audio — savings but no loan

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 22nd, 2016 by skeeter

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Savings but no Loan

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 21st, 2016 by skeeter

I just read in my morning paper that 38% of Americans who make over $100,000 a year would have a hard time covering an emergency bill of $1000. They’d have to sell their BMW convertible or their condo in Kuaia or jerk their kid out of Harvard law school for a semester. Or at least a week. You can only imagine what the rest of us have in rainy day savings, much less tornado day when the fiscal roof gets blown off the old shack. Nearly two thirds of this country don’t have a grand on hand, but they have credit cards. We average about 2 and a half per person. Get in a scrape, put the bill on the card. When all else fails, declare bankruptcy and start over. A million of us do every year. Most of that is because we don’t have health insurance.

Down here on the fiscally conservative South End, a thousand bucks is a lot of wampum. I suppose we could blame ourselves for not filling the piggy banks and our savings accounts, but last time I looked the Fed had kept the interest rates down to practically zero, hoping to stimulate a languishing economy after that Wall Street meltdown of nearly ten years ago, not a lot of incentive to save which is what the Fed wanted. If you’re patriotic, spend it now, don’t wait to buy that Lexus.

If you were like my folks and lived through the Great Depression, you learned some hard lessons. You didn’t want to be in debt. The banks who made you those easy loans wouldn’t be so friendly when the sheriff came to repossess your farm. The Great Recession, I’m not so sure we learned those same lessons. The banks might’ve. They pass out those credit cards instead of loans and they got a lot of extra charges at the brick and mortar, help them make up some of the losses when folks didn’t have enough money to play the stock market the way they used to.

Down here I see more neighbors playing Lotto than the Dow Jones. And a few play at the Southendomish Casino, hoping to cash in on the blackjack tables. I asked a buddy once who’d just bought a brand new John Deere riding mower how he could afford it on his paycheck and he said he figured out the minimum payment on his credit card and calculated how much overtime he’d need. I said do you understand how much interest that would be, probably cost you twice the original price of the mower? He said all he worried about was that minimum payment.

I used to think folks didn’t understand interest and percentage. I used to think they had bad math skills, maybe didn’t realize the odds down at the Casino or the fee at the ATM. I used to blame the education system for not teaching basic economics, household economics, you know,bank accounts and loans and interest calculations. As usual, I was wrong. They understand it probably better than me, they just want that riding lawn mower. And hope overtime doesn’t dry up. I guess they’re not as nervous as me.

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Save Our Wildlife!

Posted in pictures worth maybe not a thousand words on May 20th, 2016 by skeeter

SAVE OUR WILDLIFE SOUTH END

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audio — meet the artist

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 20th, 2016 by skeeter

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Meet the Artist

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 18th, 2016 by skeeter

I was recently introduced to a stranger the other day as ‘the artist who did …’, a designation that invariably makes me squirm in my underwear. I don’t go around introducing my friends as Joe the accountant or Wendy the professor or Ralph the serial adulterer. No point in tying them to a preconception, putting them in a neat well-defined box and leaving them to futile extrications. The person I was introduced to said, “Oh, I saw your glass in the train station….” And then she asked where I’d taken my art studies, expecting, no doubt, some university or salon, possibly an apprenticeship under Chihuly.

“I took a night class at Stanwoodopolis High School,” I said, giving the answer I’ve given since the first time I was asked this. “Went to one class and came home with just enough information to be dangerous.” I lived in the shack I bought in 1977, a place with plastic on window openings that needed to be boarded up or filled with conventional paned glass. But since I didn’t know then how to frame a house or remodel a window opening to make a used window frame fit into the wall, I got this eureka moment when I saw a stained glass class offered in the local night school. Why learn framing when I could make a window that fit exactly the opening where the plastic was?

I know, I know, I could’ve just as easily learned woodworking and carpentry, but I didn’t have much faith in my skills on that front and anyway, I didn’t own tools either. So, like always in my life, I took the easy route instead, rolled into town for a night class, figured one hour was plenty, bought some glass the next day and a glass cutter, then went to work. By the next class I had one window installed and a six foot doorway filled. Why go back? I was practically a pro. So what if it took me decades to learn what I didn’t learn by finishing that class?

But a funny thing happened on the way to my career. I learned how to frame a wall, learned how to build a house and learned how to cut glass. I made a few windows, but being poor, the glass cost a fortune and those windows got smaller and smaller. By then I’d gotten kind of hooked on stained glass, all that color, all that sparkle, all the magic of it, corny as it sounds. And I hated working small. I’m the sort of guy who could never be a clock repairman. Those tiny parts would drive me nuts. Doesn’t help that I have ten thumbs.

So I started selling stained glass windows, much as I hated to given my disdain for all things commercial. Victorian designs, roses, cute iris windows. Do a few of those and you too might venture toward doing your own stuff even if it was odd or bad or semi-weird. The woman I’d been introduced to said ‘you must have a natural talent.’ I replied that she hadn’t seen my first attempts, otherwise, she would know I didn’t.

But … I’m living proof you can learn. All this mumbo-jumbo of right brain, left brain, maybe you buy that. Okay, but keep this in mind: we all got a brain and it has both sides, no assembly required. Doesn’t cost any extra to use both and the funny thing is, they get better the more you do.

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audio — invertebrate art

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 17th, 2016 by skeeter

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Invertebrate Art or How to Sing Your Life

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 16th, 2016 by skeeter

We got a little Art Tour going on this weekend on the island, about 50 artists, then about 50 more who’d rather ride the coat tails of the ones who advertise and promote this event. Since I was one of the original artists at the beginning some 19 years ago and watched it grow into a successful regional event, you might think I’d resent all those artists who avoid dues and meetings just to profit from the work of others.

But I don’t. It warms my cockles to see the entire island — for two weekends — celebrate art. Sure, there’s the profit motive, but the island is in America, land of capitalist excess, a fact even us artists can’t ignore though we try our damndest. My old shack (let’s call it a studio) was on the Tour for 9 years at the beginning. Had four of us starving artists down there and by the end we had 3000 visitors in the 3 days we were open back then. For you non-math majors, that’s a thousand people a day who drove clear to the South End for aesthetic entertainment.

I didn’t sell much except the notion that the island was the Art Island, plenty enough for me. Folks wandered the acres of gardens the mizzus had planted, saw how we lived, how artists lived and maybe where their inspiration came from. What we wanted, of course, besides getting filthy rich those few days, was offering a glimpse into our own creativity, how art isn’t so much just an art form, a blown glass vase or a pastel painting, but a way of seeing the world, then creating one. Gardens, tool shed architecture, found object sculptures, hand built houses, all of it a tapestry flowing from the imagination.

What we hoped was to inspire others to explore their own world. To the folks who told me they didn’t have one single artistic bone in their body, I always said sorry to break the news, but we all create our lives, some consciously, some not. We’re all of us artists, but some of us fools try to make a living at it.

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audio — america in a 12 oz can

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 15th, 2016 by skeeter

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America in a 12 oz Can

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 14th, 2016 by skeeter

The Belgian-Brazilian conglomerate that owns Budweiser brewing announced that they would now call this country’s best selling beer America. America the Beer, not the beautiful. Actually the best selling brew in the United States is Bud Lite. Somehow America Lite doesn’t have the same panache, although judging by this year’s political campaign, America Lite sounds about right. Less filling, fewer calories, but drink enough and your head will swim.

Now … I’m a cynical person. But naming your alcoholic beverage our country, well, even a cynic winces at this. Of course all the patriots will flock to the new red white and blue watering hole in a can while profits flow overseas in a global tsunami of misplaced jingoism. I know, it’s just dog eat dog capitalism, but for the luvva Abe Lincoln and Tom Jefferson, are there no limits to the crassness of advertising?

I think we can assume the floodgates of branding are now wide open. Get ready for Jesus, the SUV made by Honda. Gets 23 mpg highway and comes with GPS showing shortest routes to Heaven. United States, a low tar cigarette both filter and menthol. God, the new moniker for the GOP, only need to change one little letter and virtually no content appeal . Land of the Brave, the real estate company formerly known as Century 21, already an old and tired brand but once was forward leaning. You know, back in the dead 20th.

Naturally there will be some confusion. When the presidential candidates refer to America, which one do they mean? ‘We will make America great again?’ Is the candidate suggesting Budweiser wasn’t? Can he be sued for slander? Has he got Trump Beer coming out and this was always a marketing ploy to undermine his competitor? Or did he buy stock in a foreign corporation, to make it great once more as an offshore dodge, and now he doesn’t want to show his tax returns?

I don’t know about the rest of my fellow Americans, but I want the name changed back. Either that or we change the country’s name.
O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain!
Budweiser! Budweiser! God shed His grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!

I know, kind of a nice ring to it.

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audio — art bubble

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 13th, 2016 by skeeter

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