Sunday, September 18, 2022

Concert Confidential



Well…………….I’m back. After my widely read (okay at least one person read it) last 3400 word epic, it’s obvious my adoring fans have not had enough. Message received. Encore time it is. 

In a refreshing change, instead of wrestling  with the fate of humanity, I want to document my adventures and debacles going to concerts. What is truly unacceptable is I haven’t been to a concert since Covid. And the thought of going to shows again was one of the things that sustained me through 2020! I bought a ticket to see Dead and Co. last year at The Meadows but it rained late in the afternoon (remember last summer when it rained every day) so by the time I showed up they had already gone on and they had a looooooooooooooooooooooong line checking vaccine cards and I don’t know. I wasn’t feeling it and went home. This summer the few decent shows were all around the time I was moving and  I was sort of afraid of spending money. Dead and Co. again, Jack Johnson, Dave Matthews, Phish. Even Kiss. I would have totally rock and rolled all night with them if the beer was cold enough. (Or the gin). 

Next year! 

The first show I ever went to was John Mellencamp. I think he was past his John Cougar phase, long past his Johnny Cougar phase, and not yet in the mature and sophisticated John Mellencamp phase. I think it was the John Cougar Mellencamp era—the transitional hybrid phase apparently designed to not put too much on his fans’ plate all at once. This was a gift from my aunt who took my brother, my two cousins, and me to the show. I was in 7th grade. Great first show but as I was a tween and this was an adult supervised event it was a concert event minus any embarrassing moments that I can recall. Boy would that change. 

I don’t think I’ll even try to go in order because some of these were a long time ago and I’ve probably destroyed so many brain cells attending concerts it's hard to remember precisely. Let me jump all the way to the summer of 1994. I attended two shows in which I learned a lot about the karmic balance of the universe. I even formed my very own groundbreaking Puke Equilibrium Theory that I think any Buddhist guru would totally get on board with. Sometime early in the summer a bunch of us decided to go see Lynard Skynard last minute at Riverside Park. (I’ll start calling it Six Flags the minute after I start calling The Meadows “Xfinity Theater”). This was a blisteringly hot June day and I decided the only reasonable way to beat the heat was to start pounding beers early and often. I also don’t think I ate. I think I just forgot? And did I want to kill my buzz in any way when they launched into Freebird or Simple Man? Of course not. So the end of the show is a bit hazy but I was TOLD the next day that I vomited and when my friend’s girlfriend went to assist me I puked on her shoe. Accidentally. Oops. 

A month or so later a few of us took a road trip to see Pink Floyd at the old Giants Stadium. 2nd straight year there: we saw Guns n’ Roses and Metallica in the summer of ’93. Believe it or not, I didn’t get tooooooo drunk although I can distinctly remember having to pee incredibly bad as we were driving through New York City traffic on our way there. Did I end up peeing in a lidded container to stave off bladder explosion? I want to believe I didn’t. About midway through the show a kid stumbled into his seat right next to mine. He was clearly comfortably numb. Once in a while you have a moment of total clairvoyance where you can actually see into the future like a Prophet standing on a mountaintop. I experienced once of those spiritual breakthroughs in this multipurpose football stadium. I thought to myself, “Dude, you better not puke on me”. I am not making this up or exaggerating, not 5 seconds later he puked on me. On my shoes. Well set the controls for the heart of the sun. As a knee jerk reaction, I yelled, “You’re the biggest asshole!” or something like that.   

Was this all a coincidence? You must be joking. He who liveth by the puke shall die by the puke. Was he even the biggest asshole, really? Or was he an agent of karmic Justice? A Budweiser pounding Shiva? I had to go up to the Men’s Room and take off my puke soaked socks and throw them in the garbage. (Before I discovered the beauty of sandals—still sneakers and socks back then). The legend of Roger Waterless Floyd lives in. This was the only show I’ve seen that literally knocked my socks off.  

But my summer of ’94 concertgoing wasn’t over just yet. In August four of us went to Saugertees, NY to see Woodstock ’94. We might call this The Forgotten Woodstock. Woodstock ’69 is all the peace and love hippies dancing naked in the rain. Woodstock ’99 is all the Limp Bizquit bros doing it all for the nookie and breaking (and burning) stuff.  99 has earned not one but two documentaries in the last year on HBO and Netflix. ’94? Well it’s the only one Dylan performed at so there’s that. Shannon Hoon of Blind Melon put on a dress and spouted incoherent ramblings on stage before his eventual drug overdose. Green Day mudfights anyone? So my Woodstock was pretty good too!

But I got lost. Now there’s lost and then there’s 1994 lost. With smartphones I feel like getting lost has almost become obsolete. Not so then, my friends. No cell phones anywhere. After we set up our tent, one of my friends said something like, “Now everyone look around and note where we are. Especially you Ryan”. Oh I see. Single out the blind guy? My indomitable 21 year old stubbornness aside, I did take a long around and made a mental note of all these canopies they had set up with white and yellow stripes. Done.  

The problem started, like all problems, with beer. This was a non-alcohol event! But then people broke down the gates, rumors spread like wildfire that a package store down the street was selling 30 packs of Bud for the low, low price of $30 and we were just the target demo he was looking for so we went for a walk. Things of course get somewhat hazy after that as we started pounding beers like we were Lawrence of Arabia downing lemonade after trekking through the Arabian Desert on a camel. 

Things went next level apeshit when Nine Inch Nails took the stage caked in mud from head to toe. (Oh—it had poured rain and turned the field into a mudpit). Mosh pits, puddles, Budweiser patrons, and Industrial Metal collided in an apocalyptic maelstrom of mayhem. It was glorious. Two random dudes picked me up and tossed me in a giant mud puddle. I tell people this and they’re like, “Those assholes!”. No, you had to be there. It was all just good clean fun! Unfortunately, I lost my binoculars in the puddle somewhere. 

Metallica (3rd time seeing them in two years) was followed by another moonson/thunderstorm causing me to hide under these roofed gazebos they had. Then Aerosmith hit the stage at 2AM. The last notes of Dream On didn’t sound until 4AM. 

No sign of my friends anywhere. But I started walking looking for a yellow and white canopy. And I found one! Then another. Then other. Oops. I guess that wasn’t the landmark I thought it was. But I kept walking. And walking. And walking. Must have walked by the same Nobody Beats The Wiz stand 20 times. (Or was there an infinite amount of those too?). This was turning into some David Lynch nightmare. I was definitely starting to get a little worried. Also, after a tropically hot and humid Saturday the rain had brought in a cold front. Oh, and it was still raining. And I had no umbrella or hoodie. Just my T-shirt and shorts. (Jorts probably). And I hadn’t slept all night. And was maybe just a bit hungover. I actually laid down on a blanket where the owners were nowhere to be found and attempted to sleep but not possible.  

I did find a tent for all the lost sheep to go. They said put your name on a big bulletin board and maybe your friends will see it. Also they might read your name from the stage but priority wen to lost children, not lost 21 year old binge drinking idiots.  

I did meet some kids I would have never met otherwise. Some girl whose name I have forgotten. Think she had black hair with some punk rock highlights. She was actually FROM Saugerties. So Woodstock came to her hometown. But I mean how lost was she really? I was 132 miles from home. I ended up staying around this tent all day figuring I would be harder to find if I was a moving target. The girl ended up going back to her tent and invited me to go with but again I figured I should stay put. Wait a minute………….this story isn’t adding up at all, is it? Am I remembering It right? Was the lost at all!?

On Sunday night, following the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Peter Gabriel, they said they were going to take us overnight to some hostel or something and then in the morning drive us to the bus station where they would help us find our bus home. I think they might have even paid for the bus ticket? In the meantime they had a nurse on site who took my temp. I believe it was 92. She asked me when was the last time I had slept? I said not since Friday night. (With an all night rave going on—I can remember Dee Lite’s Groove Is In The Heart thumping). Have I eaten? Well I bought a slice of pizza that morning but I was worried about running out of money. She was like, “So you are hypothermic, sleep deprived and malnourished”. I thought, “Gee, I guess when you put it that way”. She told me to go get some soup and get warm in the heated tent area they had.  

The hostel (or homeless shelter or what was it?) was like this bunk bed setup—but without the beds. They were these almost cubicle looking things made of wood. Was there mattresses or even a sleeping bag? I can’t remember for sure but I’m thinking no. But two days without sleep caught up with me so I slept anyway. I called home from a pay phone at the bus station and told my brother I was lost. By this point, word had got out. My friends were already home and told him I was MIA. My mom picked me up from the bus station in Springfield. I think I horrified her. I had dried mud on my clothes. I hadn’t showered since probably Friday morning? I looked like Martin Sheen coming out of the mud before going to kill Marlon Brando at the end of Apocalypse Now. The horror.  

But it wasn’t boring! I was weirdly happy about how the whole weekend had gone actually. Saw some good music and had managed to get myself home on my own—well, with the help of the festival staff and a spirit boosting Green Day loving girl who was lost in her hometown.  

Oh, I also got lost a few years later. I went to see the Allman Brothers at the Meadows when I lived in Vernon in the late 90’s. I went by myself and took the bus. Plan was to take a cab home but when I went to the McDonald’s across the street where they had pay phones inside I discovered they had just closed. So I was stranded in the North Meadows of Hartford at around midnight on a Sunday unless I could find a phone. Finally a guy saw me wandering lost and confused. I think he was in an all night warehouse? Or maybe an all night security guard? He let me use his office phone and this midnight riding rambling man found his way home. 

Wait……………there are actually a lot of lost stories come to think of it. I went to see The Police’s reunion tour at Rentschler Field in 2007. So in 2007 I would have had a cell phone. So how the heck did I get lost? I think I decided there was too much post show traffic right outside the stadium so I needed to find another spot for the cabbie to pick me up. Only I don’t know Silver Lane like the back of my hand so I aimlessly wandered around there at night until I found some bar and called a cab. 

Oh I was also violently shoved at Dave Matthews show at The Meadows. This was also the summer of ’07. That was a challenging time as my apartment AC broke, the awful management staff never fixed it, annnnd the building got a bedbug infestation. So I was maybe a bit edgy. I heard this older, creeper looking guy talking to a girl who looked like she was 17 or something. He said something like, “Have you done any modeling? Would you be open to doing nudes?”. I’m like great so this guy running Porn Hub from section 400. Again………..common theme here….but I had been drinking. I think I said something like, “You’re a fucking creep!” and he shoved me back hard. Actually fell off my feet and landed a couple seats back. So I just walked away and found a spot at the other end of the row. Was I going to lose my teeth over this guy? Would I really rescue this damsel in distress? I always wanted to be the savior. I’m basically Don Quixote. Obiouslyv it was up to the girl to basically decided for herself whether to ignore the guy or not. Well I meant well. I think. 

I was also blatantly ripped off at a show. Guns n’ Roses was supposed to play Lake Compounce in the summer of ’91. But it was cancelled. Then the promoter filed for bankruptcy and in doing so somehow got out of having to pay us back. My frugal, raised during The Depression in Fall River, MA grandmother literally never got over this. She would bring up how “you kids got ripped off!” for years to come. Me? I was over it. I had gotten to see G n’ R three times on the Use Your Illusion tour anyway and I was really more disappointed about not getting to see them than losing the $45. 

I went to a Phil and Friends show in about 2006 and had my one and only mind bending mushroom experience. Folks, magic mushrooms are illegal and you shoudn’t touch them. But some bad kids I was with offered them. My prior shroom samplings had been non-events. I took such small tabs out of paranoia of having a bad trip and seeing dragons and mastodons or something that I didn’t get any buzz from them. Not so this time. Ohhhhhh boy was everything groovy all of a sudden. I couldn’t stop laughing for an hour straight. At nothing. Life was just completely hilarious and I had never realized it before. I also couldn’t stop staring at my hands. From six inches away. This must have looked pretty normal. I realized that it was so weeeeeird to have hands. I mean these things are just hanging off us like this. They’re so bizarre looking! Why is no one talking about this? Unfortunately, the shrooms combined with—reader, you will be shocked—copious amounts of beer caused one of the worst hangovers of my life the next day. Spent. Like someone hollowed out my insides. I remember going down to my building’s parking garage and just sitting there hanging out. Why? Reader, I just don’t know. 

I will have you know that not ALL the shows I’ve gone to involved alcohol and (occasionally) other things. I went to see Nine Inch Nails again in the early 2000’s at The Meadows. This was nothing like the insanity of the Woodstock show. I did not drink a drop of booze. Okay. Full disclosure: I didn’t have the opportunity as there were no sales of alcohol. Unbeknownst to me! It seems their liquor license was suspended after they sold to an underage girl a month earlier at a John Mayer show. Your body is a wonderland boy does it again. Fathers be good to your daughters because I’ve decided any girl who rejects me must have daddy issues and it can’t possibly be because she’s just not that into me. That freaking guy. NIN was good but let’s just say March Of The Pigs doesn’t have quite the same visceral impact when you’re not blitzed and caked in mud and wondering where your binoculars just went. 

I can recall one incident of feeling kind of scared at a show. Again, back to Lake Compounce. This was CT’s makeshift answer to an outdoor concert venue after the industry was shifting that way but The Meadows hadn’t opened yet. Great Woods in MA was open but we are slow to get everything. There were no seats. We went to see Motley Crue in about 1990. As the band was getting closer to going on stage the rowdy, largely teenaged crowd started pushing to get closer to the stage. It was slightly suffocating. Started to feel like I was getting crushed. And of course, people have been crushed to death at concerts. Maybe it was because I had watched the episode of WKRP In Cincinnati when they all went to see The Who in Cincy and fans were crushed to death. (An actual real life incident). Johnny Fever was inconsolable. Don’t even talk to Venus Fly Trap right now. Gordon Jump was nonplussed. So having watched this chilling cautionary tale, I thought to stave off death by suffocation I should move back, so I had to enjoy Shout At The Devil from a safe distance. The devil probably couldn't even hear me shouting I was so far back. Satan wins again.  

I already wrote a blog about another completely insane thing that happened at a Bruce Springsteen show in Hartford so let me just give you the Cliff’s Notes. I had a seat in the second row in the 100 section area. I stood up as soon as the show started because I mean it’s Bruce and it’s rock and roll baby! The people behind me motioned and asked me to sit down. A lady said, “My mom can’t see”. But I mean…..this isn’t the symphony orchestra, am I right? They even narc’d on me but I heard the usher say, “I can’t make him sit down”.  Halfway through the show Bruce crowdsurfs his way down the floor and up to my section. He was standing 2 feet from me! He tells the crowd of 16,000 adoring fans, “This is Max’s mom! She turned 90 years old today!”. Max Weinberg. The drummer. Conan O’Brien's band leader. National treasure. Awkward. But she was a youthful looking 90. Probably drank a lot green tea. How was I to know?! But it gets worse. During the encore Bruce always has the arena lights turned on as they play Born To Run. They started to leave and I see one of the ushers bringing out a wheelchair for Mrs. Weinberg. In conclusion, I’m the worst person in the world. But I do want to pitch this to Larry David because this is totally an episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm waiting to happen.

Another time I took a cab to a show and I was basically openly mocked by the cabbie. I think this was the summer of 96? I went to see Hootie And The Blowfish. Look, I was super bored! I actually wasn’t even a huge fan. I mean they are okay but they’re the reason CVS background music was invented. So the cabbie is on the phone (I considered people with mobile phones pretentious douches back then—that stance didn’t age well) and he says, “I’m driving someone to see Hootie And The Blowfish. You know that fake rock band”. Buddy, I’m right here. 

In the summer of ’91 I took my longest concert road trip. A few of us took a bus organized by WCCC (or WHCN?) to Old Orchard Beach, Maine to see AC/DC. They were supposed to play here but I think it was another Lake Compounce promoter disaster so they let fans either use their tickets to the show in Maine or get a refund. We chose to pack up the coolers and ride the highway to hell up there! We got back to Ellington at maybe 4 in the morning and all the cows had organized the kind of jailbreak even Bon Scott would have admired by breaking through their pen and taking a little pre-dawn stroll around the neighborhood. They created a massive traffic jam at the corner of Hoffman Road and Muddy Brook. Post script to this story: the first class I ever took at UConn was a Com Sci 101 class in the auditorium at next door E.0. Smith High School. (Strange feeling taking your first college class and walking through a hallway of  high school kids to get there). The professor actually started with “Did anyone go anywhere nice this summer?”. A kid raised his hand and said Old Orchard Beach, ME. Another raised his hand and said Old Orchard Beach. A third raised his hand and said Old Orchard Beach. I was sadly too shy to raise my hand. The professor finally said, “Wow! I guess Old Orchard Beach was a real hotspot!”. Of course I think it’s also a vacation spot but I wanted to say, “Hey did you guys check out Angus and the boys too? Was Whole Lotta Rosie sick or what!?”.   

I was also asked to sit down at a Rolling Stones show at the Civic Center. By an usher! A woman behind me had ratted on me. Wow. We are a looooong way from Altamont here, aren't we? Another time we went up to Foxborough to see the Stones in the Patriots’ old stadium in the early 90’s. So….I missed half the show. Not sure what got into me. Was it just the long car ride? But I passed out. But the second half of the show rocked on this rainy night! 

Probably the hottest show—literally—I ever saw was Blind Melon at The Sting in New Britain. A very hot summer night and no AC in what was maybe some sort of converted sweatshop or something? Also up there in the heat department was another Bruce show at The Meadows—the only time he’s played there—in 2010 or so. A scorching hot night and I was in The Pavillioin in the middle of one of those long rows. Obv cold beer solved that. There was one of the most awkward group actions at a show I’ve ever seen. Let’s see…just looked this up…..they opened with Sherry Darling, Badlands, and Out In The Street. The crowd was in a frenzy! Then the opening notes to Outlaw Pete hit—the dreaded “new stuff”-- and thousands of people sat down simultaneously like they were in a Catholic Church and the priest just said, “Please be seated”. Ended up getting picked up as I was walking downtown by a kid from school and his buddy—a boisterous gentleman with a thick Irish accent I had met at UConn basketball games. Having planned to go into work the next day, I was not aiming to drink more. They had other plans and stopped at The Half Door before dropping me off in West Hartford. Incredibly, I still made it to work the next day. I would never in a million, billion years be able to do that now. 

Have I ever walked in the wrong bathroom at a concert? I have. At a Phish show at Madison Square Garden. This might have been New Year’s Eve of 1998/99. This has happened to me a couple times in life and the first reaction is always, “Wait, where are the urinals. Oh……no. I’m in the wrong place”. But a very nice girl with one of those long dresses hippie girls always wear just kind of laughed at me and said, “You look lost”. Of course at concerts the Men’s Room often become unisex anyway so I guess it all evens out.                    

Loudest show? Cinderella at the Springfield Civic Center in 1990. Actually won these tickets off the radio. A few songs into their set the sound died completely for a few minutes. Yeah probably because it was a bazillion decibels. The only time my ears rang, like really rang, afterwards. I mean for a few days I would hear this ringing sound. I thought I was going deaf for sure. But then it went away. Good thing. You don’t know what you got till it’s gone. Now I know what I got it’s just this song.

Lest this whole thing seem like a long rant about problem drinking, I would like to note that I have attended some concerts where I voluntarily abstained from drinking. Lately I’ve become more of a seasonal drinker where I pretty much take the winters off. The lure of an ice cold beer is just stronger on a hot summer night. Plus dealing with any sort of hangover when it’s gray and 23 degrees or raining and 39 degrees is just an experience I decided I wanted out of. So a few years ago at the XL Center, which was literally across the street at the time, within a 2 week span I saw Mumford And Sons and Fleetwod Mac (without fired Lindsey Buckingham). Alcohol was on sale! But I didn’t drink. And it was still pretty enjoyable I must say. And I kind of felt proud of myself. Concerts have been my Achilles heel for awhile. Generally I can drink in moderation these days, but some of the biggest slip ups have been at shows. Partially because the band hits the stage and you think, “This is great! Life is great! Who cares about tomorrow!? We’re
going to live forever! Let me go grab another $17 24 ouncer!”. Also there’s the cutting off of sales where you don’t always know when it will happen thing. I would always overcompensate to avoid a dreaded horrifying outcome like sobering up by the encore. Of course I have no funny stories to tell about these two shows. But actually that’s become more common for all shows. Middle age FTL. 

Well I’ve taken up quite a bit of your time. In summary, I’ve been shoved, thrown in the mud, I’ve sweated, I’ve frozen half to death, I’ve gotten lost, I’ve been ripped off, I’ve drained my bank account—but I would do it all over again! Concerts make no logical sense. You fight crowds, you stand in 100 lines, you pay through the nose, you risk heat stroke, hypothermia, and lighting strikes. Half the time your view of the stage isn’t great and the sound definitely isn’t great. It makes a lot more sense to stay home and listen to your favorite band on Spotify! Maybe get a turntable and listen to them on vinyl from the comfort of your own home. No lines to the fridge or the bathroom! But there’s still that excitement when they hit the lights and everyone starts screaming and the band hits the stage. It’s a communal experience you can’t duplicate at home. Or a Catholic church. Makes it all worth it. 

I think. 



 



     





Saturday, September 3, 2022

All The Kids They Hold A Grudge, Their Minds Are Logged On To The Net

Well so here we are again. Everywhere you go people are constantly screaming, “What we need more of in 2022 is blogs!”. Okay, so maybe blogging is about as hip as My Chemical Romance, but 280 characters just doesn’t cut it for this guy. And Vlogging? That’s a hard no. 


I was telling myself to get back into writing so this is my way of getting back into shape. This won’t be so much a blog as a guy who’s been eating Fritos on his couch for a year wheezing his way through a 5K.   


I was thinking about….the Internet. The biggest event of our lifetime is probably not the pandemic, or Donald Trump, or 9/11, or Monica Lewinsky, or even a late middle aged Tommy Lee posting drunken dick pics to promote a reunion tour, but the Internet and all the ways it has changed life. It’s the automobile of the 21st Century. Cars created suburbia, highways, and Sammy Hagar’s I Can’t Drive 55. The Internet has created….well everything. 


It's become commonplace for people to say the Internet ruined life as we know it. You see it all the time: people posting comments on social media over the Internet saying the social media and the Internet destroyed society. Guess they are trying to bring the enemy down from the inside? Yes, it's kind of ironic, maybe a little hypocritical—or maybe it’s not. Maybe it just shows that it’s become such a ubiquitous force, it’s pointless to even try to live an offline life anyway. Remember when hipsters all were going back to flip phones? Have we heard much about that lately? I entertained the thought several years ago myself. Then I thought, “What if I get lost?”. And “Why do flip phone screens suck so bad?”. End of my retro hipster phase. 


And yet none of us felt so ambivalent if not hostile toward it in the 90’s when it started. I was totally into it. Guitar tabs posted for free online! No more $20 tablature books to buy. Emailing people. So cool! Er……are there any naked online pictures you can find of celebrities or other girls gone wild? (The bandwidth for actual videos was still at least a DSL connection away). I never found out the answer because this would be wrong and just sad! So did we think AOL was a harbinger of societal collapse? Helllll no. 


And yet now it seems common for people to say life changed for the worse and everyone seems to have buyer’s remorse and feel like we were lied to somehow. Or maybe not even lied to. Maybe everyone telling us The Information Superhighway was going to make us all smarter, better people believed it themselves. Maybe both the sellers and the buyers drank the Kool Aid. Did they know it would just become The Opinion Superhighway? The Tik Tok Transit Station? 


Now this is really tricky because how can you know it’s not just middle-aged nostalgia? Are people really yearning for the offline world or just their youth? Or a bit of both?


I will say there’s one example I think about. My job. I’ve been working in the same office for 19 years this September. There have been two major technical shifts in my time there: one happened in the first couple of years, the other happened in the last couple of years. The first was switching from paper cases to an all electronic system. I mean we weren’t COMPLETELY in the Stone Ages when I got there. There were computers. And you would use them to track cases and do certain things, but the cases were paper, the medical evidence and forms were all paper. But we underwent a (very painful) transition to all electronic case processing. (It’s the government---they can screw up a two car funeral. Usually by summoning a committee of 23 to design 39 different routes the two cars are to follow. And are we sure the deceased is dead? We’re going to need a death certificate before we can move forward).  


Also, when I got there, the place was pretty lively. Lots of socialization, lots of shall we say eccentric, sometimes alcoholic, occasionally insane people. But a lot of people seemed to know each other. There were semi-regular happy hours and a lot of people actually showed up. At our summer picnics and The Christmas I mean Holiday I mean Winter Party was always well attended. The place was kind of fun. But slowly things seemed to change. The place got more cliquey. Fewer people seemed to know each other. Happy Hours stopped since people just wouldn’t show up. And our summer and winter events became a little more sparsely attended even though attendance meant a free Thursday afternoon off from work. 


Did all the fun people just retire or leave? Was it management changing? Possibly that was part of it, but our switch to an electronic, Internet driven case filing and medical records system may have changed the place more than anything. In the paper case world, you had to move the cases between medical consultants,  supervisors, quality assurance, the clerical staff. Back and forth. Cases—and people---were constantly on the move though the office. So you might bring a file to someone but find yourself asking about the kids or telling them about your weekend attending a Maxim model search at The Brickyard, whatever the case may be. But once we went fully digital, there was rarely any work related reason to get out of your cubicle and social activity seemed to gradually decline accordingly. It’s not like everyone stared straight ahead and never spoke a word, but I think a lot less. And the cold convenience of technology might have driven all of it. 


But if our office community had become more splintered than before, it’s become almost non-existent now. It’s now a mostly remote job. People are only required to be in the office one day per week—and many seem to often use their time on days they are supposed to be in the office. We say this was driven by the pandemic, but Covid really just accelerated it. It’s really driven by the Internet. Covid or not, without being able to get online, remote work would be impossible. Most people seem to love working from home. I (mostly) like it. It’s the 21st Century’s answer and apology to the 20th Century’s biggest downer: commuting. There hadn’t been too much commuting before cars since everyone just lived where they worked. But if there is one thing that seems to unite us a country and a world, it’s our universal hate of commuting. A century of car commuting has raised blood pressures, bored people to tears, polluted the environment, caused endless amounts of car accidents, and subjected people to endless phony phone call skits from wacky morning drive DJ's.  Telework is the antidote to that poison. Whenever I hear people say they hate the office, if they talk further they usually bring up the commute. I don’t know if we actually do hate the office per se all that much, it’s just that the commute required to get us there and home spoils any redeeming qualities it might otherwise have. I myself have wasted COUNTLESS hours and days of my life sitting on some cruddy two seater bus with my leg rubbed against a big boned stranger’s leg because they actually require two seats or waiting for a bus in sub-zero temps or pouring rain. Which is why I can’t be anything but pro-telework and thank the creators of the Internet for bringing this bounteous gift to humanity. It’s this century’s white-out to last century’s grammatical mistake.  


And yet……can I be honest with you? Do not tell my bosses this. I actually have kind of mixed feelings about working from home. I love the zero commute, but it’s kind of lonely some days. I listen to music, I listen to podcasts. That keeps me company. I call my claimants and they are always an absolute delight! But after the Internet chained everyone to their desk in the office, now it’s chaining us to our desk at home, miles away from each other. Only a Skype away! But that’s still not real life. So it just seems the more technology advances, the further it drives away a lot fo face to face interactions with each other. Am I the only one a tiny bit sad about this? Maybe people with more of a life than me don’t care. Especially the ones with kids. Or the ones who kept all their friends growing up. Those folks  probably have very little need for the office as some sort of social town square. This is why office management’s talks about preserving “culture” rings hollow. I assume many offices are similar to mine where much of the culture and community had already pretty much gone the way of paper case filing systems anyway. Work form home is only the final phase of a computer and Internet driven separation of office staff from each other that’s been going on for a few decades.     


And is the office just a microcosm of society? I saw a Facebook post the other day asking about going to the mall back in the 80’s. This of course triggered a flood of nostalgia about how great the mall used to be. I kind of agree. I used to love the mall. Record stores, bookstores, Orange Julius, how could you not love it? Or video stores. I watched the Netflix doc about the last Blockbuster where they ran through the history of video stores. So I went online and found a blue and yellow Blockbuster T-shirt. Strangers compliment me on this shirt almost every time I wear it. I’ve never had a shirt that drew such praise. Is this because everyone kind of misses the social setting of a video store? I guess we should be happy that any smart TV or Roku or Apple TV is the biggest video store you could ever imagine right at your fingertips. You never have to leave your home! And no worries about snotty judgmental clerks questioning your rental choices! (Clerks? What are you a degenerate? The Mask? What are you mentally challenged?). It’s more convenient and convenience seems to win every time. But it’s lonelier. You don’t have to leave your house to work or watch any movie you want. Is that good news or bad news? 


But maybe all this is stupid. Okay so you can’t find a record store in the mall anymore, but you can still see live music. You can’t find video stores, but you can still go to the movies (if streaming doesn’t kill movie theaters). Work and shopping may be far more confined to home, but people still go out. They go to sporting events, they play sports, they join yoga classes. They get sunburns and alcohol poisoning in Cancun. They go to bars and restaurants. Lots and lots of things are still basically like they were in the offline world of the 80’s and mostly offline world of the 90’s. Could both the statements that computers and the Internet are going to save the world and that they are destroying the world be hyperbolic and basically wrong? 


Young Steve Jobs constantly used a metaphor about computers. He said humans aren’t very fast and can be easily outraced by any number of animals. But put a person on a bicycle and they can beat most animals in a race. So computers are the bicycle that will make us faster and better. 


I’d say that hasn’t hasn’t aged well. Is a crutch a better analogy? Do smart machines make us dumber? You could learn how to spell or you could let spellcheck do it for you. You can learn how to sing or let auto-tune do it for you. And did people before the computer age have no ability to enrich themselves? They did have things called books. And newspapers. And magazines. And encyclopedias. And evening TV news—which was actually probably a little better when it was more information driven instead of opinion driven ratings bait. That magical bicycle was kind of always available to anyone who wanted to ride it. And of course, it's still available today for people who still want it. So maybe the biggest insult you could actually give computers and the Internet isn’t that they have destroyed society, it’s that they haven’t maybe mattered? There were smart people and dumb people then. And there are smart and dumb people now. And the smart people are still smart because they read books—not Yahoo News. (Full disclosure: I read both so maybe flip a coin here).  


But maybe here’s the difference: you once needed to at least be semi-smart to get your voice heard. Most people in print and TV journalism are at least reasonably smart, as are people who create movies and TV shows. But social media, as opposed to the old media, has opened the floodgates to everyone. You can be a complete idiot and be on more or less equal footing in the comments section of Facebook or Twitter with any MIT professor or Yale graduate. On the Internet a PhD from Stanford is of equal value to The School Of Hard Knocks. 


So has the Internet made smart people smarter? Doubt it. Has it made dumb people dumber? Doubt it. But maybe it’s legitimized and popularized dumbness and meanness in a way like we’ve never seen before. Ignorant and dumb people have never had more company than they have now. So they can get together and egg each other on. Al Quaeda was organized online. So many mass shooters belong to forums where they can have their feelings reinforced by other angry, alienated young men. The January 6th insurrections were from many different states, but they organized it all online. (They probably got help turning their computers on). 30 years ago, that would have almost never happened because the Internet wasn’t around. Also white supremacy went into remission for a long time probably because the gatekeeper media didn’t talk about it and there just wasn’t a community many racists could find to share views and receive encouragement from others. Now Sleepless in Shreveport can pour out his hate filled heart about how much he hates black people to  all his semi-literate soulmates the world over.  


In other words, the Internet has democratized everything. And this is the real conflict because don’t we say we want things democratized? It’s just that the Internet has created a megaphone that has allowed the lunatic fringe to not be on the fringes anymore. Again, The Information Superhighway just seems to incredibly naïve now. In hindsight, we actually should have seen this coming. In the 20th Century, television and newspapers became the glue that helped bind society in a way it had never been before. We were really always the Divided States Of America but for a while we were actually pretty unified. Economic prosperity and a non-divisive, more bipartisan media helped create that. (In our divided times we don’t believe that: liberals say it was lies from the corporate media, conservatives say they were always stealth liberals imposing their agenda in sneaky ways through the mask of impariality but let’s move on). If the old media was like the world with its clothes on—often designer clothes at that---the new online media is life stripped naked. In many ways it’s more honest, less polite, less vetted. But as they said on Seinfeld, there’s good naked and bad naked and what we see is definitely naked while opening a pickle jar. Or it’s like what they say about nudists: it’s always the ones you least want to see naked who are first to take their clothes off. 


Maybe Steve Jobs was right. Maybe the digital age has given people a bicycle—it’s just that it’s not to the fast and thoughtful ones. They already had one. Instead it’s given the lowest common denominator one. Not one they can use to become smarter and faster, but one they can use to broadcast and celebrate and encourage ignorance. The bicycle is not knowledge or invention or creativity, it’s attention. A voice. So it’s not like humans racing a cheetah as he predicted, it’s smart and decent humans being chased by Proud Boys on their brand new 10 speeds. (Okay, souped up Harleys but trying to stick with the bicycle metaphor here).  


And this is why I say the biggest story of our time, almost the only real story of our time is the invention of the Internet. If the world hasn’t been destroyed in 100 years or 200 years, I’m sure that’s what the history books will talk about first. And those of us who are old enough to remember the offline world and yet have lived through the online world have been alive though a unique time in human history. The vast majority of people never saw the online world and the vast majority of future people will have no direct experience or memory of the offline world. So many other big recent historical events seem more of a symptom of this tidal wave. Again, 9/11 may not ever happen if those radical Muslims from different countries weren’t able to come together online. Trumpism likely never happens either. Again, it’s all from a voice a segment of the population now has thanks to the Internet that has fueled a movement that he was smart enough to exploit all the way to the White House. But in many ways Trump and his buddies have been along for this ride as much as the rest of us.  


So I don’t know. Maybe the Internet will destroy society after all. It certainly seems to have split us into factions much more. It’s become such a depository and dumping ground of opinions that it almost seems like facts have become less important. Is it going to kill any idea of an objective reality itself? John Adams said, “Facts are stubborn things” but what if they aren’t as stubborn as we might hope? What if facts are like a religious faith: they draw all their power from people’s belief in them. If everyone stops believing in God, then God is dead. (In the sense of having relevance down here on earth, not necessarily in the sense of whether God exists). Zeus and Aphrodite, and Athena weren’t just names in books, they were gods with shrines people visited to worship. Now they are dead because no one believes in them anymore. They don’t believe Zeus can do anything to help them in their life. If people don’t believe facts help them, will they just stop believing them and does the Internet provide an unprecedented forum for new distorted realities to form? If someone’s Alternative Facts are all I choose to believe, does an actual fact matter?


So the Internet just seems like this monster whose taken on a life of its own. Dr. Frankenstein had the noblest of intentions when he created him but the monster grew a mind of its own and the doctor lost control of his own creation. But whats’s amazing about technology is there are no rules, no laws that seem to govern it. Was legislation ever passed approving the Internet? Was there a Supreme Court ruling? Nope. We tightly monitor abortion rights, gay marriage, gambling, how fast you can drive on the highway, what drugs you can put in your body, but something like the Internet which has arguably impacted life at least as much as those things was never subject to any real review, sign-off, or permission slip. Same thing with the 20th Century’s big invention: cars. Don’t think the Supreme Court gave the green light there either. It just happened. People heard how fast they could get from Point A to Point B and no one thought there was any reason why we wouldn’t rush into it. We now know that cars have caused thousands or millions of deaths from driver and pedestrian accidents, that they have caused skyrocketing carbon emissions which could end up creating a climate all but inhospitable to humans…..so yeah. Someone probably should have reviewed this. They were spending more time worrying about prohibiting alcohol and never even considered any downside to cars. Not saying cars shouldn’t have existed, just pointing out that new tech exists on its own privileged, basically above the law plane that almost nothing else in society does. 


Holy crap this is long. I could probably go on but…………….I won’t. Here At Blog You Like A Hurricane we have a staff of one. Budgetary constraints just don’t allow more staff members I’m afraid. So Tom Cruise does his own stunts and your humble blogger does his own editing. 


What have we learned? Probably nothing. Bye!   


PS--And I didn't even talk about distracted driving. Thanks Apple! Another reason Steve Jobs' metaphorical bike rider won't be outracing any cheetahs any time soon. The cheetah isn't texting that smokeshow he met at Cross Fit training in the middle of the race before crashing into a tree!