10.22.2010
And, It's Happening Again
Our voices carry...
I guess a lot of people didn't notice - at least not until the news broke that the duly elected democratic candidate for Lt. Governor pawned himself and became yet another Illinois political pariah over his "youthful indiscretions" with prostitutes and money laundering - but we recently had an election here in the Great State of Illinois. And, judging by turnout data, not many folks really cared, although that still doesn't explain the cacophony of voices raised in song when Todd Stroger garnered a mere 13% of the vote.
Now I am not here to spank anyone - unless there are willing volunteers. Nor am I here to shake anyone out of their apathy.
I know how easy it is these days to become cynical and detached from the process that is our responsibility. Giving a damn is hard work. I know it is way simpler to come home after a hard day of looking for work and tune into "American Idol" or the "Biggest Loser" or any of the other candyland commercial crap corporate media puts out there to distract us from becoming informed citizens.
After all, We the People, as TAX FEARING AMERICANS, know that Marx had it all bolluxed up. Religion is not the opiate of the people: Celebrity is. I know too that the Jeffersonian ideal of an informed populace, genuinely involved and interested in the political process passed into history decades before we questioned Lady Gaga's gender or Brittany stepped out of the limo without panties.
So, like I say, I am not here to take anybody to the woodshed. And, I wouldn't presume to tell anyone what to do. No, all I am here to do is tell you my own personal voting story. Take from it what you will.
It's February 4th in Chicago. I don't have to tell you what that means. Primary elections!!!
I walked into my polling place - A church, can you dig on that? 'So much for separation of Church and State' I thought. But, I had resolve.
I had also had a couple beers with some friends before heading over to the church to practice my civic faith, so I kinda had to pee and seeing how's it's winter and what with all the gear and layers and whatnot I wear this time of year, tending to this simple bodily function tends to be as complicated as assembling Ikea furniture while tripping on acid.
That being the case I decided to fulfill my obligation to the general welfare of my increasingly unpredictable bladder before attempting to fulfill my obligation to the general welfare.
Blessedly relieved, I stood in line behind my similarly civic minded citizens (both of them) for a whopping three minutes thinking: 'Whoa, thank god I hit the can first.' I stepped up to the registrar and handed her my expired driver's license and my voter registration card - good citizens like Boy Scouts and porn stars are always prepared.
An interminable minute went by as they located my name on the registration list and I began to worry that I'd forget the name of one judicial candidate - a law school classmate of mine - for whom I simply had to cast a "yes" vote for because in this well informed citizen's opinion she deserved the hell of serving on the Circuit Court of Cook County for turning me down when I asked her out.
After highlighting my name in sharpie yellow, the registrar handed me back my invalid identification and my voter card and showed me where to place my illegible signature on the long blank line with the big X in front of it. The registrar handed my signed affirmation to the election judge who, duly and with great deferential fumbling about, placed it on a two ring binder.
The election judge, a young man who I guessed to be a mormon Republican, in his mid twenties, wearing a flag pin and enough Brylcreem to shame Ronald Reagan, grinned a shiny toothy grin up at me and asked which ballot I wanted.
I smiled my best snarky smile and said: "Dude, I rode my bicycle here." The election judge's grin widen into a dragon size smile, blinding in its brilliance, making me very thankful that I had neglected to remove my sun glasses and shouted down the table: "Democrat!"
'What is up with that?' I wondered, clutching my ballot much as I imagine Moses clutched the Ten Commandments on his stroll down Sinai. Halfway to the voting booth I turned and caught the judge's eye and said very quietly, not wishing to disturb the austere atmosphere of this citadel of citizenship: "How did you know?"
Again the glaring, dragon smile beamed forth as the judge said, "Dude, Republicans don't ride bicycles."
With laughter on my lips and a Tip O' my Hat, I stepped into the booth to cast my ballot.
Seriously, I wanted to link this up to funny pictures and articles, blog posts, and the tons of other crap I read every day, but man, it's later in the day on a Friday and there is a lady waiting. Vote.
WSE
9.18.2010
8.11.2010
I have become addicted to twitter over the last couple months. It is now my "go-to" website (That would be an interesting blog post -- a list of my favorite websites through the years.) Why? It seems like you are having a conversation with people.
It is worth signing up for twitter just to follow
Roger Ebert, he provides links to his excellent blog, retweets other great twitterers (are these real words?), and adds other great content. Trust me, check his feed out for a week, you will be amazed.
The rest of the people I follow are somewhat evenly divided between lefty political pundits, sports journalists (mostly basketball, basketball writers are the best), and WWE wrestlers. There's probably someone out there who has great gardening tweets, great soul music tweets, great mystery writer tweets, I hope I find them.
You can follow me on twitter at deano_a_martino. I will try to tweet at least once a day for the next month.
7.24.2010
Two Wheels Good
7.17.2010
7.11.2010
7.10.2010
El Mundial
7.05.2010
7.04.2010
7.03.2010
Missed the Pool Again.
What is it about Saturday afternoons that induces one into so great a state of lassitude that the new doesn't get read, the cats don't get fed and one ignores the important things - like ogling barely clad beauties bathing?
Having said that, I would like to add, that I have nothing cogent to add.
WSE
Mise en Place
Big day tomorrow, happy birthday U.S.A.!
I haven't put much time into planning tomorrow's party. Whatever, I have some meat, my friends are coming over, it's going to be hot, everything will work out. It helps that I have my own errand boy who will go get whatever we need tomorrow.
So far today I've:
-Made jello shots. I wa planning on making red, white, and blue layered ones but the jello selection at Target is poor.
-Biked to Kurowski for sausage and Chicago Meat for pork butts. At Chicago Meat they butcher whole hog and you can get a butt with the skin on and spine still atttached. They're a bargain at $1.49/lb.
-Cleaned off the back porch with WSE, and moved the grills and furniture to the back yard.
-Made a pineapple/vodka infusion*
-Wrote(?) a blog post
More later ...
*Pineapple Vodka Infusion
-1 overipe pineapple cut into 1/4 dice
-750ml vodka
-juice of 1 lime
Hmmm it's good after 5 hours. A couple weeks would probably be ideal, but I doubt it will last that long.
6.27.2010
Brent is an Agent of Destruction
I started grilling (chorizo, corn and a mustard coated pork roast) and left WSE and Brent to make the second batch.
Never let amateurs in your kitchen.
* Green Crack Sauce
- 10 medium tomatillos (husk removed). The tomatillo is related to gooseberries
- 1 small onion
- 6 cloves of garlic, skin on
- 2-4 jalepenoes or serranos
- Roast these in a 450 oven for 25 minutes or so. Or grill them till roasty (this way is better.). Peel the garlic and add them to a blender along with:
- 1 avocado. Don't let WSE near the avocado, it will drive you nuts.
- Juice of 1 lime
- cilantro to taste (I use 1/4 bunch)
- salt
Blend until smooth. MAKE SURE THE BOTTOM OF THE BLENDER IS ATTACHED!
6.25.2010
Oh Boy
I hate to admit that this made me laugh.
6.23.2010
6.19.2010
The Garden Part 2
Here is the rest of the garden. Lots of weeds, yuck. I'm not going to label everything this time; there's zucchini, cucumbers, mixed greens, spinach, and leaf lettuce. The herbs plated are parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme, dill, chives, basil, and marjoram. I have no idea what to do with marjoram, I may have to get the Larousse out later.
6.15.2010
The Garden
In true hippy fashion, we have a huge garden. I've planted a few vegetables in my lifetime, but I was always more of a perennial man. However, desperate times call for desperate measures.
a) elotes
b) hobak-jeon
c) dilly beans for Kim
d) bacon wrapped stuffed jalapeños
e) I want to make tomato juice from fresh tomatoes for Bloody Marys*. How would a bloody mary taste with fresh tomatoes? All the recipes I've found call for cooked tomatoes. We'll investigate this further and report back later.
h) Beet Rosti
i ) Roasted Cauliflower
* My Bloody Mary recipe. For a pitcher. Always make a pitcher.
- 1/2 a 750ml bottle of vodka. Use cheap vodka. In fact you can use rum (yes I've tried it.) Tequila works too.
- 1 beer. A Sierra Nevada Pale Ale is good. Hoppy beers preferred, or Guinness.
- 8-10 dashes Worcestershire
- Heaping Tablespoon Horseradish
- 2 Tbs. Pickle Juice
- Juice of 1 lime
- 1 Tablespoon Sriracha or other hot sauce. Feel free to add more if it is a Bloody Mary bong morning
- 1 teaspoon celery salt
- 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
Sunday Recap
Appetizer. James made the crackers. For those who don't know James, he brings us elegant desserts at 3 least times a week. I've been begging him to make crackers out of my Martha Stewart book. These were the bomb.
6.13.2010
Open Thread Guest post
Meghan and I with a cracker that looks like the lower peninsula of Michigan.
Where o where are the umbrellas?
Musical interlude:
☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂☂
6.11.2010
That Damn Libural Media
6.05.2010
Tell me Sweet Little Lies
(Note to the Tea Partier's: if you're going to adopt a name for your astro-turfed movement of white, old, racist, angry, rich people do some fucking research first, after all, Al Gore didn't bust his ass to give you the internet if you're just going to ignore it).
And if all others accepted the lie which the [Candidate] imposed... then the lie passed into history and became truth. 'Who controls the past' ran the [Candidate] slogan, 'controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.' George Orwell, 1984.
The Nazi comments . . . they are awful, she said, her voice dropping. Knowing that my father died fighting the Nazi regime in Germany, that I lost him when I was 11 because of that . . . and then to have them call me Hitler's daughter. It hurts. It's ugliness beyond anything I've ever experienced. The Arizona Republic 6.3.10.Problem is Jan's dad didn't fighting the Germans. He died in California battling lung disease.
...her statement should not be taken to mean that she was claiming her father was a soldier in Germany during the Nazi regime. Daily Kos 6.3.10.
I go to parties, sometimes until 4. It's hard to leave when you can't find the door.
LIVE BLOG TOMORROW
LIVE BLOG TOMORROW
LIVE BLOG TOMORROW
LIVE BLOG TOMORROW
everybody says "I'm cool,"
"He's cool"
6.04.2010
Who said it?
a) "You always get me where I need to be."
b) "How do you spell _________?"
c) "HeeeHeeee it's in my room"
d) "Hey did you taste the cake/pie/cookies . . ."
e) "I saw so many yoga pants today!"
1) Peace Donna
2) Madalyn
3) Deano Maritino
4) James
5) WSE
1st correct answer in comments wins a jar of zuchinni pickles!
And yes, I did just ask if "quotee" is a word. :(
6.02.2010
please, please don't go
Hey everyone, I know we suck at posting during the week, but we are working on it. They're are several projects we're working on here at WSE including:
5.30.2010
No Training Wheels
It’s been 2 months, still a neophyte. Driving addiction, cold turkey.
At first, stumbled through missed connections, figuring out routes and times. Why try and act like I know what I’m doing? Biking, though, has been the big pleasure, a surprise.
I learned to ride a bike in the long, dusty driveway at my grandparents. Hot corn field one side, Mom’s huge garden on the other. We almost never went in the garden. Mom spent hours there each day. It wasn’t the kitchen garden, that was out back. In the front garden was a bewildering array of trees, bushes, odd plants, light spots and dark corners.
There were no training wheels for us. I pestered my dad to let me try the blue, rusted white wheeled bike. I don’t remember him running behind me, but he must have. In my memory I rode upright the first time.
Have you done that, run behind the bike while a kid learns to balance Just hold firmly, then lightly, then watch them soar, crash, get up and go again. Watch and wonder.
Glad to bike again.