Wild Ones

I’ve known some. I was just reminded of a guy I knew who would chug a big gulp from 7/11, then belch talk the entire alphabet, dragging out a long ‘Z’ to end his performance…’One hit Dave’. His ability to put is legs behind his head, sans Levi’s, then, light his farts, always made the party…One Ton Todd. He would regularly win bets by eating a Big Mac in one bite. Holy shit, it was AWESOME! He would smash it in his big paws prior to inserting one end of the mass into his mug, then, inhale it while seemingly unhooking his jaw like a large constrictor snake…Jake, the janitor at the Saugus V.F.W. He would make bets he could drink a beer with out touching it. Guys would take that bet, then say, “No using a straw, old man!” Jake would then match the bet, take out his dentures, put his mouth AROUND the beer can, suck it in and tilt his head then drain it. For a cool ending, he would then suck a dent into the can and spit it over the bar…Frank Angelostro would bump start his 175cc Tempo while pushing it backwards, then, hold the bars sitting backwards all the way down the street…I could do an entire chapter on Don Sorensen. He was a wild man prior to being dragged down Van Nuys blvd under a van on his Yamaha. When he got out of the hospital, he walked like a drunken Frankenstein, and talked with a slur. He blew his entire insurance check on a chick he met that wanted to live in Hawaii. When the money ran out, he moved in with me. Some Don-isms: I meet two babes. I bring them home. Don is polite. He then goes into his bedroom while I entertain in our small front room. As we’re having some wine, Don comes back into the room naked, with just a sock covering an ENORMOUS erection. He then says a polite, “Ladies, have you seen my other sock?” I take Don to the Kern river. We camp at the rock slides above the one way bridge. A great day. Until the bikers and their truck flunkies take over our spot. Don begged me to stay to eye ball the biker chicks awhile. It gets dark. Don goes to sleep in the front seat of my Power Wagon. A big bonfire is going. A biker chick starts taking a beating right next to where I’m sitting on a log. Her old man drags her by the hair, then, shoves her face against my truck driver window. He has a branch from the fire he had grabbed while dragging her. He’s screaming at her while putting the blazing torch next to her face. In the pitch black, it was frightening. Suddenly, the window slowly cranks down. Don’s face appears, in his mouth, a fat doobie. He says his slurred, “Hey Bub, how about a light?” The guy puts the torch to Don’s doobie. He puffs it into a big cloud, then cranks the window back up. After things settled down, we collected money for a beer run, then never went back…Oh, Don’s favorite thing was to eat a big meal at a restaurant, then, act bewildered when he had to pay up. He would cry big tears and sob out of control until they just let him go. If not, the cops always did. They all knew him…Mexican Bob. He was a supply man at Formasa garage. He told me he once spared himself jail by getting sent to the psycho ward from putting his peanut butter off his jail sandwich into his butt crack, then, eating it and licking it off his fingers like it was shit as the judge was talking to him…Mike the mook. A big drunk at Barneys Beanery. He would break and run as cops tried to cuff him. He would always blow them away from his prosthetic arm coming off as they tried to cuff him…Smokey Joe. He would take out his fake eye and blow smoke out of his eye socket…

Hanna-Barbera

Gave the best Christmas parties of ALL TIME!! Halloween a close second. EVERYONE got smashed! It was a company requirement to be able to drinks alot of booze at the drop of a hat…Their large complex was built on the former site of ‘Monkey Island’. That place folded prior to World War 2 when a couple hundred monkeys escaped and ran amok for a few weeks all over Cahuenga Blvd and Barham in the brushy hillsides. They expanded a few times, so, connected the buildings with a big bridge on the second floor. Mr. Hanna and Mr. Barbera had their offices on the second floor, right next to each other. I came into the picture after P.B.X. school. They had five old cord pair switch boards, side by side in their main lobby. They kept them long after most had been replaced all over town because they were LOYAL. Most of their switch board gals had been on the job since day one. As one retired, so would her switchboard…The main phone room had a common wall with Mr. Barbera’s office. Since I would go past his door all the time, he would start saying things to me to throw me off. I finally figured out he was just jerking me around for fun and gave it back to him. One party they gave would have to be the best I ever went to. All the illustrators were in hand made costumes they had worked on for weeks, drinking right out of blenders and running amok. Since no one really knew who was who, it was time to pull out all the stops. Security ended up locking the gates and calling cabs for about three hundred people. One gal had a Yogi bear painted on her using her giant breasts as Yogi’s eyes. There was food EVERYWHERE! Different departments had different music blasting. I got into a conga line that went up the stairs to corporate, smashing pictures off the walls from the giant paper mache heads they were wearing getting spun around and had them dancing blind. Finally, the cops show up. THEY PARTIED WITH US!!! I’ve been to HUNDREDS of big parties. None can ever top this one. My side hurt for days from laughing so hard. One gal did the best Fog Horn, Leg Horn using helium from a balloon. I heard later she made Mr. Barbera wet his pants while chasing him in costume with a giant dildo…

The Gettys get a new dog

Let’s cut to the chase. Someone in the medical team monitoring coma man noticed some movement on one of his graphs, long after I had left. They trace back this glitch to my repair visit. Who knows why it glipped. Maybe he had indigestion the same time I was there. All’s I know, is I have a bunch of pissed off professionals giving me attitude when I arrive for my ‘therapy’ time with my new pal. It ended up being a double edged sword. On the crappy side, the medical team in place wanted me to drop dead. Physical therapists by the dozen, Specialists on every subject on his condition, care givers 24/7, and me, retard of the month, getting the spotlight. I made friends with the care givers, so, that was cool. Also, on the good side, being an on call system tech to these big shots let me run wild a bunch of times. I would have them call dispatch and need me somewhere, ‘Pow’, my pager went off…It had its perks. Alas, I did all sorts of things to bring back one of those glips in the monitor, it never happened again. I would read favorite parts of books to him. Tell him funny stuff I had seen on other jobs, things like that. I was NEVER alone with him though. Maybe that played into it. Being a ‘Dedicated’ tech started to get real boring. After a couple of months, they dump me as Mr. Wizard. Not as their phone gimp though. Someone in the Getty sphere sequed me into handling a bunch of their accounts. Nothing corporate. Always residential or Condos and such. First of all, I didn’t have the qualifications to work on some of their large account systems. Second, they had plans for me in an entirely different direction. I ran into some really odd things working for this real estate company that fronted for about thirty Getty holdings I did end up being a tech for. I’ll tell some of those stories along the line…I never saw the Getty guy again. I did hear that he came out of his coma…

Really Rich People

I’m dispatched to a nice, single story home off of Sunset Plaza. I can see the top floors of the Playboy building past some neighbors’ roof tops. Sunset Plaza is a winding road that climbs up into the Hollywood Hills. Parking can be tough. Sometimes, at four am, drunks careen off of parked cars like pin balls. I once had Richard Dreyfuss knock down nine orange cones and my little metal fence around my manhole I was working in, but, another story. Anyhow, I’m ushered in by a medical looking guy. Laid back, but in a nurses outfit. He takes me right to the phone closet since all the phones are down. Sparing you tech talk, I find the room that’s the culprit and inform the nurse. He’s in the nice, wide open kitchen playing cards with three other nurses. One is a fantastic looking gal, just spilling out of this short cut, nurses skirt…Having mastered the Jedi booty glance, I pretend not to notice her and speak directly to my first contact person. He leads me to the master bedroom. Not that I’m some genius. When I pulled off the wire that was marked, ‘MASTER BED’, the system came back up…In this large, well lit but spartan room, is a big hospital type bed with the I.V. hookups and monitors next to it. I have to get behind the bed to reach the phone jack for the Multi-line Merlin set. The nurse says a quiet, “He’s in a coma, so, don’t worry about upsetting him!” I nod and he leaves me to my work. I look at the face of the man in the bed. Actually, more of a barely past teens man. He’s pale and thin. Maybe from the coma? I notice he’s missing an ear. I look at my dispatch order. Getty? It comes to me in a flash. Its Getty’s grandkid who was kidnapped and lost an ear because grandpa was slow on paying up. I also knew he had done an eight ball and had the lights go out on him at a party a while back. I look into his face from about a foot away. His eyes are moving around but out of control. One keeps rolling back into the upper regions of its socket, a life of its own. Having done Truman Capote’s phones for years, I had read a copy of, ‘JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN’. It was about a man turned into a living torso from a war injury. I wonder if I could communicate with him, like in the book. I stand in front of him and tell him who I am and what I’m doing. I then told him if I was in his shoes, I would take a dump in my pants every hour to get that hot nurse to clean me up. Stuff like that. I give up after a few minutes and fix the phone trouble, spilled water in the jack. I inform the nurse guy he’s all set, they have a maintenance contract, so, no bill, off I go…The next morning, my boss is shitting tacks. He informs me I’m to go to a certain address in Beverly Hills, “TEN FUCKING MINUTES AGO!” Huh? I roll for the pad. Oh man, a roller coaster ride had just begun I wasn’t going to get off of for quite awhile…

Rich People

Most rich people are sad. Their homes and residences are usually unused mausoleums, or, temples to THEM. Oh man, Rudy Vallee. He was really famous in the silent movies. He had this trick driveway at his home up off Mulholland. It was twisting and narrow. Sort of a mini French oceanside with a big drop off past a small stone wall that ran along the drive. When you came to the end of the drive, there was a giant wooden Lazy Susan flush with the blacktop you pulled up onto. It had these little plastic deals to guide you. When it was time to leave, a houseman, or, Rudy himself, would hit a motor and spin you around facing down the drive. Sweet! Rudy’s house was built right into natural stone. When you climbed some stairs into his French countryside style home with the steep pitched roofs, covered in red tiles, potted plants surrounded you. Once inside the big, bolt studded door, you stood on a platform…Looking down into the living room and den. A tall natural rock face with fractures in it was opposite the stairs leading down. Every five inches, was a picture of Rudy doing something, or, nothing at all. Singing through his megaphone was his claim to fame. I also noticed all the people in the photos with him were long dead. I think he was about 95 when I worked on his phones. His phone wires were legendary for sucking ass. His main wire terminal was under his tennis courts. Yep. UNDER. He had a huge museum dedicated to more pictures of him. Some ten feet high with lights illuminating them. His wife was about fifty years younger then him. She spoke with a French accent. She would scrunch her face and speak French when I gave her the bill before leaving. If Rudy spun you around on your exit, he would give you a bottle of wine, covered in dust…I’m once again sent up to his place on a cable repair. I hadn’t been there in quite awhile. The place was, well, different. Once inside, I’m guided to Mrs. Vallee’s office. A tall, well built and tanned Italian looking guy is guiding me. He has really white teeth. No shirt and one of those romance novel hair styles that swept back like a mane. I also notice something else. Not one picture of good old Rudy. All had been replaced by ones of Mrs. Vallee. Some with her and the stud muffin doing party scenes and such. Something told me Rudy wasn’t around anymore. I’m informed by the new boss that my phones are going to be removed and to do an inventory. She then spins her chair away from me. I stand there with Mr. White teeth. I don’t think he understands a word of English. She finally spins her chair back towards me and says a snotty, “WELL?” I say a polite, “Gee lady, here’s where I usually get my bottle of wine!” I’m ushered out…

S.W.A.T. me, baby!

I’m starting to really like Tehachapi. Last night, we had another broo-ha-ha emanating from a neighboring ranch. Leo had just put in ‘The best of Monk’. A tapping at our front window makes us all turn around. We’re not much on drapes or curtains. Mainly because we don’t have any. A teenager is gesturing to me to come to the door. Our dog sleeps on in front of the wood burning stove. I nudge his ass on my way to the door for some back up. He thumps his tail and ignores me. I ask the kid to step inside since its 34 outside. He has no time for pleasantries. “My mom just stabbed my dad and is beating him as he lays on the ground with a shovel!” I hand him our wireless phone. Now, as hes’ on the line with the Sheriff’s, my mind races on the correct etiquette for such a situation. After a brief conversation, the boy hangs up. He informs us he’s to wait at our house. I offer coffee or tea. Pat hands him a jacket…I try for a conversation. Oh brother. A mistake. They’re Chippewa. It’s going to be his moms third felony for spousal abuse. He’s just arrived from…I can’t go on. It’s too horrible. Lets just say I forget all about Monk and slip my coveralls back on over my pajamas. Adding my hammerless .38 snub nose in my butt crack. We await the troops. As we wait, a thick Tule fog comes creeping in like a scene from the ‘Crawling Eye’. Soon, we can’t see past our porch…Its about nine p.m. when the first units arrive. We can’t see them, but we can hear the doors slamming and voices. Leo, Mr. Helpful, yells out, “Hey you guys, up here!” I choked off the rest. Soon, dim glows of approaching flashlights advance. About twenty five of them. Rick, the tent boy, winks his flashlight their way to help them out. They want to talk to the boy…These guys couldn’t find Joe Louis in a bowl of rice. THREE hours later, they find her in the chicken coup, right next to her house. They search my place, FOUR TIMES…The fog was cool though. Some of those cops didn’t come down off my mountain until one am. We could hear them on there radios every once in awhile. “Ah, still looking for the road, over!”…At least their search dogs were smart. They wouldn’t go up behind our house. Too many bear tracks…Oh, she’s already home as of ten this morning. Pat wondered if she should take over some cookies. I took her down with a Spock neck pinch…

One of my Heroes

Just outside London, many years ago, it was decided by the powers that be, to tear down an old museum and zoological garden, and redo the entire complex. Two big backers feuded over every tiny aspect of the project. Finally, it was completed. The little drop bar came up at the parking lot guard shack, and the building opened. There was one thing that everyone loved about the place. The friendly, always smiling attendant who handled the parking lot. Always courteous, he even had a donation jar to help out others who didn’t have the dollar fee for a car, five bucks for a bus. Fifty cents for a bicycle. Also, boy, was he reliable. He NEVER missed a day. Only took off Tuesdays when it was closed, or, the occasional holiday if shut down. For twenty years, you could depend on him. One morning, traffic is stacking up. No one is at the drop bar to take the parking fees. Turned out, smiley had built that shack…Each of the other backers, thought the parking booth and drop bar had been installed by the other. This fellow had poured a small slab, framed up the little toll booth, drop bar and prices, then, opened along with the new museum. NO ONE QUESTIONED IT. For twenty years, the smiling man took home two to seven thousand dollars (or pounds, I guess) CASH! One day he felt he had made enough, adios parking gig. Over twenty years! Let’s see, for one month, around a HUNDRED GRAND A MONTH? At five grand a day average over a 25 day month, I think so. How much a year? TWENTY years? WOW!…

White Elephant

There’s a big house up a sharp drive at the dead end of our canyon. There’s a ‘For Sale’ sign laying in the brush off the drive. I take down the number to see what they want for it. Not five seconds into the conversation, the woman at the real estate office tells me its a ‘White Elephant’. She then told me the price. I asked her if she knew where the term came from. She informed me she could care less, was busy, and to call back when I wanted to buy a house…Guess I’ll tell you guys…Back when the British were conquering third world nations to get masts for their Navy, they had to go through a certain province in India to get through the Kyber pass. All of the disembarking troops started from this point. Now, the Maharajah of this domain not only didn’t want the British coming through, he also had a huge problem of his own making. He had made a big mistake, years earlier…The King, while out on a tiger hunting expedition, spots a baby white elephant in a small herd of his subjects that lived nearby. He was just enamored with the creature. He had to have it for his private zoo. Since this village still owed on its annual taxes to the King, he waves their taxes for the year, and takes possession of the delightful animal. The King shows off his new prized addition to his menagerie, while also putting forth an edict that a white elephant is to never do any work and to be pampered and well cared for…Jump forward a few years. The King is going broke. So many of his subjects brought baby white elephant calves to avoid taxes, he was ready to rip his beard out. Now, he also had about sixty wives. His former first lady, now long cast out of the inner circle, tells the King that she can take care of his problem, if he makes her top dog again. He agrees. She arranges to have each new British regiment, take a gift of a royal white elephant, with all its trappings, after a good bye feast with the King. Not wanting to offend the King, or, piss off the English Queen, they just put the new elephant with their own elephants they used to carry cannons. It was months before all the regiments realized that they had been had. They were all stuck with beasts that ate all day, couldn’t work, and seemed to live forever. Thus, when the Brits returned home, it was stuck in their vocabulary. If it’s big, worthless, and you can’t get rid of something, that, my friends, became a ‘White Elephant’…

Tarawa

Huh? What’s Tarawa? I asked ten people today and that’s the response I received back. It was a small island in the Pacific. The Japanese in WW2 were really proud of it. They said it couldn’t be taken in twenty years. And why shouldn’t they say such a thing. Concrete
pillboxes, ninety percent underground, minimum six feet apart. Point blank suppressing fire on EVERY beach. The highest point was seventy five foot. Reefs surrounded it…I was told I was a ‘hero’ for fighting the County. What Horseshit. My friend, Clem, the world’s worst
mechanic, a drunk of exceptional magnitude. He really was a hero. Sure, he lived in a dump. A tiny house off Sierra Hwy that sat right in the epicenter of Dozer tracks piled ten foot high, old back hoe buckets by the dozen, sheets of aluminum gathered over sixty years. Stuff like that. He could care less. He was within walking distance of his favorite VFW…Last year, in his nineties, the County killed him. Yep. They red tagged his old house and locked him out. He crept into an old step van in the wash that had no wheels on it, tried to keep his small dogs and his old bones warm. Burned to death in the back of it. The County leaped into action. They brought in a ‘Cleansing crew’ that stripped his place down to the DIRT. They then placed a $22,000 dollar bill on his estate. Since he was in his nineties. Who would that even be? The new college across the street going in couldn’t have anything to do with it, could they? Then, here’s the kicker. The County received over TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS for all the scrap metal on his property. Pure steel, titanium, copper, aluminum, tin. So what, you might say. If you said it in my presence, I’d smash your fucking face in. Clem was in the first wave that hit the beach on
Tarawa. He was a kid. If you ever asked him about it, he would just stare at you and turn away…I learned one thing about REAL vets. They will not talk about the war. Sure, phonies who are into glory tales will yak it up. That’s because THEY WEREN’T THERE. Clem was there for the three days it took to break the Japs backs. It was do or die. No prisoners in the Pacific. You put your hands up against the Japanese and bullets would walk across your chest. After the Marines realized this, they showed the enemy how to really take the gloves off…Out of one hundred guys around Clem that came off the track driven boats,
six made it fifty foot inland…Guys like Clem are our real heroes. Guys like me just write about them…

Death Valley

I’m seventeen years old. It’s 1969. I’m rolling towards a three day stay in Death Valley. All paid for, compliments of Pacific Telephone. I’ve only been with the phone company five months, and I’ve done the Death Valley run consistently longer then any other tech. Our garage at 3636 Beverly took it over after some wheeling and dealing in the corporate towers. All’s I knew, was everyone else at my garage hated it. Except me. I LOVED it! This trip I have a new foreman with me, Larry Mall. He decides he’s going to know all of his crews routes, so, he books a room next to mine at the Golden Choya motel, gets a metal fold up seat from supply for his ass, and comes along…Now, Larry is wearing a Pac Bell blazer, a white shirt and black tie. Also, some loafers. Its five am and no one is there to wave us off. Now at Baker, I check in at our motel, then point the truck toward Tecopa Hot Springs, our first stop…At Tecopa, its now 115 and getting hotter by the second. No air in my Pac Bell coin box truck. It had a service body. One ton. Bad paint on the hood from me cooking eggs on the hood for tourists. This truck has twin radiators, a two way phone that never worked, and an overdrive that really kicked some ass. It also had no passenger seat. It had a lazy susan safe behind the spot that seat was supposed to be bolted. Larry sat in a temp folding seat, all METAL. His legs hunched into his chin like Quasimodo…As we head towards Furnace Creek Inn, we have some other stops. Shoshone, is next. I pull up to the emergency phone in its all glass booth with a pull shut glass door. Not one piece of glass in it with out a bullet hole in it. Ditto for the hand crank to operator phone. I have to use all hand tools to replace the glass and phone. Try drilling case hardened steel in 125 degree heat with no shade sometime, a real slice of heaven…I’m now am in my usual fashion statement, Levi 501’s full of holes, wing tips, and my t-shirt around my head, constantly soaked with water from my ice chest. Larry doesn’t approve of my attire. I ignore him. Its only eleven am. He ain’t seen noth’in yet…We roll to Death Valley junction and the air strip. Its now so hot, Larry has now stripped off his clothes and has his shirt over his head like mine, dipped in my ice chest without even asking me. I smirk to myself in my rear view mirror…I take Larry into the one woman ballet at the Junction. Since we’re the only ones in the small wooden structure, she does her dance right by us. A psycho, sure, but my family is circus, so, I tend to drift towards these sorts. Larry hides in the bathroom. Her fifty years of unchanged makeup is freaking him out…Its now about 250 degrees in the truck. We head towards Furnace Creek. It’s not even two pm…Once at Furnace Creek Inn, blessed relief from the blasting heat. They have air conditioning! They also have regular pay phones. Not like the hand crank, generating a ring to an operator phone like the armored emergency phones on the side roads and bus stops across Death Valley. I show Larry the usual tourist stuff, the pool that has one end that dumps down to water the date trees that Furnace Creek had made famous in their date nut bread, baked on site. The giant thirty mule team wagons parked in front of the old Borax mine entrance. Took a ride out to Scottys castle, then called it a day. First up, take the small paper disc out of the little machine mounted under the dash that records all of your stops and speeds you attain. Since I kicked it every time I climbed into my seat, it was totally screwed, every day. Learned that trick my first day on the job from a crazed nut case named Alan Stovall…Now, I have to tell the Stovall story, so bare with me…Stovall was a big bear of a guy who had a band, a hot babe, and hated the phone company. He finally gets a recording contract. I knew this because I was getting reamed by another supervisor when he stumbled in drunk as a skunk at four p.m., then, shoved me out of the way as he leaned forward over Denny Cross’s desk, laughing like a maniac, while tearing up his route cards. He then spoke. “Hey, Cross, guess what? YOU AND THIS COMPANY CAN KISS MY ASS”! He then spins, pulls down his pants and starts spanking this giant white ass. He then pulled them up, tossed his I.D. and truck keys on Dennys desk and strolled out the door…Now that we we’re technically off the clock, Larry wondered what I usually did on my own time. Since we had sort of bonded, I decided to trust him. I have him buy us some brews, more ice, then take him through the locked gate I had a key for at the Ranger Residence area to head up into the mountains. We end up about an hour before sunset overlooking some wrecked cars down in a gully. They we’re towed there from the highway patrol after big wrecks. I pull out my .270 mag from a side bin of service body and start to load it. Larry starts to freak out. “WHAT THE FUCK, YOU CAN’T HAVE THAT IN A COMPANY VEHICLE!” I tell him to lighten up and have another beer and to stop being such a sissy. I then tell him, “Check out the rear light on that red Chevy!” I jack in a round and blow it the hell away. Larry’s hand is shaking as he lights a smoke. I ask him for a couple. I then take off the filters and stick them in my ears. An old trick from Led Zepplin concerts. I ask Larry if he would like to take some shots. Before he can answer, some Ranger trucks come around the bend in the road, all their light bars lit. Larry looks like he’s going to have a heart attack. As his eyes are looking at me like I just destroyed his life, one of the five Rangers hops out and says, “Well, did it come through?” I nod, go to another bin, take out the two pounds of weed I’d promised them from my last trip…And so began Larry’s internship to the real Death Valley.