For some time now, I've been meaning to go through some of
my old files. Back when I first moved
out, I bought this little file box at K-Mart, in which I could keep my Very
Important Documents. As it turned out
my definition of Very Important Documents ran from my Social Security card and
Selective Service registration, to bits of past writing, to newspaper and
cartoon clippings. It’s really kind of
a time capsule for me, documenting the years from 1974 to 1997.
With the age of digital storage, the old file box is kind of
a nostalgic anachronism. I haven’t
added anything to it since I moved to Baltimore. (You know, where I got a computer and began storing documents
electronically.)
Yesterday, I finally found the time will to go through
it all and see if I might find some blog material. I had a couple of particular bits of writing in mind I thought I
might recreate for your amusement; I’d just have to find them.
But I learned something as I went through all those old
nuggets. I learned that I wasn't nearly
as good of a writer as I thought I was.
Maybe it was the apparent pretension I see now, maybe it was the
cringe-worthy inappropriateness of looking at old comic bits through the lens
of the current sociological ethos, but it just didn't hold up.
Of course, what else should I expect from a time capsule?
I was particularly disappointed in a story I wrote in the
late 80s, about playing sandlot football.
I was so proud of it at the time, and it’s a story I still want to
tell. I was hoping I could just drop it
in here as a post, but it clearly needs a lot of work. I’ll get to it, eventually.
I've previously written about getting into a blackboard verse/limerick war with my high school girlfriend’s
older brother, in English Lit class.
(It was an important moment in developing my rep for wise-ass wit.) In the post, I mentioned that I had some of
my limericks, but I didn't know where they were. Well, I found them in the file box, along with the ones I wrote
with another dude during a boring college lecture class. (We would alternate lines and write about
people we didn't like.)
What I learned there was that my blackboard stuff was mildly
amusing at best (although still worlds better than the other guy’s), and that
the stuff with my friend was ragingly inappropriate for this day and age. (And its own day an age; I just didn't know
it yet.) Sure, I’d laugh at some of the
turns of phrase, but at the same time I was thinking, “OK, that’s
never going to see the light of day…"
I found a bunch of old annual evaluations dating back to my
record store days. All that did was
highlight how much I wanted to get out of that rat race, not knowing that I was
just heading into a different one. Not
that they didn't contain some truth.
With some of the comments, I’d be thinking, “No, that was bullshit.” Other times, I’d be like, “Yup, that was
me… I still suck at that…”
I did manage to find one little nugget I was proud of. Remember when I was writing about my retail
career and I mentioned how in return for posting a local radio station’s
billboard in the store, we would receive some free commercial spots? Being a recent college graduate with a
degree in radio, I would write the commercials and the station would produce
them. I posted the audio from my best one.
When I was going through the archives, I found a couple more
commercial scripts I wrote. One in
particular, I thought was reasonably clever.
This was a pre-Christmas ad from November of 1985; a riff on the old
Night Before Christmas classic.
(Music: “Carol of the Bells”)
‘Twas a month before Christmas
And all through the store;
Peaches shoppers were shopping
And asking for more.
With the Cars and the Starship
At $6.99
I knew that great savings
Were soon to be mine.
Aerosmith, Loverboy,
Heart, Kiss and Sting;
At $5.99
They made my heart sing.
(For brevity’s sake, I’m skipping a couple of stanzas about
the glory of blank audio and video tapes.
Hey, YOU try writing something interesting about TDK SA-90s!)
My compact disc player
Was sounding just fine,
With Peaches whole stock
At $13.99.
There were jam boxes, head cleaners,
Headphones and stuff,
With prices so low
I just can’t get enough.
(Music fade up: Tina Turner, “But I Might Have Been Queen”)
But Tina was calling,
And Autograph too,
Both at $6.99
Just like old Motley Crue.
With WASP, Mr. Mister,
Marillion and Cure,
Peaches Records has got
The best prices for sure.
Now bring yourself over
And don’t you forget,
Your ‘RQN coupon
For the best savings yet.
You’ll find it at Peaches,
Your Christmas-time pick
On South Reynolds Road,
Just south of Southwyck.
It’s kind of funny just seeing a list of all the bands that
were popular at the time. Some have
held up, others, you’re like, “Who?”
One of the other things I realized in going through the file
box was that I lived in an epic era for newspaper cartoons. I had tons of them stashed away, mostly The
Far Side, Calvin and Hobbes, Doonesbury, and my favorite Bloom
County/Outland/Opus. (Only Doonesbury
is still running today.)
I found a clip of what may be my all-time favorite
comic. It was a Sunday strip of
“Outland” from 1993. “Bloom County” was
a huge favorite of mine in college, before the author rejiggered it into
“Outland,” which eventually begat the Sunday-only “Opus.” I couldn't believe that this clipping still
looked as bright and fresh as if I ran in the paper today. Most of my other clippings had grown faded
and brittle. Maybe the Albany
Times-Union used better newsprint.
Anyway, here is a look at a strip that was controversial at
the time, but remains as true now as it was then. Sometimes the truth hurts…
(Click the pic, to embiggen for easier reading.)
6 comments:
That comic is PRICELESS!!
Hugs!
Valerie
That's why it's my favorite, Val.
OPUS RULES...then and now.
Wish you were still writing commercials.
Me too. And if I was, I’d be like, “I DARE you to zap this commercial, because it’s going to be more entertaining than the stupid show you’re watching in the first place!”
Okay, I had to look up Autograph and Marillion on Spotify. I was not aware. Now I know why.
Autograph was a one hit wonder with the song Turn Up the Radio. They were kind of a Def Leppard clone, only without the songwriting chops. All I know about Marillion is they were an artsy fartsy English band. I take no responsibility for the state of the music... I was just the ad man...
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