August 17, 2010

  • It Was the Summer of '85 - Xangalebrity Edition

    June, 1985 was a big month for me.  I moved out of the dorms in college and into my first real home with 3 friends.  I got my dog, Oreo, who was my constant companion for the next 12 years.  I lost my virginity (to a girl), made lifelong friends that I still have today and developed my identity.  I was 19 years old, about to turn 20.  I had yet to travel the world, but I was beginning to gain my wanderlust.  The next five years would turn out to be the most pivotal of my life.  They were years I look back on fondly.  It was a time of big hair, skinny ties, great music and carefree times.  To get through college I babysat for about 50 kids, and worked at 2 homes for the developmentally disabled.  Last week, one of those "kids" found me on Facebook and sent the following messages:

    Just like now, I took lots of pictures of kids and my dog.  Jocelyn's message inspired me to scan a few of them. Try not to laugh too hard!  (Time to go on another diet!)


    TJ, Stormy, me, Robert, their cousin & Oreo in our house in Charleston, IL 1986


    No, I wasn't a Republican and I wasn't channeling Alex P. Keaton! This was during the Statue of Liberty Centennial in New York City July 3, 1986. Nice Trump hair, LOL!  I still can't believe I posed with that asshole Reagan, who was singlehandedly responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of AIDS victims.  Guess I wasn't too political back then.

     


    The summer of '85 in Aspen, CO.  I can still use those jeans as a bracelet!


    Mason, Matt & Oreo, 1986


    May 18, 1987. Oreo ran up on stage when he saw me get my diploma!


    The above referenced, Jocelyn


    Oreo & Mason - Chicago, IL  Easter 1988


    My best friend Daniel, in our kitchen in Arlington Heights, IL - Christmas 1989


    Daniel Jr. & Scotty - The mullet years


    Brendan & Jocelyn at the Field Museum in Chicago


    LOL...the B&B Daniel & I stayed in before the REM concert in 1989.  We were SO alternative!  :)

     
    Bob Sheu & Oreo in St. Joseph MI at Billy's cottage & Daniel in the backyard posing


    If you still want to see more, here they are!


    25 summers later and I'm running a world class luxury boutique hotel!  Just kidding of course, though sometimes it feels like a real hotel.  A couple of famous Xangalebrities came by for lunch today.  Alex, also known as RoadLessTaken and Sam, (NotYourSon) formerly known as WhereTheFishLives.  They both had "holding the Hotel Careyfornia" sign on their Bucket Lists, so I was happy to oblige:

     
    To see the full size photos, click here.

August 9, 2010

  • Viva La Vie Boheme!

    What a week!  After arriving from Africa, Darlene & Jay left California on Monday and Rob arrived on Tuesday.  It was a whirlwind week, and he made me realize I'm not as young as I used to be.  I think I slept a total of  six hours all week!  We had a great time though, as these photos will attest.  It was exciting to have him here on Wednesday when the California Supreme Court finally ruled that Proposition 8, the ban on gay marriage, was unconstitutional.  My feelings on this are well documented.  It was nice to be able to attend the rally in West Hollywood with Rob and celebrate this small victory on the road to equality.  For those of you who don't agree, please watch this:  :) 


    The Colbert Report Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    How to Ruin Same-Sex Marriages
    www.colbertnation.com


    For more of my photos from Wednesday's Prop 8 Rally in West Hollywood, click here.  For last year's star studded rally (where Chazz met President Obama), click here.


    The fabled sign will never be the same!


    Psychedelic Rob!


    Hooray for Hollywood!


    At the historic rally, listening to Ted Olson, David Boies and Chazz's buddy, Dustin Lance Black


    We even managed to meet Thai Elvis at The Palms!


    Our friend August's back yard in Perris, CA was stunning!


    Apparently guns are allowed in Perris! :)


    August making a ninja catch!


    Trying not to laugh or move!


    At The Abbey with Ryan & Claudio


    It's late!


    Snuggle buddies!


    Here's to good times at The Hotel Careyfornia!


    Click here for the best of the rest...

    The week was topped off last night with a performance of "Rent" at the famed Hollywood Bowl.  Directed by Neil Patrick Harris, who originated the role of Mark in L.A. in 1997, and starring Vanessa Hudgens, Nicole Scherzinger, Wayne Brady, Tracie Thoms, Gwen Stewart and other Rent veterans, the show was a dazzling, sumptuous feast, set amongst the tranquil Hollywood Hills. Even though this was my 16th viewing (in 7 countries and 5 languages), it never gets old. "There's only now, there's only here. Give in to love, or live in fear. No other path, no other way. No day but today."

    rent

    The underlying themes in Rent" have resonated with me for nearly 15 years.  When I first saw the play in 1996 in New York City it spoke to me like nothing I had ever seen.  The story is an old one, 159 years old to be exact.  1851 was the year that Henri Murger published the book Scènes de la Vie de Bohème a story about his friends; so called "Bohemians" or "starving artists" living in the Latin Quarter of Paris in the mid 1800's.  His friends had the same names as the central characters in "Rent" (with American updates; Rodolpho became Roger, Marcel became Mark, etc.).  50 years after the book was published, Puccini turned it into the famous opera La Boheme, which in turn, 100 years later became the musical "Rent".  The central themes of all three were the same, though the times, plagues and vices were different.  Wikipedia presents this chart:

    Character in La bohème Character in Rent
    Mimi, a seamstress with TB Mimi Marquez, an S&M dancer with AIDS
    Rodolfo, a poet with TB Roger Davis, a musician with AIDS
    Marcello, a painter Mark Cohen, a filmmaker
    Musetta, a singer Maureen Johnson, a bisexual performance artist
    Schaunard, a musician with TB Angel Dumott Schunard, a gay cross-dressing drummer with AIDS
    Colline, a philosopher with TB Tom Collins, a gay computer whiz and Anarchist philosopher with AIDS
    Alcindoro, a state councillor Joanne Jefferson, a lesbian lawyer
    Benoit, a landlord Benjamin 'Benny' Coffin III, also a landlord

    No matter how hard the characters try to fight it, they all come to the realization that love is the strongest force we know.  Stronger than heroin, AIDS or even death.  Be it the "starving artists" in the Latin Quarter of 19th Century Paris, the American Bohemians like Jack Kerouac in the 50's or the drug addled, AIDS victims in Jonathan Larson's masterpiece "Rent"; they all knew this "fact", and they lived their lives accordingly.  Even in this age of social networking and a truly wired global technosphere; it's good to be reminded that we are all connected by the powerful force of love, and that a broken heart universally hurts.  "We don't own emotion, we rent."  How ironic, that Jonathan Larson, the composer and playwright of "Rent", dropped dead of an aortic aneurysm the night before the show opened on Broadway in 1996.  After all, "Rent" is about living for today, because you never know what tomorrow might bring.

    Last year I had a conversation with an acquaintance I first wrote about in this post, entitled "Perceptions" three years ago (she's also an evangelical Christian).  She told me that I would be proud of her, because she finally watched the movie, based on the musical "Rent".  I asked her how she liked it, and she basically thought it was "disgusting".  At first I was taken aback by her response.  I know the movie wasn't nearly as good as the play, but it was unfathomable to me how anyone could find these ageless, central themes anything but life affirming and beautiful.  She admittedly shed tears at the sad parts, but implied that all of the tragedy and sadness of the movie was a result of the characters ("Lesbos" was one of the words she used), not seeking the "love of God".  They were seeking love in the wrong place.  Their addictions, (heroin) and diseases, (AIDS) were their own doing.  I fail to see the Christ-like thinking in this sentiment and told her so.  Coincidentally, the initial person I referenced in the "Perceptions" post in 2007, whose family fled from tyranny, starred in the ensemble of "Rent" this past weekend at the Hollywood Bowl.  A full circle moment.

    "To sodomy
    It's between God and me.
    To faggots, lezzies, dykes, cross dressers too.
    To me....To you....
    To people living with....not dying from disease.
    Let he among us without sin,
    Be the first to condemn.
    La Vie Boheme.
    Anyone out of the mainstream.
    Is anyone in the mainstream?
    Anyone alive with a sex drive.
    Tear down the wall.
    Aren't we all?
    The opposite of war isn't peace.
    It's creation.
    La Vie Boheme.
    Viva La Vie Boheme."

    Here are some photos and a video from last night:


    Sorry for the shoddy video...I was trying to be discreet...but you get the idea!

August 3, 2010

  • It's Their Elephant Cloud

     
    August is shaping up to be another busy month at The Hotel Careyfornia.  Tomorrow, Rob is visiting for the week before heading to the Philippines.  This past weekend, my friends Darlene & Jay arrived after spending the past year trekking throughout Africa.  I've been following their adventures on their award winning blog:  http://elephantcloud.net all year, but it was so great to have them here in person relaying their remarkable stories. (You can read why their blog is called The Elephant Cloud, here.) 

    Anyone who has ever visited Africa knows the hold it takes on your heart.  I have written about my own journey there, but what Jay & Darlene have done this past year, surpasses all of my humble exploits; and they have surely left Africa a better place.  Darlene, a physician's assistant by trade, and Jay a software developer; brought their unique blend of talents and compassion to the farthest reaches of the continent, to the people who needed it most.  The most recent example, before they left, involved Darlene treating patients for a newly rediscovered and debilitating foot disease at the Adventist Hospital in Gimbie, Ethiopia, while Jay followed the progress of the Podoconiosis treatments which the hospital was sponsoring.  Through publicizing this on their blog, they were able to get over 900 pairs of shoes donated to the cause.  See for yourself:

    Their adventures are truly inspiring.  Whether it's helping Tanzania's forgotten children, being mobbed by Egyptian paparazzi  or communing with lions and giraffes in the Serengeti, they are living life full force.  How many of us have secretly desired to sell our homes and all of our worldly belongings, leave our jobs and travel the world to make it a better place?  As someone who explored the world for many years without a home, I can somewhat relate; but Darlene and Jay's journey is the definition of epic.  I'm honored that they stopped here to share their wonderful essence and remind me what matters most in this life.  Here are some photos from our weekend together:


    They flew from Africa to New York and then made their way west with all of their belongings.  I wasn't sure what to expect when they arrived, but I was picturing the opening of the Beverly Hillbillies.  Sure enough they drove right through Beverly Hills and made it to the world famous Hotel Careyfornia!


    A LONG way from Africa!


    In good company!


    The bouganvillea in bloom against a stunning foredrop!


    They hadn't had sushi in a year, so to say we "feasted" would be a huge understatement....I'm still full 3 days later!  It was great though!  Thanks guys!

     
    This was our second star sighting of the weekend...it's Busy Philipps from "Cougartown" and E.R.  Our first sighting happened the night before as we walked home past the House of Blues and someone asked us, "Hey, do you want to get high with a celebrity?"  We turned around to see Andy Dick in a dark corner...getting high.  LOL.   Needless to say, we passed.


    Chazz waiting for leftovers from Claudio's Brazilian barbecue


    Making s'mores!

     
    Ryan and I enjoying the s'mores and the company


    Guess who's up to his old tricks again??  He made his placemat an oxymoron!


    Click here, for the best of the rest...

July 20, 2010

  • Refudiated Hiatus

    I've been away from Xanga for over a month.  Apologies to my loyal readers...but I needed the time away to work on some other pressing matters.  I did manage to keep Facebook and my micro-blog at Tumblr up to date with photos, but that's about it.  Thanks to those of you who wrote inquiring as to my whereabouts.  I'm still super busy with work, but something happened yesterday that was too good not to blog about.  The stupidest woman in America is at it again, as evidenced by a tweet she sent out yesterday:

    Maybe she's still reeling from the news that her daughter is engaged to my friend Levi Johnston, noted Playgirl model who she calls "Ricky Hollywood", but "refudiate" is NOT A WORD even in Palinese!!  She also used it in an interview with Fox News:

    She tried to smooth over her idiocy with another tweet invoking a Bushism and a hardly noteworthy lexical creation by President Obama, but the damage was done:

    Some enterprising folks even bought the URL www.refudiate.com and are now selling T-shirts:

    And now there's a debate over whether to add the word to the dictionary!!??  Tell you what...you can add it, as long as you "refudiate" Sarah Palin!  As reported by Jacob Heilbrunn, author of "They Knew They Were Right:  The Rise of the Neocons",

    All the hubbub overlooked the possibility that perhaps Palin isn't simply trying to bring down big government, but the English language as well.

    It would be foolish to underestimate her ability to succeed, at least in the latter area. She's already displayed great skill at mangling every word and phrase within talking distance. Imagine what she could do with the bully pulpit.

    Indeed, if Palin becomes president, she might well enjoy the opportunity to rewrite not only history, but English itself. Here's what a high school grammar test might look like under the Palin regime, requiring students to turn any word starting with "re" to substitute "v"s with a "p." Correct spelling would be the following:

    It's become increasingly clear that President Palin is refolted by the idea that liberals continue to control the news media. She seeks to refair this problem. Refresenting the will of the people is the job of President Palin, who finds it totally refrehensible and refulsive that the media continues to refroach her for pursuing innovative ideas. Liberals, refent, the end is nigh!

    Palin is reportedly (sorry, I meant refortedly) thinking of calling it a new campaign to mind your "p"s and "f"s.

    Enough of the Wasilla Wombat.  Here are some photos from the past few weeks that you may have missed if you don't follow me on Facebook or Tumblr:


    With the kids at the 4th of July Parade...click for more


    Looking forward to Cats & Dogs in 3D!


    With Brent & Riye in Koreatown


    A rainbow in Dove Canyon last week...click for more


    Tressa and the rainbow!


    Dinner with Ryan & Chazz


    Hot Dogs


    Poolside at The Hotel Careyfornia


    The LaBrea Tar Pits with the kids...click for more


    Welcome to the Hotel Careyfornia!


    Hollywood with the kids yesterday...click for more

June 13, 2010

June 4, 2010

  • The Gandhi of Dogs


    Today would have been my dog Oreo's 25th birthday, so I'm reposting this.  His biography rivals that of some people, but I think it's a fitting tribute to a faithful companion. 

    Oreo was born on June 4, 1985 (the same day the Oreo cookie was invented in 1912) on a farm in Mattoon, Illinois.  He was an adorable puppy, mischievous, and ornery from the beginning, with a true mind of his own (just like his master!).

    I originally agreed to "watch" Oreo for a boy in my neighborhood who picked him up from a farmer during a summer job.  The boy's grandmother said he could not keep the puppy, so I said he could stay at our house in Charleston, IL, (where I went to college, Eastern Illinois University) until a suitable home was found.  Needless to say, from that day forward, July 13, 1985, Oreo belonged to me.

    My friend Meg Slattery actually named Oreo.  When he was a puppy, he was all black, with white in the middle.  When she suggested Oreo, I knew it was the perfect name.  (Other names on the "short" list were: Thor, Bosco, and Ranger.)  The vet suspected Oreo was a mix of German Shepherd, Sheepdog, Wolfhound, and Wire Terrier.  A pure mutt!

    From the beginning, Oreo was a unique dog.  That first summer, I would ride my bike to campus, and he would  stick his little head out of my backpack the whole time.  I was only taking one class that summer, so I used to spend hours on campus, training him to wait for me whenever I went inside a building.  It took a whole summer, but he eventually learned how to wait for me for over an hour.  Of course, in the beginning, the slightest thing would distract him, and he would be gone.  He loved squirrels, children, even bugs.  Anything could get his attention.

    I remember that he always walked slightly diagonally.  He could never walk a perfect straight line.  The summer of '85 was unusually hot in Illinois.  Oreo loved to go to the lake, and jump in the water any chance he got.  I have such fond memories of that year.  When Oreo was about 7 months old, he started wandering the neighborhood on his own.  It was a small  town, and most everyone knew him already.  He was quickly becoming a mascot on campus, and he eventually learned where every grade school in town was located.  He used to know when recess was at each school, and show up to play with the kids.

    The kids of course loved it.  Oreo would go down the slide with them, and use his front paws to push them on the merry go round.  Since I baby-sat for over 50 kids in town, nearly everyone knew him already.  The principals however, weren't as pleased.  I used to get phone calls all the time, telling me that my dog was at recess again.  This practice continued for many years, even after I graduated and moved to Chicago. When I lived in the suburbs of Chicago, Oreo used to go to three schools within a five mile radius of our house!  He crossed some major roads to get there, but he always looked both ways before he crossed. I worked about 40 miles away at the time.  When the principals of the schools would call me at work (I had my work # on his tags), I would tell them to just wait until recess was over, and he would leave.  Sure enough he did.

    I actually spied on him one day to discover where he went on his travels.  I always put him in our fenced in back yard before leaving for my job at the bank each morning.  One morning I actually drove away, but parked around the corner, and waited to see what Oreo would do.  Sure enough, at about 9:00, he jumped the fence (a little reminiscent of this cute beagle) and started making his rounds.  He went to several schools, and stopped off at several different spots where he was assured to find an open can of cat food, or some tasty garbage to indulge in!

    He also used to play games with the dog-catcher.  He was on their "10 Most Wanted" List for several years, but  he always managed to foil them, and hide, or run back to the house and scratch the door to come inside, just in the nick of time!  He always learned quickly what the dog-catcher's van looked like, in every city we lived in.

    Oreo is the only dog I know who graduated from college.  During my outdoor graduation ceremony in 1987, Oreo actually saw me cross the stage to receive my diploma.  As he had attended most of my classes with me, he naturally felt he deserved a diploma as well.  He would usually wait outside, but occasionally he would sucker a kind soul to let him in the door (puppy dog eyes), where he would proceed to sniff me out in whatever classroom I was in.  I still sometimes hear the jingle jangle his collar used to make, and remember the sinking feeling of my dog interrupting an important exam, or a complicated business law lecture.  More than a few times, he came "bounding" into a crowded lecture hall, and ran right to me!

    Oreo had such an interesting life.  He went all over the United States with me.  In my last job where I traveled for 13 years, certain customers of mine would ask for him by name.  Hotels that would not usually allow dogs, allowed Oreo.  He used to love the VIP (Very Important Pet) program at the Omni in downtown Chicago.  They would turn down his bed sheets at night, and leave him a minty dog biscuit!

    Perhaps the most famous Oreo adventure occurred in August of 1987.  I had just graduated from college, found a job and finally found a house to rent in the Chicago suburbs that allowed an 85 pound dog, and had fenced-in (all be it "jumpable") back yard.  Our first night in the house, Oreo pawed the door open at about 4 AM, because there was another dog in the yard.  I heard him trying to get out, but was too sleepy to care.  In the morning, Oreo was gone.  It was a hot Saturday morning, I had not even lived there 24 hours, and my dog was gone!  I was frantic, and drove around the city looking for him. 

    I enlisted kids on the block to ride their bikes up and down all of the streets calling Oreo's name, but it was no  use, he was gone.  By nightfall, I had a feeling I knew where Oreo was headed.  Home.  Charleston, IL, where I went to college, was 200 miles due south.  Oreo had grown up there.  He went to every class with me and waited outside every building.  It was all he ever knew.

    I went to bed that night with a heavy heart.  The next morning as I sat teary eyed at my mother's kitchen table reading the paper, I saw it.  There, on the front page of the sports section of the Chicago Tribune, was a picture of Oreo, being shooed off the golf course at the Western Open!  I couldn't believe my eyes.  The Western Open was being held in Oakbrook, some 45 miles south of our new house.  Oreo was definitely on his way back to Charleston. 

    In the picture, he looked scared and dirty.  My heart went out to him.  Luckily all of his tags still referred to our old address in Charleston.  That morning, I called Animal Control in Charleston, and told them to be expecting Oreo, and gave them all of my vital information.

    What I didn't know, was shortly after the newspaper picture was taken, a kind hearted woman named Lola Proulx, had bought Oreo 8 hot dogs, and gotten a rope around his neck.  Lola, a true dog lover, with over 9 of her own, took Oreo to the Hinsdale Humane Society, and waited until Monday morning to call down to Charleston and trace his tags.  The Animal Control people in Charleston, gave her my work number, and that Monday morning I received the most triumphant phone call of my life.  "I found your dog", Lola screamed.  I yelled out in the lobby of the bank "They found my dog", and the whole office cheered!

    I got Oreo back that afternoon, leaving work early to drive down to retrieve him.  I never saw him happier to see me!  After that, he never strayed far again, though his adventures were never curtailed!  (Ever since that day, he was scared to death of trains and train tracks.  I suspect he nearly got hit by a train on his long journey, and until the day he died, I always went out of my way in the car, to avoid railroad crossings whenever Oreo was with me.)  After making a donation to the Humane Society that day, Oreo and I went home!

    Oreo adapted well to city living.  Everyone loved him.  He became friends with homeless people in downtown Chicago.  He continued playing with children everywhere.  He once had a close call with a herd of huge elk, whose fence he somehow penetrated.  It was a cold winter day, and I wasn't paying attention to where Oreo was running.  When the herd began to charge him, a crowd of people started screaming.  When it looked as if the end was near (as the leader of the pack with a horn span twice the length of Oreo bowed to jab him with his horns), Oreo found the hole in the fence which he had entered through, and ran to my waiting arms as the crowd cheered!

    When I started a new job in 1990, I moved back down to Charleston to take care of some children who needed my help; Oreo was back in his element.  He loved college life.  Fraternity parties, beer blasts, and of course graduation ceremonies.  Homecoming was always a special time for him, as he renewed old acquaintances, and made new friends.  I can't tell you how many times I heard strangers on campus say, "Oh that's Oreo, he's a campus dog, he doesn't have an owner.", or "That's Oreo, he was at the Sigma Chi party the other night!".

    He was such a kind dog.  He learned tolerance early on, when I worked at three homes for developmentally disabled adults while I was in college.  He suffered much abuse as a puppy, at the hands of these "big kids" who really didn't know their own strength.  Oreo never bit anyone, though after a mailman threw a rock at him when he was a year old, he had a lifelong vengeance for the US Postal Service.  (He loved the UPS and FedEx drivers though!)

    In the summer of 1993, Oreo was shot with a 38 caliber revolver, by a disgruntled, miserable campus security officer, with nothing better to do.  It was late at night.  I was visiting a friend on campus, after all the summer classes had left and the school was deserted.  My friend was the only one left in her building, and Oreo was waiting patiently outside for me, with a bowl of water next to him.

    We had had run-ins with "Officer" Hall before.  He never liked Oreo, and always told me to put him on a leash.  I'm proud to say that I never once put Oreo on a leash.  There was no leash law on campus anyway, dogs were allowed to be under voice command.  This particular "officer" once made a fool of himself in front of many people, by trying to "arrest" me for not having Oreo on a leash.  Oreo got the last laugh though, when he ran away as the "rent-a-cop" was trying to catch him.

    That evening, with no one around, "Officer" Hall shot Oreo at point blank range in the chest.  When I came downstairs to check on Oreo, he was gone.  Oreo was NEVER not waiting for me when I came back from someplace, and when I saw the pool of blood on the pavement, my heart sank.  

    My best friend Dan and I, searched for Oreo for hours.  We finally found him, at home, a mile and a half from where he had been shot.  He had CRAWLED all that way, and lost over half his blood.

    Dan and I were in shock.  As Dan drove us to the vet, I cradled Oreo, now almost comatose, in my arms in the back seat.  The vet immediately started an I.V. and performed a blood transfusion.  Miraculously, Oreo lived.  The bullet missed his heart by an inch, and left an exit wound the size of a quarter.  From that day on, Oreo was scared to death of police officers, guns, and fireworks.  The 4th of July was always a horrible time for him, and to this day I think of him, and say in my head, "It's OK Or..".

    The response to the "attempted assassination" of Oreo was overwhelming.  Conspiracy theories abounded.  Was the gunman on the grassy knoll?  Was the mob involved? Perhaps a secret Post Office consortium?  A triangular shot pattern?  We may never know.  Dan even wrote a rather dark poem about it:

    Some bastard shot dog Oreo,
    And shot him in the chest.
    Some canine killer put a bullet through old boy,
    Trying to kill one of the best.

    If I should ever find,
    That man, that gun, that beast.
    I'll chop his bloody head right off,
    And let Oreo have a feast.

    I'll take an axe to the monster,
    Who tried to murder such a sweet friend.
    And wonder if that keen mutt realized,
    Revenge was taken in the end.

    I do know that I received cards and letters from all over the world!  I (actually Oreo) received my first telegram (from Brazil!), and kids in the neighborhood brought toys and treats at all hours.  The house looked like a hospital room after someone undergoes major surgery!  So many flowers.

    The bank I used to work at sent out a group fax to all 25 branches.  The Internet was not as widely used back then, but postings on a newsgroup alerted people all over the world of Oreo's hour by hour recovery.

    At a Midwestern Banker's Conference, Bob, the president of my company was giving a speech about a recent retreat he had been to, where Bill Clinton spoke about banking reform.  Later, in the receiving line several people wanted to know about Oreo's condition.  "How's Oreo?  We heard he was shot!" they said.  Our company president who was new, and not familiar with Oreo's legacy at that time, could only think to himself, "I just met with the President of the United States, and they want to know about OREO??"  We laugh about it to this day, and it's rumored that Bob's dog Cody looked up to Oreo!

    I once gave Oreo a "dog IQ" test.  He scored as a genius!  I know a lot of people think their dogs are smart.  But Oreo was so intuitively humanlike it was scary.  When other people were in the room with him, alone, they would talk to him!  It wasn't just me.  My friend Claudio used to teach Oreo commands in Portuguese, and he learned them!  In the later years when he lived with Dan and Angela when I traveled, he learned to care for the babies.  He knew Angela was going to give birth the night before Mia was born.  He slept by Angela's side, and he took care of her.  Oreo had many nicknames, Dan used to call him "Bubba" or "Bubba Chops". I often simply called him "Or".

    I took him everywhere!  The President of one of the banks I used to work at, loved dogs.  I would take Oreo to work with me every morning, and he would lay outside the bank until the lobby closed.  At 3:00 he would come in and lay under my desk, or wander around to see if he could help in any way.  The tellers actually used to take him in the cash vault with them for "dual control"!  He was the hit of all the picnics and parties, and continued to visit schools at recess until he died.

    When a friend of mine in Los Angeles landed the 2nd Assistant Director job on the television show "Friends", I was lucky enough to attend a taping in 1994, and meet the cast.  As I carried pictures of Oreo with me wherever I went, one of the crew put a picture of Oreo on the refrigerator on the set, where it remained for the remainder of the second season.  If you paused your VCR at just the right spot, you could make out Oreo's handsome mug in several scenes!  Of course, after that Oreo wanted an agent, and the whole Hollywood thing started to go to his already swelled head!  Once I flew to from New York to L.A. and sat next to Meg Ryan.  We talked a little, and I showed her pictures of Oreo.  She thought he was a "beautiful dog".  That too, went to his head! 

      

    His mannerisms were truly unique.  He would cock his head, on cue, with certain words:  "Treat", "Ride", "Walk" and his all time favorite "Rusty".  Rusty was Oreo's best friend when we were in college.  He belonged to my Finance professor Carol.  I used to baby-sit her kids.  They lived out in the country, and Oreo and Rusty would run through the countryside, and play for hours on end.  Rusty was tragically poisoned after I graduated, but the name "Rusty" always invoked a near 90° tilt of Oreo's head for the rest of his life.  Other close dog friends that Oreo remembered all his life were Ginger, Cage and Pork Chop.  When you said those names, you could practically see Oreo's memory at work.  Oreo used to do a trick when he was younger called "Fire", in which he would literally drag himself across the ground like he was crawling out of a house in a fire.  He would perform this trick on cue, which often invoked quite a laugh when campus preachers were engaged in fire and brimstone speeches on the Quad!  Oreo would also howl hilariously.  Whenever we would howl, he would mimic us exactly.  Thinking of that, still makes me laugh to this day.

    Dan used to invoke a mischievous Pavlovian response from Oreo with the word "Buku".  He somehow taught Oreo to "hump" whenever he said that word.  Though I did not approve, the simple mention of that word caused endless laughter at many college parties over the years.  Oreo was a master of physical canine comedy!

    Dan also used to do a drawing of Oreo every year for my Christmas cards.  It became an annual tradition that so many people looked forward to during the holidays.  My favorite drawing was the one Dan did the year Oreo was shot.  It shows Santa, going up the chimney, and Oreo sitting by the fireplace, after Santa had just left him a new ACME Bulletproof Vest!

     

    Everyone had unique stories about Oreo.  Some I never knew.  After he died at the ripe old age of 12, Michelle, a  little girl I used to babysit, created a memorial website called Oreonline, while the Internet was still in its infancy.  She did it out of loyalty to a friend she had known since she was two years old.  I received so many hundreds of emails, cards, and letters after Oreo died., and all of them were posted on that first website.

    A strange event occurred exactly a week after Oreo passed away.  After a business trip to Tokyo, I flew to Guam for some quiet reflection.  That day I was on a remote mountain top (more of a hill, really) on the island of Guam, waiting for the sun to set, and taking pictures.  As I climbed the small mountain, I was struck by the calm and serenity of the surrounding countryside.  At the top of the peak was a tree.  As I approached the tree, I saw rainbow colored ribbons adorning the branches, and dried, dead fish attached to the ribbon!?  When I reached the base of the tree, there was a dead fish, with ribbon, and six perfectly placed OREO cookies on the ground!?  These were not imitation cookies, they were Oreos.  What this meant, or means, I to this day have no earthly idea.  I asked local people if they knew of some strange custom.  They had no explanation.

    Suffice it to say, I will never know why I saw those cookies atop that mountain, but it did remind me of a true friend, who was there for me whenever I needed him most.  A friend who taught me love and compassion, discipline and how to care for a living thing, forgiveness and trust.  This was Oreo's legacy.  He was the Gandhi of dogs.  His inner peace affected all who touched him, and all those he touched.  I have yet to get another dog, though any reader of this blog knows that I have many wonderful dogs in my life.  He can never be replaced, but his memory will live forever.

June 2, 2010

  • A Crude Comparison


    Really Sarah???

    Exactly 20 years ago, one of my favorite bands Midnight Oil; played a half hour concert in front of the Exxon building in New York City:

    "Performing on a flatbed truck beneath a banner declaring “Midnight Oil makes you dance, Exxon oil makes us sick,” the ever-politicized Australian band delivered an inspired set protesting the Exxon Valdez oil spill.  You can watch the entire 30-minute performance, along with interview footage, here."  For those who may not remember, the Exxon Valdez dumped some 11 million gallons of oil in six hours, just a few miles from the Alaskan shore. (Had Sarah Palin been there, she would no doubt have seen Russia reflected off its shiny black surface.)  While other causes were initially blamed, the Valdez disaster was primarily caused by Exxon's cost-cutting negligence in regard to the ship's radar. Already downgraded in the '80s, it had eventually broken down entirely, and the company decided to save money by not fixing it.  Fast-forward two decades to the current Gulf oil spill, which had executives from BP, Transocean and Halliburton shifting the blame back and forth during this month’s Senate hearings.  Ironically, Dick Cheney’s Halliburton is intimately involved in both the current spill and our two current wars. Something worth remembering this Memorial Day.  "We're a small screaming voice," says Midnight Oil frontman Peter Garrett toward the documentary's end. "But we'll keep speaking. If they don't listen now, someone will be listening tomorrow."  We can only hope."  Source: CS Independent.

    Who's going to save us?

    And 40 years ago, the oil spill that spawned the modern environment movement, happened right here on the coast of Santa Barbara, where we visited this weekend.  As reported by the Sydney Morning Herald:

    For it was another undersea oil well that 40 years ago spawned the modern day, highly effective environmental movement on the US West Coast and the core of US government environment protection policy.  Compared with the volume of oil spewing into the Gulf every day, what happened five miles off the coast of Santa Barbara, California, in January 1969, was minuscule. But its aftermath was vast.  An explosion of natural gas at Platform Alpha, operated by the Union Oil company, caused a blowout - releasing an undersea oil gusher. It would be 11 days before the blowout was brought under control. About 3 million gallons of oil escaped, much of into the pristine and ecologically diverse Santa Barbara channel waters, coating the nearby shoreline.

    The damage was enormous. About 4000 dead sea birds and large numbers of seals and dolphins fatally poisoned. The oil also killed innumerable fish and ruined kelp beds.  But then something unexpected happened; tens of thousands of people arrived to help with the clean-up. They laid out mountains of straw to soak up the oil, carted away tonnes of contaminated sand and gathered up the dead and injured wildlife. They were of all ages and affiliations, causing then president Richard Nixon to remark: "The Santa Barbara incident has frankly touched the conscience of the American people."  The Santa Barbara spill fully awakened the West Coast environmental movement and led directly to the declaration of the first Earth Day in November, 1969, the founding of the US Environmental Defence Centre and the first university Environmental Studies Program. Offshore drilling was banned for the next 16 years - until the Reagan administration came to office.  Read more...

    It took Santa Barbara decades to recover.  We may not be so lucky this time...and poor BP, just wants their old life back!  Suffice it to say if Sarah Palin ever becomes president, the number of disasters like this would increase ten fold.  Speaking of Santa Barbara, here are my photos from this weekend.

     


    Best of the rest...

    I also almost bought an iPad this weekend, but I decided to wait until they could do this:

    I also took Chazz on a photoshoot recently, to showcase the beautiful flowers California constantly has blooming.  Enjoy the show: 

May 27, 2010

May 24, 2010

May 17, 2010

  • Out of the Closet

     
    In preparation for the next wave of guests at The Hotel Careyfornia, I spent the whole afternoon today, cleaning out the closets in my bedroom.  It has been well documented what a packrat I am; and my closets were bulging at the seams.  I've lived in California for 8 years now.  I guess I can part with of most of my turtlenecks and sweaters from when I lived in Chicago, LOL.  I even got rid of a bunch of hoodies! I'm sure that will surprise my friends...as I had close to 100.  This is the pile of clothes that's going to Goodwill:


    That's a pile of 130 shirts, 40 sweatshirts and about 35 pairs of pants...it freed up a lot of hangers!

    Ryan's mother was in town this week from Missouri.  I had never met her before and we had a really nice time.  I took Chazz to the Lake Hollywood dog park and he had a blast: 


    Sniffing the Hollywood sign


    More photos here...

     


    Sleeping beauties


    Dinner with Lora last night

    And finally, **BREAKING NEWS** The Rapture is here! Forget everything I said about Jesus in my last post.  Jesus is alive and well and walking the streets of West Hollywood! Chazz and I snapped this photo the other morning. Jesus was walking down Fountain Ave, no doubt heading to Starbucks? Praise the Lord! But that means Chazz (the proverbial pooch) is screwed! Now I need to find a real atheist!


    Chazz checking out Jesus Christ...Only in Hollywood!

    This is a real call to a televangelist who sells red vegetable oil and claims it is really the blood of Jesus. 
    You can't believe it until you hear it!

    “It is the final proof of God’s omnipotence that he need not exist in order to save us.”  Andrew Mackerel, the hero of Peter De Vries’s 1958 comic novel “The Mackerel Plaza”

    Can science answer life's most important questions??  Morals are based on conscience experience.