Pimp my Ride

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Catalog Shoot 1

“Where are you?” asked the bike wrangler, or rather the agent that had rented my motorcycle for a photo shoot this morning.

“I’m putting on my helmet right now,” I said.

“How long is it going to take you to get here? It’s the first shoot, everyone is ready to go.”

“Seriously, I live five minutes away,” I reassured him. “I’ll be there on time.”

The shoot was scheduled for 7:30AM in scenic Brooklyn Heights, which, in reality turned out to be seven minutes away instead of five, so I was two minutes late. “No problem,” the agent said when I pulled up to the location. We had never met before and he was probably a little nervous that I was going to be an hour late, if I showed up at all. I got off the bike, pulled off my helmet and gloves and shook his hand. “Good to meet you,” he said with obvious relief.

I took off my gear and put it in a pile on the sidewalk and then we did a walk around of the bike, looking it over, discussing it’s age and condition, swapping stories of accidents and near accidents. He owns a Scrambler, he said. (A bike from Triumph’s current line inspired by the old models from the Sixties) “Unfortunately, I took it to the track and wrecked it.” he said, pulling out his iPhone to show me pictures both pre and post-accident. “I’ve been riding my old Honda CB750, but I have to be careful, it’s overdue for an inspection.”

I felt like a stage mother or worse (?) a pimp when, after we finished with the small talk, the agent pushed my bike into position and the crew began surrounding it with lights and reflectors. After a few test shots, a male model came out of the trailer — a twenty-year old guy dressed in a clean pair of jeans that were cut off at the calf, tennis shoes with no socks, and a Cocoa Puffs T-shirt. It seemed like a funny outfit for a model to wear while posing on a vintage Triumph and I said so — though I only mumbled it to one of the assistants as I looked over his shoulder at the test shots that were showing up on his laptop.

“He looks like he’s about to get his ass kicked,” he said.

“Why did they need a vintage bike for this shot?” I said. “It doesn’t make any sense.”

“They’ve been shooting all kinds of vehicles. We did a Vespa last week, and a cool old car the week before.”

The assistant was a freelancer, like me, and he complained that, aside from this particular catalog shoot, work has been essentially nonexistant. “How about you?” he asked.

“Slow,” I said. “Why do you think I’m whoring out my bike?”

“Ha, yeah, ‘You know things are bad when….’

“…When you let a kid in a Cocoa Puffs shirt pretend to ride your bike for a day.”

“I’m actually thinking about moving to China,” he said.

“China? Seriously?”

“Yeah man, that’s where a lot of photo production work is moving. Staples already does all of their catalog work there. A friend of mine lives there, and I have some connections so I’m going to check it out for a week and see how I like it. if I do, fuck it, I’m moving there.”

Catalog Shoot 2

“I really like that Cocoa Puffs shirt,” said one of the other assistants who came over to check out the test shots. I thought he was joking and laughed. “Nah man, I’m serious,” he said.

The stylist overheard him. “You shouldn’t have said anything to Michael about it,” she said. (Names have been changed to protect the fact that I’m terrible with names.) “It could very well have gotten ‘lost’ at the end of the shoot, you know what I’m sayin’?”

“Oh yeah, shit, well…They sell that shirt in the store?”

“Yeah.”

“I’m gonna buy me one for sure.”

When I first got the call from the agency, I didn’t even think to ask what the shoot was for, only how much money they were paying. Topless supermodels in skin-tight leather leggings, studded boots with six-inch heels digging into the pavement? Maybe a suede bikini under a lamb’s wool vest? You never know. But when he mentioned it was a catalog shoot, I knew better. Although I wasn’t fully prepared for a hobbledehoy in a Cocoa Puffs T-shirt, what I envisioned wasn’t that far off.

“There are a couple of girls for the second half of the shoot,” I was told as we stood around waiting for them to come out of the trailer. No topless supermodels, of course, just a couple of fresh-faced tweenagers, smiling and shaking their hair against the wind machine. “Great,” said the Photographer, snapping away, “super cute, nice, really good…”

A couple of hours later and we were done. The agent thanked me, handed me a check, and waited until I kicked the bike to life. “Thanks again,” he said. “We’ll let you know if anything else comes up.”

“I’m around” I said, then headed home. “Sorry ol’ girl,” I said, patting the gas tank at the first stop light. “I promise never to humiliate you like that ever again.”

But between you and me, we’ll see. When all I have to do is show up somewhere with my bike, money not only talks, it won’t shut up.

Catalog Shoot 3

Duchomp!

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Unauthorized ParkersDuchomp!

Make New Memories

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Dirty Lollypop

I don’t know what the temperature was when I drove back from New Jersey after visiting my parents for a couple of days. It was well over 100 degrees outside, and with no air conditioning in sluggish traffic, it felt like a hundred more in the small cab of my little pickup. My shirt was soaked trough with warm sweat and the stagnant air had the vague smell of cat piss — courtesy of the tom cat that lives in my parking garage. I thoroughly cleaned the car several months ago and seemed to have the cat piss licked, but apparently it had only been hiding.

It took about three hours to get back to Brooklyn which is par for the course — even mid-week — in the summer time.

I went inside, peeled away my sticky, stinky clothes, and hopped in the shower.

The water coughed out in spurts, then gave a few dry heaves and quit all together.

No water.

The water pump in our building is unreliable. We complain and get told it’s fixed about once a month. I kept checking it very couple of minutes, but finally gave up and instead just stood naked in front of the air conditioner. Once dry, I collapsed on the bed and fell asleep.

Without realizing it, I’d left the water tap on and woke up to the sound of a faint stream of water pulsing into the sink. I shut off the kitchen tap, and then went into the bathroom for another try at the shower. Water trickled out weakly, as if the shower had prostate trouble. I stepped into the stall and rinsed off as best I could, then got dressed and went outside in search of some dinner. (With Deborah away, there was no food in the house, of course.) I walked about a half block before I was completely soaked through with sweat again.

Deborah Sunbathing on the Roof

Deborah returned from her family visit in Pennsylvania the following day and I drove to JFK to meet her. More cat piss and traffic.

The drive to the airport wasn’t half bad, but the drive home was a nightmare. It took us nearly three hours to drive 17 miles. Deborah didn’t mind. She was just happy to be home and used the time stuck in traffic to regale me with tales of her family visit.

Deborah Sunbathing on the Roof

Deborah and a few of her relatives went to Kennywood, an old amusement park near Pittsburgh that’s been around since 1898 and, according to Wikipedia, is one of only two amusement parks listed in the National Register of Historic Places. They originally planned to go on the Fourth of July to see the fireworks, but went on the Fifth, instead, which was probably just as well since the park was crowded enough as it was.

Kennywood: Make a New Memory

Deborah, her cousin Katy, Katy’s husband James, and their 14 year old son Zach, took a ride on a water ride called Raging Rapids. Riders are seated in a round tube-like flotilla, six seats facing in a circle. Two gangly, somewhat nerdy, teenage boys filled out the raft, and off they went. “Waterfalls, geysers and even water guns from onlookers drench riders as they traverse the course down a beautiful river canyon…”

After one particularly rough patch of “white water” Katy pointed out to Deborah that Deborah’s top was down, completely exposing her bare breasts. While Deborah fixed her shirt, James said to the two red-faced teenagers, “That’ll be five bucks.” All anyone has to do is look at my Flickr account to known that Deborah has no problem revealing her breasts, and nudity causes her no embarrassment, but it’s hard to to feel a little awkward when everyone around you is beet-red. Deborah laughed and shrugged, and looked at the boys as if to say, “oh well, whatever, moving right along,” but neither of them could look her in the eye. Not then, nor for the duration of the ride. She passed them later in the day and one nudged the other, “There she is.”

“Just think,” I said to Deborah when she told me the story, “You’re now a part of these kids’ personal mythologies. Those guys will be remembering that moment for the rest of their lives. Or at least until they get girlfriends.”

Kennywood Park’s tagline is “Make New Memories.” Their website invites visitors to contribute stories of first kisses or first dates. “Did you meet your husband or wife while working at Kennywood? Did your parents bring you to school or company picnics when you were child? Thousands of folks have a favorite Kennywood memory to tell. May we hear yours?”

Ha.

Lit Up Like the 4th of July

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Proud to be an American

I took advantage of my solo bachelor weekend by having brunch at a diner that Deborah doesn’t like.

In the old days, I probably would’ve struck up a conversation with the lanky, tattooed waitress with the Sophia Loren glasses and the knock-out knockers — or tried to anyway, depending on how receptive she was to all my half-assed witticisms — but these days I can barely communicate with my closest friends let alone attempt charming small talk with strangers so, instead, I finished eating, refused a refill on my coffee and asked for the check all within fifteen minutes of sitting down.

I hadn’t been to the place in a couple of years and was surprised to find that, unlike the rest of Williamsburg, it really hasn’t changed much. Oh, I suppose the crowd was a little less interesting than it used to be, but, well, aren’t we all?

Waterworld

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Racing a Floating City

I drove Deborah to the airport yesterday morning so she could catch an 8:30 AM flight to Pittsburgh. On my way back, while driving along the Belt Parkway, I saw what looked like a giant wedding cake slowly making it’s way up New York Harbor. Easily ten stories high from what I could tell. I dug out my little point and shoot and did my best to snap a photo of it out the car window. I can’t remember ever seeing a ship that big before. In fact, I thought it might be some kind of optical illusion.

But this morning, a quick check online tells me that it’s Norwegian Cruise Lines’ brand new ship, Epic — the largest cruise ship ever built by Norwegian cruise lInes and the biggest ship to ever dock at the Manhattan Cruise Terminal.

How big is it? It’s so big that it squeezed under the Verrazano Bridge (just south of where I saw it) by a mere 2 feet.

153,000 tons, 200 feet tall, 4,100 passengers.

Apparently it’s going to be christened here in New York today with a celebration hosted by Reba McEntire, who USA Today calls “a longtime Norwegian Cruise Line fan.” Who knew? Needless to say, Reba and I aren’t on the same page.

I don’t get the attraction of cruises — I’ve never been on one, and don’t plan to ever go on one — so I don’t suppose Norwegian Cruise lines gives a rat’s ass what I think, but man, that is one ugly boat.

Anyway, in the meantime, I’m home alone while Deborah is away for a week. What to do, what to do…

Please Don’t Steal This Piano

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Please Don't Steal This Piano