen from the search engines confounds and amuses them.
So they set to documenting this madness for all to see.
The beast that has been born is…

Refer Madness

Thursday, June 2, 2005

The Legend of Fat Indian Bitch, part 1

I was in the 10th grade when I first became friends with the boy who would become Lazy Roomie. Lazy Roomie's locker was right near mine, so even though we never once shared a class, we'd still see each other several times a day. Over the space of a few weeks we learned that we shared several common interests: sneaking cigarettes, obtaining and drinking beer, Guns N' Roses, and of course girls.

That was pretty much all it took for us to be friends. Over the last few months of 1988 we became Best Friends. Nearly every day I spent time at his house. [Always his house, never mine. His mother was far more permissive than mine.]

Lazy Roomie's parents had divorced years before I met him. His father had remarried, to a Native American woman, and they'd had a child: Fat Indian Bitch. Fat Indian Bitch (FIB) was about 5 years younger than Lazy Roomie (LR) and me. Several times a month FIB would be at Lazy Roomie's house to visit her brother.

Being lower class, but boring and well-behaved youths, LR and I rarely had anything exciting to do. My time at his house was sometimes spent parked on his couch watching TV, but mostly spent sharing Dr. Peppers while tossing a football around in the street. Whenever FIB was around, she'd usually just hang off to the side watching us. LR and I would often try to include her, but she rarely joined us. She'd just sit there and watch.

This continued for a few years, until LR's mother died and LR moved to a plains state to live with his older sister for a while. LR and I drifted apart, and I stopped seeing FIB completely.

After a few years away, LR moved back to town and we quickly resumed our regular pattern. Same couch, same TV, same football, but we traded the Dr. Peppers for cans of Bud Light. So one day we're watching TV and he says to me, "You looking for a roommate?"

"Yeah, actually I am."

"You wanna move in here? My roomie's leaving next month."

So we worked out a deal where I'd move in with him in a few weeks. The morning before moving day, I stopped by to make sure he'd still be available to move my furniture with his truck.

It was about 8 a.m. when I knocked on his door. Well, pounded might be more appropriate. He was drunk and sleeping it off. Several minutes and a few sore knuckles later, the door opened.

It was not Lazy Roomie. It was a woman.

My first thought was, "Woohoo! LR's getting some! Not much to look at, but still a landmark." This was not the case. The lazy-eyed, hung-over woman who answered the door left me on the porch and went to rouse LR. We sat on his wobbly chairs in the dining room while he told the story.

Lazy-Eyed Nottie was kicked out of her father's house the night before. She had no family, no car, no job, no money, and nowhere to go. She called up her best friend, looking for advice.

"This isn't a big deal. We've been talking about getting our own place anyway. Let's just do it now."

"But where are we going to go? We don't have any money."

"Hmm. I know! Let's move in with my brother!"

And so the die was cast. LR wrapped up his explanation with "you're cool with this, right?"

I glanced over at the couch to see the two quasi-homeless girls pretending not to listen.

"Well, yeah, I guess. But I'm saying right now, I'm paying for a bedroom, not a place on the couch."

The four of us agreed, and LR and I made plans for moving my furniture. I left feeling pleased about moving, but apprehensive about my two unexpected roommates: Lazy-Eyed Nottie… and Fat Indian Bitch.

Award winning post

Officer of the Order

Best Series, August 2005

Wednesday, June 1, 2005

Dammit, why didn't I think of that?

So last night I was hanging out with the governor. Really. Governor Doyle realizes that I am an Important and Influential Person. Therefore, he must suck up to me as he enters this reelection cycle. And suck up he did, the little toady.

Ok, I'm exaggerating. Slightly. I'm on the far edge of being a player in local politics, so I get invited to everything. Last night was a reception for the governor. This particular event had beer, so I made an appearance.

It was pretty typical, as far as these things go. I got my warm handshake and my two minutes of face time. It's a damn shame I wasted both of those minutes talking about mercury levels and education funding.

What I should have done was open this up to all of you. Had I thought about it ahead of time, I could have held some kind of contest. I would have loved to see what kind of things you'd suggest I say to the governor. I imagine suggestions like "Governor Doyle, is it true you have webbed feet?"

Dammit. That would have been a blast. Somebody remind me of that every couple of weeks, so I don't forget next time.