Wednesday, April 10, 2024
Luna crunching
Monday, April 8, 2024
Queen of Cheese? Theophilus the Great
I just tried to watch another YouTube video that GOT IT ALL WRONG. It celebrated the awful poetry of one William Topaz McGonagall, calling him the Worst Poet in History. But McG is not even close! I was going to post a comment on it and thought: ah shit, why bother? I'll do my own post on it. (They always get it wrong, don't they?) But McGonagall is certainly not alone in writing bad poetry. Even the so-called greats had their off moments.
I found a horrible Robert Frost poem in which a man pounds on his door of a snowy evening and asks if he can cut down all the lovely snow-sparkling pines on his property to sell as Christmas trees. And here Frost hums and haws over it, turns it over in his mind, thinking: well, here are the advantages in it; and hmmm, here are the disadvantages in it; and: AIIIIIEEEEEK! Cut down all your friggin' trees?? What are you thinking? I guess back then it must have seemed that there were trees enough, that they were endless, and just a crop to be managed like any other. But I was so upset at this point that I didn't even read to the end.
Discouraged, I threw away Christmas and widened my scope to include any old poetry that was sublimely bad, but it's hard to find truly awful stuff. I found articles quoting three or four weak lines in, say, Tennyson. Auden once used a bad adjective, and somebody found a pun in Shakespeare, comparing an orange to Seville (or was it servile?). Well, who gives a shit about that? I wanted bad, and I wasn't getting it.
A Tragedy
Theophilus Marzials
Plop.
As they scraggle black on the thin grey sky,
Where the black cloud rack-hackles drizzle and fly
To the oozy waters, that lounge and flop
On the black scrag piles, where the loose cords plop,
As the raw wind whines in the thin tree-top.
All is running water and sky,
My thought is running out of my head;
My love is running out of my heart,
My soul runs after, and leaves me as dead,
For my life runs after to catch them -- and fled
They all are every one! -- and I stand, and start,
At the water that oozes up, plop and plop,
On the barges that flop
And dizzy me dead.
I might reel and drop.
Plop.
Dead.
Flop, plop.
* * * * *
A curse on him.
Ugh! yet I knew -- I knew --
If a woman is false can a friend be true?
It was only a lie from beginning to end --
And stop.
As if this bounty weren't enough, I found these little notes attached to an article about him, claiming that Marzials, not McGonagall, was the worst poet in the English language:
"Theo Marzials, the last of the Victorian aesthetes, who lived on in rural retirement, addicted to beetroot and chlorodyne (morphia, chloroform and prussic acid), for two decades after the world thought him dead. In the 1870s, as a young man with long hair, flowing moustaches and a silk bow tie over his lapels, he worked at the British Museum. According to Max Beerbohm, the great Panizzi himself, founder of the round Reading Room, was one day surprised to hear a shrill voice crying from the gallery: "Am I or am I not the darling of the Reading Room?"
stove."
by: Theophilus Marzials (1850-1920)
The wan witch at the creepy midnight hour,
When the wild moon was flying to its full,
Went huddling round a damned convent's tower,
From out the crumbling slabs or tombs to pull
Some lecherous leaf or shrieking mandrake-flower.
Beneath she heard the dead men's voices dull;
Around she felt the cold souls creep and cower;
In hand she held a grinning damned's skull!
Then through the ruin'd cloisters, strangely white,
T'wards the struck moon, all swathed in colod grave-bands,
She saw dead Love wringing his hollow hands,
And gliding grimmer than a dank tomb-light.
And with a shriek she rush'd across his path--
And now the hell-worm all her body hath!
The problem with this one is, as Zero Mostel says to Gene Wilder in The Producers: "Nah, it's too good." In fact it's neither good nor bad, and is as purple as most Victorian stuff was. But it strikes me as bargain basement Gerard Manley Hopkins, and even a pale photocopy of Hopkins has a certain power behind it.
MARZIALS DISH. This was all I could find about his sex life, and it came from Wikipedia so it MUST be true:
"The relationship between Marzials and fellow author Edmund Gosse is debated, with some claims that their relationship was more than platonic."
I don't know what to say.
Sunday, March 31, 2024
Saturday, March 30, 2024
Need a dog bowl padded ruff? You've come to the right place.
Bring on Meghan's candle of grievance with sobbing crystal petals. Whatever she's selling, I'm buying!
By Jan Moir for the Daily Mail
The Duchess of Sussex has launched a lifestyle brand called American Riviera Orchard and I am here for it.
Quince bark coffee, tomato leaf soap, taster pack of salmon sperm injections, hand-embossed make-your-own voodoo doll kits, moonbeam gummies — whatever the heck Meghan is selling, the first merch drop can't come quickly enough for me.
And the only question to ask is this: what took her so long?
The Duchess is one of those women who was born to tell other women what to buy and think and do. She walks among mere mortals simply itching to enlighten us all on how to be, where to shop, who to adore and why greige is the new taupe — whether invited to or not.
Since Meghan's influencer days on The Tig, where she posted recipes, beauty tips and style hints from her Toronto base, it was clear that sooner or later she'd return to this lucrative world of clicks and likes; that she would be back among her merchant-class kinfolk quicker than you can say 'add to basket'.
The Duchess of Sussex has launched a lifestyle brand called American Riviera Orchard which sells items including: Quince bark coffee, tomato leaf soap, taster pack of salmon sperm injections, hand-embossed make-your-own voodoo doll kits and moonbeam gummies
All she had to do to maximise her online profile and boost any future profits was to somehow — somehow! — elevate herself from B-list television actress to becoming a significant figure on the global stage; a somebody that everybody had heard of, a person who went from not knowing Oprah Winfrey neither personally nor professionally, to inviting the all-powerful media star to her wedding. Anybody got any ideas?
Whatever you might think about the former Miss Markle, you must agree that it was mission accomplished on that front at least.
And how! From first date to locking the Frogmore door for the last time took just over three years, less time than the gestation period of a salamander or certain kinds of shark.
Of course, Meghan didn't marry Harry purely to winkle him out of the Royal Family, like extracting a sulky whelk from a pearly shell, just so that she could go on to use her royal title to launch a commercial lifestyle website selling cosmetics, jams, nut butters and organic birdseed in California.
Be serious! No wacky conspiracy theories on this page if you don't mind.
Yet one still must admire the clarity of thought, the audacity, the sheer drive and twin peaks of mutual ambition it took the Sussexes to get where they are today. I admire the energy, if not the approach, simply because far too many people were kicked to the kerb on their fast lane to liberty.
However, surely even Harry and Meghan must be exhausted by the industrial grievance complex that has funded their own lifestyle thus far?
That's one reason why I hope that this American Riviera Orchard venture will usher in brighter times for them both.
So, bring on the five-wick candles and the youth-dew elixirs, make haste with the seven-ply cashmere lounge pants and the overpriced jars of honey.
Let's all dig deep and online shop till we drop to keep this young couple in the luxury to which they have become accustomed and feel that they deserve.
To this end, here is Meghan; back in California arranging white roses in a vase, cooking something virtuous for lunch, launching herself as a tastemaker and a mompreneur who leads by example.
Someone who imposes her terrifying sense of style upon the dreary, civilian she-turnips in the real world by wearing £1,500 Roland Mouret day dresses and no end of delicious designer gowns to pick up her latest humanitarian award. So inspirational!
Yet, just like all those other lifestyle gurus — including Martha Stewart and, of course, Gwyneth and her mighty Goop — one can't help but feel that sometimes their online sisterly solidarity is as manufactured as their signature scents.
And — whisper it — also that it is avarice rather than the giving of advice that really floats their boats. Out there in brand-land there are certainly millions of dollars to be made, but it is difficult to see where American Riviera Orchard fits into this crowded marketplace.
In the U.S., brands such as The Pioneer Woman started off as a farm-girl blog and turned into a multi-million-pound business, today boasting a hotel, a pizzeria, a cooking-utensil range and a TV cooking show that's run for 37 seasons and made founder Ree Drummond a very rich woman.
This week, Ree is raving about a new milk frother and wondering if you can feed carrots to dogs, while her wildly glamorous rival, Hannah from Ballerina Farm, is selling sourdough kits and 'mountain raised meat' on the Utah ranch where she lives with her husband and eight children.
Closer to home, even Kate Moss is giving e-commerce a whirl with her Cosmoss company, a new line of beauty and self-care products sold online and in-store. The range features a facial oil made from something called Mythical Tears of Chios — a resin native to the Greek island of the same name — that sells for around £105 for 30ml, making it almost as expensive as scorpion anti-venom. Has everyone gone completely mad?
Cowgirl, party girl, Goop girl — but what is Meghan's USP going to be? Surely she wouldn't dare to play on her royal connections? She promised not to, after all.
The Duchess has said that she wants her brand to be more 'accessible' than Goop, but is impressed by the polished elitism of Flamingo Estate, another California brand that sells organic soaps and an exclusive lifestyle.
I'd listen to Martha's advice on anything, but what does Meghan know about brooms, except perhaps — as her enemies naughtily claim — how to fly one?
'I am flattered,' said Martha, when told that she inspired the Duchess of Sussex. She advised her to 'produce good products that work and will help the homemaker have a nice life. That's what it's all about.'
American Riviera Orchard seems to be rooted in a sense of place rather than a person. Meghan is selling the California dream, one jar of jam at a time. It is Montecito that is the major sell, but even still, there is the faint air of unearned emplacement; the feeling that she wouldn't be living in this upmarket millionaire's paradise were she not married to a prince of the British realm.
Indeed, some are convinced that American Riviera Orchard will taint the monarchy with an unsavoury strain of commercialism, but not anyone who has perused the Highgrove website recently.
You won't believe the stuff that King Charles is flogging under the auspices of his beloved country home in Gloucestershire.
Everything from £375 corduroy gilets for country gents to £150 silk scarves, triple-milled soaps, Prince of Wales check washbags and a £9 teabag tidy. Yes, you might not be surprised to hear that a member of the Windsor family is selling Yakhak Milky Rock Crystal Quartz Charms for £39 apiece — but it is Charles and not Meghan who is the culprit here.
If Gwyneth's Goop famously 'nourishes the inner aspect', what will Meghan's Orchard do? Give everyone the pip?
To launch a brand such as this, you must be popular and admired, you need a roaring army of fans to build your brand, you need to have the pulling power of someone like Jeremy Clarkson.
I've seen with my own eyes how hundreds of people will queue for two hours just to buy a bag of Jeremy's potatoes from Jeremy's farm because Jeremy grew them.
Can Meghan inspire the same devotion in her public? We will find our next month when the site launches at last. In the meantime, here's what I imagine we are in for …
The Candle of Grievance (£86)
Beautifully housed in a reclaimed jar, this soy wax candle is impregnated with crystal petals which make a sobbing sound when they burn. Light it for a frenemy, light it for yourself, lighten up for God's sake.
With top notes of prickly thorn and a dry down of sour grapes, this will fill your space with a keen sense of injustice that lingers long. Burn time: three years and counting.
This soy wax candle is impregnated with crystal petals which make a sobbing sound when they burn
Shearling Noise Cancellation Headphones (£256)
A sophisticated solution to plugging your fingers in your ears and shouting, 'la la la, not listening'. Instead, pop on these fluffy beauties and marinate longer in your own thoughts, be they petty or ever so grand. Lined with hand-milked muskrat silk to keep your lobes toasty. Accessorised with opals for emotional amplification.
Dog Bowl Padded Ruff (£99.99)
Have you ever worried that someone might burst into your kitchen and throw you on the dog bowl without a by-your-leave? If so, this is the gadget for you. Simply clip this velvet padded ruff around your dog bowl, ready to cushion your fall in any emergency. Made from a repurposed ceremonial robe no longer needed. Available with sustainably farmed ermine trim, apply for details.
Mood Bracelet (£799)
Multi-strand quartz bracelet that will help align your chakras and promote calm. Featuring rose quartz for unconditional love, malachite for pure odium, cellulite for self-acceptance and compassion and cherry quartz for cherry picking fights.
The mood bracelet - rose quartz for unconditional love, malachite for pure odium, cellulite for self-acceptance and compassion and cherry quartz for cherry picking fights
Ohm Alert Portable Meditation Set (small £55, med £75, large £95)
Featuring a pre-loved cardboard box inscribed with the words Meditation In Progress, Do Not Disturb. Using her formidable calligraphy skills, the Duchess of Sussex personally inscribed each box herself, turning this practical aid to meditation on the move into a valuable collector's item.
Wherever you are, simply pop the box on your head to create a safe space for chanting personal development mantras, manifesting, lucid dreaming and grounding the ego. (Limited edition autographed version, £100 extra.)
Silent Not Silenced Revenge Diaries (£125 each)
Set of thick-lined diary notebooks for journalling, collecting evidence, settling scores and keeping secret lists of potential royal racists. Each volume comes with a special 'unconscious bias' section and an enemy index.
A set of thick-lined diary notebooks for journalling, collecting evidence, settling scores and keeping secret lists of potential royal racists
Hummingbird Sage Dishwash Soap (£38)
In honour of the moment when 11-year-old Meghan changed the world by writing to Procter & Gamble about a sexist dishwashing liquid ad. Has she mentioned this before? 5p off orders of 12 bottles or more. Discounts for the unwaged.
Merrie Olde England Gourmet Section
The Duchess of Sussex is thrilled to introduce her own recipes and culinary ideas to entertain and delight. Included is Marry Me Roast Chicken, featuring the exact roast chicken and sacred herbs Meghan was cooking when Harry proposed.
Look out, too, for a family favourite called the Frozen Wieners Supper and a spectacular Japanese Puffer Fish dish that Meghan liked to serve to her in-laws, followed by Hard Cheese and Simply Crackers.
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Meghan Markle Merch: artisanal lavender dog soap, anyone?
Kate Middleton news derails Meghan Markle’s
big plan
The global outpouring of
goodwill for the Princess of Wales as she fights cancer may leave Meghan Markle
in a very difficult position.
Are you in need of a new dog lead or
meditation cushion or wine carrier or drawer organisers or marmalade or a bird
feeder? How are you doing for pet shampoo, lanterns and tisanes?
If you are then, boy, do I have some good
news for you. Meghan the Duchess of Sussex has heard your cries and
soon you could be able to buy all this and much, much more from her new
American Riviera Orchard (ARO) lifestyle brand.
Those industrious sorts over at the Daily
Mail have somehow gotten their hands on ARO’s trademark application which
for the first time reveals the scope and ambition of the duchess’ first major
solo commercial project and golly gosh it’s a big ‘un.
To which I say, amen. Build it and they will
hopefully come and spend money. Dream big and then embroider it on a pillow you
can sell at a massive mark-up. I am all in on the return of Business Meghan seven years after she shuttered her blog The
Tig, even if that was blandly derivative.
Meghan Markle’s new lifestyle
brand American Riviera Orchard will have quite the array of goods.
However, in the ten days since ARO’s Instagram
debut, the world tilted on its axis with Kate the Princess of Wales’ announcement that she has cancer.
How could the incredible global deluge of
support and sudden lovey-dovey messages of goodwill for the princess affect the
public reception of ARO?
Basically, will discerning shoppers fork over
large wodges of hard-earned cash for artisanal lavender dog soap to a woman who
is not on speaking with Kate? And who has spent the last few years chipping
away at Kate’s image?
No launch date has yet been revealed for ARO
but it mustn’t be far off.
For the better part of the last year reports
have circulated that Meghan was beavering away at some entrepreneurial online
turn with the only oblique hints being that it would be authentic and whatnot.
Meghan Markle's new lifestyle
brand, seen in a promotional video posted to Instagram. Picture: American
No matter what best laid plans might have
been drawn up, just over a week later, on March 22, Kate released her video – the internet reeled and the
Church of England sat down to write a special prayer (truly) to wish the
princess a speedy recovery.
The worldwide reaction to the video has been
truly incredible to witness.
It has been viewed 197.5 million times on the
Then came the hand-wringing and the
self-flagellating with millions worrying about the consequence of their gleeful
reposting of bonkers Kate theories and speculation.
The end result of all this sympathy and
suddenly caring bleating is that Kate has basically been deified in only a few
days.
The Princess of Wales
revealing she is undergoing treatment for cancer. Picture:
So where does this leave Meghan and ARO? Could this dramatic volte face of
feeling towards Kate have an impact on her business’ debut?
Join me as we really get into the weeds here.
The
Whatever is happening back in Blighty has
nothing to do with whatever the duke and duchess are doing.
Kate, William, Harry and
Meghan reunited briefly after the Queen died in September 2022 but relations
have remained strained since. Picture: Chris Jackson/Getty Images
However, the other argument goes, get real.
That’s a wilfully naive interpretation.
For years, the
While Crown Inc. and Harry’s relatives were
unconsciously biased, frigidly cold in the face of personal suffering and
emotionally constipated, the
Harry and Meghan with their Oprah interview,
Netflix series and the duke’s memoir Spare, offered a deeply
unflattering portrayal of William and Kate claiming that they had encouraged
Harry to dress up as a Nazi, William had attacked Harry, Kate had made Meghan
cry and in one shocking incident currently under investigation by the European
Commission, Kate was reluctant to share her lip gloss with Meghan. (
In November last year, the Dutch version of
highly sympathetic Sussex biographer Omid Scobie’s Endgame named King
Charles and Kate as having commented about the Sussexes’ son Prince Archie’s
skin colour. The duke and duchess did not comment on the claim push back in any
way.
The
Given this history, this story, the image
that Meghan has cultivated post-Megxit is the yin to Kate’s yang, what could
this mean for ARO’s launch?
In this climate, will Meghan pitching herself
as a cosy domestic goddess with perfect taste land with shoppers and see the
orders stream in? Or could there be some sort of shopping protest vote, so to
speak, with people staying away from ARO out of sympathy for the Princess of
Wales?
Will support for Kate see the credit-card toting
masses boycott or avoid ARO? Or is Meghan’s
(I have said it before and I will say it
again for anyone who needs to hear it – the Duchess of Sussex has sublime
style.)
It’s interesting to note that to date, ARO
has attracted 570,000 Instagram followers, despite no content aside from that
first video. That’s a truly impressive figure until you realise that in 2019
when Harry and Meghan launched @SussexRoyal, they set a Guinness world record
for reaching one million followers in five hours and 45 minutes, then the
shortest time ever. (Jennifer Aniston later broke that record.)
And William and Kate? They have gained just
shy of one million new followers this year alone.
Daniela Elser is a writer, editor and a
royal commentator with more than 15 years’ experience working with a number of
Beware the Helping Hand (or: How to Make a Crazy Quilt)
I just had one of those godawful internet experiences of losing a few thousand words I labored over for the entire evening – because I forgot to hit “update”. I was adding it to a previously-published post, so it wouldn’t automatically save as a draft. So it didn’t. But I will make an attempt at piecing it back together. The gifs are random and just a way to break up the block of text.
Have you ever had a relative you tolerated, even tried to be nice to, strictly because they were kin and you didn’t feel you had a choice? I had one of those, but no more. I had to unload this person for the sake of my – excuse me – “mental health”.
And the whole thing is so ironic, in light of what went down, and why.
My sister-in-law, my husband’s brother’s wife, whom I will call Janie, is what used to be called a “ busybody” – happily probing into everyone else’s business, then passing along the most sensitive bleeding chunks of information with relish, especially if it would serve her in some way. And this did.
She would phone me. For the past 30+ years, at least three or four times a year, she’d phone me, and talk, and talk, and talk, in her rattling-on, self-involved way – which was irritating enough – but it was worse than that. I don’t know how some people do this, but she was adept at extracting information from people – me in particular. When I’d finally get off the phone with her, which always took a lot of effort, I’d always have the feeling that I never should have told her any of that stuff. But somehow it came out. Like a robin pulling a worm out of the ground, she somehow got things out of me, largely from asking questions so none-of-her-business that you somehow answered her because you couldn’t quite believe what she just said.
This has taken a turn just lately because she started to follow my Facebook posts, and leave likes and comments on the majority of them. Some of them were nice, but mostly they gave me that cloying feeling. She was fastening on. Coat-tailing, they used to call it. Even reading her comments made me feel drained. After she read my Facebook post on “Why I Hate Mental Health” (because it has become a shallow, meaningless buzzword), she phoned me (of course! She always phones me!), and began to talk. Oh yes, I was so right! Oh yes, the mental health care system is terrible! And as it turned out, she has taken it upon herself to become a Mental Health Crusader, and has joined some sort of board of directors and gets up at board meetings and tells Tales of Terror from the Crypt of Mental Illness.
I should have been clued in when she said she told them all about her close friend, a woman with schizophrenia whose doctor changed her meds, leading her to attempt suicide so she had to be hospitalized. She told this in colorful detail, which I am sure must have really impressed her pals at the board meeting, but while she was rattling on, my guts began to squirm.
Did Janie, um, like, ask permission to say these things? Did her close friend want those painful episode brought up and trotted out as an example of How the System Fails the Mentally Ill? I had no idea, but my stomach-squirm turned out to be prescient.
That’s the thing, Janie remembers stuff. God, does she remember. This was the kind of thing I would tell her, oh, maybe 30 years ago, but she filed it all away. But there it was again, dredged up, fresh as paint, raw and red and glistening. She then said she told this psychiatric horror story at her board meeting, in an attempt to raise funds for one of her pet projects, Feed the Criminally Insane or something. No kidding, she told my story to impress the board.
But there was just one problem. More than one, really, but the main one is this: it never happened. She took several different stories I wish I had never told her and conflated them, stitched them together, “curated” them into the ultimate horror story, when in reality the hospital corridor thing (which was only one night) happened in 1982, and the crisis line thing happened in an entirely different setting (NOT a hospital) in 2004. And never did I ever crawl on my hands and knees. I walked, until some nurse shouted at me “GET BACK INTO BED!” (which was bad enough, but still not crawling). So the most RECENT story, told in very garbled form, happened 20 years ago. Out of these rags and tatters, she stitched together a crazy quilt of horror that was much more colorful and impressive than anything that actually happened.
But this time it was different. I had had it with Janie. Forever. I just couldn’t pretend to be nice to her any more and just told her to STOP dragging up stuff from the past that I’m trying to forget about! And I tell you, she was very upset. I was raining on her social worker/self-righteous-charity-lady parade, thwarting her shining quest to Speak for Those who Cannot Speak for Themselves, the powerless, the stigmatized, the crawling dregs of society!
I don’t remember yelling at her any time before in all those dozens or hundreds of annoying one-sided phone calls, but I did it this time, and she was not only astonished but actually quite offended. What?? I’m not grateful for her selfless service to The Cause? I didn’t want to help her save every mental patient who ever crawled along the floor in a psych ward? Well, no, Janie. I don't. She finally said, “QUIT SHOUTING AT ME! I heard you the first time, so you can just stop ranting at me!”
At that point, I hung up. I immediately blocked her on Facebook, then deleted her furious email response unread, though the first line gave the impression of a tiny little person jumping up and down and screaming. The exclamation points were practically flying off the page. So that’s the end of Janie, and I now realize I never DID have to have any sort of relationship with her. I just felt like a captive audience. I never wanted to talk to her on the phone, yet for years and years I let it happen, and she went right on studying and extracting and collating her crystalline memories of fuckups that happened to me forty years ago. (Or maybe they didn't, but it sure sounded good that way.) I’m fascinating, you see. I’m a live one. Right there in the jar, on the end of the assembly line. So her scientific little busybody mind could poke, prod, and finally present the results of her laboratory experiment to the Board of Directors, with the final goal of getting a cash grant for all her psychiatric charity work.
I've left out a few bits and pieces, but because it's my blog and I'll rant if I want to, I'll add this. On the phone, Janie recounted how she was gathering funds for her Mental Health Event (bake sale, rodeo, nude swim), and someone dared to joke at her, saying "so are you crazy too?" or something equally devastating. Janie told him to FUCK OFF, turned on her heel and walked away. (This was in public.) She recounted this proudly, as if to elicit oohs and ahhs from me, exclamations of how brave, how gutsy, oh my, you go girl, etc. Ohhhh, thank you so much for standing up for me, speaking for those incapable of speaking for themselves! (At the same time, do you notice anything here? ANY implication AT ALL that she herself has a mental health condition is outrageous and abusive and causes her to fly into a public fury.)
Janie has never been popular in my family. No one says it out loud, because we’re not that sort of family, but everyone has had a “story” at some point. Bill’s sister Judy once told me in a sort of muttering voice that she saw Janie in her kitchen, opening each kitchen cupboard and each kitchen drawer and snooping around in the contents. She said it was like an inspection. Mostly the muttered complaints were about the fact that they never saw her husband (was he being held hostage somewhere?), and her busy-body-ness and general obliviousness to other people’s feelings. Then I heard the incredible story from Bill’s brother that Janie had once been in a cult, complete with shaved head, mantras, sexually-abusive gurus, and whatever else they have in cults. It struck me as strange, as she doesn’t strike me as someone who would take orders from anyone – or was it a sort of School for Cult Leaders, and she was studying for a degree?
Friday, March 22, 2024
Predators hiding in plain sight: subtle exploitation on social media
(I wrote this post after I had to block someone who was following my Facebook page very closely. I was later to discover she had used much of my most sensitive material for her own gain. That's not allowed. But it got me to thinking.)
Thursday, March 21, 2024
Love Walked In. . . and it never left.
It shouldn’t surprise me too much that I’ve fallen down the Gershwin
rabbit hole once again. It was a full nine years ago I became fascinated,
devouring every book I could find on the boy genius’s life and art (including
Oscar Levant’s fanboy adulation), and of course immersed myself in his astoundingly powerful music.
So here he is again, all because of the comment I just received from a woman who is related to Alan Schneider, the man who for decades posed as George’s illegitimate son. Wow. DNA doesn’t lie, does it? And for all the criticism of the internet, all the ranting about the evils of social media, this could not have happened without Blogger, a nearly-obsolete program (or maybe it’s an app, whatever THAT is) and my 12+ of posting on it nearly every day.
Through this magic portal, I once received an email from a woman in
Then after my usual bloodhound effort, I found SOMETHING in a very old
newspaper archive from 60 years ago. Yes. They had published the winner of a
poetry contest, and the thing was written by two people (can’t remember their
names), and there it was – the elephant poem, in a newspaper archive in
Getting back to Gershwin. I won’t repeat all the ins and outs of it,
except to say I felt – believed – I had some sort of mystical connection to
him. I felt his presence, shy at first, then gradually coming closer, a sort of warmth, and a kind of yearning to be heard, believed, understood. After his untimely and gruesome death of an inoperable brain tumour in
1938, people began to “see” him about town, hurrying along a busy street,
hanging about at music festivals dedicated to his songs, and even – I swear –
playing a piano that was NOT a player piano. Several people saw it, and they
knew it was him.
My own connection with Gershwin’s ghost deepened and broadened, and it was exceptionally beautiful and mysterious - until I made the mistake of sharing it with someone I knew, a university prof (I had taken his anthropology course) and self-styled spiritualist medium. What he said was a slap in the face. It was a fantasy, a dream, I was imagining the whole thing to try to gain credence as a spiritualist. (I wasn’t.) Then he pulled rank, as he often did, citing his superior education (two Masters degrees and a PhD) and the fact that I had a psychiatric condition (and he didn’t) that made me prone to fantasy.
So George went away for a while. But where he is now, there is no time,
which is extremely convenient for me (I’m still in my fleshly form, after all).
So is he here again?
Why not? Paul Biscop isn’t. Paul died suddenly about eight years ago, dropped
in his tracks with a stroke and was dead before he hit the ground, His partner
of 20 years, also called Paul, emailed me with the news, so I must have still
been on file somewhere (in case he needed someone to harass). Paul had died
suddenly, he said, and we should pray for his soul. But then I saw something on
Facebook that shocked me: a page for a spiritualist church that Paul Biscop had
actually founded, and from which he stomped away years ago because people
weren’t doing it right, were listening to their own hearts rather than slavishly
following what he told them to do (and when and where),.
Paul was dead, and I wasn’t sorry, but there was more to it than that,
and it was awful. The posts from the spiritualist church (and very few had
posted their condolences, likely still feeling burned by his narcissistic
bullying) sent out an urgent call for financial help for his long-time partner.
Paul Biscop had left him with a massive debt that he had known nothing about,
and the other Paul was now literally homeless and left with nothing.
So the church set up a GoFundMe page which only garnered a few hundred dollars. The church did not host his memorial - that was held in a Masonic lodge, and the lady on the Facebook page stated that there would be a table set up in the back selling Paul’s books (no doubt on anthropology and other dry topics) to try to earn some funds for his now-destitute partner.
OK, this is very long, but I’m on a roll here The thing is, I of course
never abandoned Gershwin’s music (my two favorite pieces are the Cuban Overture
and the stunningly beautiful Love Walked In), but his presence had faded as if
he too had been stung and had to retreat. But it’s OK now, George, I still love
you and feel you and know you are immortal. You ring in those songs, songs that
will never die. Like a latter-day Mozart, he would sit at the piano composing,
then play the piece that same night in a concert hall. His improvisations were
heard only once in human history, because they were different each time. This
is what I was originally going to write about, but now – hell, I am exhausted
already from visiting the past, something I try not to do these days.
Past-tripping can be counterproductive and even traumatic, and the reason it’s called the past is because it has PASSED. So I will try to get on with my day, such as it is (plunged back into the rabbit hole), and of course I will revisit the music I never quite walked away from.
Love walked in, and it is apparent to me now that it never left.