Wednesday, December 31, 2014

A New Year (An open letter to my readers)


Dear Readers,

When I launched jonpenfold.com in early March of 2014, I never imagined it would become such a huge cultural sensation in such a small amount of time. With over 10 million hits a day, translated into 37 different languages, and a major motion picture currently in pre-production, my weekly blog has surpassed all of my expectations. In November, when Facebook offered to buy me out for 60 million dollars, I told Zuckerberg to go screw himself—“I’m not for sale!” After all, he never replied to my letter last May (See: An Open Letter to Mark Zuckerberg, 5/6/14). “I know you read it, you son-of-a-bitch! I know you read everything I write! I know that you are secretly my biggest fan!” (Note to Zuckerberg: contrary to what I just wrote, I am indeed for sale. Seriously, just call me and we can discuss it. You have my number. You have everybody’s number. You know everything about us.)

Here at jonpenfold.com, 2014 was one hell of a year. Over the course of the last twelve months, we saw ourselves floating in isolation tanks (See: And We’ll All Float on OK, 3/25/14) and drinking whiskey (See: Drinking Whiskey with Lewis and Clark, 3/31/14), but not at the same time. We found ourselves snowboarding down an active volcano (See: From Hood to St. Helens, 5/20/14) and drinking beer (See: A White American Male on India Pale Ale, 8/12/14), but not at the same time. And we saw ourselves running a half marathon and eating lots of donuts, both at the same time (See: A Baker’s Dozen, 5/27/14). We also gambled on horses, went for hikes, dumped ice on our heads, tried to watch soccer, got healthy, got unhealthy, ate out of the garbage, visited strip clubs, and rode bicycles, lots of bicycles, sometimes naked (See: jonpenfold.com).

But now it’s 2015—time for change. Starting next week, jonpenfold.com will have a new format. Instead of “Finding Adventure in Everyday Life,” we will be telling stories—all sorts of stories. True Stories. Made-up stories. Stupid stories. Funny Stories. Scary stories. Serious stories. Controversial stories. Stories that will make you laugh. Stories that will make you scream. Stories that will make you cry. (Ok, maybe not the last one). It will be a bit different than what we were doing in the past year, but I believe it will be for the better. If you like what you read, please share it with your friends. And, if you don’t like what you read, just don’t read it. Because, in the end, just as Ricky Nelson sang, “Ya can’t please everyone, so ya got to please yourself.”

Happy New Year and thanks for reading,

Jon Penfold

jonpenfold.com

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

My Short X-mas Story


            It was my sixteenth Christmas on Earth and I was old enough to understand that Santa wasn’t real, Jesus wasn’t the actually the Son of God, and my parents weren’t wealthy enough to be wasting their hard-earned money on stupid gifts that their children wouldn’t really appreciate. I unwrapped my presents and received exactly what I expected, exactly what I really needed: underwear, socks, and a membership to AAA. Once all of us kids were done opening all of our gifts from our parents, it was time for us to exchange the ones we got for each other. I can’t recall what my older brother got me, but I’ll never forget the present from my sister, or the one I gave to her. We were both in high school, at that age where practical jokes were much more priceless than anything you could purchase at a store. From my sister, I unwrapped an absolutely useless poster-sized collage, filled with photographs of LeAnn Rimes and Hanson, the band behind the megahit “Mmmmbop.” (At the time, I couldn’t stand Rimes, but to this day, I still don’t understand the pictures of Hanson, for I was, am, and always will be a fan of the blond-haired brothers and their upbeat, feel-good music.) From my parents, my sister had already received what she had been asking for all year—a CD player—so, I thought it would be funny to give her an empty CD case with a fake cover that said, “Haha, I bet you thought this was a CD!” It was hilarious.
My last gift of the day was from my little brother, who was only eleven years old at the time. Not expecting much from my youngest sibling, I was surprised to open a card filled with a half-dozen scratch-off lotto tickets. While my siblings played with their gifts and my parents cleaned up wrapping paper, I scratched off the tickets one by one. Loser. Loser. Loser. Holy shit! Sweet baby Jesus! Santa Clause is real! “I just won ten thousand mother-fucking dollars!
“Hey, watch your language young man!”
But I wasn’t fooling around. I had just won. And I won big!!! What would I buy? A new car? Probably not. A used car? Maybe. Every Beatles album ever produced? Most definitely. “I’m rich. I’m rich. I’m rich!!!!!!!!!”
            “It’s fake.”
            What?
            My little brother breaks out laughing. “It’s fake,” he says. “It’s a fake lotto ticket. I bought it at Spencer’s Gifts.”
            That year, my entire family had a good laugh at my expense, and because of it, it was a Christmas that I’ll never forget. Sometimes the best Christmas memories have nothing to do with spending money, sometimes they have to do with losing it. And Jeremy, by the way, I’m still going to get back at you someday, when you very least suspect it…


Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Twelve Films of Christmas

I don't like Christmas! There, I said it. The only thing I hate more than receiving presents is shopping for them. Ugly holiday sweaters are precisely what they claim to be. There's a reason why people don't drink eggnog year round. And don't even get me started on the "true" meaning of Christmas. But before you write me off as a total Scrooge, I'll be the first to admit that Darlene Love's rendition of "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)" is one of the greatest songs ever recorded, and that there are about a dozen great films that revolve around--or take place during--the holiday season. So, without further ado, here is the jonpenfold.com list of the twelve greatest Christmas movies of all time:

#12) Scrooged


I know, I know, we're all sick of "A Christmas Carol," 
no matter how differently it's being told, 
but this one has Bill Murray as Scrooge, and who could ever grow sick of Bill Murray?

#11) Bad Santa


What could possibly be better than Bill Murray as Scrooge? 
Billy Bob Thorton as a Bad Santa, that's what!

#10) Elf


Will Ferrell as an Elf? What more needs to be said? 
A few more bad career choices and I have a feeling that we'll be seeing an Elf 2...

#9) A Christmas Story


Take away the leg lamp, the frozen tongue, and the soapy mouth, and what's left is a story of a bullied adolescent who wants nothing more than a gun for Christmas. 
Wait, what the hell is this movie about again?

#8) The last 45 minutes of It's a Wonderful Life


Skip all that boring shit about George Bailey's life and jump ahead to the final act, 
where it clearly explains that if you commit suicide, you get to return to an
alternate reality where everyone in town gives you their money. 
Wait, what the hell is this movie about again?

#7) Ernest Saves Christmas


You're probably wondering how this found it's way on the list. Well, once you realize that it was intended to be watched under the influence of hallucinatory drugs, everything will suddenly become perfectly clear.

#6) Batman Returns


Maybe not the best Batman movie ever made, 
but it's the only one that takes place during Christmas.

#5) Rocky IV


Maybe not the best Rocky movie ever made, 
but it's the only one that takes place during Christmas.

#4) National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation


Who would have thought that the Griswold's greatest vacation would be the one 
where they didn't really go on vacation at all?

#3) Lethal Weapon


Now that we know what we do about Mel Gibson and his beliefs concerning Christianity,
 it allows us to look at this movie in a completely different way.

#2) Gremlins


A simple lesson for everyone: if your Christmas present comes with instructions, for the sake of your family and neighbors, please just follow them!

#1) Die Hard


As you watch this incredible motion picture, pretend that the character of John McClane is actually a young John McCain. You'll definitely regret voting for Obama back in 2008.




Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Dumpster Diving: A Detective’s Inquiry into Found Food




             On average, I get sick about twice a year: once in the spring as the seasons are changing, and once again in the fall, when the Grammy nominees are announced. So last week, as God-awful songs such as “Fancy,” and “All about that Bass,” we’re nominated for Record of the Year, I came down with a mild cold. Now, my problem with getting sick isn’t the illness itself—there tend to be treatments for most things these days—but rather my personal obsession with trying to figure out how I got sick in the first place. For some reason, my mind can’t simply accept that I “caught” a cold. I need to know its point of origin. I suddenly become some sort of lousy medical detective, like Dr. Gregory House from the Fox TV show House, but with absolutely no professional training. Regardless of my lack of medicinal knowledge, I always try to figure out the cause of my illness. Was it that pizza I ate on Tuesday evening? Perhaps the “chef” didn’t wash their hands. Or maybe I got it from one of those elderly folks that I deal with at my day job? But I apply hand sanitizer about a hundred times a day, so that seems unlikely. Maybe it was from…
            “Maybe it was from that cookie you ate,” my girlfriend, Katelin, chimes in.
            “What cookie?”
            “You know exactly what cookie I’m talking about. The one you found in the envelope.”
            Oh, that cookie. A good detective must not leave any stone unturned, so let us go back a few days and look at a conversation I had with Katelin concerning this said cookie:
December, 2014, a Tuesday Evening, around 10 p.m.
            “You did what?”
            “I ate a cookie that I found at work.”
            “What do you mean you ‘found’ it?”
            “It was in a drawer.”
            “It was just lying in a drawer?”
            “It was inside an envelope.”
            “What kind of envelope?”
            “A normal white envelope, the kind you use for mailing letters.”
            “So, let me get this straight: you found a cookie, in an envelope, in a drawer, and you decided to eat it. What if somebody poisoned it?”
            “That’s why I only ate one of the cookies, even though there were two in the envelope. Plus, what kind of sick person would poison cookies and then just leave them for someone to find?”
            “What kind of sick person would eat random cookies that they found in an envelope!?”
            Katelin brought up a valid point, and it got me thinking: perhaps it was this “found food” that made me sick. But to be sure, I needed more evidence. I couldn’t examine the cookie since I had already eaten it, but I could look back into my archives and see if there were any other times that I had eaten “found food” and then examine the consequences of those actions. I suddenly became some sort of historical detective, like Lilly Rush on that CBS show, Cold Case. Let’s travel back to the last time I ingested some “found food”:
            February, 2012, a Sunday, late night, actually, early Monday morning, 1 a.m.
Myself and four other twenty-something year old men had just finished a long night of drinking beers and riding children’s bicycles down very steep hills at incredible speeds. As one could expect, those said activities resulted in an unparalleled hunger taking over the depths of our exhausted bodies. We rolled up to a local pizza shop carrying the combined appetite of a wolf pack in winter, but the doors had just been locked for the night. Too late, but wait, one of the trustafarians I was with knew someone who worked there. “At the end of the night,” he said, “they always throw the leftover pizza out. It’s still good and all; we just have to get it out of the garbage.”
So, like a horde of urban raccoons, we rummaged through the trash and left with about ten pounds of cold pizza. Since I had cash in my pocket, the intelligent thing would have been to simply head to another eating establishment and purchase some fresh food, but I was caught up in a classic case of group-think and having one of those “When in Rome” moments. (After all, this did happen in Portland, Oregon, where young people go to retire, and we all know that retired folks eat out of the garbage on a regular basis.) So, I ate the pizza. And it was good. One slice in particular was more impressive than the others—some sort of Mexican pizza covered in nacho cheese. (When I returned to the same pizza shop a few weeks later, during business hours, I was quite shocked to find out that they didn’t offer a pizza with nacho cheese sauce). Anyway, to make a short story shorter, I became extremely ill following the garbage pizza incident, developing one of the worst colds I’ve ever had in my life.
            So, there we have it, case closed, fine detective work leads to another mystery solved: eating “found food” can cause illness. Who would have thought? Luckily, as I preformed a search and seizure on the medicine cabinet in my bathroom, I discovered an old bottle of cold syrup that was a few years past the expiration date…


Next Time on Penfold, Pointless Detective: Does medicine really expire?



Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Our Most Important Right


            The Chinese banned puns last week. Apparently, General Tso was finally fed up with people thinking he was a coward. Or something like that—I don’t really know much about China or its culture. Authorities have yet to announce what the punishment will be for disobeying the order (Get it? “Pun”-ishment), which clearly states: “Radio and television authorities at all levels must tighten up their regulations and crack down on the irregular and inaccurate use of the Chinese language, especially the misuse of idioms.”
            I know what you’re thinking: Who cares what the government of some country on the other side of the world is doing to its citizens? Here in the good old U.S. of A., we’re concerned with more important topics, like gun-control, not pun-control. (See what I did there?) After all, we have freedom of speech—The First Amendment says that we can say whatever we Goddamn please! Well, that might be changing.
            The United States Supreme Court is currently listening to arguments concerning free speech and the Internet. The case revolves around a man named Anthony Elonis, who was sentenced to four years in prison for posting explicit rap lyrics on his Facebook account. In his lyrics, he threatened to murder his wife and shoot up an elementary school. Elonis claimed to be venting through an artistic outlet, much like the rapper Eminem. The court said he was guilty of transmitting interstate threats “to injure the person of another.”
            While the national media blinds us with reports about Ferguson, Missouri, this much more important issue is being lost in the teargas. The Supreme Court’s decision concerning this “freedom of speech” issue has the capability of drastically changing the way we interpret the First Amendment, and consequently, the way we perceive America as a country, and as an idea.
            If the Court decides that Elonis is in fact guilty of transmitting interstate threats, then social media as we know it will be forever changed. Sure, there is no place for violence in a civilized society (except for in football, hockey, MMA, boxing, playground fights, television, war…) but Elonis did not commit a single act of violence. Remember the old saying: “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” People say stupid shit all the time—especially on social media—but that doesn’t mean that they’re going to act upon their words.
            And what’s going to happen if the court decides against Elonis, against free expression? Who will get to decide who’s a legitimate threat, and who’s just some dumb-ass who had a bit too much to drink before signing on to Facebook? For example, what happens if I say: It sure would be nice if someone cut off Tom Brady’s left leg just below the knee? (That sonofabitch would probably still throw for 3,000 yards.) Or, the world sure would be a better place if Kim Kardashian wasn’t in it. Could those statements be taken as threats? I bet Kanye West would think so.
            As a writer, I have a much larger stake in this issue than most people, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t concern every American, regardless if you use social media or not. Altering our First Amendment could cause a very large ripple effect. If the Court starts interpreting the words we use, then what’s next? Do you want to live in an America that has free speech, or an America that’s free of speech? We can’t allow a crooked government to rob us blind. Do you really want to be left without our most important right? Oh shit! I just got banned from the Chinese Internet.


Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Hunger, a Story from the Archives

           

            
            I’ve said it once and I’ll say it again, there are very few things more American than an all-you-can-eat buffet. They are the freedom factory of food. Americans like things cheap, simple, flavorful, and in abundance. At an all-you-can-eat buffet, that’s exactly what you get. One price with an assortment of choices: if you’re a health nut, you’ve got the salad bar, if you’re a gluttonous ball of chub, you can have fried chicken covered in hot fudge, or better yet, hot fudge covered in fried chicken. Just like the American dream, the possibilities are endless.
            I’ll be the first to admit that there are very few things I love more than an all-you-can-eat buffet. But as I was powering my bicycle across the United States I did my best to steer clear of them. It was not easy, cruising by, with my stomach starved, growling for endless grub. But I know myself all too well, and I know that if I sit down at an all-you-can-eat buffet, there is no stopping me—I will eat, and eat, and eat, until I cannot eat anymore. I will pack my gut with every last morsel of food that can possibly fit in it. And when it is finally full, I will continue eating to see just how far my stomach can stretch.
            I did well in resisting the temptation, making it through the east coast, the Midwest and the Rocky Mountains without giving in to my cravings. But when I saw a Golden Corral in Vernal, Utah, I just had to stop. I had tried them all in the past: Ponderosa, China King, Pizza Hut, Old Country, Home-Style Family, and Sizzler. But I had never been to a Golden Corral, and the curiosity of a new buffet triggered a mechanism in my brain that lured me in like a raccoon to steaming garbage.
            It takes a certain kind of person to visit an all-you-can-eat buffet. There is the elderly, who will sit at a table for three hours working on a single scoop of cottage cheese, because they know that there is no time limit and the room is nicely air-conditioned. There is the large family with a handful of kids, whose parents are smiling because not a single child can complain that they didn’t get what they want. There is the obese, who, well, need little explanation of why they frequent such a restaurant. And then there is the worse of them all, people such as myself, who are poor and hungry and have a pocket full of plastic bags because nowhere does it say that you can’t take food away with you.
            So on a Tuesday morning, at a Golden Corral in Utah, I ate as much food as I possibly could, and then attempted to take the place for as much as I could eat later. Stealing food in a busy restaurant is no easy task. It is not like a teenage girl in a shopping mall who drops mascara in her purse and walks out the door. It is a much more sophisticated business. It takes the expert knowledge of which foods are the easiest to remove, and the skillful art of swiping them without being spotted.
            It’s sad to say but this was not the first time I tried to steal food from a buffet. My experience told me that the best things to take were fried chicken and rolls. So I loaded up a plate and sat down in my booth. With a plastic grocery bag opened up on my lap I attempted a single dump, trying to get the entire plate of chicken in one move. One of the pieces missed, hit my upper leg, and rolled onto the carpet where anybody could see. I did not panic. With the nerves of a burglar I simply stood up, walked in the direction of the bathroom, and kicked the chicken breast under a nearby table. Nobody saw a thing.
            On the way back to my booth I filled another plate. I sat down, but this time attempted a different strategy. Again I opened the plastic bag on my lap and started dropping the chicken one piece at a time. I thought I was being sly but must have miscalculated my approach, because as I scanned the room I immediately spotted a woman at a nearby table staring directly at me with a face full of disgust. I had been caught and I could see it in her eyes that she was not at all impressed. But what was I to do? After all, I was hungry.
            I was always hungry. It started my very first day on the road. Not ten miles into my ride and I needed to eat, and then again ten miles later. I had brought with me about five pounds of trail mix consisting of peanuts, raisins, and M&M’s. I thought it would be a simple thing to snack on, but after ingesting the first two pounds I quickly realized that I hated peanuts, raisins, and M&M’s. I also realized that five pounds was a lot more than I thought it was, because it took me nearly 600 miles to finish the bag, and by the time it was gone I would have been happy to never see trail mix for the remainder of my life.
            I was burning more calories than ever before in my life. There was no way to know exactly how many, but I would guess well over 5,000 a day. There was a constant hunger that would not subside and my body desperately craved nourishment. By the time I reached Denver I had lost 35 pounds and had not an ounce of fat on my body. On a positive note, I could eat whatever I damn well pleased and never worry about gaining any weight. And that’s precisely what I did.
            At the start of the trip I told myself that I would not eat any fast-food. That personal agreement did not last long. With my body burning such a large amount of calories, eating became very expensive very fast. I had a choice between running out of money or eating cheap, and there is nothing cheaper than fast-food restaurants. By the time I reached Tennessee I was a fast-food junkie. I tried every item on every value menu at every restaurant. There were grease stains on my clothes and my saddlebags smelled like cheeseburgers. I started out with the belief that fast-food was disgusting and after 6000 miles, dozens upon dozens of restaurants, and hundreds of thousands of calories, my belief slightly changed: fast-food was really disgusting.
            When I wasn’t gorging myself with fast-food I tried to keep it simple. Every morning I would stop at the first gas station I came across and have breakfast, usually a large coffee, a muffin or bagel, a box of brownies, and a bag of dried fruit. I almost always ate dinner out of a can, primarily raviolis, always uncooked.
            Lunch was a different story. I would search the small towns for a local diner and always order the cheeseburger. I was on a mission to find the best cheeseburger in America. This proved harder than I imagined. The local diner just doesn’t exist like it used to. Franchises have taken over this country, driving out the mom and pops. I saw more abandoned local restaurants than those in operation. It’s a sad state of affairs when the most popular eatery in a small town is the Dairy Queen. But nevertheless there were the hidden gems and I always stopped.
            I sampled a wide variety of cheeseburgers throughout the United States. In Charlotte, North Carolina I was dared to eat an entire “Full Hemi,” three patties, and over a pound of meat. It was gone within minutes, and though I didn’t attempt it, I still think I could have eaten two. In Kansas I found a small diner with only four seats who hadn’t raised their prices in forty years. Instead, as our currency inflated, they just made their food smaller. So now there half-dollar cheeseburger was the size of a half-dollar. I ate ten of them. With different regions of the country came different names and different toppings. In the Rockies I tasted the “Mountain Man” burger and in Montana I sampled the “Original American.” In Utah I had a burger topped with salami and in Wyoming one with ham and bacon. It was easy to decide which cheeseburger in the United States was the worst: definitely McDonald’s. But which one was the best? It’s impossible to say, because I loved every bite of every one. You should never have a starving man judge a food contest.
            I was always curious to try the local delicacies. In Baltimore I had Baltimore crab. Though the locals strongly encouraged me not to, I ate everything except the shell. “It’s going to make you sick,” they said, but I didn’t listen. I didn’t get sick, but I didn’t take a shit for three days afterward. In North Carolina I tried deep fried pickles for the first time. I didn’t even know you could deep fry a pickle, but boy am I glad that you can, because they were absolutely delicious. I learned that Kentucky Fried Chicken in Kentucky tastes exactly the same as Kentucky Fried Chicken in New York. And as I got west of the Rockies I wasn’t fooled by the “fry sauce.” It’s just ketchup and mayonnaise mixed together.
            In the three months it took me to ride my bicycle across the United States I consumed more food than I would in the other nine months of the year combined. About eighty percent of my money was spent on eating. There were times when I was given food, such as at a Kentucky campground when an old racist man cooked me a couple of hamburgers. And there were times when I traded food, such as at an Appalachian campground when I bartered with a traveling hobo, a half jar of peanut butter for an instant coffee stick. Yes, I got food many ways, but only stole it one time. One time, at a Golden Corral in Vernal Utah. One time, and I was caught doing it.
            So there I was, at the all-you-can-eat buffet, frozen like a deer caught in headlights. So I was stealing food, was it really that big of a deal? It was going to be thrown away anyway. But it was stealing nonetheless and it was wrong. The lady at the table next to me just kept on staring. Mind your own damn business I wanted to yell, but that would have only made things worse. Maybe she wouldn’t care. But then I saw the waitress come to her table, and I saw her say something, and I saw them both look in my direction. The waitress walked over to the manager and then he looked my way, but I was gone.
            With my belly expanded I waddled out the front doors and frantically unlocked my bike. I high-tailed it down the road, the whole time feeling like I was going to throw up. I made it less than a mile before I had to stop, my breathing heavy, and my stomach about to burst. I found a covered picnic table and laid down on it. I didn’t move for the next two hours, my body lethargic, my mind filled with paranoia. I would have a bag of fried chicken for dinner that evening, but never again would I stop at an all-you-can-eat buffet.


                  

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Everything You Never Wanted to Know about Mustaches


"A good mustache makes a man for many reasons." -John Oates

Since the time I was able to grow it, I've always been a fan of sporting facial hair--the beard, in particular--but when a new job had a policy of "nothing more than a mustache," I figured, what the hell, why not? So, as many men are growing hair on their upper lip for "Movember," I've been having more of a "Mo-year," which got me thinking: What is it that makes the mustache so darn appealing? After hours of research, I came to the realization that the answer to that question is far too complex for a single blog post, though I did find out several interesting tidbits concerning the mustache. For your pleasure, I give you, "Everything You Never Wanted to Know about Mustaches."


  • The earliest known depiction of a mustache is from an Iranian portrait dating back to 300 BC



  • In the UK it is spelled "moustache"
  • In many Arab countries, the mustache is associated with power
  • The mustache can be broken into six sub-categories: Natural, Hungarian, Dali, English, Imperial, and Freestyle
  • These sub-categories can be further broken down into types: Chevron, Fu Manchu, Pancho Villa, Handlebar, Horseshoe, Pencil, Toothbrush, and Walrus
  • The longest mustache on record in that of Ram Singh Chauhan, measuring 14 feet (4.29 m) on   March 4, 2010


  • Pittsburgh is home to the American Mustache Institute (AMI), which advocates for greater acceptance of mustaches in the workplace and throughout modern culture
  • Four U.S. Presidents have worn just mustaches: Chester A. Arthur, Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, and William Howard Taft. Could Obama make it five?

  • The 1972 Oakland Athletics were encouraged to grow mustaches by their eccentric owner, Charlie Finley. When they played the Cincinnati Reds in the World Series, the championship was referred to as "the hairs vs. the squares." The hairs won in seven games.


  • It's a cold-hard fact: Men simply look better with mustaches





Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Man Against Machine: Thoughts on the Return of Garth Brooks

 
         
           I’m going to do something today that I haven’t done for a long while—I’m going to purchase a compact disc. I used to buy music all the time, in various forms—CD’s, cassettes, records, even 8-tracks (thanks to the 1983 Cadillac Coup de Ville I owned as a teenager)—but with the ability to obtain free music via the library and the Internet, paying for it just seems like a waste of money these days. So, what makes today different? Why have I decided to throw away my hard-earned money on a round piece of plastic that holds about a dozen songs?
            It seems that every decade a recording artist emerges that redefines the way we think about popular music. Elvis started it all in the 1950’s; then, of course, we had The Beatles in the 60’s; Led Zeppelin in the 70’s (or was it the Bee Gees—I guess that’s the one decade that could be debated); and Michael Jackson in the 80’s. The 1990’s may have seen the emergence of grunge-rock and the ever-growing popularity of hip-hop and rap music, but it was one man from a much unexpected genre that would take the music world by storm. That genre was country, and that man—a chubby, balding guitar player from Oklahoma—was Garth Brooks.
            Before Garth Brooks, country music was something folks from the country listened to. Because of Garth Brooks, country music has become an important part of our popular culture. In this day and age, country albums often top the Billboard 200, but before Garth Brooks, that had never been done before. By fusing country and western with rock and roll, along with electrifying audiences with high-energy live performances, Garth singlehandedly turned the country music world upside down. He wasn’t afraid to tackle topics that had previously been taboo in the genre—domestic abuse, racial divide, adultery and even homosexuality—while still remaining true to tradition, with sentimental ballads and hard-drinking anthems. And nobody was a better salesman. Though many country acts have had more hit singles—George Strait, Tim McGraw, and Toby Keith, to name a few—nobody has come close to selling more albums. Five of Garth’s albums have sold over ten million copies, while his Double Live album has surpassed the twenty million mark. Yes, that’s right—twenty million hard copies. Even his crossover Chris Gaines experiment sold two million copies, which was considered a disappointment. (How many other artists could call two million copies a “disappointment?”) With over 134 million total albums sold, only The Beatles and Elvis have sold more. Pretty good company, if you ask me. So, what does a musical phenom do when he’s at the top of his game; when he’s sold more records than Michael Jackson; when he’s redefined an entire genre of music? What did Garth Brooks do? He quit—no more touring, no more albums—and as fast as he exploded on to the music scene, he was gone.
            Flash forward thirteen years, to today—the day Garth Brooks releases his first studio album since 2001. I woke up excited this morning—excited over a record-album (I haven’t felt this way since Guns N’ Roses released Chinese Democracy in 2008, and for very similar reasons). As a child of the 90’s—one who grew up in a rural setting, nonetheless—Garth Brooks was my Elvis Presley, my Beatles, my Michael Jackson. I don’t even remember caring much about music before I heard “Friends in Low Places,” and “The Thunder Rolls.” My bedroom was a legitimate Garth Brooks shrine. I knew every song by heart. But then I grew up, and Garth disappeared, not only from my own life, but from just about everyone else’s too. Every once in awhile he would play a show, or release a single, but the unstoppable force that we had all been mesmerized by, was gone. But deep down, I believe that all of his fans knew that he would someday return; that his “retirement” wouldn’t last forever. After all, how does an artist just stop making art? But the question remains: after thirteen years, can a musician simply come back in stride? Will his fans welcome him with open arms? Can he fulfill over a decade’s worth of expectations? But most importantly, will his music still be great? Because, after all, it’s always been about the music. Or—like Guns N’ Roses in 2008—can he only disappoint? We’re about to find out.
Okay. I just went down to the store and bought the album. First thing first: I’ve seen Garth on TV lately and he doesn’t look anything like the man on the cover, unless he lost thirty pounds for the photo shoot and then immediately gained it back. But then again, it was never Garth’s good looks that brought in the adoring fans—it always came down to the music. And, after a first listen, I have to say, Man Against Machine does not disappoint. Unfortunately, unlike most of his previous albums, this one might be missing a mega-hit single, but on the other hand, unlike most of his previous albums, there are no duds. If anything, it’s a refreshing throwback to the kind of country music that made me a fan of the genre in the first place (unlike most of that binge-drinking garbage-pop that masquerades as “country” on the airwaves today. Oh my God! Am I getting old?). It might not be Garth’s best album, and it probably won’t sell 20 million copies, but it’s far from the worse thing he’s ever put out, and more than anything, after thirteen years, it’s just great to hear that unmistakable voice once again. Welcome back!



            

Thursday, November 6, 2014

The Petersen Rock Garden


The sky is grey and the wind makes a cold day feel colder. It’s Halloween, which might be the creepiest day of the year, and we’re exploring what might be the creepiest tourist attraction in Central Oregon. Katelin and I are the only ones on the property. The only humans, that is. Dozens of large peacocks roam the area, lazily climbing the miniature stone structures. The air is saturated with the sounds of dogs barking and chickens yelping. A black cat crosses our path. A black cat on Halloween. “What do you think they feed all of these animals?” Katelin asks me.
            “You mean, who do they feed to all of these animals?” I answer.
            “Probably tourists,” she says.
            “And unfortunately, we’re the only ones here today,” I say. Of course, we’re both only joking, but deep down, we’re thinking the same thing: This is exactly how horror movies begin.


            On Route 97, between the towns of Redmond and Bend, there are large homemade signs for “Petersen Rock Garden”—signs that left me absolutely intrigued every time I drove past them. What could that possibly be? I always asked myself. I know what a rock garden is—my parents had a small one when I was growing up—but what could be so special about Petersen’s that they felt the need to advertise to strangers? I had to find out.


            We followed the signs—a right, a left, another right—three miles off the main highway, until we found ourselves in what many would refer to as “the middle of nowhere.” The gate was open, but there didn’t appear to be a single soul on the grounds. I parked the car in a large lot that was empty except for a small, unattended fire, which was sending dark smoke into the air. We got out of the vehicle, I put the “suggested donation” into the drop box, and we slowly walked around a small city, crossing bridges suspended between miniature houses, churches, towers, palaces, and statues. Moats and ponds were scattered around the structures, all of them dry and empty, which gave the area an added sense of eeriness. A sign caught my attention. It said “ENJOY YOURSELF—IT IS LATER THAN YOU THINK.” What the hell is this place? The phrase repeatedly ran through my mind. And, who could have been crazy enough to build it?


            The crazy man’s name was Rasmus Petersen, a Danish immigrant who settled in the region in 1906. In 1935, he began to build structures from the many different kinds of rock that had been strewn about the area from volcanic activity that occurred thousands of years ago. For the next seventeen years, until his death in 1952, Rasmus continued to arrange a variety of different rocks: obsidian, agate, malachite, and thunder eggs, among others. Because of its oddity, the site quickly became a popular roadside attraction.


            At the peak of its popularity, the garden saw about 150,000 visitors a year, but today, Katelin and I are the only ones here. But then, as we’re just about to leave, a van pulls into the lot and stops. Nobody gets out. A woman sits in the driver’s seat, talking into a cell phone. Is she looking at us?
            “What do you think she’s doing?” Katelin asks after a few minutes.
            “Calling her redneck relatives,” I answer, “to let them know a couple of “victims” are here all by themselves.”
            “Do you think the gate will be locked when we try to leave?”
            “Most likely,” I say with a smile.


            We pull out of the lot and down the drive, where we find the gate wide open. We continue on to Bend, where we enjoy a wonderful weekend getaway—eating and drinking and racing bicycles. But I know that years from now, when I think back upon our short vacation, it’ll be the Petersen Rock Garden that I’ll remember the most. So, the next time you’re driving down the road and notice an intriguing sign that has always left you curious—take the time, stop, explore. What’s the worst that could happen? You could get murdered by rednecks and fed to a flock of peacocks, but that seems like the kind of thing that would only happen in a horror movie.




            

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

What Would He be Doing?


The pitches aren’t tricky—no surprises—always straight, always across the plate. Fastballs, of varying height, but by Major League standards, slow—70 miles per hour. I swing. I miss. I swing. I miss. I swing again. I get a piece—a foul tip. This is harder than I thought it would be.

It’s a rainy afternoon and I’m at the local batting cages, swinging an aluminum bat at orange rubber balls. The slow pitch cage—35 M.P.H.—was cake, and the 45 M.P.H. didn’t seem so hard either, but now the rubber balls are zipping by me like lightning, and I’m thinking to myself: How do those guys on television make it look so damn easy?

When I watch the World Series—watch grown men play a children’s game—I like to play a game of my own, a game called “What would he be doing?” As in, what would he be doing if he wasn’t a Major League Baseball player? Though this game can be played while watching most sports, it works best for baseball, because unlike other sports, where the participants clearly look like professional athletes, many baseball players look more like everyday, ordinary guys—guys you see walking down the street—guys like you, or me, or your Uncle Bob, or that guy that picks up your garbage every other Tuesday. Here’s a quick example of the game, World Series edition:



What would Billy Butler be doing?
Plumber, or Truck Driver









What would Tim Lincecum be doing? 
Pot farmer in the Pacific Northwest (Not to say that he isn't already doing this in the off-season)
















What would Eric Hosmer be doing?  Inmate










What would Hunter Pence be doing? 
Alligator Wrangler (Not to say that he isn't already doing this in the off-season)








What would Brandon Finnegan be doing? Country Music Singer (Under the stage name “Tex Brandon”)










What would Pablo Sandoval be doing? Amusement Park Mascot







So, playing this game got me thinking: If these guys can play baseball for a living, maybe anybody can. And that’s why I’m at the batting cages, whiffing at pitches that any good little leaguer would be crushing. But then again, I haven’t swung a bat since I was a little leaguer myself, so perhaps I’m just a bit rusty. I put another token in the slot and wait for the red light to turn green. The buzzer sounds. I swing. I get a piece. I swing again. Another piece. Pitch after pitch, I make contact—mostly ground balls that would most likely be foul—but contact nonetheless. Finally, on my last pitch, I crush it—a high line drive. It’s going, it’s going, it’s gone! (Actually, it hits the net above the pitching machine fifty feet away, but I’d like to think it would have sailed about 400 feet otherwise.) Maybe, just maybe, I was right—maybe anybody can be a ballplayer. Maybe if I try really hard—if I invest more time and more money in the batting cages—maybe I could be a ballplayer. Maybe I could make it to the big leagues. Maybe some guy at home will see me on television. Maybe this guy will be playing “What would he be doing?” Maybe he’ll say, “If Jon Penfold wasn’t a Major League Baseball player, he would be sitting on his couch, watching the World Series, writing a weekly blog.” 

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Wait ‘till You’re My Age: Thoughts on Getting Older, with Quotes

            
Wait 'till you're my age...
           
            I remember being a freshman in high school, a lightweight on the wrestling team, and hearing a senior teammate complain about aches and pains and whatnot. “What’s your problem?” I asked one day.
            “Wait ‘till you’re my age,” he quickly responded, “then you’ll understand.”
            Boy, did he seem old to me back then.
            A few years went by and I became a senior, and an alumnus stopped by practice while home from college. He was much heavier than any of us remembered, and severely out of shape. “What happened to you?” I asked.
            “Wait ‘till you’re my age…”
            I didn’t wait. I refused. I went off to college myself and joined the rugby club, where the older members complained. “Wait ‘till you’re my age…” they all said.
            And then I was their age, and it was men in their mid twenties repeating that line I had already heard so many times throughout my life. And then men in their late twenties. And then their early thirties. “Wait ‘till you’re my age…”
            This week I celebrate another year on Earth, and can you believe it, I’m still waiting. I’m still waiting for that day when I can tell someone younger than me: “Wait ‘till you’re my age…” Truth be told, age is what you make of it. There are teenagers who act as if life has already passed them by, and then there are senior citizens who treat life like it’s just begun. It’s all in the way you perceive your own life—how "old" do you feel?
            I know there are naysayers out there who will disagree, who believe that aging is more than one's own perception, that aging has more to do with the physical toll it takes on the human body. Well, I personally know men well into their forties that are in better shape than most men in their twenties. Hell, I know women in their fifties who are in better shape than most men in their twenties. Sure, as you get older, your muscles might get a little tighter, which means that you have to stretch a little more. And your metabolism might slow down, which means you have to eat a little healthier. But that doesn’t mean you have to feel older, that just means you have to live smarter. Some scientists believe that someone of my generation will live to be 200 years old. If that happens, then everything we believe about aging will drastically change. Forty will no longer be the “new thirty;” forty suddenly becomes the “new twenty.” This means, if I’m turning 32 this week, it’s about time to celebrate like I’m finally old enough to get my driver’s license! (And old enough to drink, of course.) And if you think that sounds crazy, that I’m merely being over-optimistic about getting older, then, well, just wait ‘till you’re my age…
            On that note, I’d like to end with some quotes on aging, because, after all, if somebody said something about something at some point, then, you know, it must be true:

“A man is not old until regrets take the place of dreams.” –John Barrymore

“The great thing about getting older is that you don’t lose all the other ages you’ve been.”
–Madeleine L’Engle

“I will never be an old man. To me, old age is always 15 years older than I am.” –Francis Bacon

“You don’t stop laughing when you grow old, you grow old when you stop laughing.”
–George Bernard Shaw

“Men do not stop playing because they grow old; they grow old because they stop playing.”
–Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

“Aging is not lost youth but a new stage of opportunity and strength.” –Betty Freidan

“The aging process has you firmly in its grasp if you never get the urge to throw a snowball.”
–Doug Larson

 “The older I get, the more I realize, the less I know.” –Jon Penfold