own the odium*

From TORONTO,

March 23rd, 2010

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So here I was, sprawled on the skeptical sofa, watching women's moguls through a veil of tears, and suddenly thought, I've gotta get outta here and own me some podium.

I know what you're thinking. Veil of tears??? Norton, our savvy old crony, surely when a relationship ends you just laugh, light a cigarette and call out “Next!”. You can't feel heartbreak like us mere mortals over here. Why, you're....you're....The Tourist! The skeptical one... Remember?


And the answer to that, my worried little friends, is that I don't feel heartbreak like anyone else. My heartbreak is HUGE. Thundering. Of epic proportions. The Tourist does heartbreak like no one does heartbreak.

I weep the most enormous tears, wail the biggest wails, yell at the neighbours, kick dogs. I don’t merely tear at my beautiful ebony hair; I set it all on fire - and grow it back within the hour. I fling things around my apartment, yelling, “Out of my way!” and “Shut up, you!” I wake to discover I’ve eaten three entire pillows out of madness and hunger for affection. I hurl all my pots and pans and the contents of my fridge out on the floor, because loud noises comfort me. I stare at one wall for hours on end, then cover it in feces and smears of dijon mustard.

I gnash my teeth, whatever that means.

It’s all either not a pretty sight, or intensely beautiful, depending what you’re into. I’m a weepy, snotty, angry whirling hurricane. Of love.

And on the seventh day, I walk into the Flight Centre, demanding to be flown somewhere.

In this case, Vancouver.

VANCOUVER, 2010

DAY ONE

I arrived in town with my Olympic gear (sweatshirt, t-shirt…alas, no coveted red mittens) and my excited Olympic grin secretly tucked away out of sight. Arriving from afar, I was expecting a grumbly, unenthusiastic Vancouver full of people who just didn’t approve. I thought I’d be conspicuous in my CANADA shirt. That only outsiders would be seen in such things.

I’d imagined the fans consisting of a few Japanese tourists ducking through as angry locals pelted them with organic yogurt and spelt (it’s a B.C. thing).

….Until I realized the gear (and the spirit) was EVERYWHERE. Who can hold onto boring old grumpy ideals when there are gold medals flying around? And when Alex Bilodeau and Jenn Heil are so darn cute?

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I was staying with my buddy Christine Oakey, who was working for the Olympics (at VANOC headquarters, spending very long days saying, “Go here.” “Don’t go there.” “Stop picking your nose”). Mackenzie Muldoon (similarly bossing people around at the curling facility) was crashing on the couch. Except for that evening, Oakey and I would scarcely see or speak to one another at all until three days after the games, despite literally sharing a bed at night. It was a king size bed, and we didn’t even spoon. Perhaps we communicated telepathically, between the wee hours when I would crawl in and five a.m. when she would crawl out.

But that night, we went to the victory ceremony. Sadly, no canucks were receiving medals that night, but we yelled and whooped at Russians and Chinese and other types with great enthusiasm. It was “Newfoundland Night” at BC Place, which meant a whole lotta Sean Majumder, lots more fiddling, a song or two from Hey Rosetta among others, and a headlining performance by Great Big Sea.

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That was fun, if made slightly trying by the presence of a very small, very drunk young diehard Great Big Sea fan standing right behind me, whose mouth was exactly at my ear-height, and who wailed along off-key to every word, even the singer’s impromptu riffing. I miraculously managed to hold onto my Olympic spirit and not wring her drunken little neck.

Oddly enough, I’d spent the previous evening at the C.R Avery concert at the Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto, listening to songs all about Vancouver; now here I was in Vancouver, listening to a guy sing about Newfoundland.

After that we were deposited onto Robson street, where Oakey went one way (back to work) and I went the other: into the throngs celebrating the Canadian men’s hockey team’s defeat of Slovakia which moved them onto the final against the US.

It was fucking insane. Crowds of running, singing, high-fiving crazy people going absolutely wild. I remember thinking, It can’t get any crazier than this. What’s gonna happen if (when) we win the final? What will people do then? Blow themselves up? I guess this is ten and the knob goes to eleven.

It was a bit much to be alone in. After four thousand high fives and getting puked on once or twice, I started to feel infinitely lonely, and so slid into a coffee shop on Granville, to eat cheesecake and listen to an Irish guy play the guitar and wail about lost love. That was more my speed. As a backdrop to the music, you could still hear constant screaming in the streets outside; I started to play a game of pretending that everyone out there was being attacked by zombies as we sat in a café, waiting for the end to come.

DAY TWO

…Included a trip to Atlantic House on Granville Island, to see Nova Scotia’s own (excellent and rather dreamy) Matt Mays, though Oakey and her coworkers weren’t awake enough to last until he came on.

One of Oakey’s friends, an expat Brit, spent about an hour trying to figure out my accent – eventually bursting out with “I’ve got it! I know who you sound like: That scientist guy from the Simpsons!” (The guy who says “Glavin” all the time.) And then explained that it was just that I have “a very intellectual way of saying things”. Which may be the nicest way that I've been called a nerd.

When those assholes left, I got to spend the the rest of the evening with my real friends – a bunch of young yahoos from Coquitlam that I’d met in the lineup while waiting for Oakey and her gang. Perfectly friendly, gentlemanly yahoos, who couldn’t believe their luck in suddenly having a girl to hang out with, without pressing it. One of them, though, the most weavingly drunk one of the bunch, felt a constant need to grind my gears about being from Toronto. First he wanted to hassle me about being a Leafs fan; when I told him I didn’t really follow hockey, except during the Olympics, Go Canada, he switched to ridiculing people from Toronto for not even caring about hockey.

He asked if I followed lacrosse. I said no. He scoffed at that. I asked him “Do you play?” He told me he used to, before he decided to just go fuckin’ drinking every night. I eventually got to the root of his resentment: some lacrosse team from Toronto that was better than his lacrosse team had come out here and kicked his lacrosse team’s ass…and “they thought they were pretty fuckin’ great”. I pointed out that it was sports, not a tea party, and that if he had won, he would have thought he was pretty fuckin’ great, too. He almost conceded on that one, and was soon lifting me in the air during the Matt Mays show and nearly dropping me on people’s heads. Score one, snooty girl from the centre of the universe. Winning them over, five drunk boys from Coquitlam at a time.

DAY THREE

…And final day of the Olympics, I straggled over to my pal Mike Wasko’s house in Kitsilano for the game. Saw a sign for THE BEST CINNAMON BUNS IN THE WORLD as I stepped off the bus, so I had to take a detour, obviously, and was just coming out with my box of sticky goodness (insert…dirty joke here) when the bar next door erupted. First goal Canada! I ran the rest of the way to Mike’s place, leaving a trail of icing sugar and excitement in my wake, and got to watch the rest with a quality group of Wasko’s family, friends, a sandwich buffet and mimosas. (You got style, Wastich, my friend.) The buffet proved a valuable distraction; whenever the game got too tense, someone would declare, “I can’t take it anymore! I’m going to eat meat!” Except for Yurij, who kept threatening to walk around the block and was watching most of the proceedings from the next room, by the door, ready to flee….and whom everyone kept admonishing to stop being so goddamned Eastern European and have some faith.

Well, you know what happened, obviously, and obviously it was glorious.

There at Mike’s place, a contingent of us leapt into Sarah Cobb’s car and headed downtown where, indeed, the knob had been turned to eleven.

We wandered around, soaking it in and grinning ‘til our faces hurt. At least my snooty Toronto face did - I’m not used to that kind of thing.

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(That second one is Cobb, almost passing for me.)

I must say, I do appreciate the ferocious return of the high five; it indicates people forgetting that they're too cool for such things. The sun is shining, we are the champions - what's not to high five about?

The cops stood in the middle of it all, grinning and receiving high fives themselves, looking proud as anything. A few of them , though, were just a-twitchin’, waiting for something to go wrong. One sports bar had imported some snow, the only snow in town, and had it piled out front. Some dude scooped up a handful, threw it at someone…and was immediately tackled by police! When I lobbed my modest snowball (gently, friendli-ly, at Nick Wasko’s feet), handsome, tall, grey-haired Officer Doom was instantly in my face, letting his presence be known.

“Haya doin’?”

“Great, officer! How about you?”

“I’m worried. Remember ‘94.” (When the Canucks lost the cup and downtown erupted in riots.)

“Yeah, but everybody’s happy this time!”

“Well they started off happy then, too.” (????)

“I’m sure it’ll be fine. Everybody’s celebrating!”

“….You’re not from around here, are you?”

Maybe he was just trying to pick me up.

I'd love to know the numbers on how many people called in sick the next day (or just didn't show up for work).

We headed back to Mike’s place after an hour or two, to watch and ridicule the closing ceremony. It was so stinky (though I actually didn’t mind the Buble-and-the-beavers bit; it was every other stinky thing)….but valuable for this: it made me realize how lucky it was that the opening was so good. Thank God they saved the shite for when no one was watching.

DAYS FOUR THROUGH ELEVEN

The 2010 games over and life returning to normal, suddenly everyone was talking about something that any theatre professional instantly recognized as post-show depression. It was getting news time even, Brian Williams referring to the sadness and sense of loss spreading across Vancouver, and VANOC offering counselling to staff to deal with it all being over. My theatre friends working at the Olympics were used to this kind of thing: closing a show, saying goodbye to friends made and moving on…but for poor Joe Volunteer, having just participated in two weeks of the greatest show on earth, the feeling was new and devastating. Like a little kid leaving summer camp and bawling as her parents drag her away from her pals (unless she went to smelly Brownie camp). PSD for everyone!

People on the Skytrain looked wistfully around, wondering if anyone would high five them today. Someone in line at Shoppers Drug Mart saw someone else buying a half price Quatchi (Olympic mascot) keychain and sighed, “Wasn’t it awesome?” “Yeah…where were you for the game?” “I can’t believe how quiet it is now,” people kept saying.

Perhaps the saddest thing I saw was a city bus with its sign scrolling, “GO CANADA GO! SORRY…OUT OF SERVICE”. Okay, it seemed really poignant at the time.

As for me, I was feeling mostly okay, if occasionally blindsided by some stupid thought such as, That's it. Where am I ever gonna find another man who doesn't snore?

I was looking good, which added some spring to my step. As is always the case in such climates, my skin was all dewy; my hair had acquired a wave.

My postgames consisted of a lot of sightseeing, some visiting with friends (Hi there, Nadia! Good to see you, Challenor!), surprise Oscar night in Victoria with my stepmom Liisa and her family, and some good old fashioned B.C…exercise. See, you thought I was gonna say “bud”, didn’t you? Okay, that too. But mostly exercise.

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And walking through Stanley Park one day, I felt really good. Like breakthrough good.

There you are, face to face with the mountains and trees, the ocean and sky…and you can’t help but think: Look at how small I am. How paltry are my problems. And look how beautiful the world is. There are worse things to be than alone. And, thinking these wonderful positive thoughts, you turn around and nearly smack right into this:

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And then you cry for eighteen minutes.

I soon realized it was a marker for a path and, while certainly a kick in the shins from God, not only that. I decided to bravely follow the path, imagining it could still include me, one who, while not technically a “lover”, not right now, not in the classic sense of the word, was still a lover of nature, of life, of the mountains and sky….et cetera. The sun was falling rapidly as I ventured deep into the woods, hoping I would get to the other side before getting lost in blackness. And then industrious local rapists started jumping out from behind the trees, one after the other….so there was romance to be found in lovers lane after all! How sweet!

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(Romantic post-ravagement idyll)

A day or two later, I did the “Grouse Grind”, a trek to the top of Grouse Mountain in North Van that I proudly finished in an hour and a half instead of taking the other option of giving up halfway through and rolling back down to my death. Oakey had heard it was “just a bunch of stairs", to which I answer, “Sure, Oakey...maybe if you're, say, Lance Armstrong or a mountain goat.”

In case you doubt me, here’s a word from Wikipedia, which never, ever lies: “(The Grind) is an extremely steep and mountainous trail that climbs 853 m (2,799 ft) over a distance of 2.9 km (2 mi), with an average grade of 30 degrees. The trail, nicknamed "Mother Nature's Stairmaster", is notoriously gruelling due to its steepness and mountainous terrain. - Total Stairs: 2,830.” So there.

Thank God for signs like this to let me know I was actually getting somewhere:

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And ones like this, that made me feel dangerous and cool:

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At the top, before lunch and hard-earned cider at the restaurant, I trekked around some more, and found myself walking down a grassy ski hill as skiiers slid down next to me. That was weird:

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DAY THE LAST

While arriving at the airport drunk isn't exactly what I’d call a plan…it seemed to work for me. Wasko and I'd spent the evening previous at an improv show, and later in his kitchen, consuming whiskey and shouting at each other over topics far and wide. (Even though we agreed on almost everything, we still managed to get all hopped up and wave our arms around.) After hours of this, Mike finally squinted at the clock and said, "Hey what time's your flight?" I shouted, "AAAARGH!" and ran. I had two hours to cab home, pack my bags, wash dishes, and get to the airport to be scanned and prodded for a seven am departure.


The drunkenness allowed me a remarkable level of humour through the usual ordeal. I giggled my shoes off and barely stopped myself from saying, "Most action I've seen in weeks" as security was groping me for drugs. I swaggered though the terminal with that all-knowing, drunk girl leer we know so well, then flirted with my cute young seatmate, Eric, until falling into a satisfyingly deep sleep most of the way across the country. This could be the beginning of a bad habit or even a series of arrests, but it's what I'm doing from here on in.

THE NOW

And then I got home and the hurt hit me double. I was done running around and back on home turf, where the memories lived. Back to the couch, still carrying that broken heart, and now with a lot less cash to keep it warm.

There was the Paralympics to watch, but while CTV had coverage, it mostly played highlights, and rather silently, without anyone to provide context or tell you what the hell was going on. I’m not actually enough into sports to dig that.

I need colour commentary. I need juicy tidbits to keep me interested. Like, “Michael Such-and-such is a role model to many, having overcome his blindness AND cerebral palsy to become a world-class skier…but it’s a little-known fact that he murdered six people last year”…..or “Curler Helen So-and-so is a big one-legged slut who left her husband for her coach this month”…Stuff like that.

I liked the Paralympic closing ceremony, but when it came to the Sochi stuff, it begged the same question: The Russian anthem is about twenty-seven minutes long – are they gonna do something about that before 2014?

It also kind of made me laugh that one of the musicians featured sang a tune the refrain of which was, “You may think you’ve got it all, but it could be a pebble that makes you fall”. I imagined one of the athletes having a sudden flashback and freaking out: “It WAS a pebble that made me fall! That's how I got my spinal cord injury!”

So now it’s all over folks, nothing to see.

I could try to mitigate the sadness by jumping in bed with the next supermodel who happens by…but then, whoever gets to touch this body inevitably grows addicted and wants it 24 hours a day. And I'm not ready for that kind of schedule yet. (Not that my people aren't reviewing applications.... Operators are standing by.)

But hey, back when Mister Miyagi had me paint his fence, I did learn a thing or two about patience. Sometimes you just gotta wait this shit out.
And I really am getting better and better every day. (Except when I'm not.)

Wax on, wax off,

The Tourist

___________________________________________________________

*odium

n.

  1. The state or quality of being odious.
  2. Strong dislike, contempt, or aversion.
  3. A state of disgrace resulting from hateful or detestable conduct.

BONUS SHOT:

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Darth Fiddler, downtown Victoria

SKEPTOLYMPICS 2010!

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From THE SOFA,
February 13th, 2010

Yes, I'm a big sucker for the Olympic Games. Yes, the pre-games coverage and the opening ceremony always get me kinda teary, right down to the unveiling of the latest feature-length Tim Horton's ad. And yes, this year's ceremony in Vancouver was really well done, and impressive, not to mention inclusive and respectful of the memory of Nodar Kumaritashvili, the Georgian luger who had tragically died that day. Organizer John Furlong's speech was nice. The music was pretty great. They made it look like frickin' whales were swimming under the stage.

But....

I would be remiss were I not to comment on the unacceptable paucity of silly hats. Clearly Olympians the world over had read what The Tourist had to say during the 2006 parade of athletes at Turin, thus discovering that we've all been having a snicker at their expense. (No, not the chocolate bar; that's only if it's plural.) Come ON, superhuman world-class jocktypes; this is the one time we mortals get to laugh at you, don't you get that? Is it so much to ask that you let us, just once every couple of years?

No, this year far too many of you had your shiny, lustrous, just-done hair out waving around along with your flags and arms and whatnot, no hats on whatsoever. Hardly fair.

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GREEK NATIONAL TEAM, OSLO WINTER GAMES, 1952. NOW THAT’S MORE LIKE IT.

Our sweet, muscle-bound Canucks, I happily report, did wear their silly hats dutifully. HOWEVER: flag bearer Clara Hughes was wearing a different AND DECIDEDLY LESS SILLY hat than the rest of Team Canada. Boo, I say to you, Ms. Hughes. And good luck. May your powerful thighs be wrapped in gold come Thursday.

Cut to our poor put-upon truant-from-parliament Prime Minister in the stands, looking slightly stoned, he and his wife terrified someone might mention him in a speech and draw boos from half the stadium. Waving timidly while crazy drunken premier Gordon Campbell goes insane right next to them. "Shut up, Gord," the Highly Medicated Harpers whisper through tightly clenched smiles, "You're gonna make them notice us. Here - take this valium."

All right, why do they have to drag stupid old Nelly Furtado out for all these damn things? Every time she did her inappropriately sexual yet awkward little hip wiggle Bryan Adams looked like he was gonna laugh.

Who did Sarah McLachlan's hair and why? 

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Kickass gay biker hooker fiddlers with tattoos and spiky hair! Cool!!!!

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Props to the Japanese, for waving Canadian flags as well their own. Of course our flags do match theirs, so it didn't compromise their colour scheme or anything....but I thought it was a friendly gesture.

As for the U.S. team, I can never stop wishing someone would smack all those stupid camcorders out of their hands.

Now, I'd never before heard of Shane Koyczan, but I'm sure I'm not the only one who was worried for him when he was introduced as a poet and stepped out onto the empty stage. That poor fat nerd, I thought. The jocks are all gonna laugh at him. They'll make him stick around for the whole games with the sole purpose of shoving him into their lockers when they've had a bad day. But then brother comes out with THIS: 

(Except last night’s version was even better.)

Like that Molson (I AM) Canadian ad meets W.O. Mitchell meets Jay-Z. Right on for chubby bearded slam poets! Our games are so inclusive they even include you!

All tolerance has its limits however, and the overriding message of the Canadian media’s Olympic coverage, when it comes to our team, seems to be this: no useless little bronze or silver medals will do.

Bring home the gold or CTV will ram your decapitated heads onto stakes as a warning to future losers. And feed your bodies to the winners. Mention the words "personal best" and we will ship you to Nunavut, stick a pointy thing in your skull and Michaelle Jean will eat your heart.

Speaking of Jean, anyone notice the two minute shot of her sleeping during the speeches? I know, she’s had a pretty tough month.

Another thing that scared poor Harper was that the drums they'd handed out for everyone to beat on instead of clapping made a sound oddly like that once-familiar rumbling when all the MPs complain and bang on things in the House of Commons.

Or maybe the crowd was grumbling, about having to wear white smocks that made them look like a bunch of morons in the kind of cheap dollar store raincoats that tourists wear when they get caught in the rain. God forbid the audience shouldn't match! (What's that, Emily?) My trusty research intern is informing me it had something to do with the lighting effects. Well lah dee dah.

Jacques Rogge en francais is just as boring as Jacques Rogge en anglais.

Luckily, to wake everyone up, there’s kd lang sounding fucking amazing. But I gotta say it...Hallelujah? As in "It's a cold and it's a broken hallelujah"? Wow, nothing says "Go Canada" quite like that. (Heads on stakes, people.)

And then there's Measha Brueggergosman singing the Olympic Anthem. Measha B belts that shit out….and is met with a little meh and some limpwrist flag waving. Bloody Canadians.

Follow that up with some overdramatic croaky franco-dude (called Garou of all things) who gets to sing on account of having a song called Un Peu Plus Loin, Un Peu Plus Haut, which is like oh so inspirational. Un peu plus BLECHH. I try to get Quebecois music, I really do. Okay, that's a lie, I really don't. Whenever my dad waxes nostalgic about his mom and all his aunts and uncles jamming in the Laurentians back in the day all I can think is, "Oh thank God I wasn't born for that".

As for Nikki Yanofsky, she’s lovely, but it’s day one and I already don’t ever need to hear that song again. Thanks again, CTV.

Wayne Gretzky runs like a girl. Of course I skate like a turd.

By the way, have a look my right skate, which literally exploded under my feet last time I went skating (the other one was ready to blow), which explains my nonparticipation in this games' short track speed skating events.  

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Watch out in 2014, when I'll be 38 and therefore really ready.

Anyway, it was very exciting when the Great One took the torch from BC Place…

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To his Fortress of Solitude…

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And lit the magic cauldron of Olympicon.

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(As he’s doing this, Brian Williams points out that the torch ceremony was conceived by the Nazis for the ‘36 Olympics as a symbol of Aryan supremacy??? WHAAAT??? Jesus Christ.)

The people lining the streets were so excited! They didn't know whether to yell CANADAAAA or GRETZKYYYYY! So they shouted sort of a combination of the two, peed themselves and cried. That's why the RCMP mistook them for derelicts, tasered them and drove them out of town in the “Spirit Van”. Just for the duration of the games. Then they get to come back and dine on the succulent yet untriumphant limbs of the Canadian competitors - er, big fat failures – who don’t get gold, along with all the rest of us.

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See you in two weeks, when all this is over and I pry my atrophying body off the couch,

The Tourist

GO GRETZKADAAAAA!!!!!!!!!

Random Crap 2009!

From OUAGADOUGOU, BURKINA FASO
Just kidding.

From TORONTO,
January 7th, 2010


Friends, I am about to go downstairs and murder the dog that won't stop barking, as well as any neighbours that try getting in my way. This could result in jail time, and while I imagine I am legally permitted to blog from jail, I fear that my noisy laptop would disturb the other inmates and put my life in danger. There's also the possibility that, due to its size and heft and strange appearance, the guards would consider it a dangerous weapon and take it away fom me along with my belt and many knives.

I may manage to escape the authorities and flee to High Park on my new snowshoes (!) and wearing the corpse of the offending dog as a hat. There I'll live among the raccoons and Japanese tourists all winter, emerging in the spring unrecognizable with my long beard and therefore safe. But clearly, as my Vaio's battery won't even last me to the streetcar stop and back, I won't be blogging from the woods either.

Either way, it may be a while, so I've a few things to get off my chest first.

#1: I have snowshoes! Here they are!



OOOH. AHH. OHHH.


I hate that stupid little laugh that Joni Mitchell does at the end of Big Yellow Taxi. It's enough to make me hate the entire song. And I just don't understand it. What's so funny about paving paradise to put up a parking lot? Nothing! And that's why the laugh is so fake.

I read an audition posting the other day in which the theatre stated it was looking for performers who are "able to move". This is not the first time I've seen this. They don't say that you need to be able to dance, or even be particularly graceful, though that's what they mean. Just able to move. I'd love to go into the audition, introduce myself, and for my audition piece, just sit in a chair, completely still, and occasionally shoot an arm or leg in the air. Or painstakingly raise an eyebrow or a single pinky with a pained groan. Better yet, I could pose as a quadraplegic and have someone wheel me to the audition, where we loudly protest the discrimination being demonstrated against me, an actor who isn't able to move.

Do animals get insomnia?

Has anyone died because they couldn't find their phone in their apartment to call 911?

I'm surprised that apples don't have a PR problem. Isn't it the fault of them and that snakey little devil that we all don't live in Eden? Don't they represent our fall from grace with GOD? And yet Boy Scouts sell them, and they have this squeaky-clean image, "American as apple pie" and all that. You'd think evangelical Christians would be condemning apples as Satan's fruit and stoning those who grow or eat them. Who represents apples? I want their agent.


Speaking of apples and Boy Scouts...




I can no longer bear to hear my boyfriend speak of his scouting years as a kid. It makes me angry. It makes me jealous. It makes me want to jab him with sharp, pointy objects. And not in a sexy way.


I was a Brownie. It sucked. I may have told you this before, but I was the worst Brownie in history. I earned precisely two badges; one for knowing how to read, and one for learning the alphabet in sign language, which was the only other choice that interested me. It seemed they were always trying to get us to sew and bake and darn socks and make useless crafts. I tried for a sewing badge once, but it was just too complicated. My two sad badges were stuck on me with safety pins. Meetings took place, usually, in the horrible ugly gymnasium of some Scarborough school nearby.




Kimberly Moonlight and I only joined because we followed some older, cooler girls there one day and wanted to be like them. We lied about our age. (You had to be seven and we were six.) There were weird rituals involving dancing around a fire and chanting. As we were in a gym, the "fire" was an effect created by some creepy girls crinkling orange cellophane and waving it around. There was something called a toadstool. We were Pixies first, and then danced around chanting until one day we were "flown up" to the Brownie level. I think there may have been a stuffed owl involved. I know we had to call the adults things like Brown Owl and Tawny Owl, and that one of them would read us boring stories and things from the bible.




One day I got in deep trouble because, restless during storytime, I started showing all the other Brownies the gross cut on my tongue. My sister and I had been trying to breakdance on the kitchen floor one day (obviously), and I had bit down on my own tongue while attempting a headspin. It now looked kind of lumpy and scary and what could be better than that? All the sucky girls around me reacted appropriately, looking grossed out and shocked and mouthing "Ewww", until one Brownie whose nose was particularly brown, raised her hand and told on me.




They stripped me of my badges and clothes and made me sit on the plaster toadstool shivering and naked for the rest of the meeting, while they chanted insults in Cree and pelted me with pine cones and macaroni. At least that's how it felt.




When we got to be old enough, our mothers let Kim and me quit Brownies and join Guides, which was for older kids, where you got to wear blue uniforms, and where my mom said the girls "might be less sucky". They weren't! They were MORE SUCKY! Some of them were thirteen and still doing this shit by choice, when they should be out experimenting with crack cocaine and boys! Some of them were horrible tyrants. And the whole thing was infinitely boring, and still took place in a school, this time one further away.




Also, wearing your uniform to school on National Scouting Day was even more humiliating now that you weren't so young and cute and had an awkward haircut and might get boobs soon.




I hated selling Girl Guide cookies. I resented it. It was awful. It set the tone for any humiliating joe job I've had to do since. (It was, however, infinitely better than the time our grade school announced that our fundraising product that year would be family-sized jars of spices. They even had an infomercial-type salesman lead a pep talk in the gym, telling us how great an idea this was. I remember standing in a neighbours' doorway, offering up the one fact I, the ten year old not-yet Tourist knew about any spice in an effort to help the school effort: "Seasoning Salt is REEEEEAALY good on popcorn. I use it myself all the time.")




Anyhow, boyfriend Jason wasn't a BROWNIE, he was a Cub. Way cooler. He wasn't a Guide, he was a Scout. They didn't sell sugary fattening cookies, they sold delicious fresh healthy apples. He didn't go to meetings in an enormous, fluorescent-lit gym, he went on expeditions. They went hunting! They went winter camping, for fuck's sake! When I went to Brownie camp one summer, and later to Guide camp, we stayed in these pre-built wooden platform tents, so we weren't even sleeping on the ground, and didn't get to pitch anything. Our main duties seemed to be waddling back and forth filling buckets with water in case our tents caught on fire, and scrubbing the toilets. I shared quarters with a girl named Barbie, who was my fast friend, but later my mortal enemy (ending with us rolling on the ground, at blows, while on a nature walk), and with two whiney, fat, identical twins who cried all night and whimpered, "I miss mom." "Me too. I miss Mom." "I miss Dad." "Yeah, I miss Dad."



At this camp, Windy Owl and Farty Owl would give us time each day to write letters home, despite the fact that we were gone for less than a week and we'd get home before our letters did. I kept pointing out this fact to the twins, who nonetheless huddled together every afternoon, sniffling out, "Dear Mom, Dear Dad, come get us." They were twelve.

The only redemptive moment came each evening at dinner time, when I got to sit near Penny, an older, slutty girl who would share confusing and interesting facts about sex and periods. But she started to sicken me after a while.




Meanwhile, the fucking Boy Scouts were off killing wolves with bows and arrows or sometimes just skinning them alive, and building bridges across rapids while their handsome, rugged leaders shouted handsome, rugged words of encouragement and tossed them each a beer as a way of saying, "Job well done, son".

This is why one cannot speak to me of Boy Scouts.

I really love leaving my contact lens case on the window sill overnight in winter. In the morning when I put my lenses on my eyes, they are deliciously cool and kind of shocking. This is fun.
I need to get out more.

I just busted one of the straps on my new snowshoes. Here it is:



BOOOO. HOOOO.






Half of me thinks it ridiculous that "installation wizards" are called what they are. The other half thinks it's kind of wonderful. I don't encounter many wizards in everyday life.

No, Scotiabank. I am not "richer than I think." Unless you're planning to give me some cash, I know exactly how poor I am, you profit-posting sons of whores.

Jason is designing some shows in the Next Stage Festival. So far, I have been invited via facefuck and group email a dozen times by three or four people and some "groups", none of them the man himself. I was fully intending to go, but now I think I won't, to protest all the harrassment.

When Daniel Karasik was promoting his play The Crossing Guard (not to be confused with the 1995 film of the same name though, oddly enough, they did both star Jack Nicholson) he sent out facefuck invites three times a day for six years. I started waking up in the middle of the night with a start, drenched in sweat and yelling "Crossing Guard! Crossing Guard!" In the end I actually went. And I really enjoyed it. But I didn't like enjoying it.

Also I think Hugh Grant is underrated.

Unintentional Four Weddings and a Funeral segue in 5...4....3...2....

Have you seen this L'Oreal hair dye ad in which Andie MacDowell, spokesmodel, claims the product will even work on "those stubborn little wiry ones"? What the fuck? Why is Andie MacDowell taking an interest in my pubes? And why does she want me to colour them?? I just don't understand the televisor.

This is from an ad on ebay from a seller peddling the Dora the Explorer Talking Cash Register, a popular item for little capitalist golddigging sluts in training....er I mean, girls:

Dora the Explorer she is such a popular character. This is Dora's talking Cash Register. This is new in the box, never opened. Dora the Explorer is off on another adventure. This time, she is teaching children the value of money with her very own talking cash register. It comes to life with pretend shopping trips and bilingual phrases to send kids on their own shopping trip. They can use Dora dollars or even swipe their own Dora credit card. As a real working cash register, it has a credit card tablet for kids to sign their name, just like adults! And to help Dora with her shopping, they can scan bar codes on the price tags or in the adventure book. This toy provides hours of amusement and the children can even act like different customers using the dress-up accessories provided. Kids ages three through eight will have lots of fun as they shop with Dora.





Just look at this kid, proudly displaying her first credit card.

I guess that's not so bad. I probably had some kind of Fisher Price cash register when I was a kid. But check out.....Polly Pocket's Race To the Mall!

In case you think I made that one up, here's the terrifying TV ad:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/mpd/permalink/m3T8CFI8XBRD3B


Guess when I first saw these products advertised? Last Christmas, just before the financial crisis! Training our little girlchildren to rack up debt! I know, I know, spend five years acting at The Shaw Festival and you come out the other side a big fat socialist. Good thing I didn't work at The Stalin Festival (located in picturesque Espanola, Ontario, pop. 5 314).

The other night I had a dream in which I came up with the ultimate business plan. It goes like this: get hold of a bunch of crocodiles, tranquilize them and then wire their jaws shut so they can't bite. Toss them in a pool with a bunch of rich businessfolk and extreme sportsters who've paid a lot of money for the danger and excitement of swimming with predators. I'd just moved on to the idea of adding great white sharks to the mix when I woke up. I now realize that the sharks and crocodiles would likely be strong enough and determined enough to break anything holding their jaws shut, so I think I may not have come up with a brilliant unethical business plan but a brilliant horror movie plot. Could they use this in Saw IX? I hear they're running out of writers who will work on those things.





You know those junkmail items you get intermailed by lovely young ladies like Mandy! and Wendy! with subjects such as "bigtitttttssixtynein" or "wild girl ayyynal" (weird spelling in hopes of passing through the spam filters)? I got sent one titled "Brutal 3some fckuking at the gloomy bedroom".




Ladies and gentlemen....Mister Burt Reynolds!





And some bandages that look like bacon!




And that My Friends, for now, is all.

So much the lighter for sharing this all with you, ready for 2010, for murder, mayhem and life on the run,
The always Skeptical,

Tourist

the holocaust/music issue

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a day in the life

WELCOME BACK. WE'VE BEEN EXPECTING YOU.


From TORONTO
August 8th, 2009

What happens when I get off one gig and have very little to do until the next? That's right, Faithful Reader: I masturbate. A lot. But also.....random weird thoughts that have been jiggling around in my very large brain get a chance to rise to the surface. I've been home from beautiful Gananoque for a month now, my head empty of the creative struggle, my couch dented with a large ass print, the contents of my liquor cabinet in a constant busy rotation......which means that you now get:

AIMLESS MUSINGS FROM THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF NORTON.
WhOOOOOOOO!!! (I just like to say that. Typing it is pretty good, too.)

I think I often make the mistake, when working out of town, of thinking that as soon as I get back things are going to be some kind of exciting nonstop party all day and night, with no effort on my part. Like I'm going to be lifted up and put on a float the second I arrive and led through screaming throngs of Torontonians on some kind of Back From Gananoque V-Day Parade. To be sure, there's more going on here than there was there......okay, there's a LOT more going on than there was there, and friends to see, and sex to be had.....but I also get to do wonderful things like sort receipts and organize my closet. Maybe I should do mushrooms and then sort receipts and clean my closet. Actually, that sounds terrifying.

Speaking of sorted receipts, I've now paid my 6000 dollar debt in back GST. Just 7000 bucks in back taxes to go + whatever horrors remain on my credit cards! Donations toward my worthy cause may be made to girlyoullbeawomansoon@paypal.com . And oh, I will be free!!!

My television blew up the very day that I arrived back in Toronto. While that's never much of a distraction for me - my timewasters are more often of the intertubing wormhole/show-spider-solitaire-who's-boss variety - I do like watching DVDs. Now that I have an inability to do that (except on my angry old laptop, which makes a constant sound like a family of four all blowdrying their hair, and so is, oh, slightly distracting) there's more time for staring at the wall and into my own head.

You will be interested to know that as I turned the TV on - hoping to settle in with West Side Story and a pizza or two - it made a terrifying, loud, PchOOOOOOoooooo sound (go ahead, try it) that scared the hell out of me. And a bright flash of light left me legally blind for the next ten minutes. It was exciting. Obviously an attempt at contact by the aliens who live in my TV set.


To even out the technology balance, I did get my stupid fridge replaced, so I now have a working freezer for the first time since I moved into this apartment. What's to complain about when I can sit here, chewing happily on ice cubes hour after hour and stuffing ice packs down my pants to make up for two lost years of coldness? I know, it's no West Side Story.

And now, A Glass Half Full Moment: I suppose this crappy, crappy summer means a little less melanoma for everyone. Thanks, Crappy Summer!

I fear I have a homicidal streak. I really enjoy murdering fruit flies. And every winter I derive great pleasure from seeing the mounting tally I keep on a pad on my fridge of all the mice I've electrocuted in my little zappy trap. I bought the trap on a Home Depot trip with my mom; on the way home in the car, I got all excited and said, "I can't wait to get home and start killing mice." She turned to me and said, "That might just be the strangest thing you've ever said."

I suppose the word "homicidal" only applies to killing humans, though, and I've never done that yet. I'm just flyicidal and mousicidal. (And centipedacidal - those things are fucking disgusting.) I envy my boyfriend for his flying bug killer. The spray I have kind of leaves the fruit flies writhing around on the counter, whispering "Kill me." His has "instant knockdown" - you spray them and they drop right out of the sky, which is super fun.





The mouse thing perplexes me, since I once had a pet mouse, and loved him like the son I'll never have. His name was Nick. I bought him at the Humane Society for four dollars, though his cage cost thirty. They make you buy one on the spot, which reassures them that you're not just taking the mouse home to feed to your pet snake, though I'm not sure why they care.

Nick lived in a cage in the kitchen of my bachelor apartment and each night I would hear him try to get his hamster wheel going and then give up. He didn't weigh enough to keep it going all the way around. After months of rooting for him, I finally heard the thing spinning, and snuck in to watch, proud tears in my eyes. He'd been pumping iron or something, I don't know. From then on I had to keep his cage behind the closed bathroom door each night because the annoying wheel sound kept me awake.

Sometimes I took Nick out of his cage and let him run around on the carpet, making little barriers around him out of towels and things. Invariably he would make a break for the space under the futon and I would just catch him before he could disappear forever, my heart pounding like crazy. Late one night he died in my hand. I put him in a little Chinese lacquered jewelry box that someone had given me for Christmas and went out and buried him in the Don Valley in the middle of the night, digging in the dirt with a spoon, crying the whole time. Rest in peace, Nick. Forgive me for electrocuting your family.

While I was away this summer, a new neighbour with a yappy little dog moved in next door. This is to replace the neighbours directly below me and their yappy dog, who have moved out.


The day I got back to town, still shaken by the PchOOOOOooo sound and the lack of West Side Story, I went to bed and was woken at 1am by the new little rat-dog-thing, which barked until 2:30. Then at 7:30 am the bone-shakingly loud construction on Roncesvalles began; they're tearing up the road, for water main work, or streetcar tracks, or maybe just for fun. That week the landlords started destruction on my building's courtyard, and knocking down the walls of the empty apartment below mine. You would not believe how loud it was. Unless maybe you lived in Baghdad circa 2003. No wonder I enjoy killing flies.....The power! The absolute power!

A couple of times a month, I board a train or a plane and go to Montreal, where I take the metro to Papineau station, walk up the street, enter a brick building, climb two sets of stairs and go into a little room behind some glass and pretend to be a bird for a couple of hours. Then I go back home. I'm trying to decide whether my work doing cartoon voices is more or less strange than my usual work as a stage actor. Making funny voices to entertain children versus putting on funny clothes to entertain adults. Mind you, just about any job is pretty weird when you really break it down, except maybe if you're a farmer or a surgeon or a prostitute. Anyone remember this?



Another weird gig I have is doing audio recordings used to train TD Bank employees. Once a month or so, our agency sends along some of the best stage actors you'll ever see (a veritable who's that of Canadian Theatre, as my cousin Adrian would say) to pretend to be TD VISA bill collectors or disgruntled bank customers. The whole thing takes about two hours, sometimes only ten minutes or so of that in studio, the rest in the boardroom eating Timbits. For this we are paid more than we would get for an entire week of performing a play.

One day it occurred to me that my help in training debt collectors to be more humane might directly impact me and my friends. And that much of the money I would be paid by TD would go right back to TD. Just as the money I get from the government in the form of residuals for my Tourism Ontario commercial I send back to the government as tax payments. And last time I got a big residual cheque for my IKEA ad? I went right out and bought myself an EKTORP.

Is that bank training gig more or less weird than the hours I spend providing the voices of miscellaneous cheerleaders, teachers and passersby on Degrassi: The Next Generation? More or less weird than my friends who fake various aches, pains and diseases as "standardized patients" for health care training? Or my old theatre school friend who bought his house and feeds his child with money made dressed as a giant tube of toothpaste? Or is it really weird that I have never been able to describe what my mother does in twenty-five words or less? That my stepmother gave many overworked, worried years of her life to the noble cause of possibly helping Royal Bank post a slightly larger profit every quarter?

AAAARGH! I've got to stop thinking about this! My head is going to blow up. I think I've breathed in too much Raid Flying Insect Killer. Raid Satisfaction With the Status Quo Killer. With Instant Levelheaded Commonsense Knockdown. Hey, that's catchy copy; we might just have something here.


I'm off now, to bake a batch of cookies and change in-the-pants icepacks (because I can), and then pack for a couple of days in Niagara-On-The-Lake. There, I will attend a tribute to the late and great Neil Munro, a director who was an excellent guy and probably the biggest risk taker I'll ever know, and whom I feel lucky to have worked with. Weird job or no.

But before I go, what have we learned today, boys and girls? Why, that your hero, the Skeptical Tourist, is a loser just like you. (Though as far as losers go, she's pretty cool.) That your job is weird and pointless. And that, next time, you will throw a parade.

Yours, not even stoned, not really,


The Tourist