Thursday 25 April 2024

A FAN’S NOTES


Oh, How We Howled


The saga of the NHL Coyotes is almost biblical. Jettisoned from Manitoba the club spent thirty years wandering in the Arizona desert before Great Salt Lake parted (evaporated, actually) to reveal the Promised Land: Utah.


Coyote wandering eventually led to a sort of breather in Glendale, a city of some 250,000 on the outskirts of the Phoenix metroplex. I saw a game there, maybe twenty years ago. I recall a short, quaint main street, sort of a southwest postcard clich̩. The team played in a brand-new arena whose naming rights were purchased by Jobing.com РI never did learn what that company did before it ceased to exist. Glendale bet its future on pro sports. In addition to the arena, the city built a football stadium for the NFL Cardinals (Chicago, St. Louis, Phoenix). The city also gave five hundred acres of land to the MLB Dodgers and White Sox, enticement to join the Cactus League, play nine innings now and then in March. None of these initiatives paid out double at the window.


The Jobing rink was empty. I clocked the men’s room and the beer station in the concourse by my section. When I ordered my first beer the vendor asked for a picture ID. I was pushing fifty. He lingered a moment over my Alberta learner’s driving permit. We chatted, there was time because nobody, not another soul was around. I felt pretty exclusive, personal bartender and all. I tipped him generously: Remember me. When I returned for a second one, he began pouring it as I approached the counter. He asked me for my ID again. I said, “Really?” “It’s the law.” We went through that ritual a few more times.


I watched Jeremy Roenick as the pre-game skate wound down. He patiently and diligently distributed pucks to the few kids who’d ventured down to the glass in the home team’s end. He underhanded some like softballs, golf chipped others with the blade of his stick. All that diplomatic effort on behalf of a lousy team in a lousy location where buying a cup of beer is as complicated as a Fanny Mae or Freddy Mac mortgage application. Maybe that’s why he’s the only Coyote I can name.  


I still enjoy sports. Not as much as I used to, but I try and keep current even if the results and standings in my morning newspaper are incomplete and stale, day-old; I don’t watch network TV. There was a time when the circus was desperately important; when I could name most of the players on most of the teams in the leagues I cared about. These days I lean more toward the old timers and their colourful old stories. I’ve more interest in Stan Mikita than Chicago’s current “generational” rookie phenom whose name escapes me. My creative impulses and lifelong appreciation of graphic design keep me in modern games: team laundry (home, road and alternates) and logos (primary and secondary) always intrigue.


I belong to a public Facebook group that frets about athletic aesthetics. Stuff can get hilariously though inadvertently arcane. Still, even pedants are capable of actual humour. One fellow suggested NHL Utah should follow in tradition set by the NBA’s Jazz and name the club for a genre of music no one in the state has ever heard: the Reggae. I laughed. Speculation on the transplanted franchise’s colours and nickname is rife. The sweeping generalization, the common misconception of Utah, is that it’s a theocratic outlier state in the Union south of 49. Holier, but as distinct in popular perception as the white supremacist state of Idaho, if only because Jesus spent the inaugural Easter long weekend on an impromptu getaway to Provo. Maybe Ogden. I don’t know: Saints, Pioneers, Bishops, Hypocrites and Polygamists (that one compliments of the 300 Club’s Uncivil Servant) might be in play.


When I was still in the game, I had, because of various client contracts and agreements, extensive dealings with a printing company in Salt Lake City. I hosted members of that shop’s team dedicated to my Calgary firm’s account a couple of times. They were good people, a dedicated, competent crew. Not one of them had been born in Utah, they’d all moved for work and couldn’t wait to leave. The message dismayed me as we were getting things done together and I trusted them, but at the same time it was important information to be aware of, to file away. I suspect Salt Lake City will become the new place of NHL exile, the most popular destination in no-trade clauses.


My only experience with Salt Lake City was a layover at its airport for a few hours, waiting on the last leg of a journey home. I was relieved to find a bar with ashtrays because I’d imagined the facility as a sort of dry non-believer hell. I think the bartop was zinc. I settled in near the ale taps, one eye on the arrivals and departures screen and the other on an afternoon west coast ball game – Giants maybe, possibly the 49ers; I really don’t remember. But I do the remember the cowboy customer. He walked in, boots and bowed legs. Whatever you may picture as his hat and jacket, you’d not be wrong. He reminded me of the dude mascot on the cover of every single Pure Prairie League album. He sat down beside me and nodded a greeting. He lit a Marlboro. He ordered a shot of bourbon with a Budweiser chaser. He repeated the process twice more inside of half an hour. Then he nodded farewell and ambled out. The “Cowboy” I’d known in Edmonton as a barfly friend and who was stabbed to death by his mail-order Filipina girlfriend had nothing on this guy.


To avoid overtones and undertones, it’s possible NHL Utah could turn to Zane Grey, author of the genre classic Riders of the Purple Sage. Salt Lake may become home to Cowboys, Rustlers, Wranglers, Outlaws or Rodeo Clowns. The Coyotes name will stay farther south as the newly bereft Arizona ownership group is expected to be granted an expansion franchise within the next five years. What could go wrong? That diehard core of hundreds of taxpayer fans will surely step up. Lazarus Coyotes would suggest a necessary balancing, an expansion team in the already bloated league’s Eastern Conference. I understand that Atlanta’s primed because the failures of the Flames and Thrashers provided the city a proven hockey town pedigree.                                 


Dispatches from the Crooked 9 has been your most unreliable, unbalanced and inaccurate alternative source of everything since 2013. My companion site www.megeoff.com is awake and alive. Watch and listen to some of the songs I co-wrote with The Muster Point Project or buy 5 KG, the complete EP. Of course, you can still purchase my latest book Of Course You Did in your preferred format from your preferred e-retailer.

Sunday 21 April 2024

NONSENSE VERSE


See You for Tea by the Sea Next Tuesday


I confess I remain somewhat mystified as to why The Muster Point Project rejected these lyrics. Cringeworthy, perhaps.


A tinge on the fringe of her fascist minge

Yellow, like Jell-O and left by a fellow

A lover, above her and under the cover

A disease if you please, a source of unease

Her doctor and proctor snorted and mocked her

That smell, Danielle, sulphuric as hell

She had a notion, a potion, a lotion

To fix in a stitch a bitch of an itch

To reign insane in the political game

The cure was impure and so we endure                       


Dispatches from the Crooked 9 has been your most unreliable, unbalanced and inaccurate alternative source of everything since 2013. My companion site www.megeoff.com is awake and alive. Watch and listen to some of the songs I co-wrote with The Muster Point Project or buy 5 KG, the complete EP. Of course, you can still purchase my latest book Of Course You Did in your preferred format from your preferred e-retailer.

Friday 19 April 2024

A FAN’S NOTES


CKUA Spring Fundraising Drive


When you ask them, How much can we give? They only answer, More, more, more! – Creedence Clearwater Revival, “Fortunate Son”


Transmit the message to the receiver, hope for an answer some day – Talking Heads, “Life During Wartime”


Sometimes, a big ask is genuine, from a desperate heart.


The radio in the Crooked 9 is like the one in “Roadrunner” by the Modern Lovers, on for a stretch. Ann and I tend to tune in for two or three hours each morning while we enjoy our coffees and newspaper sections. Our default FM frequency setting is CKUA, Alberta’s public radio station, which has been broadcasting since 1927. Our AM band alternative is CBC Radio One. Canadian readers of this blog who pay attention to actual news (a legitimate source, unbiased, just facts, context and information) will note that the “Mother Corp.” was graced with a very plump $42-million plum in this week’s federal budget – no complaints here except that maybe buying more rights to more idiotic American game shows for the television arm is cultural heresy, or just lazy – I digress.


CKUA is a legacy institution, a heritage institution that predates the formation of the CBC. It contributes to Alberta’s cultural life and, crucially, promotes and chronicles the province’s arts and culture scene in real time. That’s a major mandate and a self-imposed one at that. There is nothing else quite like CKUA in Alberta, maybe even all of Canada. Listeners are free to tune in to anything out there on the airwaves. If “Brown Sugar” is commercial-corporate radio, CKUA is “Moonlight Mile” and “Sway”. Its programming is essentially formatless. The menu of shows and the genres its hosts concentrate on is extensive: jazz, funk, blues, country, classical, choral, world beat, reggae, rap and all their fantastical hybrids. 


The odds of CKUA surviving long enough to celebrate its centennial are looking long. Skin of its teeth but not fly by night, the station survives mainly on donations from its audience of nearly half a million people, only a fraction of whom actually chip in. Government grants are miniscule. Advertising revenue, mainly because there’s very little, is minimal. Ann and I are regular donors.


Money’s too tight to mention; things are tough all over: The ability to contemplate a donation of any size after your own needs and obligations have been seen to is something of a gift in itself. There are some 80,000 registered charities in Canada on top of other tax deductible giving options – together they almost all add up to the number of paint swatches at Home Depot. Choosing isn’t easy. I figure God doesn’t need my money, so He/She/They/It is out. I’ve never donated to a political party because I look at the shallow talent pool and figure pond scum doesn’t need feeding. Ecology, medical research and treatments, educational institutions, food banks, street ministries, youth athletics …


To me, a society with a sterile cultural life defined and exemplified by the books it bans and Disney+ substituting for soma really is a Brave New World dystopia. Admittedly, CKUA has been precious from time to time, flawed. Old songs whose lyrics may be perceived as insensitive by evolving contemporary standards have been introduced with trigger warnings. "Coloured” was bleeped from Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side”. And, so help me God, Ann and I once heard an utterly wretched, breathy, Diana Krall-inspired, airport Holiday Inn cocktail lounge happy hour light jazz version of “After the Gold Rush” as sung by (we imagined) an anorexic waif. Sometimes, you know, you have to twist the input knob on the tuner and put AC/DC in the CD player. On the other hand, thank you CKUA for introducing us to Eddie 9V and Shaela Miller. Overall, Ann and I as listeners have been winners, chart toppers by virtue of sitting in our kitchen.


Albertans need arts and culture in all of their forms: high, low and pop. Like CKUA’s programming, we don’t have to like or appreciate all of it, but it’s got to be available, even just to dismiss, sneer at. The province (the country and the world) is a big and magically diverse place, sometimes too big to see until something like CKUA supplies a proper lens.


CKUA’s spring fundraising drive is underway now. For more comprehensive information about the current tenuous state of affairs at this venerable public radio station and its programming schedule visit www.ckua.com where you can also tune in and listen from virtually anywhere on the globe.                          


Dispatches from the Crooked 9 has been your most unreliable, unbalanced and inaccurate alternative source of everything since 2013. My companion site www.megeoff.com is awake and alive. Watch and listen to some of the songs I co-wrote with The Muster Point Project (as heard on CKUA) or buy 5 KG, the complete EP. Of course, you can still purchase my latest book Of Course You Did in your preferred format from your preferred e-retailer

Saturday 13 April 2024

CORRESPONDENCE: DEAR meGEOFF


A Letter from Tony to the Consumers


Eccentric, itinerant and intermittent correspondent Tony Intas has returned to his home turf of Montreal following a pleasant winter in Florida. There was some shopping to be done, errands to run. A market-savvy retiree, Tony’s not cheap, just genetically predisposed to thriftiness.   


I am doing a “Happy Dance” today. Julian, my beloved uncle and godfather, the "Give me a discount so we have a deal king of Montreal" is smiling from Heaven.


I was at my local Walmart, or "Marte de Muir" as it known by nobody here in La Belle Province. I queued up in the "Cash only" line. Excellent customer service strategy on the part of this multinational conglomerate. This was the first time I had ever experienced such preferential treatment. Wait ... it gets BETTER!!!!!


When I looked at my bill, I noticed that I was not given the discount deal of "Buy two for the reduced price of ..." for which I thought I was entitled on a certain item. I was then directed to Customer Service who in turn verified that the shelf price, not the till price, was correct. I did not know this was Walmart (or Marte de Muir) policy, but in the case of a cash register programming error, the customer is entitled to one item FREE, IN ADDITION to the reduced-price equivalent on the other item.


Oh boy!!!!!


Not only did I get a free bottle of salad dressing - low fat because after all it will be swimsuit season soon - I also purchased my favourite Easter chocolates at 50% off, which they still had LOTS of!!!!!


Today, I was reminded of two important lessons: (1) know your prices; (2) always check your receipt.


I do not think my Uncle and Godfather Julian ever knew of this Walmart (Marte de Muir) deal. And he knew them all. And he taught me well.  The torch has been passed and I hold it high in his memory …


Readers of this blog who find themselves in places where they don’t normally find themselves, actual or otherwise, are encouraged to write meGeoff a letter detailing their experiences and impressions. Get in touch with me. I’m on Facebook.