All Gone to Look for America (22 page)

BOOK: All Gone to Look for America
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For those of us who thought celebrity marketing was a relatively modern phenomenon, it turns out the Beckhams have nothing on Bing when it comes to pushing the brand. Perhaps I should have known, given the way that the ‘Shell, Shell, Shell’ song stuck, but I had not anticipated Valley Farm Bing Crosby Ice Cream (empty packet on display), a Bing-badged record cleaner, Bing Crosby Pepsodent toothpaste complete with the man’s glinting smile on the packet (full five-ounce tube) – Bing’s King Values 10 cents off!

Then there’s the Crosby quoit game and a gambling horse-racing game that features Seabiscuit, the champion racehorse of the 1930s that became an American icon in the years of the Great Depression. And here’s a life-size
cardboard
cut-out of Bing in later years in full golf fig advertising the latest in air conditioning.

And what about the younger Bing clad in – shockingly revealing for a man who usually appeared in slacks, hat and woolly jumper – just singlet and shorts, to advertise a tummy-toning stirrup and rubber pull-up device called the Stretch to Health, also endorsed by Cary Grant, Dorothy Lamour and Cecil B. DeMille. Now there’s a gym club to die for!

Even the music wasn’t above prostitution to capitalism. One collaboration on display feature songs by Bing alongside Louis Armstrong and Rosemary Clooney and the Hi-Los, entitled
Music to Shave
By. It won its own mounted disc presented to Bing on behalf of the Adjustable Remington Automatic Shaver for the ‘biggest recording of 1959: six million copies pressed’.

Despite this avalanche of Bing Bling, I have to take a look at the place where the legend was born. Over the years as Gonzaga University expanded it
swallowed
up many of the homes once sold from the ‘Little Vatican’ estate. Some were built on, but the old Crosby home, a grey-painted clapboard
two-storey
bungalow with dormer windows, was preserved. Today it is the ‘Alumni House’, responsible for organising events for former students. When I knock on the door, I’m greeted enthusiastically by a member of the post-grad staff with, ‘Hey, come on in, sir’, in that endearing, reverential way young
Americans
of a certain class have of referring – at least face to face – to their elders.

Back in Britain I might expect to be ignored at best; here I’m invited to look around and even try a glass of the hot cider (non-alcoholic) set up for a pre-Hallowe’en party, even though the day itself is still a few weeks away. The house is a classic design of the early twentieth century, remarkably open-plan by British standards. You walk into a wide hallway with stairs ahead, a living room to one side and dining room to the other, the entrance to each framed by an elegant hardwood surround. They have kept it furnished in ‘period’ 1940s style, with a pink clamshell sofa and a couple of comfy armchairs. There is a poster for the Oscar-winning
Going My Way
, and a blown-up black-and-white photograph of the old crooner in his heyday. All remarkably safe and middle class. But then so was Bing.

Heading back along the riverside towards the less leafy and a lot more
tarmaccy
town centre, it’s not only painfully obvious that the students have very much the best of Spokane, but that yet again here is a US city centre decimated almost to the point of ruination by a lack of planning regulation and the
obsession
with the automobile.

I hate to go on about what might seem an old hat observation, a
well-documented
truism about urban America, but you have no idea until you experience it on the ground, and I mean on the ground. Outside an indoor, air-conditioned (or heated) shopping mall, to be a pedestrian in most US cities is to lead a lonely existence wandering amid half-empty parking lots
like the gaps between rotting teeth in an urban infrastructure palpably going to pot.

As I am becoming ever more acutely aware, pedestrians inhabit the same world as drifters and hobos, a world middle-class Americans try to ignore, oblivious to any concept of interdependency. Nineteenth-century buildings – the sort that are being restored in Manchester or London’s Docklands – sit, separated by patches of tarmac half-populated by gigantic empty suvs, slowly going to seed. A few, dotted here and there, have been turned into flourishing bars or shops, but too few, and too far between.

For a country with so relatively little historic fabric, and which purports to care so much for what it has, this is the tyranny of the ‘empty lot’, market capitalism taken to an extreme where it becomes synonymous with apathetic cynical vandalism. It is deemed more economical to raze a building than restore it, or even build in its place. Cheaper to hire an unskilled employee for a pittance and charge what you can to park on it.

These are the rather gloomy thoughts going through my mind as I realise I have still nearly seven hours to spend in glorious downtown Spokane. The thing about endless empty parking lots, you see, is that they’re empty. This can only make logical sense – even in the world of dog-eat-dog, live-and-let-die capitalism – for so long. But how long can it be before the parking lots – already half empty in working hours – become unviable because there is simply not enough activity in the remaining buildings for anyone to drive to visit? The doughnut effect reaches its maximum: a ring of gated suburbs
surrounding
an empty, eviscerated, lifeless city centre, given over to office blocks and parking lots.

Jeff, barman at the Onion, a bustling burger restaurant selling the
northwest’s
excellent microbrewery beers along a magnificent 1900 oak bar brought west in 1978 by train, says he has seen at least three popular downtown venues demolished and replaced by parking lots. That’s one reason why the Onion is bustling, he admits. There’s nowhere else much to go.

So Jeff and I sit and chew the fat endlessly, putting the rotten world to rights. And the long slow hours tick by until midnight when he apologetically throws me out and I stumble across the empty tarmac to the echoing Amtrak station which is gradually filling up with my few fellow westbound travellers, hoping like I am that today’s Empire Builder will come trundling into town as close as possible to 1:15 a.m., 24 hours after its predecessor, the last train to pass this way. In the end it’s only 20 minutes later which is something of a cause for
celebration
, though there’s still another hour and a half to kill as it splits into two
in the station before, in the wee small hours of the morning: one half heads to Portland, Oregon, while the other, mine, slides down the remaining slopes of the Rockies into Seattle, the ‘most happening city on the seaboard’, home to Bill Gates and Starbucks. I’m not sure whether to laugh or cry.

 

SPOKANE TO SEATTLE

 

 

TRAIN
:
Empire Builder

FREQUENCY
:
1 a day

DEPART SPOKANE, WASHINGTON
:
2:15 a.m. (Pacific Time)

 

via

Ephrata, WA

Wenatchee, WA

Everett, WA

Edmonds, WA

 

ARRIVE SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
:
10:20 a.m. (Pacific Time)

DURATION
:
Approx 8 hours

DISTANCE
:
329 miles 

THE LITTLE COFFEE SHOP
at 1912 Western just by Pike Place Market in Seattle’s West Edge district ought to be one of the least conspicuous in a city where a thousand temples to the cult of the brown bean clamour for attention. Except for the gaggle of gawping tourists outside.

It is less heavily branded than most, the name written in an unfamiliar font on the glass panels above the door, one letter per pane. It takes me a moment to recognise it, which is a full 59.9 seconds longer than it takes to recognise any other of its 15,010 franchises across the world. But that doesn’t stop
backpackers
from as far afield as Melbourne and Tokyo grinning insanely as they
photograph
one another outside what was once the only branch of Starbucks on the face of the planet. An era that seems as far distant as when Rome was just a few mud huts on the banks of the Tiber.

Starbucks No. 1, as it is wholly unofficially known, has acquired almost international monument status – on a par with the first McDonald’s. Americans might like to think their gift to the world has been the dream of ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’, but not one of those have the same
international
recognition as the Starbucks logo or the golden arches. This, of course, is
probably
a sadder comment on the rest of us. After the Boeing Aircraft Corporation and Microsoft – and I’m coming to that – Starbucks is what put Seattle on the map of the globe and helped give this damp, mostly grey city a reputation as America’s hippest city and turned its climate-conditioned anti-fashion grunge streetwear into an iconic style statement. Weird!

To call Seattle grey and damp however is to do it a serious disservice – although it is indeed frequently both. It may only get 56 days of sunshine a year but its actual rainfall total is less than Atlanta, Georgia, or even New York City, if only because it is not prone to heavy tropical downpours. Its climate in fact is remarkably similar to British cities but its setting is spectacular:
surrounded by mountains and squeezed between the beautiful waterscapes of Lake Washington and Puget Sound. Seattle is a city of surprising elegance. I had been aware of that ever since stepping off the overnighter from Spokane and making my way out of the dingy station concourse to find myself
standing
in front of a larger than life-size replica of the Campanile from St Mark’s Square in Venice. It’s one of those moments when you have to pinch yourself, walk back into the building you’ve just left, and then come out again to take a second look.

Seattle’s King Street station is a splendid railway-era folly on a grand scale, built in 1905, and now – thankfully – in the middle of a long and expensive restoration process. The grimy tiles above my head as I emerged from the train were a false ceiling put in place while the original gleaming white moulded 45-foot-high vaulted canopy above is brought back to life. Unlike Buffalo, where the original building is all but doomed to decay, King Street will once again be not just a functional building but a landmark to be proud of.

Meanwhile, back at that other landmark, Starbucks N0. 1, I’m trying to decide whether I should pay homage by indulging in a cup of coffee. The trouble is, middle-aged child that I am of a British generation that couldn’t tell a mocha from a mud pie – my biggest achievement in the coffee world was explaining to my mother that cappuccino was not a Venetian painter – I have still never really been able to get my head around a tall latte or a frosted frappuccino. Under the circumstances then, and given the fact that inside the hallowed portal, the corporate clones have been unable to resist
transforming
even this, the mother ship, into an identical replica of every branch from Belfast to Bogotá (and no, I haven’t been to either but how much do you want to bet?) that even the chance to try Pike Place Blend (‘uniquely on sale here’) fails to tempt me (though I suppose it gives them something to offer the
pilgrims
as a souvenir).

It is one of those supreme accidental ironies that a brand that has come to symbolise the triumph of monocultural marketing over local individualism has its origins so firmly rooted in what miraculously remains one of the most exciting, individual, anti-corporate street markets in the whole of the United States. In a country that teems with plenty, but mostly displayed on the sterile shelves of supermarket giants, it is a rare delight to come across such a vibrant, natural, popular and flourishing urban market as Pike Place. The downstairs levels, on the underfloors descending to the waterfront, are full of quirky privately-owned shops that offer anything from Pacific seashell necklaces to useful bits of domestic hardware, but it is where the market meets the bustling
street on the uppermost level with its fishmongers, florists and fruit and veg merchants that makes Pike an outstanding experience.

It is immediately obvious that this is Pacific Rim America: the Asian racial influence stronger than anywhere I have been outside a Chinatown. And the mix has more in it of Japan than China. The first Japanese passenger steamer ever to reach the United States docked here in Seattle in 1896 with 259
immigrants
on board. Racial tensions that emerged during the Second World War, when born-and-bred Japanese-Americans were interned and often stripped of their property (something that never happened to the vastly more numerous but more racially homogeneous German-Americans), left a bad taste that
lingered
for many years. Poignantly addressed in the bestselling novel and movie
Snow Falling on Cedars
, the injustice has been forgiven, if not wholly forgotten. There are now some 56,000 Japanese-Americans living in Washington State, more than anywhere else except Hawaii and California, where they form a much smaller proportion of the population.

The market’s showcase is the Pike Place Fish Co., with its jaw-dropping display of the great – remaining – wealth of the Pacific Ocean: whole albacore tuna, salmon from the coast and rivers of Alaska, Dungeness crabs of
monstrous
proportion, great legs – up to two feet long – from snow crabs caught in the Russian arctic.

‘Okay, watch yo’ heads. Flying fish,’ calls a portly grinning
Japanese-American
fishmonger, as an assistant in front of the glistening fish racks passes him an order.

‘Yo, got that boy!’ the assistant comes back as a huge salmon – at least 20 pounds of pink and silver glistening fish flies over the heads of customers into his hands.

‘Too big? Yo’ want another?’ and a second, then a third comes soaring over our heads to be caught in a gentle cradle of swooping arms until the perfect fish is selected and the others are sent spinning back through the air to be recouched in their cosy beds of crushed ice.

The whole thing is as much choreographed theatre as sales pitch and the tourists cluster round, digital cameras extended as they try to follow the flying fish, and capture the busy banter between the grinning fishmongers hamming it up for their captive crowds.

It’s hard to avoid the impression that 80 per cent of visitors spend more time taking photographs than making purchases; for many visiting Americans the fish, crabs, squid and octopus on sale here are just too far away from the food processing chain for them to be entirely comfortable. But Pike Place is
one of the world’s great advertisements for commerce on a human, rather than pre-packed, supermarket scale. And yet it is a miracle that it is still here at all. Founded just over 100 years ago – which makes it a genuine antique by
American
standards – Pike Place began as a market for fishermen and farmers from the surrounding countryside, set up in answer to complaints by local
housewives
in what was still a relatively poor pioneer city that middlemen were hiking the prices.

But by the late 1960s – with the recent success of a World’s Fair filling their tills – the narrow-minded commercially motivated businessmen and
politicians
– the parking lot tycoons of middle America – were casting their eyes lustfully over Pike Place. It was too old-fashioned, they argued, for a city on the cusp of the future – they were right, of course, just not remotely in the way they imagined – and the interests of the city and its citizens would be best served if it were simply pulled down. In its place they wanted to erect that joyless eye-catching waste-space of urban planners everywhere, a convention centre, which would also incorporate a hockey arena, thrown in to appeal to the plebs. Oh, and perhaps just as an afterthought: a 4,000-car parking lot.

It took one man in particular, lifelong Seattle resident and, of all things – bless him – professor of architecture at Washington State University, Victor Steinbrueck, to see the crime that was about to be committed and rally public opposition. Against the odds, he succeeded not only in making it an issue rather than a rubber-stamp job, and forced a citywide referendum which in 1971 voted definitively to retain the city’s much-loved market. It is hard to imagine what single move – alongside founding Microsoft and maintaining Boeing – could have done more to boost and preserve Seattle’s character and reputation. Without the market, for example, would there ever have been such a groovy, laid-back, urban sophisticated place to hang out, and think, ‘Man, this would be a cool place to start a real chilled coffee shop?’ Maybe it wasn’t such a good thing after all.

But if saving the fertile earth for the germination of a coffee shop crop that has wiped out little family businesses across most of the inhabited planet, could be regarded as a dubious achievement, at least the benign radiance
generated
by Pike Place ensured the growth and survival of other excellent
enterprises
, not least among them the Pacific Northwest’s home-grown renaissance of microbrewing. The microbrewery revolution which took off in Washington and neighbouring Oregon finally gave Americans – and grateful visitors – beers that have flavour and taste and eroded the monopolistic dominance of the corporate gnat’s piss producers: the men that ate Milwaukee.

One of the Northwest’s finest micros is just on the edge of the market, though it’s not that easy to find, being as you have to go down an indoor
staircase
at 1415 1st Avenue to find it. But I have done my homework in advance and within minutes I am seated blissfully at the horseshoe-shaped bar of Pike’s Brewery waiting for Nancy, the bright-eyed effervescent barmaid, to pour me a second velvety glass of Seattle stout, pulled from an English-style hand pump and deliciously free of the otherwise omnipresent carbon dioxide.

Coca-Cola and Pepsi may be two of the best-known brand names on earth and the planet’s bestselling soft drinks, but I have to blame them for the
near-universal
American insistence on pumping all drinks full of so much C02 that it is a wonder the population isn’t permanently belching. I don’t want to sound trivial on a major issue here but in a country perpetually dosed on bargain refills of fizzy drinks, it’s easy to imagine flatulence might be America’s biggest contribution to global warming.

Yet bizarrely, the one thing it is all but impossible to find easily in America is carbonated mineral water. Posh places stock Perrier – and charge
accordingly
– as they should, given the air miles it has clocked up, being flown in from France. Ditto the mountains of Evian on display in every supermarket – a real testimony to the enduring reputation for ‘chic’ still exuded by the French. But where oh where, particularly in these northwestern states of gushing crystal clear mountain streams, are the domestic bottled waters? Surely a city like Seattle would soak up the ‘designer waters’ that do so well in Europe. When every French or Italian – or even nowadays Scottish or Welsh – hill region boasts its own varieties of ‘pure mineral waters’ – when you get the likes of ridiculous failed wine snobs holding ‘water tastings’ – I would be sorely tempted to say the Americans have held on to their sanity.

Except of course that they haven’t. America has bottled water, and enough people drink it, but it is almost exclusively ‘purified’ drinking water from the local mains similar to the Dasani brand which Coca-Cola had to withdraw from sale in Britain when it was laughed off the shelves after the revelation that it was ‘treated’ tap water bottled in the London suburb of Sidcup. But will they be back? You bet!

I digress. Here I am sitting on a bar stool with a pint of delicious stout, perusing another miraculous find picked up from the ubiquitous displays of tourist tat. It is, wait for it: a ‘Downtown Walking Map’ of Seattle! Okay
Europeans
, you need to think in context here. This is a ‘walking map’, geddit? A map to be used – while walking! Moving around on two feet, by putting one in front of the other. A map! An actual map, suggesting that bipedal locomotion is a
concept that can be employed for greater distances than that between mall and car. The parking lot planners of Buffalo or Spokane wouldn’t even understand the concept. I can’t wait to experiment!

Meanwhile, however, there is lunch. It remains true that you can – and many people do – eat very, very well in America: the French Laundry in the hills north of San Francisco is regularly listed as among the top 10 restaurants in the world (and has several times been top). There are first-class
establishments
in almost every big city. But by and large they are precisely that: first class. As in first class opposed to economy. First class in terms of table linen, genteel atmosphere, a respectful hush. Even silver salvers. And definitely price. You can also – and sadly most people do – eat very badly indeed in America. Albeit for very little. The Americans may not have invented fast food –
Japanese
sushi and German sausages in a roll are just two of the many competing claimants – but they sure as hell industrialised it. Add the salt-and-saturates to the supersize sugar-and-C02 ‘soda’ and it is not hard to identify one obvious endemic cause for what is beginning to look like a national physical
characteristic
in a nation made up of so many others: the outsize rear end. Oh, all right, if I’m going to risk offending the entire American nation, I may as well do it in their own language: the fat ass!

BOOK: All Gone to Look for America
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