Monday, December 19, 2011

Love Letter To A Dodo Bird

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Dear Dodo,


Has there ever been an uglier bird?

You, with red-tipped beak, yon gaping nostrils, most bald and all-but-plucked head.

You, misshapen as an old boot.


Can I call you my fat baby, my inelegant overgrown dove?


Can I call you my portly piggy pigeon?


I love your flightless girth and beady dino eyes.



I love your mud-puddle plumage.


There are many reasons I love you but most of all this: your ignominious etymology -


“Sluggard,” “Fat-arse,”



“Fool,” and “crazy.”


Can I call you, as Vice Admiral Wybrand van Warwijck did, “loathsome bird”?


Or might I address you, in the manner of the Dutch, simply as “swollen” (as is my heart for you)?


Oh feathered lumpy lumpy!


Oh goitered low-hanging balloon!

I long to hear your call once more, low and awkward through the underbrush:


Doo-doo, doo-doo, doo-doo.


Wednesday, December 14, 2011

I Am Re-reading Franny and Zooey For The Second Time This Month

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On January 27, JD Salinger's corpse will turn two years old. Franny and Zooey--though nitpicked by Updike, who is a cad, and by Joan Didion, who is the greatest nonfiction writer of the past fifty years--is Salinger’s finest moment. If you haven’t read Salinger since high school, start with either that or Nine Stories. Don’t start with Catcher in the Rye unless you are a sexually frustrated teenage boy.

Because I was a sexually frustrated teenage boy, I started with Catcher in the Rye. For a book report, I had to pick one novel from a pre-approved list of fifty. I picked Catcher not because I was a twelve-year-old version of Holden Caulfied, but because my older brother already owned it, which meant I would not have to borrow a book from the library, which meant I would save the $1.50 of late fees I would have inevitably incurred.

I’ve reproduced the tale here not just because I invariably go out of my way to recommend a good prose pacifier to divorced parents of petulant twelve-year-olds, but for quite another reason. What directly follows is a question about quality versus quantity, a question that is only fair when it pertains to artists who are already deceased.

If you’re a Salinger junkie, you have little choice but to read and re-read his slender oeuvre to get your fix. This is not healthy or admirable or even advisable. Since he published a mere four books, roughly eight-hundred pages in all, whenever I get that Salinger itch, there’s no place to scratch but the slim spine of one of my pocket-sized paperbacks. And I hate that. Like a more traditional junkie, I find myself lying to my mom instead of telling her the truth, instead of telling her that I am re-reading Franny and Zooey for the second time this month. It’d be a boon, not a bane, to his fans if Salinger had been more like Bob Dylan or Woody Allen or Philip Roth. Every year it seems there’s a new Roth novel in my stocking or a Woody Allen movie in my NetFlix queue or a Dylan album in my iTunes -- some superlative, some in that middle ground between mediocre and good, and some which are embarrassing, but totally have the right to exist. Regardless of their merit, however, I taste and decide for myself if I should return for seconds. Who knows? In a decade or so I might actually enjoy Bob Dylan’s Christmas album.

So which do you prefer: Artists who produce prodigiously, even if their production might occasionally be embarrassing? Or artists who are pickier with their output, producing less, but producing consistently superb art?


Elliott Krause is a Defunct staff reader and contributor to Ye Olde Blogge.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Take A Ride On A Giant Slingshot

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Both devoted garage-salers and lovers of all things thrift, the apartment I share with my boyfriend is an orange-walled hybrid of past and present, old and new. A dusty record player sits in the forty-two inch shadow of our flat screen TV, which faces a tattered yellow chair we rescued from a rummage sale two years ago. A missing leg meant that it was free, and after several failed attempts to fix the thing we used a few blocks of wood to prop up the back end, concealing our work with a bookcase purchased on Craigslist for two dollars.

Saturday afternoons, my boyfriend and a friend of his from art school sit on our couch (bought new last summer after we grew weary of Goodwill’s stained, lumpy offerings) and watch VHS tapes they find at thrift stores and auctions. Interested in obsolete technology, Josh and Derek create videos and other conceptual-based art projects that celebrate the collision of new media with old. Josh drags black garbage bags full of tapes from the office we share, and I watch while he and Derek sort through them and decide which ones to sample for their own videos. In one, Chuckie Cheese and his friends try to hotwire a school bus; in another, a high school choir from Ohio goes on a field trip to New York City.  The group favorite, though, is a video of a teenage couple that takes a ride on what looks like a giant slingshot at a county fair, their screams decade-shattering as they are snapped once, twice, into the night.

Watch below:



Amy Bernhard is a Defunct staff reader and contributor to Ye Olde Blogge.

A Hundred Years Ago...or, the Square Pancake

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 "...Many years later, I think about holding a relic.  That issue of National Geographic was nearly a century old when I held it in my hands.  Try as I might to resist the simultaneous temptations of sentimentalizing the past and frowning at the present, I can't help but feel that a century twenty-five years ago might feel like a millennium now.  I'm sure each generation bemoans, or at least takes note of, the speed of its present versus the languor of its past, perhaps without value judgement, but things are radically faster now than at any point in human history, and the past recedes at lightning speed.  Of course, the older one gets, the further into the past the past vanishes; though not news, this still rankles.  I was young when I held that issue in my hands: my childhood ended the month before; adolescence just a week later; I didn't have a whole lot of perspective yet.  But I sensed the gravity of perspective, of distance, before I could adequately essay it."

Defunct contributor Joe Bonomo has a wonderful short essay up at No Such Thing As Was about holding one of the first issues of National Geographic, Record Store Day, and vinyls.  Fans can also check out his Defunct essay, "Wait For It," which appeared in last April's issue.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Take A Letter

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Long before “LMFAO” and “BRB” freed us from tiresome longhand, there was Gregg shorthand. Useful in a number of settings, perhaps the most iconic that comes to mind is the office.  The boss would pace and pontificate aloud in a necktie while his secretary sat primly before him, scribbling his every word on a pad atop skirted knee.

Few secretaries will still “take a letter;” even fewer practice shorthand, once a highly marketable skill.  After all, in the space between the late 19th and 20th centuries the boss, as a general rule, did not type.  His business was thinking.  It was the secretary’s business to record the gems that tumbled forth from his tongue.   She’d then translate her scritch-a-scratch via typewriter and present him with a draft for correction.  This cycle continued, draft by draft, until he was satisfied with the final result. 


These days, the cost effectiveness of team-based letter construction is debatable.  Ostensibly, his time in thinking up thoughts was worth more than hers in recording them.  As she typed, he could be thinking up clever new thoughts. The whole scenario only has utility if we accept this suggested hierarchy, this basic separation of value and skills. 

Thanks to the Dictaphone, the days of “take a letter” are largely behind us.  And, thanks to the personal computer, we now know that bosses can indeed type.  In fact, some can out-type their secretaries.  We always knew this in the same way we always knew some secretaries could out-think their bosses.  Let’s face it.  The practice of dictation brought women to the feet of men, close enough for him to smell her perfume, to admire her legs, her stockings, her neckline, and all the while she would, as protocol dictated, hang on his every word. 

Today, the female executive is commonplace. Perhaps office skills like shorthand and typing offered women backdoor passage to our most hallowed men’s club – the professional space.  And while he paced and pontificated and peeked at his lovely, humble secretary, she quietly absorbed not just his words, but a sense of business acumen.  She took a letter, and she ran with it. 

Nancy Wyland is a Defunct staff reader and contributor to Ye Olde Blogge.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

The Way of All Flesh Crayons

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I could have sworn that so-called “flesh” colored crayons were around during the entirety of my 60’s childhood, but that couldn’t have been the case.  As the U.S. Civil Rights movement heated up, Crayola Crayon Executives, huddled perhaps in their multi-hued nuclear bomb resistant shelters for an emergency meeting during the Cuban Missile Crisis, made the momentous decision in 1962 to change the designation of “flesh” to “peach.”  I was four.  I understood neither nuclear winter nor racism.  I recall stockpiles of “flesh” crayons passed between me and my largely white classmates for the rest of the decade until one day Flesh was extinct.
I didn’t miss it.  I was on to other pursuits by then.  A papier mache figure whose newspaper skin I never quite finished.  A decoupage plaque of a dove of peace that my art teacher pronounced clichéd.  A social studies project of screaming headlines pasted beside a naked Vietnamese girl running out of her skin.

To learn which colors have been retired or changed, click here.

Monday, November 7, 2011

When The Daisy Girl Explodes

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It's election season here at Defunct headquarters! Those of us who love to watch local Iowa television thus find ourselves subjected to some rather uninspired ad campaigns. I tend to prefer that campaigns be maximally absurd and apocalyptic, so I'm pretty sad to say that for all the TV I watch, I've yet to see anything like this 1964 ad in which a little girl plays with a flower and then, naturally, the entire world is annihilated. LBJ's ultimately successful campaign ran the ad against Barry Goldwater. Watch for yourself:



Questions abound. Why is this little girl so bad at counting? Why is the nuclear explosion Goldwater is supposedly going to cause happening inside this girl's eye? My nontraditional interpretation is that this evil child pulls the trigger by plucking that last flower petal, which she has brilliantly hooked up to an atomic bomb. If only someone could have stuffed her in a baby cage, the world might have had a chance.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

All Aboard The Chattanooga

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In honor of the, ahem, "release" of our newest issue, I would like to present you with my very favorite defunct contraption. Gentle Readers, I give you The Chattanooga.




What exactly is The Chattanooga? It's a "curative" medical-issue vibrator crafted for treating 19th and early 20th century women diagnosed with "hysteria."

The Chattanooga evoked therapeutic "paroxysms" that relieved "ailing" housewives and "delicate" ladies of their debilitating "nerves." I suppose that, yes, a regular schedule of machine-generated orgasms might take the edge off of stifling cultural norms. "Sure."

After all, an unsatisfied 19th century woman was a crazy 19th century woman, so nothing short of an extended Rest Cure and daily treatments with The Chattanooga would rid her of her desire for something more than domestic drudgery, thankless childrearing, suffocation-friendly fashion, unfulfilling marriage, and second-class citizenry.

And just for "fun," here's one more thingamadoo called The Manipulator.

Evidently the patient would lie prone on the table with her delicacies positioned over the small opening after which a switch was flipped and all her dreams came true.

(More "medical breakthroughs" at the Museum of Menstruation and Women's Health.)

Friday, October 28, 2011

The Baby Cage

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Even before organic baby foods and fleece-lined onesies, mothers everywhere could take comfort in knowing they were providing only the very best for their baby.  Why keep a baby inside a stuffy London apartment, for example, when that baby would best be served by crisp, natural air?


So was the thinking behind the 1937 Baby Cage, a device distributed to all members of the Chelsea Baby Club in London who didn’t have direct access to a garden.  Dangling your child over a busy London street in a thin, wiry cage is but a small price to pay for clean air, interaction with nature, and a stunning view of sunset, don't you think?  And talk about supervision.

(More fascinating and quirky inventions at Life.com.)

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Welcome, Ye

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Welcome to Ye Olde Blogge, Defunct's new blog on all things old.  We're fascinated with the weird, the antique, the absurd, the dying, and will salvage these fine things for you while you wait for the milkman.  Or, you know, that defunct German satellite.  Welcome.

 

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