It must have been over thirty years
since we got the first fax machine in the office. A guy from the
phone company came and spent hours installing the dedicated line. We
plugged it in and with difficulty inserted the roll of thermostatic
paper. One of our competitors had also recently taken the plunge and
we tested out our respective machines sending faxes back and forth.
Mainly things like “Go fuck yourself,” and other witticisms. My
father never used the thing himself but was enchanted by it. He
described its function to everyone like he was recounting a vision at
Fatima.
When my boys were little they'd come to
the office after school each day. My dad still worked as hard as he
could but by then had slowed down quite a bit. He'd wake from his
afternoon nap and have a snack with the kids, usually something my
stepmother had forbidden him to eat. He told them about seeing an
airplane overhead for the first time. Dad remembered the Madrona
Theater in Seattle, where he worked as an usher. It closed for
several weeks in 1930 and he watched as the organ was torn out and
speakers were installed for the advent of sound motion pictures. The
grandchildren were also told stories about the Lindbergh baby
kidnapping. Sacco and Vanzetti and Leopold and Loeb. Dad didn't have
much of a filter. My kids would sit on his lap in his big leather
chair and listen. Grandpa remembered lots of lurid history and all
of the advances and inventions he'd witnessed since his birth in
1918. He'd stroke the kids' heads and sigh, “I can't begin to
imagine what you'll see...”
We have Netflix and Amazon Prime, a DVR
and a premium cable package and still my kids rent DVDs. I remind
them frequently of growing up with seven black and white channels
only (and walking eight miles to school. Barefoot. In the snow.
In Van Nuys). My mother did spring for a color set when I started
college but you pretty much had to scour the TV Guide and slavishly
pour over revival house programs if there was something you were
dying to see. I had the enormous advantage of access to a library of
10,000 films. I did a ton of movie theater going because ,despite
its enormity, my dad's collection was limited to only certain
studios. I'd run stuff by myself a lot, even on the bulletin board
in my tiny dorm room and also, until the advent of video, my access
to movies was my best social currency.
My kids abhor my current media
laziness. If it isn't music I can listen to on Rhapsody, I don't
bother with it. I watch mostly Judge Judy and Forensic Files, even
re-runs, unbothered by commercials for disability lawyers and
mobility devices. I seldom go to movie theaters and while I know how
to switch the regular TV over to the Roku device, I usually don't go
to the trouble. Himself and I are watching Sons of Anarchy, although
I've seen the series already. It has an ongoing Irish theme and even
uses some Irish language so he's thinking of writing a paper. God
forbid he should watch for entertainment. We also have Masters of
Sex and Rectify stored away on the DVR for when the kids are gone and
we run out of stuff to say to each other. But left to my own devices
I watch crap.
Years ago the yard at Casamurphy was
tended by a wonderful landscaper. We had a viable herb and vegetable
garden and frequently entertained outdoors. Our landscaper moved to
Oregon and we had a mow and blow guy who sucked but is a relative of
our housekeeper. It took me over a decade to muster the courage to
fire him. We've installed a dog run and the new gardener is pretty
decent. I score a pretty tile table. My friend really wants it too
but, in that she already has two tile tables, I buy it while she is
on vacation. Since, we've taken to eating dinner outdoors
occasionally and it is very pleasant.
There is just over a week of overlap
having both kids home and it will be December until they're both here
again. A friend screens some films at the Echo Park Film Center and
the kids enjoy it so much I decide to schlep home a projector, screen
and a bunch of my own shorts to run on the patio. My dad ran
movies at a lot of the kids' parties. Himself says, and I find it
hard to believe, but I bear the onus of being married to someone
infallible, that he has never seen me run movies.
Some friends are invited for Saturday
night but I am rusty on projecting so I do a dry run just for Himself
and myself on Friday. I have a particularly rare silent film from
the late 20s. Sister Aimee Semple McPherson founded the Angelus
Temple on Echo Park Lake. She was one of the first media evangelists
and her catchphrase was “I hate hearing the clinking of coins but
love the rustle of paper dollars.” In 1926 Sister Aimee
mysteriously disappeared while bathing at the beach at Venice. There
were some specious ransom notes and a huge media sensation. Aimee
turned up six weeks later. It was conjectured that she'd run off to
a love nest in Carmel By the Sea with a married boyfriend. There has
been speculation about the veracity of the kidnapping story for
years. Pete Seeger wrote “The Ballad of Sister Aimee” which
described the motel and included the line, “The dents in the
mattress fit Aimee's caboose.” After a long trial Aimee, and her
mother—an accused conspirator, were acquitted but the controversy
still didn't blow over.
Aimee produced and starred in a film
version of the real story. The result was melodramatic, to say the
least. Aimee does a lot of praying but her evil captors fail to see
the light. She is able to escape from her rope bonds when the
kidnappers leave to go and purchase fire water. Aimee wanders around
the desert, praying and collapsing occasionally, until she is found
by a kindly Mexican peasant who graciously escorts her to the border.
The last shot is of the Angelus Temple which looks exactly the same
as it does today. I can't imagine, even in the twenties, seeing this
hokum and not concluding, based on the film, that the kidnapping
story is bullshit. There is however, in San Francisco, a Court of
Historic Review which examines old cases. Aimee's case was reviewed
in 1990 and it was determined that there was no credible evidence
that the kidnapping story was fabricated.
I choose a more crowd pleasing program
for the next night. Most of the kids have never seen a 16mm
projector or real motion picture film. I run a few obscure cartoons,
some Betty Boops, and an Our Gang. I watched hours and hours of Our
Gang as a child because I described the plots to my dad for his
rental catalog. Watching one now it occurs to me that the friendship
between the black and white kids is so natural and easy. The film I
show however has a big production number which projects the kids into
the future. Some of the white kids end up on the Bowery, louts and
trollops. The luckier kids strut down 5th Avenue in
tuxedos and minks. The final group is the black kids who tap dance
wearing the uniforms of maids and railway porters. I'm sure I didn't
notice this when I was kid but my audience gasps. Then however,
there is another twist. In the future, Spanky has a swanky
nightclub. Darla explains to Alfalfa that by performing there she
earns “hundreds and thousands of dollars” and buys diamonds.
When it's Buckwheat's turn to take the stage, Darla explains that
Buckwheat earns “hundreds and thousand of dollars” and sports
diamonds too. Our Gang comedies were such a simple pleasure of my
childhood. I am surprised that now, half a century later, they're so
confounding.
I will likely bring home films and a
projector again. It is weird that this is a novelty in such a
different way than it was when I was a kid. For me and most of my
friends, being able to choose what to see was incredibly appealing,
Now it is an exercise in nostalgia, which I am happy to provide but
it makes me feel old. Our mom. The blacksmith. I hold on to many
films and pay a bundle to keep them in climate controlled storage.
It seemed like folly but I couldn't bring myself to part with them.
Now however with the advent of high definition, holding on the the
prints is still sentimental but suddenly quite practical too.
While I keep thousands of film prints I
am virulently opposed to most other physical media. I take great
pains to reduce the clutter of DVDs, CDs, vinyl records and books.
My kids however spend much of their time amassing more. I chide them
for accumulating more bulky dust collecting items. I guess, like my
pop with the fax machine, I appreciate that I need no more than a
phone or laptop to enjoy books, films and music. Perhaps the kids are
building priceless collections. Or maybe they'll reach the same
point that I have and find the aggregation of stuff unbearably
oppressive.
Free stuff is a bit less oppressive
though and as a top Amazon reviewer Himself receives books, sundry
items and various gadgets in the mail every day. He is reluctant to
let me peruse the available books because he's afraid that it will
skew his Amazon algorithm towards chick lit and they'll start sending
him Stephanie Meyer or Danielle Steele books instead of William
Vollman and Thomas Pynchon. Because the upstairs TV is on the fritz
(and even though it is NOT energy efficient and the screen is too
small for me to see, I am forbidden from acquiring a model that will
consume MUCH less electricity and costs (with free shipping!) under
$200) I am reading a book. I am almost done with said book and due
to the lack of en suite entertainment I think it's a good idea to get
another one. Himself relents and lets me log on to his Amazon Vine
account to see what books can be had for free (or for the price of a
review actually).
I ask Joe College how to make my
computer incognito so I don't have to try to remember by own Amazon
password. He tells me the commands off the top of his head and
voila! Earlier in the summer Girlfriend in-law shows me how to
retrieve my browsing history. I still can't figure out a screen grab.
There is so much that I don't know that I don't know. The kids
though have never not had computers and I was nearly thirty when I
acquired my first. My kids have never had to make a trip to the
library to settle an argument over a trivial fact or navigate using a
map. Or try to refold a map.
I wear a device on my wrist that
records how far I walk and how much I sleep. And probably tracks me
in some sort of creepy way. But, whenever I look at something
online, it is advertised on Facebook within seconds so I'm over that.
Still, like my dad, I wonder where it is all going. I read about a
new device called a Sproutling which is affixed to a baby's ankle.
It monitors the baby's heart-rate and sleeping positions. It also
analyzes the baby and alerts parents via a phone app when it is
hungry, wet or on the verge of waking up. It anticipates a baby's
needs before the baby has a chance to cry. What will it be like in
the world when, inevitably, a technological device recognizes our
every need before we know it ourselves? My dad saw a man actually fly
in a winged contraption. I watched, in snowy black and white, a man
set foot upon the moon. I sense though that in the lifetimes of my
children, and their children, the world will change more profoundly
than it has since the beginning of time. And I don't know whether
to feel wistful or relieved that I will miss it.
3 comments:
It's been a long time since I've had a real film night. I talk about doing it, but it just doesn't happen. The last time I put up a screen and projected a film in the backyard, with family and friends, we watched Nanook of the North. There may have been a Betty Boop cartoon and Laurel & Hardy short before the feature presentation. I have a pretty complete collection of Our Gang on DVD and a video projector. I hope I will be able to share such things with my grand-daughter someday...even if they aren't always politically correct.
Well, I was reading a few minutes ago this verdict: technology won out over the humanities, a poet admits. But even Twitter channels Muses. The gadgets proliferate, their shelf life dwindles. Moore's Law + capitalism's "creative destruction" insisting we buy again as XP goes the way of rotary phones, clock dials, and cursive script. The most profound wisdom may be when Sister Aimee looked up, hand extended to beseech the Almighty, and said of her captors: "Father, forgive them, for they know what they do." At least she cited from the best: and she used the newfangled hi-tech of the 20s to pack her Angelus Temple. I wonder even then where everyone found parking near Echo Park Lake. Guess it was hip even then. xxx me
I know you have an amazing collection of films. Will send you my wish list that includes trumpet music performed by my Grandpa. Range includes Betty Boop cartoons, rare silent movies and Paul Whiteman orchestra music with Bing Crosby. There is great museum (new) in Culver City for screenings, Mayme Clayton museum and Cultural center. Currently running "Black Talkies" like today Scott Joplin- king of jazz".
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