Thursday, September 30, 2010

First They Came For The Boyfriend...


Several weeks ago the boyfriend said something so shocking, so disturbing, so vile I had to ask him to repeat himself to be sure I actually heard what I thought I had heard.

"I think I'm beginning to really like Bakersfield" he said.

WTF?

What kind of sociopath says such a thing? Was he on crack?

Truth be told he hadn't really been himself ever since he started the new job. He was different. He was... happy.

OK, that's a stretch. He was happiER. True "happiness" in Bako is a pie-in-the-sky, unattainable goal. Like clean air and water.

He'd taken the job out of desperation. The original thinking was it would be a place-holder, like my job, until something came up in LA. But it ended up exceeding our limited expectations. By a long shot. The people were nice, or so he said. The facilities much better than his previous job. And the pay was nothing to sneeze at.

Ultimately I decided to let his crazy talk slide. It seemed a small price to pay for an end to the uncontrollable sobbing and veiled suicide threats I'd endured during the last job.

But then last week I came home and caught him at the computer perusing the most obscene and perverted website imaginable.

The Bakersfield MLS!

He was looking at homes!

For sale!

For us!

He sheepishly explained the method to his madness. Homes in Bakersfield were unbelievably cheap. This is ground zero for the foreclosure crisis and you can pick up a four bedroom home with a pool and the mortgage would be half our rent. Noticing the look of horror on my face, he added that it would make a great investment and we could rent it out if we ended up moving back to LA.

I'm not buying it. He's thinking of putting down roots here. Like an alien spore.

Is this how it starts? The assimilation? What's next? Country music? Cowboy boots? Trucks?

And what about me? Is it contagious? Do you feel anything? Or do you just go to bed normal one night and wake up the next morning with an overwhelming desire to run out and pick up "Going Rogue" by Sarah Palin?

I guess we'll just have to see how this all plays out. Hopefully it's just a phase. Like our brief dabbling in vegan food.

If not, I don't know what I'm going to do.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Carrie On


It's not the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, but it appears to be pretty darn close...

CARRIE UNDERWOOD!

Tonight, for one night only. At the RoboCop Aren.....er, "RaboBank Arena".

It seems like the whole town is going tonight. Everyone is so gol darn excited they are quivering with anticipation.

Reminds me of the time I saw Cher.

We won't be attending. Not out cup of tea.

Not yet, at any rate.

Check back in a few months, it may be an entirely different story the way things are going.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Coffee Klatch


I have a new friend.

Her name is Marlene.

We're coffee buddies.

Probably the most distressing thing I discovered on my first day of work, and there were many, was the fact that no one in this office drinks coffee.

Which means, there is no coffee in this office.

And that just isn't going to fly with me. I'm a caffeine addict and trust me, you don't want to fuck with me if I haven't had my morning fix.

Not only do they not drink it, but they appear to be openly hostile to the very notion of it. I noticed an ancient Mr. Coffee in the kitchen and off handedly mentioned to the office manager I was going to brew a pot. You'd think I just mentioned I was going into the kitchen to cook up a batch of meth by the look she gave me. It didn't matter in the end. The machine was busted.

In my previous life I'd just swing by a Starbucks or Coffee Bean for my morning cup of joe. But in my new, downmarket life that's an unaffordable luxury. No more mochas or soy lattes for me. No, I'd have no choice but to resort to "Plan B".

Gas station coffee.

In the past two weeks, I've sampled them all. Exxon, Shell, Fastrip (a Bakersfield exclusive). And after much deliberation I've finally settled on Chevron. Their coffee isn't much different from the swill all the other ones serve, but they have an outstanding variety of flavored creamers that help disguise the taste and almost make you forget your probably drinking recycled oil from out back.

Which brings us to Marlene.

She works at Chevron. Four A.M. until 1PM, five days a week, for the past seven years.

"It's a living" she'll tell you. Almost every day.

Marlene is a tank of a woman, standing taller than me (and I'm 6'3"). I'm pretty sure she outweighs me. She looks to be mid 50's, but I'm thinking she's younger and just been rode hard. She has a massive pyramid of dirty blond curls resting on her shoulders, which she styles like a standard poodle. Because of the work shirt she thinks I'm a doctor.

I think she has a thing for me.

If there's a line she always opens up a register for me. She's always so happy and pleasant to me.

"How's the wife?" she always asks. Where she got that I have no idea. I think the first time she asked it was to determine whether I was available and when I replied "Great" it burst her balloon a bit. Now she continues to ask just to hide her interest, or to gauge whether there might some day be an opening. Waiting for the day I reply "Not so great, we've separated...". At which point she'll make her move, which is frightening to contemplate.

But all the same, I like Marlene. She always starts my day with a smile.

Monday, September 27, 2010

It Was What It Was


Last week was a rough one, emotionally. The sad grim reality finally set in that we weren't leaving.

Not now. Not any time soon. Maybe never.

What triggered it was the decision to formally, officially abandon the search for a job back in LA. It had long been an exercise in futility and had devolved into a kabuki-like morning ritual. It really wasn't much different from playing the lottery; deep down you know, rationally, that you aren't going to win and yet you're equally certain that the day you stop playing will be the day your numbers finally come up. And so you keep going. For awhile.

When I first found myself out of work in the summer of '07 I lept into action. I worked with two head hunters, registered with 8 different placement firms and joined God knows how many online services. One of them aggregated job listings from every job board you'd ever heard of and many more you haven't. You entered your parameters and every morning received a tidy little email with every single listing it could find. In the beginning it ran a dozens of pages and took hours to sort through. By the end it was reduced to only a handful of listings, mostly for entry level positions or unpaid internships. It was really my last link to the LA job market, and last week I finally pulled the plug.

Over the course of three years I lost track of how many jobs I applied for; I stopped counting at 500 and that was before we moved to Bakersfield. The whole process only generated one interview, back in '08. Working against me was the fact that the advertising business is a lot like "Logan's Run" with 40 as everyone's sell-by date. I was already well past that when I started looking for a job.

But it's not all doom and gloom. The job I took in Bako, originally as a place holder, temporary, stop gap measure has turned out to be better than expected. The pay sucks, but so far it's covering the bills. The work is interesting in a Bako kind of way. I have insurance for the first time in years, which is sadly considered a luxury nowadays. And they take out my taxes which will avoid many sleepless nights around April 15th.

So one door closes. Whether or not another one opens remains to be seen. But it was time to put the past squarely in the past and move on.

And so it goes.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Leave It To Beaver


The morning weather girl is known for two things:

A voice that could cut glass and enormous tits. Oh, and dressing like a hooker.

This morning she was talking beaver.


"Is this not the cutest beaver you've ever seen?!"


"Uh oh! Looks like we're going to have to chase some beaver..."


"Does your beaver have a name?"


"Ill be here for another hour, so come on down if you'd like to see some beaver!"

If You Have To Ask...


I think it's a trick question.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Fly Me To The Moon


The harvest moon last night was amazing and the fact it fell on the first day of Fall was poignant.

The harvest moon actually seems to mean something here. It probably has something to do with the fact that they actually, you know, harvest things.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

All's Fair


So today is the first official day of Fall and that can only mean one thing...

The Opening of the Kern County Fair!

No word yet on whether the Michael Jackson Memorial Pedophile Fun Zone is returning this year.

I did catch on the news that this year you'll be able to get "deep fried beer". They didn't get into the mechanics of how exactly that's done, but it would seem to me to bend at least one of the laws of physics.

But what do I know, I have an art degree.

Never let it be said that Bako didn't do it's part for the advancement of science.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Come For The Sun. Stay For The Fun.


I was driving the other day when a radio spot came of for the Comfort Suites hotel out by the highway...

"If you're visiting Bakersfield for business, or just a long vacation..."

??????

A vacation? In Bakersfield?

I can't imagine anyone wasting a vacation in Bakersfield, let alone a "long" one.

There isn't anything to see or do here. Bakersfield is what you pass through on your way to somewhere better. My parents came to visit months ago and I was able to give them the grand tour of the city in under 20 minutes. Maybe there's a whole part of the city I'm unaware of. The interesting part.

But here's the thing - when I was digging online for the postcard image at the top of the post I discovered a lot of vintage photos of the city and by all appearances this place used to actually be, you know, interesting. Take a look...


It's almost... dare I say it.... pretty.


So what happened? Earthquake baby. 1952. Apparently it took out all the cool stuff, and the city fathers of the day decided to replace everything with drab, Soviet style concrete bunkers. I mean, this was the Kern County courthouse before the earthquake...


And this is what they chose to replace it with...


And it's just been down hill from there.

Such a shame. Such a lack of vision.

It's sad to imagine what could've been here. Instead they've just settled for being...

"The Crappiest Place On Earth."

Monday, September 20, 2010

Got Gas?


The gas explosion in San Bruno two weeks ago is a little cause for concern. It isn't so much that the city of Bakersfield sits atop a spiderweb of oil company pipeline as it is that we're served by the same incompetent, evil utility, Pacific Gas & Electric.

We had never had the pleasure of PG&E service until we moved here. In LA we had a different gas provider, one which didn't cause things to blowup. When we moved here there was already an all out war going on between the fine folk of Bako and PG&E. It started months prior to our arrival when PG&E rolled out some new technology, using Bako as corporate guinea pigs. I've written before about Bako being corporate America's go-to test market. They would tell you it's because statistically or demographically Bakersfield represents some magical cross section of America that makes it ideally suited for testing new things. I still believe it's because they consider Bako expendable in case things go horribly awry.

At any rate, PG&E had unveiled it's hot new thing... "Smart Meters".

I suppose we could debate the wisdom of marketing anything labeled "smart" in this town, but the truth of the matter is it was a moot point. PG&E is a utility and a monopoly and it's not like anyone here had any say in the matter. The "smart" meters were state-of-the-art, or so they said, and broadcast their data on a radio low frequency. PG&E goons slowly cruising the streets could collect all the data without dealing with locked gates and snarling dogs. It would be fast! It would be easy!

They installed the "smart" meters on half of the town, and when that hapless slice of the population received their next gas bill they discovered it had doubled.

All hell broke out, as you could imagine. It was summer and the old bills routinely ran around $500. Very quickly PG&E held a press conference to explain the situation. It was all very simple, they said...

People were simply using twice as much gas as the previous month.

That was too stupid to fly, even for here. Pretty soon the local lawmakers were calling for inquiries and congressional hearings. PG&E quickly came up with explanation 2.0...

The old meters were wildly inaccurate and the new meters were spot on. The people of Bakersfield had actually been getting "free" gas for the past 50 years, without so much as a thank you to PG&E. They wouldn't go so far as to accuse people of "theft", but they were willing to overlook it all because that's just the type of benign, thoughtful utility they were.

Now shut the fuck up about the meters and pay your bill.

So watching PG&E try and spin away their responsability in leveling a neighborhood up north isn't all that surprising.

I particularly like their helpful hint to "Call PG&E if you smell gas".

In Bakersfield?

How could you tell?

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Where Has The Time Gone


Today is the first, and one would hope only, anniversary of this blog. I didn't realize I started this thing the very first week we were here; I thought it took a couple of weeks for the despair to consume me. But, here we are.

In honor of the dubious distinction, I've reinstated the rolling panoramas of Hooterville at the top of the page. It was never my intention to stop them, just a horrible housekeeping error. A couple of months ago I decided to do one my infrequent stabs at being organized. My computer desktop was a complete mess and I started purging unneeded files. The images for the blog were in a folder labeled "Bako" and when I saw the word I reflexively deleted it.

Most be something Freudian.

At any rate, the boyfriend has to work today and I have nothing but time on my hands, so I rebuilt them. Now you too can experience the wonder that is Bakersfield.

Come back often, they'll change every day!

Friday, September 17, 2010

May I Help You?


So after two days and several hours on the phone with Paypal, the source of the fraud and identity theft, it looks likes at the very least my money has been refunded.

"If you'd just check your account you'd see the money has been refunded" the woman told me in a snit.

Listen honey, if I could I would, but because I had to close the account because of your fraudulent activity I no longer have access to see if your lying or not.

Remarkably they were able to locate the perpetrators, contact them, get them to confess and voluntarily return the funds, which is why it was resolved so quickly.

"So what action is Paypal going to take against them?" I asked.

"We've flagged the account..."

Flagged? Well isn't that special. I guess it will make it easier to find them when they do it again, if they haven't already.

"I see here they've been flagged before..."

Are you fucking kidding me? How many "flags"must one have before Paypal actually, you know, does something? I'm guessing they wouldn't contact the authorities or, god forbid, close an account unless it had more flags the front of the U.N.

What did we, the consumers, do to so piss off corporate America that they've chosen to make this process so painful? I understand the financial incentive; if fewer people call it saves them money, which is why they bury the contact info on their websites like a pirate treasure. But it's gone beyond that and now seems purposely designed to be as sadistic as possible. Paypal isn't the worst offender; that distinction belongs to Time Warner Cable. I spent two weeks of my life and God knows how many hours with them trying to restore our phone service which they'd "inadvertently" cut off.

Fun fact! Much is made of the Indian call centers, but did you know that if you call in the dead of the night you actually get sent to Argentina? It's true! After wasting three days on hold with Time Warner I got the brilliant idea to call at 2am, thinking that the traffic from the West Coast would be tailing off at that time, and the traffic from the East Coast wouldn't have yet revved up. I spoke to a lovely woman in Argentina and we had a leisurely chat about summer in Buenos Aires after it was determined she couldn't help me.

Time Warner also gets bonus points for telling me I had to go to their website to fill out a work order when I was calling to complain that our internet service had gone out.

But here's the thing: Corporate America keeps saying they've outsourced their call centers to save money, yet they secretly still have representatives here in the good ole U.S. of A. (Shhh... they're in Colorado Springs). And one thing I've learned is that if you raise holy hell, start dropping F-Bombs like crazy and demand to speak to an American they will ultimately transfer you back to ’Murka and Voila!, problem solved. It worked with both Paypal and Time Warner. Once I got an American with Paypal, the problem was solved in 10 minutes. With Time Warner it took about 15.

Paypal transferred me to 4 different people in Bangalore before I finally got the American, so they're paying 5 people to essentially do the job of one. Corporate efficiency at it's finest.

And people wonder why this country is going down the toilet.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Putting the “Dent” In “Identity”


I knew something was up on Saturday when I received a notice from Sirius/XM informing me that my service would be cut if I didn't pay my past due charges immediately. That would be bad news if I'd actually ever signed up for the service.

And sure enough, last night I discovered I'd been a victim of identity theft.

Well, good luck with that.

Do you know what they're going to get if they hack into any of my accounts?

DECLINED
DECLINED
DECLINED
ACCOUNT CLOSED
DECLINED
DECLINED
DECLINED
ACCOUNT CLOSED
ACCOUNT CLOSED
DECLINED
DECLINED
DECLINED
ACCOUNT CLOSED
DECLINED
DECLINED
DECLINED

Within three days of losing the LA house in a short sale, every single account I had was suspended or closed. The only card I still have that works is my supermarket club card, and if they hack into that all their going to get for their trouble is a free can of dog food. I don't know what the hourly rate for hackers is these days, but they're actually going to lose money going after me.

All the same, I'm still starting the joyless task of reclaiming my identity and to be honest, my heart really isn't in it. My "identity", such as it is these days, is so damaged and abused it hardly seems worth the effort. You should be able to trade your identity in when it's worn out and useless. If you can total a Ford Fiesta and move on, why not your identity?

I've finally done what I've avoided for the past three years - ordered a copy of my credit report. While I haven't been able to open so much as a Petco account, someone was able to get Howard Stern for free for months. Lord knows what other damage has been done. When I picture finally viewing my credit report, I imagine viewing a mutilated body after a horrible murder. I see my credit report on a stainless steel gurney, covered with a sheet. The Credit Coroner comes in and slowly draws down the sheet. I gasp in horror and collapse in sobs...

"Yes that's my credit.... what kind of monster could've done something like that?!?!"

I was on the phone last night with Lisa, a very nice woman, closing accounts that were possibly still accessable.

"Have you filed a police report?"

"Was it necessary?" I asked.

I really couldn't handle another midnight visit from the B.P.D.

I think I've suffered enough.

Exhibit A


You know who looks like they're from Bakersfield?

Nancy Grace.

Evidently she has a new show, and she's been pimping it on TV relentlessly. Every time I see her I think "Didn't I just see you at FoodMaxx?"

All the women here look like her.

It's mostly the hair. She's rocking a classic Bakerdoo.

But it's also, I think, the seething anger.

That, I can understand.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Make It Work


I just discovered we missed the Gun Expo.

That's like Fashion Week here.

Now we won't know what's hot for Spring.

Bedazzled grenades are SO last season.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

B.f.P.D.


Nothing good ever comes of ebay (something California will find out soon enough once Meg Whitman buys her governorship).

I'm just speaking from personal experience. I haven't used the service much, but each time I have it's been nothing but disappointment. Things you sell never sell for what you think they're worth, things you buy usually end up being a ripoff. Even when something shows up pretty much as advertised it just proves that phrases such as "mint condition" and "minor damage" are all in the eyes of the beholder. Or seller.

The boyfriend, however, is quite the opposite. He was a rabid ebay-er when I first met him. He's suffered all the same disappointments, fraud and heartbreaks as me, many times over, and yet through it all he's remained undeterred. I think it's because it's not so much the actual purchase for him as it is the pursuit. He's like a big game hunter, after a prize. Actually, it's crazier than that; if you'd ever seen his wild eyed frenzy in the final seconds of an auction, pounding the "refresh" key like a jackhammer, you'd understand.

Of course our diminished circumstances have kind of put the kibosh on his ebay habit. That doesn't stop him from looking, and ever so often he discovers something that becomes an itch that just has to be scratched. And so it was a few months ago with the Mercedes.

The boyfriend is a car guy, and in better times he had a small stable of classic and not so classic cars in various states of repair. He'd buy them and sell them, work on them, keeping and driving them for months or years and then trading them for something else. In the time I've known him he's gone through 18 cars, but who's counting. His pride and joy was an '84 butter yellow Cadillac. When our world started collapsing, and we'd already gone through the savings and the 401k, we both started selling off all our prized possessions. One by one the cars were all gone, except the Caddy; That was too much to part with. We moved here to Bakersfield with it in tow and it sat in the garage until Spring when, sadly, that went too.

But I knew it wouldn't last.

The idea of him without a car project is almost unthinkable and I knew it was only a matter of time. And sure enough, a couple of months ago he called me in to look at what he'd found on ebay... a '83 or '84 maroon Mercedes. We really couldn't afford it, but I could tell by the look in his eye that the Crazy Train had already left the station. Being the enabler I am, I started justifying it; when you think about what a therapist would cost, or a stay in psychiatric institution, it really wasn't that much. And then I looked closely at the listing.

If this thing had any more red flags on it it would have been a May Day parade through Red Square. The most serious one was the fact the car was in Massachusetts, so there'd be no way to check it out first. But he was not to be dissuaded and before you knew it, it was a done deal.

The car arrived about a week later and to the shock of absolutely no one but the boyfriend, it was a complete lemon. Among it's many sins was the fact that the "burgundy" interior had once been tan, and the previous owner had evidently dyed it with beet juice. Once you sat in the car, you'd exit looking like you'd just waded through a vat of chianti. But you really didn't have to worry about sitting in it since it didn't run.

There followed the expected recriminations. Angry emails flying back and forth, talk of wire fraud and theft. The seller didn't give a shit. The boyfriend contacted both ebay and Paypal, who pointed to the fine print in their terms of service and washed their hands of it. All was looking lost. But then he found an unlikely sympathetic ear...

His credit card company! Go figure. I never thought I'd see the day when a credit card company wasn't just concerned, but actually helpful. He pled his case and in very short order they cancelled the transaction.

Now the angry emails were really flying, but now they were coming one way, out of Boston. They were mostly threats to trash his reputation on ebay, to post his name and address on sites dealing with car sales. Until yesterday.

Yesterday the seller threatened to kill him.

The boyfriend came home ashen faced and called me in to look at the email. Yup, there it was..."Going to KILL you!"

What to do. Call the cops, obviously. The boyfriend called the cops back in Boston figuring they were the ones with the killer in their midst, they should be the ones to do something about it. But they informed him that he needed to go through our local police. Which brings us to the Bako angle to the whole story. You knew there had to be one, right?

So around 6:30 last night the boyfriend calls Bakersfield's finest. They seemed concerned and informed him that, yes, it was a very serious matter. They would send someone out to take a report within a couple of hours. So we waited and waited, "straightened" up the house a bit, if you know what I mean.

Hours went by... nothing.

Finally around 10 we shut off the lights and went to bed.

And then, in the dead of the night, the dogs started going berserk. I jumped out of bed and went to see what was up and saw the dogs barking by the front door. I looked at the clock... it was 1am. I looked through the peephole and made out the unmistakable silhouette of a cop. You have fucking got to be kidding me.

I went and rousted the boyfriend; this was his problem. He dashed out of the bedroom, grabbing the Marimekko floral print kimono-style robe I'd gotten him for Christmas years ago. In hindsight, not the best choice in wardrobe for dealing with the authorities. He let the cop in and I heard them mumbling in the kitchen for about 10 minutes.

I hid in the bedroom.

For all I know, the Bakersfield police are completely enlightened and tolerant of gay couples, but I wouldn't bet on it. And considering the robe, oy vey.

I heard the boyfriend let the cop out and he came back to bed. I asked him what they were going to do about it.

"Nothing".

According to them, this is a civil matter.

Really? That couldn't way for day break? It was such a newsflash it had to be delivered in the middle of the fucking night?

What the hell is wrong with these people? One of the alleged virtues of these country folk is their supposed down-home, aw shucks common sense. Where the hell was that at 1 in the morning?

I have to say the whole episode left us totally creeped out.

Not the serial killer in Boston, the Bakersfield Police.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Year Two


I honestly thought we'd be gone by now, our nightmare year in Bakersfield quickly fading into memory, mentioned only humorously in passing over cocktails...

"Well if you think THAT'S bad, let me tell you about the year we lived in Bakersfield..."

At the very least I thought I'd be staring at a wall of neatly packed moving boxes, even if the details of where we were going were still to be ironed out.

Exactly why I thought that is a mystery. It's not like the circumstances that drove us here in the first place have changed. In many respects, they've actually gotten worse. Probably just a survival instinct, an act of self delusion to keep from stringing a rope over the rafters of our rented two car garage.

But surprisingly I'm not all that upset. "Resigned" is probably the best description of my mood. Maybe it's all those hours of watching "Lock Up: Raw". I'm always amazed at how homey some of the inmates at San Quentin have made their cells. It just goes to show you that anything is doable if you work at it. And besides, there are people in far worse shape than we are, so maybe we should just be grateful for what little we have.

So I guess we should make ourselves comfortable. Looks like we're going to be here awhile.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

And Speaking of Unimaginable Tragedies...


Today marks the one year anniversary of our exile in Bakersfield.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Shocking But True!


A few weeks ago we mysteriously started receiving a subscription to US magazine. It has our address on it, but someone else's name. Nothing too surprising about that... not knowing where you live? That's so Bako. We figured it would get sorted out soon enough so we might as well enjoy it while we get it.

Flipping through the pages it became painfully obvious that we are now completely out of touch.

Who were half these people?

Paris Hilton was arrested? Again? Where was I?

Why on earth are the Kardashians famous?

Why does any of this matter?

I must say it's somewhat liberating breaking free of the gravitational pull of the Celebrity Industrial Complex of LA. Until you leave you don't really notice how much celebrity and fame are deeply woven into the fabric of Los Angeles. And that aint necessarily a good thing.

Celebrity foibles and sightings are such a staple of the local news that at times it's indistinguishable from "Entertainment Tonight". And we aren't even talking Brangelina A-listers here. Thanks to the new Reality TV manufacturing base, a new crop of famewhores is dumped on the market weekly. A year ago the meatheads of "Jersey Shore" were less than nobodies and now they have book deals and fragrance lines and "Snooki" has entered the lexicon.

It isn't overstating it to say celebritydom is pervasive to every aspect of life in LA. You can't escape it driving down the street, where "stars" leer down on you from every bus and billboard. Streets get closed for crews filming NCISCSI:Miami/LasVegas/NewYork. Or get blocked by roving packs of paparazzi watching Paris shop at Kitson.

Every mom and pop establishment has a wall of signed head shots, as if it really matters that Howie Mandel uses the same dry cleaner or Ricardo Montalban once used the same car wash to detail his Corinthian leather. Restaurants and clubs rise and fall on who's seen and who's not and they secretly pay to get an appearance. I hear Paris charges a cool $100K to show up at your door.

Probably a lot more for the gratuitous cooch shot sliding out of the Bentley.

We used to have a townhouse in West Hollywood two doors down from an unassuming French restaurant. One day it closed without notice and became shrouded in scaffolding. Six months later it emerged as DOLCE. Ashton Kutcher was an investor and it quickly became the white hot center of the A-list club crowd. Now the paparazzi were trampling our front yard and you couldn't leave because the driveway was blocked by a limo full of Olsen Twins. Within a month or two, Ashton cashed out and sold it to some other investors and soon after the celebs departed like a swarm of locusts for the next new thing. Last time I was in LA I noticed DOLCE was gone.

It's now an unassuming French restaurant.

One afternoon on Sunset I was almost run off the road by careening SUV's driving on the wrong side of the road chasing a white Range Rover, followed by a couple of squad cars. It was complete pandemonium and ended up as a massive traffic jam at rush hour. When I got home I turned on the local news to see what it was all about.

It was Britney Spears going for sushi at Blowfish, pursued by stalkerazzi.

Last summer, just as we were packing for exile, Michael Jackson died. His last tour stop, the rented Beverly Hills Mansion, was just down the hill from us. For weeks after it was like a scene out of "Apocalypse Now", with squadrons of helicopters hovering and swooping over a now deserted house. Why? Why not?

Up close it all looks like glitz and glamour, but looking at it from a distance now it all just looks so stupid. What a complete waste of time and effort. I thought I would miss it quite honestly, since I worked tangentially to the entertainment industry, or "The Industry" as it's known in LA (as if there's no other kind). And I have to say it's a bit of relief that I don't.

There's something to be said for living in a place where the biggest celebrity in town is the high school quarterback.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Unclear On The Concept


Yesterday I found myself stuck in traffic. (Yes, we have traffic here. It's what happens when "master planning" is considered some sort of Liberal conspiracy and you build dozens of far flung subdivisions and can't be bothered to improve the two lane country lanes that connect them.) I found myself stuck behind a "Super Patriot", a common species here although this was one of the more extreme examples I've seen.

The car was plastered with so many wingnut bumper stickers I couldn't even make out the color of the car. Countless American flags and eagles and all the slogans you come to expect here...

ONE NATION UNDER GOD

THESE COLORS DON'T RUN

FREEDOM ISN'T FREE

DON'T TREAD ON ME

Yadda, yadda, yadda.

But the one that amused me the most was the large one slapped on the center of the trunk...

BUY AMERICAN!

It was right above the Toyota emblem.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Indian Summer


Once the boyfriend came home from work last night we discovered there wasn't a thing to eat at home, which left us with two choices - a kamikaze run to the market, which neither us of was enthused about, or heading off into the great unknown in search of a restaurant. We opted for the second choice which was a dicey proposition; the last time we set off for dinner with no clear destination in mind we ended up an hour later at each other's throats and starving.

I think we ended up at Denny's, not speaking to each other.

This time however, we hit the jackpot. We quickly settled on a middling middle eastern restaurant we'd once tried. It wasn't great, but it was cheap. It was located in a strip mall off California Avenue and what we hadn't noticed before was this was the ethnic food motherlode. Located in the same mall were a Thai restaurant, a Vietnamese Pho spot and an Indian restaurant. I left it up to him to pick and he was almost giddy with the choices. He literally drove in a tight circle in the parking lot, round and round, trying to choose. We've been dying to find some flavor in this town and now we had our pick. You couldn't base your choice on popularity, since all were deserted. Normally that would set off huge warning bells, but this is Bako and we're talking "furriner" food, so we didn't read too much into the absence of customers.

Ultimately he chose the Indian restaurant. I was a bit leery based solely on the name - "Taj Mahal".

C'mon, really? That was the best they could come up with?

The staff seemed overjoyed by our arrival. We were the only people in a huge dining room. They waited on us hand and foot and we ordered a variety of items à la carte. We tried not to get our hopes up, having been burned a couple of times before. Like the Thai restaurant near our house, where "spicy" meant an extra dose of Mrs. Dash.

The food arrived and it was amazing. We love Indian food, but neither us claim to be experts. The food easily matched or exceeded what we'd experienced in LA. We were very happy campers. Although, for future reference, when these people say "spicy" they mean "spicy".

But the highlight for me wasn't so much the food, which was by all accounts excellent. It was the entertainment. Mounted on the wall directly opposite me was a flat screen TV featuring Indian satellite TV. And for the next hour we would be watching...

"Entertainment Ke Liye Kuch Bhi Karega!"

Brought to you by "Ulana Ultro Bright!"

As near as I could tell it was basically "India's Got Talent", although the judges also had a gong, so there was a bit of the Chuck Barris craziness involved.

I was transfixed.

There were elements of 'American Idol" to it, with one of the judges doing his best Indian Simon Cowell impression. There was even a vapid Ryan Seacrest-ish host, proving that "bland" knows no borders. The contestants ranged from a Kashmiri dance troop to a woman who shot arrows over her shoulder. There were contortionists and as near as I could tell an Indian Rodney Dangerfield. He got no respect either and was gonged.

Almost as entertaining were the commercials, slick ads for naan and microwavable Samosas and Bollywood movies "coming this Eid". By far my favorite was for "K&K Insurance... serving all your gas station and convenience store needs!"

Our waiter informed us this was a nightly show, with each night's winners returning on Friday to crown the week's big winner.

I think I know were we'll be this Friday night.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Baku #10: Tap Water


The bath tap gurgles.
The water runs brown, like dirt.
That can't be good, right?

Monday, September 6, 2010

At Summer's End


The unofficial end of summer. And not a moment too soon.

Summer used to be my favorite season but time and circumstances have dropped it to the bottom of the list. It always seemed to start with such high hopes and anticipation, only to end with varying degrees of disappointment.

Summer became, for me at any rate, the season when grand plans didn't pan out, expectations were woefully unmet, vacation trips went horribly awry and on more than one occasion relationships imploded in the blink of eye.

Summer was when I lost my job, and then our home.

So when it comes to Summer... not a fan. Good riddance.

But the end of Summer means the beginning of Fall, my favorite season of the year.

You can feel the change in the air, and in my book any change is more than welcome.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Sour Krauts


I had to run a bunch of errands on my lunch hour on Friday and decided to treat myself to a little fast food. I stopped at a burger joint on a main drag near the highway and was surprised to find a gaggle of German tourists milling about the front counter.

Germans? In Bakersfield? Clearly they weren't here to see the sights since there aren't any sights to see. Not unless you count "Buck Owens' Crystal Palace", and really, why would you?

It then occurred to me that they were probably on their way to Yosemite and just pulled off the highway for food, proving once again that Bako is really nothing more than a giant truck stop.

A few of them were intently studying the menu board but the rest were surveying the restaurant and it's patrons, muttering amongst themselves.

Now it just so happens I took two years of German in High School. My parents were raised speaking it and I thought it would be charming to be able to speak it to my grandparents when they visited. It turns out it was all for naught. Seems my family speaks "low" German, a dialect, and nobody could understand half of what I was saying. So I abandoned my German studies before I ever got truly conversational. I've forgotten almost all of it, save for a handful of phrases and a random mix of words. And one of those words I remembered was "schrecklich" and I was hearing it a lot as I stood behind the Germans.

It means "horrible".

Now that seems a bit harsh, especially coming from people who idolize David Hasselhof. The people of Bakersfield are many things, but I don't think I'd go so far as to call them horrible.

Not all of them at any rate.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Time Will Tell


Two things were clear by the end of dinner Wednesday night: We'd both forgotten our own anniversary, and neither one of us had paid the rent. Regrettably, there was little to be done about the first, but the second was going to have to be dealt with tout de suite.

So yesterday morning I needed to swing by the property management office to drop off a check before work. It's in a dodgy part of town, nowhere you'd want to find yourself after dark. Makes sense, in a way; although our apartment is nice, in a respectable neighborhood, the bulk of their properties appear to be section 8 housing in "that" part of town. Every time I've had to go by the office it's looked like a welfare office waiting room.

I arrived around 8:20, thinking they opened at 8:00, only to discover they actually opened at 8:30. I figured I'd just hang at the door to be first in line in case anyone else showed up. I was minding my own business staring off into space when suddenly I hear a low menacing voice behind me.

"That's a mighty fine watch you've got..."

It startled me and I spun around to see Mike Tyson standing behind me. Or rather, Mike Tyson's evil Bakersfield twin. Built like a linebacker and decked up head to toe in gangbanger finery was a frightening looking thug. His arms were covered with tattoos and tattoos snaked up his neck. And he was staring at my watch.

"That is one F I N E watch you got on my man..."

And then he flashed me a smile of gold teeth.

"I really like all the diamonds."

I was wearing my Movado, the one with the diamond bezel, the one that had been a Christmas gift from the boyfriend in better times. It was one of the few remnants of our past life, a reminder that at one time we had been prosperous. I had come close to pawning it several times when things had gotten particularly dire, but I always held off because it meant so much to me. Now it looked like it meant a lot to someone else too.

"What's a watch like that cost?" he asked.

I don't know, I said, it was a gift. That isn't entirely true. Yes it was a gift, but I knew exactly what it cost. I wasn't about to share that info with him and sign my own death warrant.

I could feel all the blood draining out of my face. I was about to be jacked. Jacked in Bakersfield. Only then did I notice he was holding a cashier's check. He was here to pay his rent. That didn't make him any less threatening, but still it put me a tiny bit at ease. But now he was staring at my chest.

"So I see you work at XXXXXX..."

God damn work shirt! I knew nothing good was going to come from this. Fine, he wouldn't jack me here, of course not. There would be witnesses. He'd stalk me at my office down by the rail yards in the middle of nowhere. He'd bide his time, now that he knew where I work. Fucking shirt. Well, at least the authorities will know who to call when my lifeless body is found floating in an irrigation canal.

As delightful as the conversation had been, I turned my attention to the office window, desperately looking for anyone. It was 8:26, four minutes to go.

*tick, tock, tick, tock*

"That watch is really amazing..."

*tick, tock, tick, tock*

'I looove how all the diamonds sparkle in the sun..."

Suddenly I saw the office manager through the window. I've dealt with her before, and she's dumb as a bag of bricks, but now if only she'd look at me and see the fear in my eyes, I'd take back all the nasty things I've thought about her in the past. She sauntered to the door and unlocked it. I anxiously jumped to the front desk and handed her my check. As she slowly, deliberately started writing out my receipt I realized the thug behind me would have to go through the same process. I would have several minutes to make my escape. Although he knew where I worked, he didn't know what I drove and, thank God, he didn't know where I lived.

Just then the office manager held up my check...

"SO YOU LIVE AT 1234 MAIN STREET*, RIGHT?"

You have got to be fucking kidding me. She just announced to an obvious hoodlum where I lived! And where he could find the lovely diamond watch he so coveted. I glanced over my shoulder, and the thug was all ears. I was sure he'd be by later that night to pick it up. In the middle of the night. While we were sleeping.

Of course it didn't happen, not last night at any rate.

But I'm sure it's just a matter of time.

Tick, tock, tick, tock.

*not our real address

Thursday, September 2, 2010

The Bronze Age


How sad is this? Yesterday was our anniversary and we both forgot.

We were having dinner last night and I asked the boyfriend if the rent had been paid because it was the 1st and then a look just passed over our faces as we realized what day it was. He has some mitigating circumstances - he just started a new job on Monday and he's been understandably preoccupied. I have no such excuse, especially since last Friday I stuck a post-it with "REMEMBER FLOWERS WEDNESDAY" on it on my desk. Of course I buried it under paperwork over the past couple of days.

It isn't quite as tragic as it sounds. We met in Palm Springs over Labor Day weekend, so we've always celebrated over that weekend even if the date is off. But still, we've never missed the actual date.

I'll have to see what I can do to make it up. Somehow I don't think an Applebee's gift card is going to cut it. This will be our "Bronze" anniversary so maybe...



Maybe not. Gotta give this some thought...

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Might Neighborly


Happy Good Neighbor Day!

Yeah, I'd never heard of it either. I don't know if it's a Bako thing, or if it's one of those small town phenomenon that just flies under the radar of most city slickers. Either way I find it absolutely charming. One day out of the year where you show your appreciation to your neighbors. Amazing. In 20 years in LA I never even met most of my neighbors.

They did a live remote on the morning news, at 6:30am, where people were lined up outside a florist, waiting for it to open. Waiting to buy flowers. For their neighbors! How nice is that? It's enough to melt the most cynical heart. Like mine.

It's put me in such a good mood, I may have to go out and buy some flowers for Cindy next door.

What the hell, I just may get some for Mary too.

Gotta go with the flow.