Authors: Glenn O'Brien
She would say something like, “Yes, that sounds generous,” and make a little noise, and disappear into a room before he could voice his objections.
She needed clear beginnings and endings, and the idea of feeling reassured with a version of what appeared to be the truth seemed to her almost unfriendly.
What they said to each other about this was, of course, political. And their decision to talk about themselves to each other while talking about “versions” was a big,
monster
mistake. The mistake made it easier to remember that the other (each of them), was a separate person, and that particular fact should have been the other way around. They should’ve tried to see themselves as almost the same person, and if they couldn’t, they should at least deny their differences or try to avoid bringing them up.
They should’ve been in on this thing together. In collusion. Almost like outlaws, holed-up, waiting for whatever they tried to pull off to die down, disappear, and be forgotten.
“The trouble is this,” he said; “some of me is about feeling like I’m somebody else, and about the desires and threats in actually believing I can think about being someone besides what I already think I am.” And she would say, right after, “Mine is about my ability to control my identity so I can deliberately undermine what is good for me, so maybe what I see and what I come to know will be too good to be true.”
For him, the next best thing was still a condition far from being categorized, and the fidelity of a hands-off sensation. However painful the separation, it not only made sense, but was a way to manage what was always promised, no matter how desperately the promise was made.
She couldn’t handle his sense and felt more comfortable qualifying what she received . . . wrapping it up, and sometimes separating what was good from bad with a little gold star.
She was on top of it and he was close. She was faithful and he was sophisticated. Her sense was one of conclusion, and his a shrewd agreement. The two senses were never shared, and the meaning of what that meant to both of them was anything but sensible.
In the end, she would accuse him of being jealous.
“You just don’t like it that I’m good at pulling the rug out from under my own feet.”
And he’d say, “Not true, I am just as good as you, and if you don’t believe me, here, let me show you . . .”
H
E
’
S
A
thief. He steals. But he’s generous.
“Without lifting a finger,” he says . . . like a slogan, something he repeats so often it sounds like a law.
He goes to church and steals candles. He never panics. He’s selective. He knows which ones to take.
“Not the ones already lit. They’ve been spoken for. Their history has been written by whoever made the flame and their light is to be respected. There are lines that cannot be crossed and this is one of them. Their light is an offering, a kind of ceremonial consultation between an image and its maker.”
She didn’t steal. She raised her hand and asked permission.
“Would you mind if I steal candles like you do?”
“Not at all,” he said.
He hung up the phone and never spoke to her again. As far as he’s concerned their affair is over, finished, impossible, and too stupid to begin again. She occasionally calls but he screens the calls. She should have known not to ask. There are things a thief doesn’t ask permission for, and two of them are approval and blessing.
It was too bad. She thought the stealing was some kind of party. A birthday. She went to church. She made a wish. She took a breath. And made it dark.
He doesn’t pray and he doesn’t wish either. But now, every once in a while, he lights a candle for her, hoping it will be the one she takes. It’s not what he wanted but it’s what he has, and the matter between
what he’s got and what he doesn’t is something that he finds painful to separate.
Perhaps even now his attempt at lighting a candle is more a settlement than a put-down. A coming to terms with cutting her off . . . a gesture for forgiveness. And when he wants to admit it, an effort to share what he steals . . . a way, his way, to stay for her, wanted and remembered.
1993;
Collected Writings
, 2011
I spent my life at magazines. Almost on arriving in New York I landed a gig editing
Interview
at Andy Warhol’s Factory. From there I went to
Rolling Stone,
where I too was too humorous, then to
Oui,
Playboy’s experiment in new journalism which was too far from New York, then to
High Times
which was too far out, and to
Spin
which was too spun. But I managed to keep the writing going and met a lot of great writers, some of whom are represented here. I also managed to make a living in a world where art was becoming an investment and fashion was becoming artistic. “Beatnik Executives,” which first appeared in
Verbal Abuse,
deals with the hipster’s place in a corporate world with a “creative department.”
I saw the best minds of my generation
depressed by lawsuits, dieting, sober, all dressed up,
limoing through the negro streets at dawn
looking for an angry member of the Screen Actors Guild.
Angelheaded hipsters renegotiating the social contract,
trying to rewrite the lease on life
and cool a world aflame.
We are beatnik executives and we are just doing our job.
It’s the end of the world and we’re selling the future
because our pitch is all that’s left of it.
We are beatnik executives.
In the face of certain annihilation we say
we’re open for business as usual
and the first thirty three customers receive
a complimentary get out of Bardo free card.
Earth is less than user friendly.
Heaven is closed for repairs.
Hell is overbooked.
So what’s the alternative?
We are the alternative.
We are cool beatnik executives
and we are trying to fix the unfixable
and everything is broke.
Hey, let’s get this show on the road.
What road?
The interstate?
Interstate is how I feel Jack.
Put her in overdrive and hit the fast lane Dean,
we’ve got to catch up on old times.
We’ve got to pass somebody
just to feel like we’re standing still
and not backing up into whatever the hell is chasin’ us.
We’ve got to stay ahead of the times
even though the times went thataway. Whichaway? Thataway.
Life is disappearing.
So what can we do about it?
Hey, let’s sell it.
Maybe if we sell life itself people will place some value on it.
It’s all in the pitch.
And I’ve got the pitch.
I am a beatnik ad man.
I’m selling a future just in case there is one.
I am young, younger than Pepsi
I am free, freer than Tampax.
I’m live from New York.
I’m a beatnik executive.
I’ve got bongos in my briefcase and when I wheel and deal
it’s a wheel within a wheel and what a deal.
It’s Chango that calls the shots
and when we say possession is nine tenths of the law
we mean possession.
And when the spirit enters my body
woe be to the client who tries
to pull the polyester over my eyes.
We are beatnik sales reps marketing fertility in the face of doom,
our expense accounts are deducted directly from our karma.
We are flaunting pleasure in the house of pain,
because if we can sell it maybe, maybe just maybe it will fly.
We are here to fathom the unfathomable and plan around it.
We’re selling vision like it was real estate.
Want to buy a picture of the Brooklyn Bridge?
We are beatnik executives
and we are in Gnostic digging distance of the godhead.
I’ll show you our flowchart and you’ll see
that this corporation has Jah on the board of directors
and our prospectus is without end.
We are beatnik executives.
Lock up your daughters, we are coming to your town with
release forms.
We are beatnik executives.
Our entire organization is free lance.
Our meetings are phantom conclaves.
The jury is always out to lunch.
Don’t ask me about my personal business.
I mind my business because my mind is my business.
My database is my art.
Judge me by my product and its reliability.
You have my word. It’s the famous word that was in the
beginning, is now, and is backed by our legendary
moneyback guarntee.
We are the beatnik executives.
We wanted to take the easy way out.
And so we did. And here we are. And isn’t it fine?
Can we book you into the easy way out?
All it takes is a little hard work.
Inspiration will come later when you least expect it.
Have you met our corporate liaison Cody Pomeroy?
Cody heads up our group of dharma consultants.
Have you met Dr. Benway our man in R & D?
The streets are our laboratory and this week we’re test marketing
a condom inscribed with the Mayan Codices.
We believe it might be possible to fuck your way back to 3000 bc.
For the prevention of disease only.
We are the beatnik executives.
Anybody can drop out of society.
But it takes a disciplined organization to drop society out.
And so, blowing gage and roller blading down the corridors
of power, we’re getting our kicks on route 666.
We’re changing the rules.
We’re making business a pleasure.
Stalinist art students may say our advertising is immoral
but we don’t want to live in a world without fine Italian
restaurants and firm mattresses.
We are here to change the world from the top to bottom.
We’ll start at the top thank you.
We learned that trick from the painters.
We are the beatnik executives.
Step into our private elevator.
No that’s not Muzak that’s John Coltrane, a Love Supreme.
I want to show you the view from our penthouse headquarters.
I want to outline our plans and show you the bottom line.
We’re a corporation with a message.
And the message is crazy, man, crazy.
The message is farout. Dig.
I’m a beatnik executive.
I don’t want to drop out. I did that already.
I want to turn on, tune out and drop in baby.
We’re the drop in generation.
We can turn this thing around.
We can change the course of history just by switching
the road signs
and that’s why our salesmen are always on the road.
What road?
The interstate?
Interstate is our mode of existence.
I’m not comfortable unless I’m in two places at once.
We’re beatnik executives.
We’ve got a finger on the pulse and we’re gonna quicken it.
We’re going to drop straight to the top.
So maybe he can’t inhale.
We’re putting the president on an IV drip and teaching him
hard bop straight from the Bird, Charlie Parker appearing
as the holy spirit.
A beatnik president? Why not?
We haven’t had one since Lester Young.
We are the beatnik executives.
Our values are visions and our neckties are art.
We can turn this company around like about face Daddy-o.
Let’s talk about quality. Let’s talk about production.
Let’s talk about cornering the market on cool
and putting it in every home in America, can you dig that?
This may be the land of the dead,
but it’s a living, man, it’s a living.
Hey Buddy, this Buddha’s for you.
Verbal Abuse,
Summer 1993
Emily XYZ is a New York poet who lives to perform and I was always delighted by her poetry readings with co-reader, actress Myers Bartlett. Few poets today use the power of voice to make words come alive, and that’s what this act is all about. Live, on stage. They tend to bring the house down with two-voice poems such as “Jimmy Page Loves Lori Maddox,” “Separation of Church and State,” and “Sinatra Walks Out.”
The bars close and Sinatra walks out | |
just a man in a hat and a trenchcoat | |
A standing ovation always follows | |
He is a terminal delinquent in a bad mood | Because he is such an incredible entertainer |
A temper tantrum over three generations | An inspiration to three generations |
Age has not mellowed nor time sweetened him | |
He is the greatest of them all | He is the greatest of them all |
He is the living embodiment of | |
the fine tradition of macho | |
American overkill | |
He is the last man I want to | |
applaud | sleep with |
The opposite of Andy Warhol is Frank Sinatra | The opposite of Andy Warhol is Frank Sinatra |
Irredeemably corny | |
violent heavy-handed and horny | |
He is all/He is nothing at all | |
You cannot make jokes about Frank Sinatra | You cannot make jokes about Frank Sinatra |
Some say he sings like a dream | |
and gives | |
voice to emotions most men | |
don’t even know they have | can never admit to |
moved me to tears | that tie up the heart |
night I met my first wife | or break it in pieces |
Some say he speaks for men | Some say he speaks for men |
men unable to speak | men unable to speak |
unfortunate men of the 20th century | unfortunate men of the 20th century |
trapped in ridiculous cages | trapped in ridiculous cages |
cages they never imagined | cages they never imagined |
cages of their own making | cages of their own making |
Some say he belongs in prison, | |
him and his mob connections | |
You know what they say, | |
but nothing was proven. | |
In the 50s, his cloven hooves | In the 50s, his cloven hooves |
marked up many a bandstand—Critics said | marked up many a bandstand |
QUIT— | QUIT |
Hit it! | |
Who does he think he is? | |
Sicilian | Overly sensitive |
Sicilian | Split personality |
Sicilian | Schizy, |
Sicilian | scary, |
Jilly Rizzo | Jilly Rizzo |
alcohol/alcohol | |
blood/blood alcohol content | alcohol content/alcohol content |
blood brotherhood | rat pack |
WNEW AM 11-3-0 | Radio City Music Hall |
Nelson Riddle | Jimmy Van Heusen |
Axel Stordahl | Johnny Mercer |
Earl Wilson | Harold Arlen |
Jule Styne | William B. Williams |
Sammy Cahn | Sam Giancana |
Sammy Davis Jr. | Cole Porter |
Toots Shor— | Toots Shor— |
He likes it when people call him a | |
class act | class act |
it confirms his own opinion, | |
If he is misunderstood, | If he is misunderstood, |
it is because he is confusing | it is because he is an asshole |
This fabulous gift | Your fabulous face always |
stored in the case of such a | grimacing at reporters— |
troubled man—Sad. | Don’t make me laugh! |
Got a telegram from Sinatra/Here’s what it says: | |
Your information stinks lady | |
don’t talk to me baby you’re | broads always think they know best |
not in my league, not in my league | don’t they don’t talk to me baby |
where you where you wear you wear you wear | you’re not in my league, |
not in my league | |
The way you wear your hat/The way you sip your tea | where’d you get that information you’re |
The memory of all that, oh no they can’t | a leech, man you’re a parasite just like the |
take that away from me, the way your smile | rest of them get it, cunt C-U-N-T you know |
just beams/The way you sing off key | what that who what that is don’t you been |
The way you haunt my dreams | laying down for that two dol lars all your |
Oh no they can’t take that away from me | life that stench you that stench you smell is |
We may never never meet again on that | coming from her! I don’t want to talk to |
bumpy road to love/Still I’ll always keep | you go home you go home and take a bath |
the memory of— | let’s get the hell outta here baby you’re |
TRAMP | nothin but a TRAMP. |
In a dream, Sinatra is awakened | |
by 20-year-old Mia Farrow | |
as the ghost of his own past. | |
(SING:) Strangers in the night/exchanging glances wondering in the night what were the chances | She comes in the night praises his phrasing His voice clear of vibrato |
we’d be sharing love before the night was through | natural as conversation melodious and cool is restored. She shows him Pearl Jam She shows him Nirvana and he slams them and when he slams them, everybody says |
WELL, FRANK’S RIGHT! ROCK N ROLL DOES SUCK | WELL, FRANK’S RIGHT! ROCK N ROLL DOES SUCK |
Somehow the past feels like | |
a better place/A place where Ava Gardner | a better place/A place where Ava Gardner |
bakes coconut cakes | bakes coconut cakes |
a place without an Elvis | a place without an Elvis |
a world of his own | a world of his own |
where all men are equal brutal | where he is the leader |
insufferable laughable | postwar Las Vegas mafia royalty |
childish homophobe RICH | Hollywood underworld RICH |
The 60s that the rest of us | |
remember | |
are as a little museum to | |
Frank Sinatra | |
a small curious place | a small curious place |
where Viet Nam and Watts | where Viet Nam and Watts |
play constantly in a silent | |
loop on the video monitor | |
and there’s a box | and there’s a box |
containing Pink Floyd Eldridge Cleaver Bernadette Devlin | containing the Stones, Hendrix Dennis Hopper Malcolm McDowell |
everything Mark Rudd ever said | |
and the whole Stax Volt catalog, | |
all incomprehensible to Frank. | |
Only thing in the whole | |
decade makes any sense to | |
him is Mrs. Robinson’s | |
stockinged legs— | |
those he understands. | those he understands. |
Back from engagements beyond the grave, | |
old friends visit Sinatra backstage | |
Sammy Davis Jr. falls on him weeping/Tells him | |
Baby you’re the Chairman of the Board | Baby you’re the Chairman of the Board |
Joe E. Lewis is glad to be back | |
He says Vegas is better than heaven | He says Vegas is better than heaven |
Deeper cleavage and lots more booze | |
Opens a bottle/here’s to the boys | |
They don’t notice/the club is closing | |
They don’t notice/the passing of time | |
because they’re drunk | because their wives |
because they’re has-beens | because their hormones |
because they’re famous | because their fans |
because they’re boys | because they’re drunk |
but you know somthin | |
way I see it | |
The real problem is mortality | The real problem is mortality |
The real problem is nothing lasts | The real problem is you get old and die |
Gotta grow up sometime/Life is short | Gotta go sometime/Time is short |
songs finish | beauty vanishes |
God plays dice in this casino right here | God knows why this world’s the way it is |
The real problem is body and soul don’t mix | The real problem is life doesn’t make sense |
WHY DON’T YOU JUST SHUT UP AND SING | |
The boundaries of good taste and human | |
decency having been crossed and crossed out | |
again and again by the bourbon in his | |
glass, | bloodstream |
Frank Sinatra stands and offers a toast: | |
To the human race | |
To the human race | |
To hell with the human race! | To hell with the human race! |
Nancy with the laughing face | Bunch of buck and a half hookers, |
what has she ever done for me! | what have they ever done for me! |
All you mothers are worthless— | All you mothers are worthless— |
There’s nobody in my league! | There’s nobody in my league! |
Placing myself on his good side I | |
raise my hand to ask a question: | |
Mr. Sinatra, | Mr. Sinatra, |
how can anyone so wretched sing so well? | how can anyone so wretched sing so well? |
Well he says | |
I’m not the first | |
and I won’t be the last | |
one born a walking contradiction, | |
dead on from the heart | |
the rest all thrown together, | |
hitting the same walls | |
over and over and over— | |
A person is only a case | |
A holder for all manner of things | |
A random arrangement of idiocy and glory | |
Sometimes a barrage of artistic light | |
Sometimes an embarrassment, | |
a dismaying puddle of slush | |
Sometimes a nobody, | |
fading into the crowd or the distance | |
the welfare office | |
the supermarket | |
the laundromat, the library | |
and sometimes | |
marvelous as a god, | |
all in one | |
all in one lifetime | |
all in one life. | |
Doo be doo be doo . . . |