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Authors: Colby Buzzell

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Lost in America: A Dead-End Journey (13 page)

BOOK: Lost in America: A Dead-End Journey
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T
he game was on the television when I walked into the bar. An angry old-timer was telling a couple other barflies all about how it’s a goddamn ripoff to purchase season tickets and why in the world should he do that, spending a couple hundred dollars for seats when he can just sit in a bar a couple blocks away and watch the games for free, as well as the drinks at the bar are way cheaper than the ones they sell at the stadium. He had a point; why do anything at all when it’s cheaper not to do it, or to do it at home, in a bar, or on the computer?

I asked the bartender—who, I could tell by his tattoos, listened to hardcore punk bands—if he knew of any good weekly and monthly hotels. He actually lived at one, and after he told me where it was located, we got to talking about Detroit and he told me that a lot of films get made here now. “Yeah, Drew Barrymore has done two movies here already because they got a new tax break thing if you film in Michigan, and they’re doing a lot of films here. Quite a few movies are going to be filmed here,
Gran Torino
was also filmed here—”

“They shot
Gran Torino
here?”

“Yeah, they shot that, and now they’re shooting the new
Red Dawn
downtown, and they’re doing another movie here that’s about the Irish gangs in Cleveland but they’re using this neighborhood because it’s more run-down and fucked up than Cleveland is—now that they kind of cleaned Cleveland up a lot.”

A regular down at the end of the bar heard this and blurted out, “Amen to Cleveland!”

I raised my beer to that, and just then a white guy with dreadlocks walked in. He and the bartender were good friends, and the bartender introduced him to me. A musician, he was actually in a Misfits cover band. He also worked on the assembly line at Ford, putting Ford Focuses together. He told me he’d got off work early tonight because they’d run out of parts to assemble, so they let everybody go halfway through their shift. I asked if that happened a lot, and he told me not all the time, but it happened, and when it did, the funny thing was that all the guys would go directly to the bars, especially the married guys, they’d go to the bars and wouldn’t tell their wives that they got released early from work, because if they did their wives would be like get your ass home, and the females, what they’d do was go straight to the casinos, and they’d do the same thing, they wouldn’t tell their husbands that they’d got off work early, they’d just go straight to the casino and then come home afterward like they just got off work. Basically what he told me was what auto industry people do when they’re told to go home, not working, or out of a job.

Since he was in a Misfits cover band and into punk, we talked music for a while, and later on, after he left, I found myself sitting down next to an old black guy. Casually sipping on his beer, he told me that he’d lived in Detroit since 1950.

“I came from out of the Midwest because there was no work out there, and so I came here and I got a job about eight hours after I got off the bus. Back in the fifties you could get hired in the morning, work a day, quit the next morning, and have another job by noon the next day.”

After taking a slow swig from his beer, he said, “Those days are over.”

He told me that he’d never seen Detroit as bad as it was now; this was the worst he’d seen it.

“Call it what you want to call it, but it’s a depression here in Detroit. You see we put all our effort into the auto industry, and when the auto industry fails, then where do you go? We put all our eggs into one basket. They could have diversified years ago, but they didn’t. Young people don’t know what a depression is. People were jumping out of their windows back then because they got broke and lost all their money. But there was a lot of people who survived. Right now, I don’t know how many people are jumping out of windows, but there is a survival situation going on. You should read about it. The rest of America is beginning to feel what we felt nine months ago.”

I then left this bar to walk over to another one down the street. Ordered a couple beers and shots of whiskey at a bar called AFB, which as you could have probably figured out on your own means “Another Fucking Bar.” Their slogan was: “Exactly what Detroit needs.” Kind of a fancy joint inside, a bit upscale—keep in mind that’s upscale by my standards. A patron next to me at the bar told me that it was once a popular punk venue before they cleaned it up. After that I set off to walk around and explore, semi-drunk, since I hadn’t eaten all day. I started taking photos of dark streets and alleys, empty lots, garbage on the streets, houses boarded up. Some halfway burned-down parts of the area felt, especially at night, as if nobody lived there at all and I was the only person left on earth. I walked over to two tall old buildings that looked like they had both been hotels at one time and stood there, wondering what had happened to them. I took pictures. They looked as if they’d been vacant for years; one was called the Harbor Lights Center, and the other the Hotel Eddy Stone. Some clever jokester had hung up on the Eddy Stone a huge
MOVE IN NOW!
banner followed by a phone number to call.

This area was totally dead—way more dead than downtown—and in a lot of ways reminded me of my neighborhood back home, the Tenderloin district. There we have roughly four to six crackheads along every street, whereas here there were maybe only one or two crackheads every three or four city blocks. This is a statistic of civic comparison that you never see in the brochures. Colby Buzzell: travel writer.

With my black beanie pulled down almost over my eyes, I was wondering where in the hell everybody was when I came across two guys smoking outside a structure that looked operational. They were both staring at me as I walked over to them. An American flag was sticking up from the building they were standing in front of, so I asked the two of them what the place was exactly, and they told me that it was a shelter for veterans.

One of them immediately asked me if I was a vet, since I was wearing my backpack. “You homeless?” he asked. I told him that I was kind of living out of my car right now—which was partially true; I had spent many a night sleeping in the Caliente—but I was planning to stay at an army buddy’s place for a couple days up in Troy, and then after that I’d be back. He told me that I should stay here when I came back, and that they had a good bunch of guys living here. It was warm, and they served three meals a day. He then asked what I was doing here—more specifically, in the location where I was now standing—and I told them just checking out, walking around, taking pictures, that kind of stuff. He advised me not to be walking around in this area with a camera around my neck because the people here would look at that as ten crack rocks and gank me for it. I looked around, not seeing anybody, and asked him if this was a bad neighborhood. The one guy furrowed his brows and curiously asked me, “Do you know where you are?”

I had a couple shots of whiskey running through my veins, and that one GN’R song where Axl poses that very same question started playing in my head. He informed me that I’m in the murder capital of the state of Michigan, and not only that, “You’re in the Cass Corridor.”

I told him that I’d never heard of it, though it did sound kind of tough, and he advised me that I really shouldn’t be walking around here late at night all by myself, especially with a camera around my neck, and since I was a vet, he told me that I should stay at the shelter for the night, that if I did I’d be safe. “Nobody fucks with us here,” he proudly told me. “One time one of our guys got fucked with, and we had three teams of guys go out with baseball bats, and ever since then nobody messes with us.”

I thanked them for their time and told them that I’d check it out in a couple days, after I visit my friend from the army up in Troy for a couple days. They wished me luck and again told me to be careful. I thanked them.

H
ung over, the next morning I called the front desk and told them that I’d be a bit late checking out, since I was having difficulty locating my wallet. I thought I might have lost it in the bar or on my way back to my room or something like that. They said that was fine, and forty-five minutes later I found it hiding tangled in a bed sheet.

Heading to the elevator, I thought back to the night before, about how the neighborhood was rumored to be rough despite the fact that it’s relatively close to Wayne State University. I’ve lived in areas on the cusp of gentrification, I guess contributing to it—for better or worse—but this didn’t feel the same; the random hipster in a sea of dilapidated buildings, but not the same. On my way down I noticed that this hotel didn’t have a thirteenth floor, and when I finally made my way to checkout, a band on tour looked like they were checking out at the same time and moving on to the next city. Lucky bastards. They at least knew where they were going next. While waiting for my receipt, I asked the guy working the front desk if it was hard to find a job here. He told me no, as long as you’re willing to work for whatever pay, which is the exact answer I’ve been getting all across the country. He then told me that just this morning, while installing cable at his new apartment, the Comcast guy tried to recruit him, and I should just go online and apply if I was looking for work. Cable guy in Detroit, that could be interesting. So I asked if it was bad here, and he released a laugh and told me that he was actually late to work this morning because some idiot decided to go up and down deflating all the tires of every single car parked on his street.

O
ver by the freeway was a huge old cement building painted light blue, selling nothing but used and rare books. It was like the Powell’s Books of Detroit; you could spend hours if not days inside and not be bored. It’ll be a sad day indeed when bookstores no longer exist. So I went to check it out while it still stood.

I instantly got absorbed in the vision of old Detroit offered by the store’s vast collection of old linen postcards. Detroit looks nowhere near the same now. Those two hotels I’d looked at in the Cass Corridor the night before were once beautiful, with retail spaces on their bottom floors, and these Technicolor portraits of yesteryear were plainly of a different city altogether, a city of state-of-the-art architecture and young men in a hurry. Most of the cards had two or three cursive sentences on the back, saying things like, “Dear folks, we are in Detroit and I am working at my trade. Nice weather for this time of year. All are well. Mom has sold the chickens, Love to all.” That one was mailed November 25, 1910.

Another one depicted “The Heart of Detroit by Moonlight,” and on back in an elegant cursive you just don’t find anymore, it read: “Everything is okay except I don’t have a job yet. Things are pretty slow all around here. Most of the shops are laying men off right and left, but look for it to pick up soon. I hope so. Rabbit season has been in for 3 weeks but haven’t gone yet. Well, so long.” The ink stamp said that it was mailed from Detroit on November 6, 1937, at 4:30 p.m.

Another had a gorgeous image of Capital Square Park from that same era, which looks nothing like that now; all the vegetation in the square is gone, and half the buildings around it are gone as well. The card read, “I am so busy I can hardly find time to write. Wages are low in Detroit. One has a hard time to pay for their board and room. Hope you will like these postcards of Detroit. Will send more soon.”

While I was lost in old Detroit, a young employee who looked like an artist came by and told a coworker that a kid just came in asking if they had any books on how to make an IED. I remember one time back in high school I was once called down to the principal’s office for doing a book report on
The
Anarchist Cookbook
, and since it was pre-Columbine and pre-Osama when I wrote it, all that happened was my parents received yet another phone call from the school administration telling them how much of a fuckup I was. “Hey,” I asked the clerk, “do you sell
The
Anarchist Cookbook
?” She told me no, and that when she first started working here twenty-three years ago, she thought the book was just recipes that were staples of the anarchist diet, but then later on she found out that it was instructions for how to make bombs. She told me that people didn’t really ask for that book too much now, maybe partly because you could find all those recipes online now.

I then asked her if she had the WPA book that was done on Michigan. The Works Progress Administration was a New Deal thing that Roosevelt did. Unlike chain mega bookstore employees who ask you, “Who wrote that?” when you ask if they have a copy of
Men Without Women
, and then ask you how you spell Hemingway, this lady knew exactly what I was talking about. She told me that they did actually have a copy, behind the counter, and handed it to me to check out—green cloth hardcover, no dust jacket but a cool deco-style imprint on the front of an automobile and a factory behind it, the sun beaming down on both. I opened it up, saw that they were asking $35 for it, as is, and that it was first published in 1941. I started flipping through all the pages. The section on Detroit began, “A visitor may spend weeks in Detroit without receiving the impression that he is in a city of more than 1,500,000 inhabitants.”

Seventy years later, Detroit’s now at 900,000, and dropping like a rock. I told the bookstore lady I’d take it.

Chapter Twelve

The End

“We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.”

KURT VONNEGUT,

Mother Night

W
hile I spent the day walking aimlessly around Detroit taking pictures, my sister sent me a text informing me that our father had decided that he was going to sell the house that we all grew up in. I didn’t respond because I didn’t know what to say or think of that, though I saw it coming and don’t blame my father at all.

Knowing that the house I grew up in will no longer be there when I get back made me want to drink in a bar. All the memories—Christmas, Thanksgiving, etc.—that we shared at that house would be no longer. In a way, I was homeless now. Equally important, that house had also been the place where I always ended up whenever I hit rock bottom and needed a place to stay for a while as I tried once again to get back on my feet. I always knew that it would be there. Yes, as I got older the welcome arms of home weren’t as welcoming. There was never a “Welcome Home, Colby!” banner strung across the living room when I moved back in. But still, it was there for me in case of an emergency. My mother lived and died in that house. All of a sudden I felt that I was about to jump out of a plane behind enemy lines without a parachute.

My phone started to vibrate; it was Callahan. He said he was out of class and wanted to hang out. I was near downtown, and my watch told me it was close to five. When I asked him how bad traffic would be at this time of day, he told me not to worry. “You’ll be fine. Nobody’s working anymore, so there’s not as much traffic.”

B
efore leaving I stopped back inside a dive bar. A sign posted outside the bar advertised free wireless, and I needed to pull up directions to Callahan’s place, so I stepped inside, ordered a pack of smokes from the bartender, tipped her a dollar, made my way to a corner table, and pulled out my laptop. While I was looking up directions, a tall old black guy with a white apron around his waist walked slowly over to me and silently placed a tray of onion rings on my table. When I told him, “I’m sorry, I didn’t order anything,” he said in this really deep voice, perhaps the deepest voice I’ve ever heard, “I know.” And then slowly he turned around and walked away.

When I pulled my car out of the parking garage, the same guy was working. I handed him my ticket, and he told me that would be $18.00. Jesus Christ. No wonder nobody went downtown anymore. As I was handing him the money, he asked me what I thought of Detroit. I told him that except that they charged way too much for parking, I liked Detroit a lot, actually. While getting my change ready, he told me that he wasn’t surprised to hear that. He explained that the world makes it out to be such a bad city because “Detroit is a dark city. A lot of us blacks live here, and some people don’t like that, that’s why they be sayin’ what they be sayin’.”

Callahan lives north of Eight Mile out in the ’burbs, past Sixteen Mile Road up in Troy, which is about a good half hour drive north of downtown Detroit. He and his girlfriend live at her parents’ house; both are in school, his girlfriend studying hard to be a nurse.

After he left the army, Callahan moved with another buddy of ours, Sergeant Todd Vance, down to San Diego. When I used to live in Los Angeles I’d go down there every now and then to hang out with them. Callahan was having difficulty finding work, and one day he’d packed up all his belongings in the back of his pickup truck and driven straight through to Michigan, where he has family. He’s lived there ever since.

The room I was sleeping in was down in the basement, which had been converted into a full bar with bar stools, neon beer signs, mirrors, TV, liquor, the works. After dropping off my stuff we stepped outside for a smoke, and while we caught up, Callahan said hello to the girl standing and smoking outside the house across the street. She was about my age—early thirties. It was cold out, and I know some people don’t like to smoke in their own house, so I didn’t really think much of it until I looked at all the driveways on the street. The house across the street had four cars parked outside it, the one to the right of it, six, the one next door, four, and so on. I asked Callahan about the girl smoking across the way, and he told me that she also was back living at her parents’ house.

We decided to hit the bars that evening, and on the way Callahan told me that he was a student right now, living off the GI Bill, and that they’d recently raised GI benefits so that he got slightly more now every month than he did before. He worked one day a week as a bar back for tips, and the tips that he made working Friday nights, always close to $100, pretty much lasted him for the week, “My gas tank is always on red, but I’ve got enough to live on right now.”

When I asked what his plans were after school, he told me that he didn’t know yet, he might try and get a job at the VA hospital working with other veterans, or he might continue going to school and take out student loans once his GI Bill money dried up. I strongly advised him against doing this because the one thing about student loans is that it’s not really “free money,” like a lot of people think it is. You have to pay that all back, along with the lovely interest they throw on top of it, and I know many educated people back home who are totally fucked because they took out these huge student loans, graduated, couldn’t find a job, and are now totally poor because all of the money they are now making in their restaurant server jobs goes straight to paying back all their student loans. The days of “Well, I’ll take out loans to go to school, and when I graduate I’ll get a job in that field making the lavish salary I require” are gone. Or maybe I’m just rationalizing the fact that I forgot to go to college, and so had no use for student loans. I will have to think about this.

Callahan said that most of the people that he knew were either in school, living off student loans, or on unemployment. While driving around looking for a parking spot, I noticed that we were passing by a lot of hair salons, and that these hair salons were all packed with people, and that all the people were getting their hair done, and that they were all getting their hair done in the same exact hairstyle as each other, and all the girls in Orange County, in New York, in Austin, in Kalamazoo, and in Poughkeepsie, too.

At the bar everybody had a beer in hand and was drinking heavily. One guy at the end of the bar had a textbook out, reading while drinking, and a lot of people were doing multiple shots of hard liquor. I looked over at the guy sitting next to me at the bar. The sleeves on his shirt had been physically removed, and he was easily about four hundred pounds. He ordered another pitcher of beer, and he was drinking out of it as if it was a pint glass. I asked him if he was unemployed, and he told me that he was, actually. He’d been driving trucks, got laid off several months ago, and was living off unemployment.

Callahan was sitting at the bar to my right, and I pointed this out to him. He told me, “I told you.” A guy then came between us to order a drink—white guy, early thirties, frosted tips, Red Wings hockey jersey, silver chain around his neck—and I asked him if he was working. He told me that he was at the GM plant and, with no worry or concern in his voice whatsoever, that he’d be getting laid off next month. “You nervous?” I asked him.

He shrugged. “Not at all.” He’d been laid off four times in the last nine years, and he said it was no big deal, that’s just how it was when you worked in the auto industry. He said he’d find something, even if it was minimum wage, and he picked up his drink and walked off. Everybody in this bar was getting completely trashed, drinking nonstop like it was one big unemployment party. Didn’t these people know how fucked they were? They all had a “This too shall pass” attitude about their lives and our current economic situation, and when Callahan’s friends started showing up at the bar, I found out that all of them—
all of them
—were living back at home and unemployed or going back to school.

At the bar one of Callahan’s friends started asking me about the book that I was working on. He asked me what I thought of the country so far, and since I had a couple drinks in me, I asked him if he’d ever been inside a Walmart. I was starting to think that if Kerouac were alive today, he’d probably go to China to write
On the Road.

Callahan’s friend then asked me where I was headed after Detroit. I told him, “I don’t know yet. I don’t know what city I’m off to next until I get there. . . .” For some reason I paused for a second, knowing that there was more to this than what I just said. “I don’t know why this is, yet, but I’m actually thinking about ending it here in Detroit.”

“Most people do,” he says.

Smile.

T
he next morning when I woke up, I saw that I was out of smokes, so I took off to the gas station on foot to restock.

On my walk back to Callahan’s I came across a yard sale, a one-story located on a busy street with the garage open and all sorts of items out for sale. They even had a couple moped scooters for sale, the kind that I’d seen a lot of the Academy of Art kids like to ride around on back home, one of which had a price tag of $600. When the guy came out, a white guy about retirement age, I asked him about the moped, wondering if a big guy like me—six-one, two hundred or so pounds, who could easily bench-press 275 prior to this road trip—could ride on one of those things. He told me yeah, no prob. “Gets eighty miles to the gallon,” he said, and when he told me that he could sell me one for $400 but not less, I asked him why he was selling all his stuff. He was moving, he said; he had purchased a place in the South. I then told him that I was from California, had just gotten here the other day, was staying at a friend’s place around the corner for now, and that I liked the scooter a lot and that it would be perfect for what I was going to do. I told him that I could cover a lot more ground and navigate my way up, down, and around downtown Detroit a hell of a lot better on a moped than on foot, and when I told him this, his whole attitude shifted and he didn’t want to sell it to me anymore.

“You want to drive around downtown Detroit on this thing?”

“Yeah. It’s perfect.”

“I’ve worked in downtown Detroit for thirty years building bridges, and I would never, ever, go down there unless I had a firearm on me. Do you own a firearm?”

“No.”

He then shook his head and lost all interest in me.

W
hen I walked into the lobby of the Park Avenue Hotel, an older white lady was leaning against the lobby desk, talking to the black guy working behind it. I asked if they had any rooms available, and what they cost. The lady told me that they had one, and she sized me up and asked how much I could afford to pay for it. I politely told her that I didn’t want to offend her by suggesting a low amount, and that I’d pay the amount that they were asking for it as long as it was reasonable. She then asked if I was employed and what I did for work, since they also only rent out to people who have jobs. This was a first. Most of the places that I’d stayed at didn’t care as long as you could pay the rent.

Be the person you want to be.

With a straight face I told her that I was a writer. Yes, a writer from California who was just traveling across the country doing what writers do, working hard on a book, and long story short, here I was in Detroit.

While I stood frozen in fear, not quite sure if she’d believe me, not quite sure if I believed me, she asked, “You’re a writer?”

“I don’t believe it either, but yeah, I guess I am.”

She warmed up to me a bit and asked where I’d been, and after I listed off all the cities and states I’d passed through on my way here, she got back to work and asked how much I’d paid for the last place I was staying. I was paying ninety a week at that last place back in Des Moines, and seeing the sign on the counter that indicated a hundred a week, I told her that I’d been paying eighty in hopes that she’d meet me halfway. She shook her head and told me that she couldn’t do eighty, that was way too low, but she could do a hundred a week. Doing the math in my head, I figured out that it’d be four hundred for a month, which ain’t too bad, so I started reaching for my wallet.

“Cool. I’ll take it.”

“Don’t you want to see the room?”

“Oh, yeah, sure.”

She grabbed the keys and took me up to the third floor. She was wearing jeans, a floral-patterned blouse, hair pulled back like she was ready to work. I got the impression that she was a very kind lady as well as a very tough one, and while we waited for the elevator to come down she informed me that she and her husband managed this building as well as the building next door, and then she looked at me. “What are you?” she asked. I tell her that I’m half Korean and half white. She then very proudly told me that she was Dutch, which explained her thick accent, and that where she was from they don’t look at color like they do here, and that she didn’t discriminate, and more importantly in her building she had zero tolerance for racist behavior and wouldn’t tolerate any of that garbage one bit—her brain didn’t even work in that fashion. “People are people,” she said. I was immediately reminded of my mother, who would say the same thing all the time, that people are people and that there are good people and bad people. That’s it.

The elevator arrived. Its doors are brass, with an art deco design carved into them. On the way up to the third floor she told me that she wants my room to be comfortable, and how she hated to rent rooms that are not taken care of because a lot of people here come from environments where “things are very depressed and a lot of people are losing their jobs and there’s a lot of friction.” They come here, she said, “and I say as long as you’re staying here, this is your home, and please think of it as your home, I want to make it homelike and not just another hotel room. You know what I mean?” I nod yes while thinking about that. “I think this is the only way that people can survive here. I don’t know what it’s like out there in California, but these are bad times here.”

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