Mood:
![](https://ly.lygo.net/af/d/blog/common/econ/doh.gif)
Our local theater is staging a production of The Full Monty this Friday night, which is incredibly brave of them, considering the small population of our town. The sign at the ticket booth explicitly states “mature audiences only”. (The very fact that I am thinking about going qualifies me as immature).
As long as I can be assured that none of the actors are my neighbors or co-workers, I might be willing to chance it. I’ll bring along some lye to fling into my mind’s eye just in case.
***
Having said, in an earlier entry, that I was one of 3 people in America who’ve never been on television, I’m now forced to recant that statement. Several people came up to me this morning and said they saw me on the news last night. (I was out of town, and had no idea this transpired). It was a clip from Saturday’s Dennis Kucinich rally, of me listening raptly and looking, in the words of one friend, “bemused”.
Now, I had deliberately made us sit in the back, so as to be out of camera range. But cameramen can sense fear. They'll hone in on you like a leopard on a wounded Thompson's gazelle.
I was at the rally because Dennis Kucinich is running for President, and I've always liked him. He’s a short vegan Congressman from Cleveland with a lot of radical ideas about peace and environmentalism and social equality and fair trade and international cooperation, which means the press totally ignores him. In true Wellstone Democrat style, his life and actions deeply support his convictions. He reaches out and connects to ordinary people and grass-roots causes as a natural extension of his beliefs and aspirations. (Sound like any socially aware actors we know?) Kucinich was also one of the very, very few in Congress with the courage to vote against the USA PATRIOT Act. Not because he loves terrorists, but because the 300+ page bill was hastily introduced at 2:30 am. Nobody had a chance to read through the thing before the vote was called, but they all voted “yea” anyway, motivated by post-9/11 fear. Now there’s some responsible legislating. I bet you could easily sell used mattresses to these people over the phone.
Speaking of the USA PATRIOT Act, why is it (I ponder parenthetically) that the most toxic legislation, programs, and think tanks are often gilded over with innocuous-sounding names? Like “Focus on the Family” (the organization that "outed" SpongeBob Squarepants), or “The Clean Air Act”. If there’s a lobbying group called, say, “The Basket Of Puppies Foundation”, chances are it’s actually a neo-nazi Dominionist organization that wants to tattoo the Ten Commandments onto everyone’s rear end and require preschoolers to carry guns. Generally speaking, these fluffy, cozy-sounding names are a sneaky way of making weird social policy sound palatable, and automatically branding the opposition as traitors. After all, only a coldhearted monster would be against puppies or patriots. And if you're against puppies, you're against mandatory tattooing. And if you're against mandatory tattooing, you're against America. Why do you hate America, you basket-of-puppies-hating America haters?
So anyways, now I’ve lost my television virginity, goldarnit. I’m not special anymore.
Since the gods are determined to make a mockery of me, let’s try an experiment and make a few more sweeping, categorical statements:
I’m one of 3 people in America who’ve never won the lottery.
I’m one of 3 people in America who’ve never gotten a MacArthur genius grant.
I’m one of 3 people in America who’ve never been shipwrecked on a tropical island with David Wenham, a crate of champagne, and a shipment of Yankee Candles.
Go ahead, universe! I dare you to make a liar out of me once again!