Monthly Archives: August 2025

864 Words: Mrs. Campbell’s Résumé

Dorothy Parker is one of my favorite figures in American history.

Parker

Born in 1893 in Long Branch, New Jersey, one of those beachside communities south of the New York metro area, she grew up to be a writer. And when I say writer, I really mean it. She wrote poetry, fiction, plays, screenplays, essays, and criticism. She was a member of the fabled Algonquin Round Table, where she was referred to as Mrs. Campbell. She’d been married, twice, to another writer named Alan Campbell (actually, they were her second and third marriages; she’d married a stockbroker just before he shipped out to fight in World War I when she was 23). She must have been gaga over this Campbell fellow to have married him twice. Like Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.

In any case, Parker (or Mrs. Campbell, if you prefer) hung out with the likes of Robert Benchley, Robert E. Sherwood, Franklin P. Adams, Alexander Woolcott, Harold Ross, Edna Ferber, Heywood Broun, Ruth Gordon, and Harpo Marx — as brilliant, cutting, imaginative, and outspoken a group of Americans that have ever existed. Parker not only held her own among them, the lot of them had to scramble to keep up with her. One of my favorite books is The Portable Dorothy Parker, a compendium of her wildly varied works including her signature short story, “Big Blonde.”

The Algonquin Roundtable is one of the two historical places I’d wish to be reincarnated in (the other being the writers room of The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour). I’d probably swoon over Parker, although she’d never be available to me considering she was herself in thrall to that Campbell guy. In fact, their relationship largely is reflected in the 1937 movie, A Star Is Born. Parker and Campbell co-wrote the script and, like the main characters in it, her fame dwarfed his.

To this day, Parker’s light and breezy but incisive as a scalpel poems ring true, as relevant as they were a hundred years ago. A couple of examples:

Her take on falling in love with creative types, “Bohemia.”

Authors and actors and artists and such Never know nothing, and never know much.

Sculptors andsingers and those of their kidney

Tell their affairs from Seattle to Sydney.

Playwrights and poets and such horses’ necks

Start off from anywhere, end up at sex.

Diarists, critics, and similar roe

Never say nothing, and never say no.

People Who Do Things exceed my endurance;

God, for a man that solicits insurance.

And, perhaps her most famous poem, “Résumé”:

Razors pain you;

Rivers are damp;

Acids stain you;

And drugs cause cramp.

Guns aren’t lawful; Nooses give;

Gas smells awful;

You might as well live.

Once, when told her editor was hollering for her to turn in a story she’d missed the deadline on because she was on one of her honeymoons, she replied to the messenger: “Tell him I was too fucking busy — or vice versa.”

She had a definitive attitude toward wealth. She wrote: “I hate almost all rich people, but I think I’d be darling at it.”

Which brings us to this observation of hers:

I think I knew what side I was on when I was about five years old, at which time nobody was safe from buffaloes. It was in a brownstone house in New York, and there was a blizzard, and my rich aunt — a horrible woman then and now — had come to visit. I remember going to the window and seeing the street with the men shoveling snow; their hands were purple on their shovels, and their feet were wrapped with burlap. And my aunt, looking over her shoulder, said, “Now isn’t this nice that there’s this blizzard. Now all these men have work.” And I knew then that it was not nice that men could work for their lives only in desperate weather, that there was no work for them in fair. That was when I became anti-fascit, at the silky tiones of my rich and comfortable aunt.

Parker, who by 1939 when she wrote this, had become a successful Hollywood screenwriter with Alan Campbell. She was as comfortable as a bankable script writer could be in those days. She wasn’t in Rockefeller or DuPont territory but she was never in danger of missing a meal. Nor did she have wait for a blizzard to earn a paycheck.

And then, along came the communist witch hunts. Anyone in Hollywood who didn’t genuflect before wealth was drummed out of business, including Parker. The FBI kept a 1000-page file on her. She was denied a travel visa during World War II (she wanted to work as a war correspondent) because she’d once belonged to the Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee. And, worst of all, she’d been a loud advocate for civil rights. After the war, movie work became so scarce for her that she had to collect unemployment checks.

There are a few people, gone now, whose take on the reign of Li’l Duce and the creeping fascism overtaking this holy (unholy?) land I’d love to know. Mike Royko is one. George Carlin is another. Eleanor Roosevelt, of course. Frances Perkins and and Malcolm X, too.

And, of course, Dorothy Parker.

 

981 Words: Bleep!

I just did something I know I’ll regret. I violated my own standards. I knuckled under. I played it safe.

I censored this week’s episode of my own radio program, Big Talk.

Ugh!

Now, inasmuch as all editing, even self-editing, can be construed as censorship, I’m always censoring either my radio show or my written work. I spend hours every week snipping out my and my guests’ uhs, ums, ers, belches, sneezes, belly grumblings, tongue trips, misspeaks, and every other conceivable form of audio detritus before I load the latest episode into WFHB’s programming software. That’s normal. What I did today was not.

My guest this week is colleague and friend Tristra Newyear. The aim of this particular episode was for us to riff on the return of the Indiana University students (and their parents) to Bloomington for the 2025-26 school year. I led off by saying, The students are coming back, the five scariest words in this town. I went on to rant about the stores being packed, traffic getting snarly, nowhere to park downtown, people driving the wrong way down one-way streets (do one-way streets only exist here?), doting parents loading their kids’ shopping carts with luxury towels and bed linens, and all the rest of the sins, mortal and venial, the flood of humanity now washing over our little village commit.

At one point, I said, “I want them to be shot.”

A joke. An exaggeration. A throwaway line. Tristra laughed and said, “Can we say that on the air?”

I immediately covered myself by saying, “… with a hypodermic needle filled with beneficial drugs…,” at which point Tristra added, “…drugs that help them read street signs.” Not exactly Mark Twain or Richard Pryor, but that was our flimsy attempt at humor.

Then, in the middle of the night I woke up. Damn it, I said to myself, someone’s gonna piss and moan about it. Someone’s gonna accuse me of advocating gun violence against college students and their parents. And, for pity’s sake, college kids are under siege enough these days, from university administrators whose goal in life is to transform academia into a high-end resort hotel and self-help retreat to Li’l Duce extorting money from colleges and universities and trying to force them to become Chamber of Commerce propagandists.

So, for the next six hours or so, I quibbled with myself over bleeping the word shot. The angel on my right shoulder whispered, Don’t put the radio station in a bad spot. Don’t open yourself up to any accusations. Be a good boy. The devil on my left sneered, Don’t give in. Don’t let the hand-wringers and pearl-clutchers win. Don’t be afraid.

At approximately 9;45am, the angel won. That little schmuck. I re-edited the audio file for this week’s Big Talk episode and inserted a bleep over the word shot. That’s what you’ll hear Thursday at 5:30pm on 91.3 FM or anytime at wfhb.org.

I’m not happy with it.

I hate soft language. I detest the censorship imposed on America’s conversation by both the Right and the Left. I can’t stand the social media finger-waggers who peek under everybody’s beds and sniff around everybody’s garbage bins looking for things to be outraged over. I’m never gonna let them tell me what to do, I’ve always told myself.

And I haven’t. Until now. Damn it.

Funny thing. Corporate America has become humanity’s word policeman. Anybody who’s outed in the media for dropping an N-bomb or uttering misogynistic drivel gets fired. Nike, McDonald’s, Walmart, Apple, CVS, and Cigna get to say, Hey, look at us! We’re good guys! We don’t tolerate that kind of verbal wickedness!

Which, I suppose. is good. On the other hand, with everybody and his brother in a public setting not able utter N-bombs or judge a woman by the size of her breasts, we came to think the absence of that kind of mouth-spew on the airwaves and the internet meant nobody thought that way anymore. We were shocked that a presidential candidate who gave voice and license to the worst, racist, women-hating, white supremacist, foreigner-loathing element of our holy land’s populace could be elected. Twice!

Who knew? We all could have known how very many “deplorables” were out there if only we’d let them speak freely. An enemy that’s invisible can’t easily be fought.

But, I may be going off on a tangent here. Or maybe not. Sunshine is the best disinfectant. I’d rather know if a guy tends to drop N-bombs than not. Free expression tells us much about our fellow species-mates.

And, for chrissakes, people, learn to take a joke. Learn to tell the difference between hyperbole and a criminal threat. Remember that scene from “Twelve Angry Men,” where one juror says to the other, I could kill you? The Henry Fonda character uses the incident to prove his point that people’s words shouldn’t always be taken literally. I could eat a horse. I’m dead. It’s to die for. I could have clobbered him. We’re always speaking over the top, embellishing, distorting, fudging, and inflating. They’re all verbal exclamation points.

Speaking of movies, I remember someone asking me, many years ago, what I through of “The Big Chill.” Throughout the whole movie, I said, I was pulling for terrorists to break in and wipe out all the characters.

Again, a joke. An exaggeration. A throwaway line. I might have been able to get away with it in the 1980s or ’90s but not today.

I want them to be shot. Anybody who’d think that was a call to action is, to borrow a handy phrase from James Carville, a goddamned idiot. Or, in keeping with this post’s theme, They oughtta be taken out and shot.

I still have a bit more than 30 hours to delete my bleep of the word shot. I probably won’t do it.

I’m not proud of myself.

 

717 Words: Summer School

Every August, I celebrate two dates that are meaningful in my personal history.

The greatest, most exciting moment of my sports fandom life occurred on August 19, 1969. My sister and her then-husband took me and their kids to the Cubs game at Wrigley Field. I’d been staying with my sister’s family that August because Riis Park day camp was finished and my mother, who worked at the local dime store, was afraid I might burn down the house if I were left alone. The Cubs had just come back to town from a successful road trip. They were far out in front in their division, 31 games over .500. The whole city was ecstatic. Everyone knew — knew — the Cubs were headed toward their first World Series since World War II. I actually had a six-inch-diameter Cubbie pin (see a pic of me wearing it in 2016 in the gallery below):

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The gang of us were just about the last people in the ballpark that day. The place was packed. The only seats we could find were high up in the centerfield bleachers, underneath the scoreboard. Wrigley was rockin’. The sun was shining and Kenny Holtzman was on the mound. He actually lived just across the Little League diamonds from my sister in Schiller Park, near O’Hare Airport. He had a white Pontiac convertible. Every time we saw it in his apartment building parking lot, we loitered around it in hopes he’d come out and invite us to come inside and become his best friends. And, of course, Ron Santo was a fixture at third base, the best third baseman in the National league and proprietor of his eponymous pizza parlor in Park Ridge. Santo hit a first inning home run with a couple of guys on base and that’s all the Cubs needed that day as Holtzman pitched a no-hitter. After the last out, fans jumped over the bleacher walls and stormed the field. The Cubs mobbed Holtzman as if they’d just won the final game of the World Series (which we all knew — knew — they were going to do that year). I thought I’d died and gone to heaven.

The other date, actually a week of dates, was August 26-29, 1968. The Democrats came to town that week to nominate Hubert H. Humphrey as their candidate for president. He’d go up against the Republican Richard M. Nixon, whom we all knew was a punchline. Bobby Kennedy had been killed nearly three months before but, damn it, we were still gonna win the election. And we were all still mourning the death in early April of Martin Luther King, Jr. Nevertheless, the good guys would win. We knew — knew — it. Who’d be loopy enough to vote for Tricky Dick?

Only the SDS, led by Tom Hayden; the Yippies, led by Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin; the Mobe (National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam), led by David Dellinger; and many others converged on the city to protest the godforsaken, idiotic war in Southeast Asia. Mayor Richard J. Daley was panicky. He wasn’t about to let the city be taken over by long-haired, commie, radical, beatnik, drug-taking, sex-enjoying hippie-dippie punks. His cops already had beaten the hell out of peaceful anti-war protesters one April Saturday afternoon in the Loop and they were itching to break more heads. The National Guard backed them up with fixed bayonets attached to their loaded rifles. This time, the world’s television cameras caught all the action. It would be labeled a “police riot” by the Walker Report.

Both August events in successive years when I was 12 and 13 helped form the adult me. The Cubs in ’69, immediately after Holtzman’s no-hitter, would go into a swoon and lose to the heretofore risible Mets. That taught me all joy was fleeting and disappointment was something I not only needed to prepare for, I had to learn how to accept it and move on. The convention and the protests in ’68 radicalized me. I came to detest The Man and always identify with the rebels, the outsiders, the ones who risked life and limb to raise hell against those in power. That lesson is coming in awfully handy now, in the year 2025.

August, when I was a kid, was always the last month of summer vacation. Except for me, for two formative years of my life, it was the month of my schooling.

786 Words: Dumb Luck

The Bomb fell 80 years ago today.

That’s right — The Bomb. It has to be capitalized.

At the time of the Manhattan Project, the US was only one of at least five nations working on building their own Bomb. This holy land only was able to do it because it was, at the time, the richest nation on the planet. It cost $20B in 1945 dollars to build America’s first nukes. No other country could spare that kind of cash as they were busy clothing, feeding, arming, and transporting millions and millions of people here and there to kill millions and millions of other people.

The US and the UK, working together, reasoned that, since many of the world’s smartest nuclear physicists were from Germany, Hitler’s Reich probably was racing to be the first to build a Bomb. Hitler, history has shown us, didn’t think all that much of the then-theoretical weapon. Of course, we had no way of knowing that at the time so we had to beat the Nazis to it.

By the time Lt. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, physicist/administrator J. Robert Oppenheimer, and their crew finally put together a working Gadget, Germany had been crushed. In mid-July, 1945, new US President Harry S Truman was scratching his head, trying to strategize an end to the war with Japan. His advisers estimated more than a million US soldiers would be casualties and tens of millions of Japanese would be starved, bombed, bayoneted, blown up, or shot to death were we to invade the Japanese mainland. Truman’s diplomats warned him the Soviet Union was itching to get its hands on a good half of Japan once Stalin’s empire joined the war. Truman political advisors counseled him that if we didn’t use The Bomb to shorten the war and Americans learned about the cost and efficacy of the thing, they’d crucify the president. All were compelling reasons to drop The Bomb on Japan.

Let’s do it, Truman decided.

How, we wonder at this remove, could anybody do such a horrifying thing? It’s easy to condemn Truman’s decision in 2025. In 1945, officials around the world were busy counting the more than 50 million human beings already slaughtered in the war. Killing huge numbers of people was the norm.

Of all humanity’s sins, our species’s development of nuclear weapons might turn out to be the evilest. That is, of course, if there’s anybody left to rank Homo sapiens‘s sins should we again decide to fling nukes at each other.

Very few people who actually remember World War II and the dropping of The Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki are left. In fact, Bill Clinton was the first US president who hadn’t fought in the war, and he took office more than 30 years ago.. The horrors of WWII, it can be assumed, kept the globe’s post-war leaders from getting too mouthy with each other for fear that things might spiral out of control.

Today’s leaders have no such historical guardrail.

Donald Trump and Dmitri Medvedev, Russia’s former president and prime minister, have been throwing threats at each other of late. They’ve been making references to their Bombs, implying each has the capability and will to incinerate the other. Post-World War II leaders with personal memories of that that horror never resorted to such threats. Even when the US and the USSR stood at the brink of nuclear armageddon during the Cuban Missile Crisis, neither Kennedy nor Khrushchev blabbed about nuking each other. Just uttering the words was seen as dangerous, rather like saying Candyman three times in a row. Or is it five? No matter.

Li’l Duce, who is unapologetically — even proudly — unaware of history, has no healthy fear of his country’s or his foe’s nukes. Historians tell us every time a new US president takes office, he is humbled — and petrified — as he’s apprised of our nuclear capability and the apocalyptic havoc using them would unleash. Not Li’l Duce, numerous observers have noticed. Even so theatrical a macho-man as Ronald Reagan, became convinced we — meaning all Earthlings — had to reduce our nuclear stockpiles once he was put abreast of their numbers and megatonnage. When Trump took office in 2017, he began crowing that we ought to build thousands more of the things.

Humans have only used two Bombs in anger. We have, though, exploded them thousands of times in “test shots” to remind the Other Guy that we have them. It’s been 80 years since we dropped the first nuke on a city. It’s almost beyond belief that we’ve never used them again following the Nagasaki bombing three days later. I chalk that good fortune up, mostly, to dumb luck.

Now, it’s the leaders who are dumb. Our luck might be running out.

 

515 Words: The Last Straw

It was the announcement Friday that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting would be closing its doors over the next few months that finally kicked me over the edge.

It cannot be argued any more; I’ve been feeling discouraged the last few months and the Trump Presidency II is the reason. No, wait, let me correct that: I’ve been depressed the last few months. In fact, all the way back to November when somehow, in some bizarre way, the American voting populace said Let’s do this shit again.

Depression. I mentioned this in my previous post: I’m not thrilled about getting up in the morning these days. I’ve been flailing around, looking for a reason or some combination of them for this despondency. Problem is, my health is good (relatively), I’m almost finished with my book-length history of WFHB, The Loved One and I are sailing along, and the Cubs are fighting for first place. There seem to be no looming griefs in my life. I’m down about Li’l Duce, sure, but can that so profoundly affect my emotional well-being?

Yes it can.

I felt so defeated when the CPB closing news hit. The goddamned Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The people who taught kids how to count.

 

 

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The people who gave us Carl Sagan and Cosmos.\

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The people who gave us Ken Burns and Baseball, the Civil War, Prohibition, Mark Twain, Jazz, and all the rest of his and his collaborators’ history documentaries.

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The people who gave us Ira Glass and This American Life, who gave us David Sedaris and the Santaland Diaries, who gave us All things Considered, Scott Simon and Weekend Edition, Terry Gross and Fresh Air, World Cafe, Brooke Gladstone and On the Media, Brother William in his Soul Kitchen, Richard Fish and his Firehouse Theater.

You’d be hard-pressed to find a more innocent, altruistic, creative, dedicated bunch of folks and the treasured pieces of art they created.

They’ll be gone soon. Make no mistake. The stations that carry them will be closing down, one by one. The kids just coming up who’d hoped to follow in their footsteps now will have no financial support, no network outlet, no local stations to carry whatever shows they conceive.

PBS, NPR, APM, PRX, and the rest will soldier on but, for pity’s sake, people have to get paid for their work. Networks and stations, closely tied together through syndication fees and annual CPB grants, will fall from the media tree like leaves in October.

Heather Cox Richardson tells us today on her Substack newsletter that the Trump administration, in its battle to redraw Texas’s congressional districts to more solidify the Party of God’s stranglehold on the state, sees the effort as “Maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time.”

That sums up Li’l Duce‘s assault on America. He has declared war on us. Everywhere. All the time.

What are we gonna do about it?

Perhaps that’s the real root of my discouragement, my depression. I don’t know what to do.