1426 lines
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1426 lines
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_____________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ _____________
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| ___________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ ___________ |
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| | c o m m u n i c a t i o n s | |
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| |________________________________________________________________| |
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|____________________________________________________________________|
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...presents... Interview with Greta Shred
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by Reid Fleming
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>>> a cDc publication.......1994 <<<
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-cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc-
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____ _ ____ _ ____ _ ____ _ ____
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|____digital_media____digital_culture____digital_media____digital_culture____|
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Greta Shred is my role model. In many ways, I'm way too chicken and
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candy-assed to attempt to pull off some of the shit she does regularly. But I
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want to be as much like her as I can, because she exemplifies many punk
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virtues.
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Greta makes movies and publishes a 'zine called _Mudflap_. Issue number
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six appeared on the newsstands in early February '94. I enjoy the layout and
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art direction, as well as its textual content. Recurrent themes are straight
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from Greta's personal interests: train-hopping, personal cartographies of San
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Francisco, the urban punk lifestyle, sexuality, and her unabiding infatuation
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with bicycles.
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The title of Greta's 'zine comes from the much-maligned chrome babe who
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appears on the mudflaps of many diesel trucks. As Greta pointed out in her
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most recent issue:
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"Many people hate the Chrome Babe! What a mystery. Some people just hate
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women. But others think the Chrome Babe might be sexist. They do make Chrome
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Dudes, too. (there's one on the cover of issue 3). Hmm... if I was going to
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go after a sexist symbol it would be those awful bathroom symbols. I hate
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those and they're all over! Like we're born with a skirt on? Girls look more
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like Chrome Babes than those things. At least the Chrome Babe has ARMS!"
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It's funny, bright, and interesting... because so is its editor.
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Don't be a dickweed. Send away for the 'zine and see what I'm blathering
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about. Greta is willing to part with her publication for a mere $1 plus two
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stamps, but she doesn't break even unless you send $2 with two stamps.
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Mudflap
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2629 19th Street
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San Francisco, CA 94110
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-Reid Fleming/cDc/MadMen of Transcription
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______________________________________________________________________________
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2-5-1994. Answering machine message: "Hi, I'm calling for Reid. This is
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Greta, and I got your letter and Neal Stephenson's article in the mail today,
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which is really great. You know, miraculously I didn't throw it away, 'cause
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I've been getting all this junk from... my friend and I sneaked into MacWorld
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and we got onto all these stupid mailing lists so we could get the free CD-ROMs
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of the Japanese pornography (which we did get)... but since then I've been on
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the hella ridiculous mailing lists for junk mail. So when I saw "Software
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Woolworths" I thought, "Ehhh, garbage." And I chucked it in the trash. And
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then I thought, "Maybe there's something free inside of there," and opened it
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up -- surprise! Well, what's your roommate's 'zine? That's my question. I
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would love to accept $50 for an interview, 'cause I'm totally broke. Call me
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sometime. My number is XXX-XXXX. It's Saturday afternoon. OK, bye."
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2-13-1994 at Jim's Cafe on Mission Street, San Francisco 11:20am.
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G: I was listening to my Green Day CD this morning that I didn't buy (I
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borrowed it). It's good, but I like the old Green Day also. I think a lot of
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people have an opinion one way or another about the new Green Day versus the
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old Green Day, or like the major-label Green Day versus the minor-label Green
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Day. I don't know... it's apples and oranges, I guess. The old Green Day was
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more surf music styly, which I like. And then the new Green Day is more pop
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styly, which I like also.
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RF: Why'd you pick this restaurant?
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G: 'Cause the booths are big, and 'cause I know what the food is like.
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There's always room to sit down. Oh, know what else? I would like to see them
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stay in business. That's another reason. I like giving them my business.
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RF: You don't want any hash browns?
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G: I don't like potatoes. [scraping her hash browns onto a plate for me]
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There's a place down the street that's called John's. It's a similar motif,
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but it's like just from the bar over [gesturing] -- it's just like one strip of
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booths and a bar thing...
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RF: Counter.
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G: Yeah, counter. I don't know what happened up there, but they've fallen on
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hard times, definitely. And I wouldn't want to see this happen to Jim's.
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Especially now that that burger joint opened on Valencia St. and they're
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probably going to have some stiff competition.
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RF: How long have you lived in San Francisco/Bay Area?
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G: Five or six years.
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RF: Is that cumulatively, or does that count traveling?
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G: No, that doesn't count. That's just that I moved here five or six years
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ago. But I haven't been here the whole time.
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RF: Where did you grow up?
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G: Ohio. Youngstown, Ohio. It's a hell hole.
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RF: How big is it?
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G: Probably about 180,000 people; 200,000 people at the most. Well, maybe
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there was 200,000 when the steel mills were working. But during my tenure
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there, everything changed from bad to worse. I mean, it was kind of tacky
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there in the beginning anyway, sort of this working-class, industrial,
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no-culture kind of place, and then everybody left, or got fired and became
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unemployed. You know, it's one of those depressing cities where things are all
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boarded up. You go downtown at night and there's _nothing_. You go downtown
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in the daytime and there's very little more. It's really weird. It's like a
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ghost town. It's like a ghost town, but it's not quaint. It really is like
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growing up in a haunted place.
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RF: What was school like there?
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G: Public school? ...awful.
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RF: Were you a punk chick back then?
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G: No. I was a loser. There weren't really punks in Youngstown. Not at all.
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There was one guy who was a punk, and there was a girl on my paper route who
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liked the Sex Pistols. She told me and my brother about this band the Sex
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Pistols, and we're like, "Whoooa... what's that mean, anyway?" But we were
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just totally isolated. So, no. I mean, in a sense that getting drunk and
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goofing off and trying to get things for free and scamming and stuff like that
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are punk things, sure - we were punk. But we weren't _involved_.
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RF: Why did you go to Antioch?
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G: Because when I was in high school, I was so incredibly bored with staying
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in that place; it was very geographically-influenced. The fact that we were
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stuck in this horrible town that had absolutely nothing of interest in it at
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all. Nothing but crime and filth and misery. And so, for one year in high
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school, I went to Japan as an exchange student just to get the hell out of
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there, and that was pretty exciting. Then when I came back, and it was time...
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I wanted to go to college, but I just thought, "I've lived in this hell-hole
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town for my whole life and now I have to pick where I'm going to stay for the
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next four years?" And I couldn't pick. So, with Antioch, they have that thing
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where you can go and do internships wherever you want. And so I thought,
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"Good. This way I don't have to pick. I'll just pick all of them." It was
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probably the smartest thing I've ever done in my entire life. I don't think I
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would have made it through any other school, anywhere. It was rowdy. It was
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fun. You could do all kinds of crazy shit.
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RF: Both of my roommates went there.
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G: Yeah? It taught us the down side of revolution, which is _meetings_.
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Meetings to fucking hell and back! If the revolution didn't kill you, the
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meetings would kill you. I use the term "revolution" in a broad sense; I mean
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the idea of taking care of your own business, of being in control of what
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you're doing. Comparatively, the students really do have a lot of control. To
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a certain extent, it's smokescreen, but there's a lot of stuff that students
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can do there... I mean, if you make a committee. Sometimes it got _bad_ there,
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because the students would get together and decide something dumb, and then the
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other students would have to abide by it.
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RF: Like what?
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G: When I was there, there was this issue about graffiti. I don't know why
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people are opposed to graffiti. Why do you think that is? Why do people hate
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graffiti more than they hate muggings and crime?
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RF: I don't know. Some kinds of graffiti I really like. When I was living in
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the Richmond district, this mail truck that kept coming by had been tagged by
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all these gangs, and it looked great. It looked totally cool on this mail
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truck, and I love mail trucks. But, on people's houses and stuff, I don't
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know. I can see why you wouldn't want gang signs on your house.
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G: Well... yeah. I mean, I can see taking care of your own house, but then,
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all right... if it's your house and you have this sense of property about your
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house, do you think that's the sense that people have when they get freaked out
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by the graffiti on the Muni buses? Do you think that that's an extension of
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that? That's what's weird to me.
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RF: I think the public stuff is totally different. As long as it doesn't look
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hostile, then I think the graffiti ought to stay. New York City spends so much
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money treating their subway cars with acid baths and stuff to get the graffiti
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off--
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G: Acid baths. That's crazy! Acid dip...
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RF: Yep.
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G: Well, even the stuff that's just gang tags... I don't know, it just doesn't
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bother me so much. It's not that bad-looking. It's not any different from
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_beige paint_, you know?
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RF: When you were in L.A., did you see any "Chaka" tags?
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G: Not really.
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RF: Oh, man. I've seen some of those.
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G: Is that the guy that got arrested?
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RF: For like thousands of tags. They estimated that for in his 2 1/2 year
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career, he'd have to have done like 12 an hour all his waking time to create
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all of the tags they estimated he did.
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G: Wow.
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RF: So, they arrested him. It was big news in the L.A. Times --
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G: Was this a couple of years ago? I think I heard about it.
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RF: And then he and his buddy went to their parole officers and on the trip
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back down in the elevator, they tagged the inside doors of the elevator.
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Apparently, the elevator stopped at a floor before the ground floor and other
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P.O.'s got in and they saw it. So it was a parole violation!
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G: Oh my god...
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RF: He's turned into this total mythic hero now.
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G: Oh my god. Well, there was that guy in New York who got beaten to death by
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cops who was just tagging.
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RF: When was this?
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G: Michael something. I can't remember his name. [His name was Michael
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Stewart -- G.A. Ellsworth] It was probably like five years ago. He was killed
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by subway cops. The issue was race. They stopped him 'cause he was tagging,
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but the thing escalated.
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RF: Were they white cops?
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G: I don't remember exactly who was what, but I believe he was a black
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person.
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RF: When you were at Antioch, did you ever compete in Camelot?
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G: Did I compete? No, 'cause I was in the fire department, and you had to
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stand by. And then the next year that I was on campus for it ('cause I was on
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campus for only two semesters that they held the race), I didn't have a bike.
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I don't think I even watched it that year. But, it was funny. Everybody else
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did. I have some pictures from it. They're hysterical.
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RF: You printed one.
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G: Mm-hm. There's a better one, though, of a guy in a wig. This guy who
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lives in Chicago now, Larry Steger. He was riding... he was partners, I think
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with my friend Casselli. Larry had on all this pancake makeup and this
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horrible blond wig, and was basically in drag. And Casselli was wearing this
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big leather vest and looked like a biker. He had no shirt on. It was weird.
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The bikes were so shrimpy. They were these little one-speed bikes, it was
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funny.
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RF: They have to do 50 laps around this quad thing? They put hay bales
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around, and people throw stuff at 'em?
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G: They put hay bales around. It's 50 laps, I guess; it might have changed
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since I was there. It's not exactly a quad thing. It's a very small loop in
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front of South Hall (which was closed). It was like a dormitory; there's North
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and South that are exactly the same, and they flank the building that looks
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like the castle. Which is, incidentally, the reason why they call it the
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Camelot Race -- because it looks like a castle. I put that in the magazine,
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hoping that someone would know and write in, but no one did. Or maybe they
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knew but didn't write in. I wrote "No one knows why it's called it the Camelot
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Race." But I did know. Well, so South Hall is in total disrepair. It's
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condemned. It's abandoned, but they can't tear it down because it's a
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historical monument, so it's just like this empty building that everybody would
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eventually break into at some point or another and graffiti on the walls, or
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spend the night in there, or screw or something. [It's since been reopened. --
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G.A. Ellsworth] So, right in front of there was the thing. _Small_. Really
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little. Somebody told me (which I put in the magazine) that it used to be
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around the whole horseshoe, which was like this big drive. It's probably like
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ten times bigger.
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RF: So, what's your job? What do you do for money?
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G: What do I do for money? I sit around and wait for the checks to roll in.
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Well, I don't really have a job. The money comes from about probably 20
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different places. Let me see if I can think of what they are... I make
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movies, right? So, I have made a couple of movies that are in these
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distribution co-ops, which is just a bunch of filmmakers get together and chip
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in money and print a catalog and then the catalog gets distributed to schools
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and stuff. The one out here is Canyon Cinema, which is really pretty radical.
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It's member-operated, anyone can join. It's not like a commercial
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distributor-type thing. They've been around since like the '60s. They kind of
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started with 1960's experimental art films, and it's still solvent after all
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these years, which is pretty cool. So, the catalog gets around to all these
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schools, and it's sort of a textbook for art film classes. I have given them
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copies of the films, and so they deal with all that stuff and every once in a
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while I get a check. It's really hard to predict. I discovered just a little
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while ago that they don't just send you the checks -- you have to ask them for
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the money. 'Cause I called up and said, "Have my films ever, like, rented?"
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And they're like, "Oh, sure. They rent all the time."
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And I say, "Oh... when do I get paid?"
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And they say, "You can get paid tomorrow, if you want to."
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And I say, "No kidding? Well, when do I normally get paid?"
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And they say, "Well, you gotta come get it. We don't just send out
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checks." That makes sense, 'cause that way they don't have to send out mass
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mailings. Some people only have like one or two films there, and it'll take
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like ten years for enough money to accrue to make it worth their while to go
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down and pick it up. And some other people, like Stan Brackidge who's a big
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art guy, he'll have like $5,000 a year in rentals there. Which is a lot for
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that. They operate off the interest. If everyone went and collected all at
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the same time, it might be bad. It would be like a run on the bank. But this
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way it works out. So I get money from them, and I try to sell that stupid
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fanzine...
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RF: Does that turn a profit?
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G: No. Sometimes it does, just because people send extra money sometimes.
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You're laughing. I mean _on purpose_; they send contributions. If I have to
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pay to print it, it costs $1.75 an issue to print, plus mailing (it costs $.75
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to mail). So, it basically costs $2.50 to send an issue to somebody, and then
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they send you a dollar. It's a losing prospect. I don't have to pay for the
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Xeroxing all the time, but it's not reliable. Free Xeroxing. Right now I have
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no magazines. I have _none_. _Zero_. And I have to go find someplace to
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print 'em, I guess. I don't have any connections right now.
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RF: My roommate, G.A. Ellsworth, has a connection at the same place where you
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were getting yours printed.
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G: But a different guy?
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RF: Yeah.
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G: Who is that guy? Does he work at night? Do you know?
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RF: Never met him.
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G: Oh, really? I'll have to ask G.A., 'cause it's grim. I even tried to get
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a job at Kinko's before, so I could print my magazine.
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RF: They didn't hire you?
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G: No they didn't, I guess 'cause I had -- it was at the Market St. store --
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and I had a different profile then. I had like a more punk profile, and they
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had basically decided that they weren't going to hire any punks at the Market
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St. store. So they said, "Oh, thanks. Bye. Thanks for the application."
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That was kind of weird, the idea of not even getting hired at the copy store
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when I qualified. What else do I do for money? I guess that's about all.
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RF: Were you a bike messenger?
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G: You know what? This is a BIG SECRET: I've never, ever been a messenger.
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Never. I have this problem with numbers, is the thing. I've had so many
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friends who were messengers, always, just because that's who the punks were in
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San Francisco. I would listen to the radio and watch them write it down and
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think, "How does that happen? I don't get it." It was so bewildering, and I
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knew that it was something that I would never be able to do, because it's too
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hard. So, I have a great respect for people who can memorize numbers and write
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them down and remember where they are. I have a little list of errands, much
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like this [picks up interview topic list], pretty much every day. And it takes
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me all day to go from place to place. To have a map in your mind of where
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everything is and shit like that? It would be a nightmare. I would be the
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worst. I would get fired. Plus, I would probably get in fights with people.
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Plus, they don't tip. I don't think that's right. They should tip the
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messenger, but they don't.
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RF: So, you don't have a job right now; you don't have a place of
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employment.
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G: No.
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RF: You're on the rolls of the unemployed.
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G: Yeah, although I'm not on the rolls of the assisted, though. I'm not on
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unemployment or general assistance or anything. What else do I do for money?
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There must be something... I'm an electrician.
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RF: Really?
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G: Yeah.
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RF: Like, licensed?
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G: No.
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RF: You just do it for friends and people you know?
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G: For people I know, and also for film and video.
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RF: Oh.
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G: I can do electrical work for film. But I don't really go after that as a
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job. Those people are very ambitious. They're very aggressive. They should
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all wear t-shirts that say, "I really want to direct" or something like that.
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Everybody on a job, you know they really want to be doing the next job up, and
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there's a lot of butt-kissing, you know? It's a weird scene. They also work
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_all the time_. They're like always working. When I did it more often, a
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couple of years ago, I would probably work about one or two jobs a month,
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'cause it pays like $250 or $300 a day. So, after you do two jobs you don't
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need to work any more. I would work with people, and then work with them again
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the next month, and they would ask, "What have you been working on?"
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I would say, "Well, I've been working on this movie, and I've been
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building a darkroom..."
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They would be like, "No, no -- _work_. What _work_ have you been working
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on?"
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I would think, "Is that all you do?" That's all they do. If you made
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$300 a day, and you totally busted your ass and worked five days a week, what
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is that? That's a fucking _lot_ of money. What would people do with all that
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money? And then I thought, "How come you guys are still electricians if you
|
|
have all this money?" That's crazy. It doesn't make sense. I guess they buy
|
|
houses.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes people would tease me, too, when they asked that question --
|
|
"What have you been doing since last time?"
|
|
|
|
I would say, "Well, I made this little movie."
|
|
|
|
Then they would say, "OoOoOoh, she made a movie! Next time, we'll be
|
|
working for _her_, huh. Bwah hah!"
|
|
|
|
And I'd be thinking, "Fuck you all, man." Someday they _will_ be working
|
|
for me, too.
|
|
|
|
RF: That's right.
|
|
|
|
G: And I'm gonna fire 'em halfway through, too... no, not exactly. But that
|
|
was kind of weird, because the electricians are so working-class. Also, I get
|
|
hired a lot by producers, so I was The Electrician The Producer Hired, and they
|
|
were The Electricians The Gaffer Hired, so it would be like being the teacher's
|
|
pet.
|
|
|
|
RF: When did you do your first issue? '91?
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah. September, I think. Summer or Fall of '91.
|
|
|
|
RF: Why did you decide to do that?
|
|
|
|
G: 'Cause we got a Xerox machine at our house for a brief period of time.
|
|
I don't know how it happened, 'cause I was opposed to the plan. At some house
|
|
meeting they decided that since they knew a lot of people who were making
|
|
magazines, they said, "Let's all chip in and get a Xerox machine _here_. We'll
|
|
just pay this nominal fee --"
|
|
|
|
RF: Lease it.
|
|
|
|
G: Mm-hm. Then I said, "I think that's a terrible idea." I don't have an
|
|
automobile either, and it was the same thing. We got a group car at one point,
|
|
and I was the lone holdout. "No! It's a bad idea!" Because it's such a huge
|
|
commitment. So, they went ahead and got this Xerox machine, and the thing is:
|
|
once you've leased it, you can't get out of the lease. You're supposed to buy
|
|
your way out for like $20,000 or something. It's really a rip. It's a bad
|
|
deal. So they had the Xerox machine there, and I thought, "OK, well... as long
|
|
as it's here, all right... I'll make a magazine." And you know, I'd been
|
|
making movies already, but I was doing all this other weird stuff and it just
|
|
didn't translate right into the movies, 'cause you can tell stories in the
|
|
movies, but... I mean, it's similar, but it's not the same. You can do stuff
|
|
that's just pictures. You can do that in a magazine, or you can do that in a
|
|
movie. You can tell short stories in combination with other stuff in the same
|
|
package. You can do that in a movie, you can do that in a magazine. But, it's
|
|
a different delivery. And I had been feeling that the movies had been a little
|
|
bogged-down, and expensive and took too long and stuff like that. And so, I
|
|
thought, "I can do all this stuff in a magazine, and it'll be funner." And it
|
|
was! It was totally fun. Plus, the movies -- people will see it but they'll
|
|
never talk to you about it. It's easier to get fanzines around; you just hand
|
|
it to people. Whereas with the movie, it's too expensive to make a bunch of
|
|
tapes and hand 'em out. People have to be organized enough to show up at the
|
|
screening, and things like that. So, it's like a different part of society.
|
|
Anybody can get mail, pretty much, but not everybody can get to a major city
|
|
and go to some weird, underground movie-showing place to see movies.
|
|
|
|
RF: What's your feedback usually like?
|
|
|
|
G: For which?
|
|
|
|
RF: For your 'zine.
|
|
|
|
G: People don't usually write if they don't like it. I think if people don't
|
|
like it, they just throw it away, or give it away or something and you never
|
|
hear from them again. But it's usually good, 'cause it takes some effort, I
|
|
suppose, to write a letter back to someone after you've read their magazine.
|
|
Only the people who have found something that's interesting to them will write
|
|
back. Which is cool, 'cause that way it's like all good feedback and not too
|
|
much bad. Although, I did get some really fuckin' negative and really, really,
|
|
really critical letters in the beginning, around the first and second issues.
|
|
I got these three letters in relatively close succession, and I thought, "Wow,
|
|
people hate this magazine! How could this be? It's almost stupidly happy.
|
|
How could people hate this thing? How could they find something to hate?" And
|
|
then it turns out that all of the letters are from the same guy, and he's like
|
|
a nut, a nut who disguised his handwriting (one of them was typed, one of them
|
|
was scrawled on a piece of paper) and he sent them from three different
|
|
addresses in town. When the whole story came together later, I thought, "OK,
|
|
this is something _totally_ different." He was a crackpot. Isn't that weird?
|
|
It turns out he lived with people that I knew. He never even confessed to me
|
|
that he did it; the roommates told me. ("You should know that he's the
|
|
one...") And I thought, "Whoa! He's like a stalker, or something." But,
|
|
since I was hanging out with one of the roommates a lot, I kind of got to know
|
|
the evil letter writer a little bit, and he was all right. He mellowed out.
|
|
And I thought, "Oh, I see. This guy is just a little strange. There's nothing
|
|
wrong with that." But after a little while, the pendulum had swung back, and
|
|
it was time to hate Greta. And he kicked me out of the poker game. So that's
|
|
the story of that guy. But the feedback is usually... people usually find
|
|
something that's happened to them, or they say, "I know about that thing" and
|
|
they write in and talk about it. I suppose that makes sense.
|
|
|
|
RF: Do people ever write in and say that you're their role model, or anything
|
|
like that?
|
|
|
|
G: No! My god! No... Let me think if they do. Some people say that the
|
|
magazine is an inspiration (I mean, they use the word "inspiration"), but I
|
|
don't know if that's because it's such a cheap thing but it's entertaining,
|
|
like it's a product, or if it's actually what people say. So I don't know.
|
|
|
|
RF: Do you read a lot of comics?
|
|
|
|
G: I do. Not a ton. Some of 'em -- this is really weird -- if they're real
|
|
detailed, and real little, I don't read them 'cause it's too complicated and I
|
|
have a really short attention span. Who's the guy who... have you ever read
|
|
that one, The Playboy comic?
|
|
|
|
RF: It's Chester Brown.
|
|
|
|
G: Yes. I love his stuff.
|
|
|
|
RF: We saw him and Joe Matt and Seth in Berkeley last year.
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, really?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah, they were at that comic store in Berkeley.
|
|
|
|
G: Wow! Which one, Comic Relief?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: Seth? Which Seth?
|
|
|
|
RF: Seth. He's the guy who does Palookaville, he keeps showing up in Joe
|
|
Matt's... All three of them are friends in Canada.
|
|
|
|
G: Didn't some of them move down here?
|
|
|
|
RF: Joe Matt was planning on it --
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, that Eightball guy moved down here.
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah, Dan Clowes is in Berkeley.
|
|
|
|
G: Wow. I like Eightball.
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah... I can only read the ones that have fat lines and lots of space in
|
|
them. That's terrible, but it's true. I guess 'cause the other ones remind me
|
|
too much of X-Men and superheroes.
|
|
|
|
RF: There's a book called Understanding Comics... I forget what the guy's name
|
|
is. Scott something. I think it starts with a P. [Scott McCloud] It's
|
|
fantastic; I couldn't believe it. He keeps talking about the history of comics
|
|
and all the devices in comics, and it really makes you look at it. It's like
|
|
an anatomical guide.
|
|
|
|
G: Wow. That's pretty crazy. I read a Robert Crumb anthology that these
|
|
weird early fanzines in it. It wasn't all about Robert Crumb, but a lot of the
|
|
later stuff was. It's like a history of underground comics. It had these
|
|
primitive sci-fi fanzines from the '50s that people made in school, and they
|
|
were _so_ funny. Can you imagine being the first guy to do a fanzine, in the
|
|
'50s and handed it around to your friends and everyone thought you were a nut?
|
|
That's cool, 'cause they didn't have Xerox machines then. I guess they would
|
|
have to sneak into the mimeo room at school, and run 'em off. That's wild.
|
|
|
|
RF: I really like your comics a lot. The comics that you draw. I think
|
|
they're really well put-together.
|
|
|
|
G: Thanks. I like doing 'em, and I wish I was better at 'em, but I'm not. It
|
|
takes me a long time, and when I'm writing 'em or drawing 'em or whatever, I
|
|
think to myself, "I wonder if it takes regular cartoonists this long to do
|
|
stuff." It can't -- it can't possibly take them that long.
|
|
|
|
RF: I don't know... Julie Doucet is making hers an anthology now because she
|
|
can't put it all out that much. So there'll be like one story from Julie and a
|
|
whole bunch of stories from other people.
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, really? In Dirty Plotte?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: No, really? So it takes her a while, too? Well, that's good to know.
|
|
Do you know Seth? He does these horrible cartoons -- they're evil. Malice,
|
|
Seth Malice. He lived with the other guy named Mats. They do cartoons and
|
|
they do comics and they do posters and stuff too, and they do silkscreens and
|
|
junk, but they don't put out a regular volume or anything. They draw so quick,
|
|
it's amazing. They do a lot of illustrations for other people's stuff.
|
|
They both work really, really, really quick, and I just think, "How do they do
|
|
this?" Their drawings are real stylin' -- they look good; they're not sloppy
|
|
and messy. So, I don't know. If I ever had to pick a job and do just it, it
|
|
would be so great to be a cartoonist and be paid for it, and be disciplined
|
|
enough to do it every day and crank the shit out. It would be cool. Either
|
|
that, or a bike mechanic.
|
|
|
|
RF: Why do you think you're fascinated with bikes?
|
|
|
|
G: Because... you know, I put that in the Mudflap. That was to deal with my
|
|
bike fascination, the first comic in issue six. There's so many things about
|
|
them. I don't know. They're nice-looking. People look nice when they're on
|
|
them. It's like there's so many different levels at which they appeal to me.
|
|
If you're not riding it, you can be looking at it, and it would still look
|
|
good. When you're actually riding it, that's another thing. When other people
|
|
are riding are riding them, they look good, and when you hang out with other
|
|
people riding them it's fun. Building them is fun, and all the different kinds
|
|
of 'em that you can get -- cruisers that are stylish-looking, like the ones
|
|
that are round and have fat tubes but everything is curvy on them, but not
|
|
aerodynamic-curvy; kinda like round-curvy. Those ones are cool. And then
|
|
those angular ones they started having... three-speed style, that are kind of
|
|
aerodynamic but aren't really, because it's only a three-speed. And then ones
|
|
that I really, really, really like; and then ones that are big fat clunkers...
|
|
there are so many different kinds. I think it really has to do with mechanics.
|
|
I mean mechanical stuff, and the appeal of geometry and physics and stuff like
|
|
that. As things become more electronic, they're not mechanical, and I think
|
|
that you miss that. People miss that. I mean, it's like the wheel. It was
|
|
the first thing, and bikes have 'em. It's the round thing. And also, the idea
|
|
of a human being working with a machine in a way that doesn't really compromise
|
|
either, it's amazing. It's comfortable. It's not like pushing something
|
|
heavy. You push it, and it pushes you back, and it's such a cool, symbiotic
|
|
thing. It's probably the friendliest machine that I can think of. You don't
|
|
get carpo-tunnel syndrome that you can get from typing on a typewriter,
|
|
although a typewriter is kind of cool. You can't kill people with it, like
|
|
with a gun, although guns are kind of cool, too. You know what I mean? Does
|
|
this make sense?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: There's so many different things about it, that it's kind of neat. Plus,
|
|
they're just fun to ride.
|
|
|
|
RF: Have you always had this opinion of bikes?
|
|
|
|
G: Um, yeah. Basically, but I hadn't thought about it as much until the last
|
|
four years, five years. I guess 'cause people ask me. When I was little, I
|
|
learned to ride a bike when I was four. I was the youngest of the kids in my
|
|
family, and so they were all nine and they all rode bikes. It was like, either
|
|
sink or swim. So, I had to learn. I wasn't even in kindergarten yet. I never
|
|
had the training wheel experience. They just put me on the bike in the grass
|
|
and pushed. They said, "OK, now go! Pedal!" And there it went, and it was
|
|
pretty simple. So I had a bike kind of early. Although I never had a new bike
|
|
until this one that I have right now that's parked outside.
|
|
|
|
RF: Really?
|
|
|
|
G: Uh-huh. That I got six months ago. That's the first new bike I ever got
|
|
in my life.
|
|
|
|
RF: What was your first bike?
|
|
|
|
G: A little Schwinn.
|
|
|
|
RF: A little Schwinn _what_?
|
|
|
|
G: I don't remember 'cause my dad had painted it. It was my Christmas
|
|
present. He got it used somewhere, and he painted it... he worked on cars, my
|
|
dad?... and he painted it _primer gray_. I was the only kid on the block with
|
|
a custom, primer gray painted bike. It was crazy. But I liked it. It was
|
|
really fast, too.
|
|
|
|
RF: Did you paint it later?
|
|
|
|
G: No. No, 'cause I was proud that my dad had painted the bike for me, and it
|
|
was my Christmas surprise. I remember seeing it downstairs on its kickstand on
|
|
newspapers, and I looked and thought, "Whoa... is that going to be mine?" I
|
|
kind of persuaded myself that it wasn't, because...
|
|
|
|
RF: That'd be too cool.
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah. And then, there it was on Christmas, for me. It was exciting.
|
|
And then I got... everybody rode those Schwinn varsity ten-speeds.
|
|
|
|
RF: I had one of those.
|
|
|
|
G: Blue or yellow?
|
|
|
|
RF: Blue.
|
|
|
|
G: Really?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: All you could get was blue or yellow! I had a Stingray. Schwinn Stingray.
|
|
All of my bikes were Schwinns! All of our whole family's were Schwinns.
|
|
|
|
RF: I had a Mag Scrambler for a long time.
|
|
|
|
G: Wow.
|
|
|
|
RF: We kept repainting 'em, me and my brother. It went on for weeks and weeks
|
|
this one summer; we'd just repaint 'em every week. After a while, you'd have
|
|
to scrape off all the old paint, and that took forever. Then our dad bought
|
|
some paint stripper, this really intense paint stripper. We learned eventually
|
|
that what you had to do was disassemble the bike, put the frame on the grass,
|
|
put the paint stripper on it, and because it's going to get on your body you
|
|
have to have a running hose next to you. As soon as it touches your skin it
|
|
feels like someone put a hot poker on you, it's so acidic.
|
|
|
|
G: Wow. Wait, your dad gave you that stuff when you were little kids?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: "Here, kids -- take care of that bike." That's pretty funny.
|
|
|
|
RF: It would strip it right down to the metal. We'd just wash it off on the
|
|
lawn.
|
|
|
|
G: Right on the grass, in the earth.
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah, exactly. Perfect.
|
|
|
|
G: Might as well have been directly into the earth.
|
|
|
|
RF: It was way faster than using sandpaper.
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah, I'll bet... I'll bet. We had chrome polish from my bike that had
|
|
chrome rims and fenders. My dad showed us how to operate the chrome polish.
|
|
That was fun. Bikes are so cool. At Antioch, they had a weird bike thing
|
|
going when I was there. I don't know if they have it now. Nobody really owned
|
|
bikes -- not too many. There was like one or two people that were bike dweebs
|
|
or something, but you'd go downtown and buy some $5 cheeseball bike and then
|
|
you'd go away and give it to someone else, and then you'd come back... there
|
|
was this thing developed of communal bikes. It wasn't quite like the white
|
|
bikes in Amsterdam, but there was this batch of about ten bikes that pretty
|
|
much anyone in the group I hung out with could take whatever bike was there.
|
|
When you came out of your building, you could just ride one because there were
|
|
only about three places you could go. It was this weird communal bike thing.
|
|
It was cool.
|
|
|
|
One of them was the Red Throbbing Member. It was a red bike, and it had
|
|
one of those phony gas tank things on it -- someone had written on it in red
|
|
paint, "Red Throbbing Member." And it only had a half handlebar, 'cause it had
|
|
just broken off inside the stem, and it was left that way. So, you had to ride
|
|
it with just one hand. That was kind of cool. And there was a little BMX bike
|
|
that was called the Maggot. I don't know why. But that was another one.
|
|
|
|
Alessandra had this one -- I don't know where she came up with it -- it
|
|
had a child seat on the back. It was very large and very awkward. Huge
|
|
triangle, the frame was just this huge triangle. It was awkward. That was one
|
|
of 'em. There was a big green three-speed. The one that I brought was this
|
|
heinous, hot pink Huffy-type thing. It was a three-speed that had a big, huge
|
|
basket. So, it was an interesting experiment. No one really thought about it
|
|
at the time. Wherever you were, if you came out of a building and one of those
|
|
bikes were there, you could just get on it and go to the cafeteria or
|
|
wherever.
|
|
|
|
RF: What are the "white bikes" in Amsterdam? Are they public bikes?
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah. They're some kind of fold-up kind of thing. I'm not sure exactly,
|
|
'cause I've never been there...
|
|
|
|
RF: Is there a deposit? How do you pick one up?
|
|
|
|
G: I think it's like those carts in the airport. They're kinda locked into a
|
|
little thing, and you put some guilders in the little thing, and it releases
|
|
the bike and you ride off. I think so. But then, that necessitates returning
|
|
them to the holders; I think you can just pick one up if it's sitting outside
|
|
somewhere -- that means that someone's finished with it and it's just not
|
|
returned. I don't know if it's in Amsterdam, but it's in some small cities in
|
|
the Netherlands. They just buy like 5,000 bikes like that and put 'em up
|
|
around. They're not worth anything to steal, because they're kind of cheesy
|
|
bikes and they're everywhere.
|
|
|
|
RF: Checking your bike?
|
|
|
|
G: It's a habit, I guess. I'm not as bad about it as I used to be. I guess
|
|
because if I hadn't gotten the other one stolen I wouldn't have started
|
|
thinking about getting a new one. Every time your bike gets stolen, it's an
|
|
excuse to go get a better one. It's a drag, and it's kind of a backwards way
|
|
of thinking about it, but I guess you just can't worry about it. There's
|
|
plenty of other horrible things to think about. Look -- she got a big, huge
|
|
bunch of flowers. That's so great.
|
|
|
|
RF: Do you read other people's 'zines?
|
|
|
|
G: Not as much as I should. I probably shouldn't say that. I should say
|
|
yes!
|
|
|
|
RF: "Yes! I read them all, diligently!"
|
|
|
|
G: Absolutely... No, I have to admit I don't.
|
|
|
|
RF: You just keep 'em?
|
|
|
|
G: Well, I'll read parts. I mean, some I read through cover to cover, but
|
|
it's a rare one that I will read through. Sometimes, if I go off somewhere on
|
|
a trip I'll take a couple of 'zines with me. Especially if I'm out of San
|
|
Francisco and I want to be reminded of all the things I like about here, even
|
|
if it isn't from here.
|
|
|
|
RF: Which ones would you grab?
|
|
|
|
G: Um... well, the one that has the most words in it, of course, is
|
|
Cometbus.
|
|
|
|
RF: Especially this last issue.
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah, so since [Aaron's] my friend, I have to read it because I owe it to
|
|
him 'cause he's my friend. I wouldn't want to give him feedback if I didn't
|
|
have any feedback to give. The problem with that is, if the 'zine is made by
|
|
someone who's your friend, you probably know all the shit that's in it already
|
|
because they told you while it was happening. You'll say, "I remember this."
|
|
"I remember he told me about this." "Hey, that's me!" Whatever. It's hard to
|
|
have an objective sense about it, at least when the 'zine first comes out. The
|
|
ones that my friends give me, I like to sit on them for a little while... wait
|
|
until I'm far away and can read it later. Which I think is frustrating to
|
|
them, but that's probably why mine has so many pictures in it -- I want to make
|
|
it easy for people to consume on the spot. I think sometimes people take the
|
|
ones with all the words in them and say, "Thanks. I'll read this later." And
|
|
they totally don't, they just throw it away or whatever.
|
|
|
|
RF: What else? What other 'zines?
|
|
|
|
G: Let's see... Well...
|
|
|
|
RF: Let me put you on the spot.
|
|
|
|
G: No, no. This is good. The one that I like a lot is Scam. Did you get
|
|
that yesterday from Iggy? Iggy is from Florida, and he's a really, really good
|
|
writer. He made this magazine that's as far as I'm concerned The Punk Fanzine
|
|
To End All Punk Fanzines. You could read Scam and never have to read another
|
|
punk fanzine ever, because it's all in there and he's a great writer. It's
|
|
really good. He's really young, too. For being such a... I mean, he's got all
|
|
these hardships, and he writes about them really eloquently, never losing sight
|
|
of the fact that many of them are optional hardships. He's not a whiner, so
|
|
it's not one of those fanzines you read where the person's like, "Oh, I haven't
|
|
had a bath! I need a place to stay! I can't afford a cup of coffee!" No no
|
|
no, it's bigger than that. It's hope, and then disappointment. It's really
|
|
great. That's probably my favorite one. He's only made two issues. The
|
|
second one just came out, and it's huge. It's like 100 pages. It's this big:
|
|
8.5" x 11". You must get it. What else do I like? I like comics a lot.
|
|
For punk fanzines, I'd say I like Scam and Cometbus -- I read them. And
|
|
then... oh, Biker Pride! Have you ever seen that one? It's really weird!
|
|
It's from Milwaukee. It's a funny shape; it's big pages folded over so it's a
|
|
long rectangle, and it's about bikes and anarchy. There's bike/punk stuff, and
|
|
then there's bike messenger stuff, and then there's bike/sports stuff. This
|
|
one, though, is the bike/anarchy thing. The guy who puts it together, he comes
|
|
off... I happen to know that he's kind of a young, relatively resilient and
|
|
fresh individual. But he comes off as being this cynical, totally gnarly... I
|
|
thought he sounded like he was 35 years old and a completely short-fuse kind of
|
|
guy. Cranky or something. I asked some people from Milwaukee, "So, what's
|
|
this guy like? Is he an old guy?"
|
|
|
|
They're like, "Oh, no. He's like 22."
|
|
|
|
RF: He just slips into that mode while writing.
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, totally! He's like Mr. Zero Tolerance, which is cool 'cause a lot
|
|
people beat around the bush, and have this false sense of unity. Especially
|
|
about bicycles; it's like the Critical Mass mentality. "We're all in this
|
|
together!" Well, yes, but we're _not_. On the back cover of one issue, he had
|
|
people send in designs for a spoke gun. A spoke gun! A gun, a weapon! That
|
|
fires spokes! It's crazy!
|
|
|
|
RF: So, did he get submissions?
|
|
|
|
G: I assume so, but it'll probably have to go on for a couple of months before
|
|
he gets the winning applicant.
|
|
|
|
RF: Did he say anything about it being mountable?
|
|
|
|
G: He just said, "Do whatever you want." But I thought that was a _gas_!
|
|
Especially the kind of thing that people would consider uncool. Just because
|
|
people are on bikes doesn't mean that they're not going to break rules. It's
|
|
kind of weird that my magazine appeals to people who are not punks, and then
|
|
they have to constantly confront that. I don't wear a helmet, and I don't
|
|
observe traffic laws and stuff like that. I'm not all that anti-car. That's a
|
|
BIG SECRET. Another big secret that I'm going to blab onto this tape. I mean,
|
|
I think they're all right.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, if you do something deviant when you're on a bike, the other
|
|
bike people (since they're a downtrodden class of people), they do that thing
|
|
where they say, "You're ruining it for all of us."
|
|
|
|
And it's like, "Whoa, wait just a minute." That can be really harsh.
|
|
There's a lot of diversity within the bike scene. You'll recognize all of
|
|
these issues from within the Gay Community, which is not exactly a community;
|
|
people don't have all that much in common just because they have the same
|
|
sexual preference. It's the same with the bike thing. Just because they're on
|
|
a bike, it doesn't mean they're your friends, or that they're cool, or that
|
|
they like you, or are nice, or anything.
|
|
|
|
RF: There's that drawing you did of one of your friends on cough syrup with
|
|
his t-shirt pulled up over his head.
|
|
|
|
G: Yes
|
|
|
|
RF: That's hysterical.
|
|
|
|
G: That's real, that's from real life. He did that. That was Bill.
|
|
|
|
RF: Where did he do that?
|
|
|
|
G: He did that coming down 14th St. towards Guerrero, kind of going from
|
|
Guerrero to Rainbow.
|
|
|
|
RF: Jesus Christ!
|
|
|
|
G: It was after a party. He does tricks.
|
|
|
|
RF: After a Robo party?
|
|
|
|
G: After a Pinex party.
|
|
|
|
RF: Ooh.
|
|
|
|
G: You're holding your head. Do you know Pinex?
|
|
|
|
RF: No. I'm just imagining Pine-Sol.
|
|
|
|
G: No no no. Pinex is probably the same as Robitussin, but it's the
|
|
concentrated form. You can't buy it in big cities. You have to go to Texas to
|
|
get it, in the small towns. It's for people who have a lot of kids, probably,
|
|
and like to keep a gallon of that stuff around. One little bottle of this
|
|
stuff, you mix it with like a gallon of honey or caro syrup and water and make
|
|
your own. It's cough syrup mix. But you get the concentrate and slug it down
|
|
and your whole face gets numb. It's really weird.
|
|
|
|
RF: What's it taste like?
|
|
|
|
G: It tastes like cough syrup, but not sweet.
|
|
|
|
RF: Does it have eucalyptus in it?
|
|
|
|
G: Very slightly. It's drinkable. It's not so bad. I think it makes people
|
|
very depressed, though... I think it depresses people. I've known of a couple
|
|
of people who were involved in the Robitussin scene who committed suicide,
|
|
actually. They're not people that I knew well, or even had ever met, but...
|
|
|
|
RF: But you know that it actually happened.
|
|
|
|
G: Right. This one guy used to make a fanzine but then he killed himself. So
|
|
that is like the cautionary thing about cough syrup.
|
|
|
|
RF: You don't smoke, but you're collecting Marlboro Miles. I understand that
|
|
the promotion ends this month.
|
|
|
|
G: Yes.
|
|
|
|
RF: You know, on the Internet just two days ago, I saw somebody post on
|
|
alt.music.alternative that there's this girl, Greta Shred, who's collecting
|
|
Marlboro Miles, and if you have any send them to her. He posted your address
|
|
and everything.
|
|
|
|
G: No kidding?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah.
|
|
|
|
G: I love the Internet! Whoa, that's so cool! I don't have a computer, but
|
|
I've gotten into these heavy arguments with some of my friends... I don't _do_
|
|
the Internet, but I have an appreciation for direct communication. It's so
|
|
similar to fanzines, and people don't even _know_. A lot of people have that
|
|
"destroy TV" kind of attitude toward computers. It's unfortunate, because I
|
|
think that people who could be using them as a communication device, as a
|
|
subversive item, they're alienated away on some principle that's inapplicable.
|
|
It's the same as... I don't own a car, and I don't drive a car, but I can see
|
|
that they're useful. I used to drive an ambulance, and I would not want to
|
|
have to use a bicycle to carry the fuckin' people back and forth to the
|
|
hospital. Excess waste, OK, I'm opposed to that. But automobiles in and of
|
|
themselves -- every automobile is not awful. The same is true of computers and
|
|
computer-based communications. The potential is really great to get messages
|
|
across. There's a punk cafe in Berkeley, Cafe Med, and they had a SF-Net thing
|
|
in there. And my friends would pull out the plug, cut the cord... do shit like
|
|
that and totally sabotage it. They were like, total sneering, like, "Eww, they
|
|
have that thing in here, where we have to sit and make our fanzines." I guess
|
|
people are allowed to hate what they want to hate, but it just seems like it's
|
|
a good idea to keep an open mind. How can you use the tools against them if
|
|
you don't know what the tools _are_?
|
|
|
|
RF: Last year, a couple of friends of mine went into a cafe that had an SF-Net
|
|
terminal real late and picked open the box. There was a disk in there. They
|
|
took it home and copied it, and then brought it back first thing the next
|
|
morning. It had the terminal program SF-Net runs on. They disassembled it and
|
|
found all the back doors and stuff, and they have sysop control of it.
|
|
|
|
G: Wow, that's really cool. At the very least, you can go in there and plug
|
|
your own phone into the little jack and make a couple of calls. To say that
|
|
computers are automatically horrible... I got in a huge fight with a good
|
|
friend of mine over it, recently. It was the worst fight I've ever had with a
|
|
friend. _Ever_. And after it was over, we were both like, "Oh, god. That was
|
|
horrible." We didn't talk for a week, but we made up after then. It was over
|
|
_that_, and I was just like, "How can you be so 'anti' something you don't know
|
|
anything about?" It's the same thing. I don't have a computer, and I don't
|
|
sit in front of it 90 hours a day, but I still think that it's cool.
|
|
|
|
RF: What are you planning on putting in your next issue about computers?
|
|
|
|
G: I don't know yet. I don't know yet. Peter from Wind Chill Factor is gonna
|
|
write something. I'm just hoping that people who are familiar with Mudflap
|
|
will write some interesting things for people who don't understand how computer
|
|
stuff might be interesting to them.
|
|
|
|
RF: Make it appealing to them?
|
|
|
|
G: Not necessarily to sell it, but to explain it a little bit for people who
|
|
don't have computers. Because people don't have to go get 'em; I'm not saying
|
|
that they have to be on the Internet. I'm not on the Internet. But I hear
|
|
stuff through the Internet from other people who will print it out and give it
|
|
to me. That's basically like being involved, even if you're not there.
|
|
Someone else gets something and gives it to you. Great. I would like to show
|
|
some things about it that would keep some people from having the blinder
|
|
mentality. I don't use a computer to make the 'zine at all. Sometimes people
|
|
will give me things that are typed on a computer, and that's okay. I'll use
|
|
it. Mainly, I just don't like the way they look. But they're convenient.
|
|
When I did have a computer, I used to write stuff on a computer and then
|
|
rewrite it by hand.
|
|
|
|
RF: What kind of computer did you have?
|
|
|
|
G: It was an IBM. I sold it to Lynn from TRIBE 8. She uses it at her
|
|
messenger company now. Tom Jennings came in and fixed it once. He sold it to
|
|
me originally, and it has this solitaire program on it... I got a little bit (I
|
|
won't say addicted)... it's just so relaxing, to just tap the little thing.
|
|
|
|
People would say, "Why can't you use real cards?"
|
|
|
|
I'm like, "This shuffling stuff is not for me. There's too much time
|
|
wasted shuffling." It was really relaxing when I was writing a couple of
|
|
grants, trying to get grant money for a movie. After each page, I would go to
|
|
solitaire for about a half hour to relax. It's very relaxing to play
|
|
solitaire.
|
|
|
|
One day, Tom came over while I was in the middle of this huge, huge grant
|
|
proposal, and he says, "This thing moves so slow. Let me fix this up for you."
|
|
And then he just starting typing a billion miles a minute, and all this stuff
|
|
is flying past on the screen.
|
|
|
|
I'm like, "What are you doing? What are you doing?"
|
|
|
|
He's like, "It'll work a lot faster now."
|
|
|
|
Not only did it work a lot faster, but I couldn't get the solitaire
|
|
program to work anymore. The little thing would come up and say there's an
|
|
error somewhere, and I'm like, "TOM! TOM! COME BACK! FIX IT!" And he was
|
|
busy and couldn't come back for a long time. That's probably why I sold it.
|
|
|
|
RF: That's sad. Right now at my company, I do tech support but I answer the
|
|
mail. That's all I do -- answer the mail. There's one guy who answers mail,
|
|
and that's me now. But I used to answer the phones, and during that I would
|
|
just play some game. Solitaire was good because it never took that much
|
|
attention, you could still focus on the person at the other end...
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah, yeah.
|
|
|
|
RF: I got into railroad games after a while, and the customers always took the
|
|
second seat in my mind. I always forgot what they were talking about.
|
|
|
|
G: Really? I had a brief period of playing Tetris, but people could hear
|
|
that. I don't know if I had a volume control on my monitor, but people could
|
|
hear the Tetris, and they would say, "You're playing Tetris."
|
|
|
|
And I would say, "I am not."
|
|
|
|
Then they would say, "I can hear those little keys tapping. You're
|
|
playing some game."
|
|
|
|
"No, no -- I'm not! I'm not!" At my job, you know. But with solitaire,
|
|
it's with a mouse. They couldn't hear that.
|
|
|
|
RF: When's the deadline for submissions?
|
|
|
|
G: End of May, because I'm going to do the next one in June.
|
|
|
|
RF: When did you start hopping trains, and how did you hear about it? Why did
|
|
you want to do it? Etc?
|
|
|
|
G: I wanted to go places for free, that's why. The guy who had his shirt up
|
|
over his head with the cough syrup... I mean, we did it at home, when I was
|
|
little, but that doesn't count because we would just get on by my house and
|
|
then go downtown. It wasn't as involved as it really is.
|
|
|
|
RF: How old were you when you did _that_?
|
|
|
|
G: Like, eight. The train went right past our house. I guess we lived on the
|
|
other side of the tracks... But we always knew where the train went, because
|
|
it just went downtown. But trying to cover a lot of miles on a train, that
|
|
just happened in the last four years. It was through that guy, Bill. A lot of
|
|
people do it now. I'll say one thing that's weird about it: there's more
|
|
people doing it, and it's hotter -- it's more difficult -- to do now because
|
|
it's crowded. People are on the lookout for who they consider to be
|
|
inexperienced assholes from the city trying to do some Daniel Boone thing.
|
|
They'll bust you. Before, they wouldn't look at you twice. They're not so
|
|
worried if a bum or a wino gets on the train and has some sort of accident,
|
|
because the bum or wino is probably not going to have a family that will sue
|
|
the railroad.
|
|
|
|
But when you think about it, the idea of having those huge monster things
|
|
rolling around in an open city (which is what they do -- anyone can get in
|
|
there; they're not fenced-off or anything), it really is a huge liability that
|
|
they've basically gotten away with for years and years. Think of a ride at
|
|
Disneyworld. You can't go anywhere except where they have you. You can't be
|
|
in unauthorized space. It's forbidden. But with trains, it's like the danger
|
|
is just as big, but it's been this unmentionable thing. I don't think they
|
|
really want to deal with it, so the solution is to hire more security people,
|
|
which they will. So that's the unfortunate thing about it. But, the
|
|
interesting thing is it's free. That's the bottom line for me. This train is
|
|
going to this place anyway; it might as well take you. Some people say they've
|
|
had these experiences where they meet these illustrious characters on trains.
|
|
That's never happened to me. I've only met either old guys who were completely
|
|
paralyzed by alcoholism and terminally unable to talk, or else the
|
|
weasely-looking younger guys who just want to steal all your stuff and kill
|
|
you. But, it's a combination of where you go, what kind of train you're on
|
|
(slow one or a fast one), and stuff like that.
|
|
|
|
RF: One of the dangers you mentioned in your 'zine is that you could get
|
|
inside a boxcar and the doors could close on you, and you'd be locked in. Has
|
|
that ever happened to you?
|
|
|
|
G: No, that's never happened to me. I don't think it happens very often.
|
|
Many people will go only in boxcars that have two open doors. There's a door
|
|
on either side. That way, it's very unlikely that you'll get locked in. The
|
|
doors open in two different directions, so if the braking or some sort of
|
|
motion like that causes one door to slam shut, it's probably not going to shut
|
|
both, because the other one's going to wedge open. But, if you get into a car
|
|
that only has one door open, and it's only open a foot, then OK, that could be
|
|
a possibility.
|
|
|
|
Also, they have metal floors. They're not made of wood anymore, and so
|
|
you can't carve your way out. In the '30s when stuff like that would happen,
|
|
people were sometimes able to kick their way out or carve their way out. I
|
|
think that probably the greatest danger if you're going north of here is other
|
|
bums. They can be really gnarly. There's a lot of 'em up there, and they're
|
|
competing for stuff. They're competing for resources, they're competing for
|
|
rides, and they're younger... younger than ancient wino guys. That's one
|
|
thing. Another is a derailment. They don't happen very often, but if the
|
|
train derails, it's hard to imagine escaping serious injury. Once, on that
|
|
trip to L.A. that I wrote about, the train the day before had derailed. That
|
|
was the one that went through all those apartment buildings. It was because of
|
|
a shopping cart or some kind of debris on the tracks. We didn't think about it
|
|
at the time, except like, "Wasn't _our_ train." 'Cause by the time you get
|
|
there, you're tired, you're exhausted, you're filthy. You can't be thinking
|
|
about danger every second. But in retrospect, I've thought about that. What
|
|
would have happened if we took the train the day before? I've never known
|
|
anyone who was on a train when it derailed, but it's going so fast and then it
|
|
flies off -- you would just _fling_, you know? You would just... _shooo_! It
|
|
would be really out of control.
|
|
|
|
RF: When you write an issue of Mudflap, it seems like you're accumulating
|
|
material from different days, or the month or whatever. I mean, you'll write
|
|
something and then set it aside, or do you write it in one whole thing?
|
|
|
|
G: Well, the SECRET is...
|
|
|
|
RF: Another secret.
|
|
|
|
G: Another secret. The secret is I'm not a very good writer. I have a
|
|
terrible memory -- it's like a sieve, it's awful. And so, I have to take notes
|
|
constantly or else I'll forget. If I don't write down everything, then I'll
|
|
remember that there was something I wanted to put in, but I won't remember what
|
|
it is. Which is unusual, because I don't smoke pot or anything. I barely
|
|
drink beer. It's not like I have chemical damage. But I have this really bad
|
|
memory.
|
|
|
|
So I take notes on stuff, and then I write it out. And then it sounds
|
|
stupid. And then I rewrite it, and rewrite it. I end up usually writing it
|
|
about three or four or five times over. I will make a list, write down ideas
|
|
of stuff I want to talk about so that I don't forget them. I compile my notes,
|
|
and maybe get some photographs or drawings or something, and then I usually do
|
|
the magazine in a whole month solid. I'll just take a month (this time, it was
|
|
January), and just spend the whole month at home, writing these things over and
|
|
over and doing basically nothing else. If I write something in advance, and
|
|
keep it a three-page thing written, then when it comes time to put the whole
|
|
thing together, it usually doesn't fit right, and I end up having to change it
|
|
anyway. So it seems better to write the things I have to write all at once.
|
|
Does that make sense?
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah. The reason why I asked is because either you have a bad memory
|
|
about what you write down, or you write something in your 'zine that you never
|
|
really intended to write in your 'zine, and then it just sort of ends up there.
|
|
Because when people ask you about things later, you're totally shocked that
|
|
people know these things about you.
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, that's horrible! It's true, though! Actually, somebody asked me about
|
|
the orange jacket. That was so funny. I had this orange jacket that was wool
|
|
and had white sleeves, actually my boyfriend has it now and I had this dream
|
|
about him wearing it and it upset me very much. Not that he was wearing my
|
|
orange jacket, but that I knew it was him because he was wearing the orange
|
|
jacket, which is now _his_ orange jacket.
|
|
|
|
I had mentioned it, I guess, in one of the Mudflaps. "All I have is this
|
|
rotten orange jacket with a big stain on it that I think is vomit." ('Cause I
|
|
found it.) And then, I was at somebody's house, and I said something like, "I
|
|
have nothing. This is really fucked-up!"
|
|
|
|
I was bummed out about something, and they said, "Yeah, all you got's that
|
|
orange jacket..."
|
|
|
|
And I said, "How do you know about my orange jacket?!" I was defensive
|
|
and shocked. "How do you know about my orange jacket?" I said.
|
|
|
|
Then he's like, "I read it in your magazine, DUH."
|
|
|
|
And I thought, "Oh, shit. That's right." I guess 'cause I'm not there
|
|
when people read it, that I have the continual illusion that people don't
|
|
really read all of it. Or they don't really read it at all, or something.
|
|
Probably, if it fully became clear to me that people read it, then I would
|
|
probably be too shy to write it anymore. Oh, there was something else, too.
|
|
Oh, see, with the movies, you have to go there every once in a while and they
|
|
ask you to show up if it's local. They show every once in a while around town;
|
|
they're not on a schedule. But when you see people watching a movie, it's
|
|
totally different from when you watch it by yourself. It's like you can feel
|
|
what people are thinking about watching your movie, even if they don't say
|
|
anything. You can feel how people are responding to stuff.
|
|
|
|
But with the magazine I never get to do that, because people read it at
|
|
home. It's almost like that you don't really know if people are reading the
|
|
stuff because you're not there. That's probably good, that's probably why I
|
|
can tell such horrible, personal things about myself and not feel completely
|
|
vulnerable.
|
|
|
|
RF: The strange thing is, all the people I know that are familiar with your
|
|
'zine read it diligently.
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, they do?
|
|
|
|
RF: And then I know other people who have just never heard of it. It's like
|
|
one or the other. It's not like, "Oh, yeah... I know what you're talking
|
|
about." It's like, "Yes! And in issue this, this, this, this..."
|
|
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G: No way! That's cool.
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RF: People know it encyclopediacally.
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G: Well, it probably makes more sense that way, because sometimes if I give
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people just one issue and they don't see the others, they're not quite sure
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what's going on, or what it's about. I think it makes more sense as a series.
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Some things happen in one and other things happen in a later one that reflects
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back to it. The sleeping bag, for instance. I almost have enough for the
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sleeping bag.
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RF: Cool. What are you going to buy?
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G: I'm going to buy a sleeping bag, and if I have enough I'm going to buy a
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watch. But mainly, it's just the Marlboro Miles sleeping bag I need.
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RF: Well, I hope you get 'em in the next two weeks.
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G: I think I will. This guy Travis has a bunch of 'em.
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RF: I asked everybody at work, nobody has 'em.
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G: Nobody?
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RF: They've been giving them to like their dads and stuff.
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G: I find 'em around here a lot. And it's cool, too, because the Menthol
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Lights are the rarest of the rare. My friend Nosmo, who's collecting them with
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me (he had already agreed that we would share whatever we got), he had found
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some menthol ones one day and then someone had traded him two regulars for one
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menthol, 'cause they're green and you hardly ever see those.
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RF: Are they worth the same to the Marlboro company?
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G: Yes. I wouldn't have given 10 miles of regular for a green one, 'cause I
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don't really care. I want to add 'em up. But it's kind of cool when you find
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a green one, especially a green one that's light. Marlboro Menthol Lights?
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Who smokes that shit? I don't even think I've ever seen 'em for sale.
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Plus, I have to admit that getting something for free from the tobacco industry
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when I don't smoke is cool.
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RF: Yeah.
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G: That's pretty cool. Am I answering the questions? I'm sorry, I'm just
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blabbing and chatting. I'm probably not getting to the point. When I did the
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interview in the last issue with that guy, it was like an hour and a half worth
|
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of tape. A lot of it, I realized, is like these tangents we got off onto
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'cause we were chatting. I kept thinking, "Aw, shit -- that's right... the
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interview!" So, when it came time to transcribe it, I paid the piper.
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RF: How do you know that Al Sobrante raced in front of a moving train and...
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G: Oh, 'cause he told me about that. I said, "That's the coolest thing I've
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ever heard. I can't believe it. That's amazing." It wasn't moving very fast,
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you know. It was moving slow. When they move at slow speeds, it's pretty
|
|
slow. But the idea of being confident enough in your jumping to jump up there?
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That's crazy! That's totally crazy. And so, when I had asked him that last
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question, "What's the daredevilest thing you ever did?" I was trying to get
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him to say that, 'cause I thought there can't be anything else that's crazier
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than that. But he didn't say it, so I had to put it in there anyway. I felt
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obligated.
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RF: Are you working on any movies?
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G: Kind of. I don't know what I'm doing with it, though. I want to make a
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movie about skate hockey. A bunch of my friends play skate hockey. They're
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funny, and it's a cool game, and I like sports. And so I thought, "I can make
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|
a little documentary about this." Once you go to film festivals and those film
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|
screenings, people make movies that are nice movies, but when they're making
|
|
documentaries, frequently the subject matter is so boring. Or else, it's grim,
|
|
like everybody talking about their childhood incest experiences and it's
|
|
depressive. So the last couple of movies I've made have been successful
|
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strictly because they're the bright spot on the fucking program.
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People think, "Oh, yeah... life is worth living! I forgot!" So, in one
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of them I put this punk song, right in the middle. It's like this punk break.
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|
Everybody's riding skating and riding bikes. And it's right smack in the
|
|
middle of this movie about the end of the world. Everyone starts nodding their
|
|
heads, getting into it -- it's almost manipulative. It's like, "Now you must
|
|
have a good time for a few minutes and get physical in some way." So, it's an
|
|
experiment to make a film about something that's energetic and cool and
|
|
interesting, and then get these stodgy people to look at 'em. They're the
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people who have money, so you have to play their game a little bit.
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RF: Are you reading any books right now?
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G: Yes! I'm reading that book about the Sex Pistols, the name of which I can
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|
never remember.
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RF: _England's Dreaming_.
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G: Yes. I'm reading that one, and someone just lent me _City of Quartz_,
|
|
which everybody's read but me. It's about L.A. What else am I reading? I'm
|
|
halfway through _Neuromancer_ -- I'll never finish it, I'm sure. Someone told
|
|
me the other day, "Oh, yeah. It took me a year to read." OK, good, 'cause
|
|
it'll take me about a year.
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RF: Seems like all the rest of them in that series, _Count Zero_, _Mona Lisa
|
|
Overdrive_, they're all the same, except they're watered-down versions of
|
|
_Neuromancer_.
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G: I read _Count Zero_. I liked it, 'cause that kid was like the bad kid. He
|
|
was a nerd, and I thought, "Yeah! All right! The nerd!" I read _Virtual
|
|
Light_, and I've totally gone through them backwards... In _Virtual Light_,
|
|
everybody was totally movie-style. Tell me this: what is it with these black
|
|
jeans? Everybody was wearing black jeans in all the William Gibson books. It
|
|
reminded me of J.G. Ballard and the white jeans, everybody wears white jeans in
|
|
J.G. Ballard's stuff.
|
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RF: I never noticed that.
|
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|
G: They all wear black jeans in Gibson. It's not like: "He pulled down his
|
|
pants." It's: "He pulled down his BLACK JEANS." And I think, "Oh Jesus.
|
|
What's with this? Is this supposed to mean something and I don't get it?"
|
|
|
|
RF: What was the deal with the "between her legs" thing you wrote about?
|
|
|
|
G: Oh! There were all these references that were almost like half-assed
|
|
attempts at being subliminally sexual or something by referring to her with her
|
|
bicycle as: "...when she had the bike BETWEEN HER LEGS!" you know? Then,
|
|
there's this other weird section during a chase scene. They're all in this
|
|
Winnebago together, and the villain makes her like pull her pants down and sit
|
|
on the motor -- she's straddling the motor with her pants down, for some
|
|
reason. He's not really looking at her or anything. It's just really weird.
|
|
And I'm thinking, "What is this in here for?" It made me very uncomfortable
|
|
for the author. I was embarrassed for him, thinking, "No, no -- you _don't_
|
|
need to pull her pants down here." It was weird, and I found that to be
|
|
troubling, just because I didn't know what that's supposed to mean in the book
|
|
and it seemed really unnecessary. It wasn't so bad, though -- that book. Do
|
|
you think they'll make a movie out of it?
|
|
|
|
RF: I'm not sure about _Virtual Light_, but _Neuromancer_ I'm sure.
|
|
|
|
G: Really?
|
|
|
|
RF: I'm sure. It's just a matter of time.
|
|
|
|
G: It's been a long time.
|
|
|
|
RF: Yeah, but I think people are still coming to grips with the material and
|
|
how you could shoot it, and also I think it's still got sort of a niche hook.
|
|
Not too many people are gonna go see a movie about it, because nobody notices
|
|
it. What I really want to see is _Snowcrash_ made into a movie.
|
|
|
|
G: Oh, that would be great. I think that would be great. I liked _Snowcrash_
|
|
a lot. Especially reading it after _Virtual Light_. I realize that the
|
|
comparisons are odious, but it was written earlier and at first the
|
|
similarities were suspect to me. I thought, "Why would somebody write another
|
|
book about a messenger and a stolen thing, so close together?"
|
|
|
|
RF: One thing I really liked about _Snowcrash_ was that it was a real cynical
|
|
look at the future, it was even more cynical than William Gibson's books,
|
|
'cause the whole entire government had collapsed and even the Mafia had become
|
|
a respectable business, now that the government was totally blown apart.
|
|
|
|
G: Yes, and I like the was commercialism was represented. And the thing about
|
|
if your pizza was late, you got like...
|
|
|
|
RF: Uncle Enzo would come and kiss your shoes.
|
|
|
|
G: Yeah, and the helicopter would descend, and it was like this total media
|
|
event that was ostensibly happy, you know? Whereas in the Gibson books, there
|
|
weren't any happy things. Everything's dark dark dark. In reality, there
|
|
would still be some dim-bulbs wandering through life thinking, "Everything's
|
|
fine!" That part of it I really appreciated.
|
|
|
|
RF: It was really humorous.
|
|
|
|
G: Plus, she gets to have sex with that guy.
|
|
|
|
RF: I thought that was completely fucked-up.
|
|
|
|
G: I thought it was good, if only for token reasons, if only just because she
|
|
wanted to, and she's like 15, and instead of being pushed into something
|
|
unwillingly... in _Virtual Light_, the heroine has to have her pants pulled
|
|
down, and she never gets to have sex with anybody. OK, so that's one option:
|
|
not to have sex at all. The other option, of course, is to be forced into some
|
|
sort of sexual thing, which is very outmoded. But in _Snowcrash_...
|
|
|
|
[end of tape, end of file]
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_______ __________________________________________________________________
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(' ') | Save yourself! Go outside! DO SOMETHING! |
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(U) |==================================================================|
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.ooM |Copyright (c) 1994 cDc communications and Reid Fleming. |
|
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\_______/|All Rights Reserved. 07/01/1994-#261|
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