Friday, December 11, 2020

294,144 dead Americans so far from COVID-19...

 Almost 300,000 dead Americans now from COVID-19!

Never would I have ever...

Meanwhile, the current USPresidentTrump ignores it all in favor of his poor loser rants about having been cheated into second place on November 3. Today he ordered his chief of staff to threaten firing of the FDA director unless he intercedes to push final ok of the COVID vaccine by today as if it is not too late to influence the election result!

Just the daily smile I get thinking of the upcoming Joe Biden Presidency...priceless.

Saturday, November 7, 2020

November 7, 2020

 Today is the 15th anniversary of the day my Dad died with me at his bedside in the Ann Arbor VA Hospital. I saw him take one final breath near dusk as the grey skies shrouded the world outside the windows.

RIP Dad.

By the way, we fired Trump and elected President Joe Biden! 

He is a good man!

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Defiler-In-Chief should not get his WhiteHouse deposit back!

                  Outrageous has become normal under Trump, but his misuse this week of the people’s house has taken it to a new warp speed!

I guess we should have seen this coming I suppose, but LIVE from the White House? 

The Secretary of State auditioning to run in 2024 by addressing the Republican National Convention from Jerusalem? 

As in Israel on the U.S. taxpayers dime?

The Trump Family BidenBashing hour?

U.S. Marines playing ceremonial pawns?

Politicizing sacred citizenship ceremony?

Live surprise pardon of a reformed bank robber?

This version of The Apprentice features Trump seizing back from Biden the narrative of the 2020 election.

Trump will fight like an evil feral animal to win in November, whatever it takes!


Right from the start in 2017...Sean Spicer looked into the camera and lied about Trumps inaugural crowd size.

KellyAnne Conway introduced the Trump theory of “alternative facts.”

And we thought that was bad!

But NO, it got much worse!

1,200 Americans died yesterday from COVID-19 aka by Trump the “China virus”

Bringing the total dead since March to 180,000.

Resulting in the tanking of the U.S. economy.

Trump response was to declare it old news and pivot to restarting the economy.

Trump blew it. He coulda been a hero like Reagan but now he will be looking up at Herbert Hoover!

The debate between Trump and Joe Biden in September looks like it will be hugely important for voters to decide who will be our President for the next four years.

#EvictTrump

#BidenHarris2020


Thursday, August 20, 2020

Democratic National Convention...I was there in 1976,1984 and 1988!

 As a lifelong loyal Democrat, I have learned what a winning campaign looks like.

Winning is very different. It signals gaining the opportunity to wield the power of government for the benefit of the many. Losers go home, licking their wounds.

As a young man, I attended the 1976 Democratic National Convention at Madison Square Garden in New YorkCity for the nomination of Jimmy Carter to be President. I remember Jimmy delivering a folksy acceptance speech signaling transition from the Watergate era to something better. Everyone joined hands and sang We Shall Overcome to close the night. I walked behind Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan as we left the Garden. A cab delivered me to an after party sponsored by Rolling Sone magazine where I met Hunter S Thompson and Paul Newman. Life in the fast lane!

My second DNC was 1984 in San Francisco. More parties, more celebs fueled that experience where Walter Mondale won nomination then picked a woman to be his running mate. Mario Cuomo delivered a rousing call to us all to go out and beat Ronald Reagan! Jesse Jackson offered a glimpse of the future of the Democratic Party.

Tonight, Joe Biden will accept the 2029 nomination

Four years later, I attended my last Democratic National Convention in Atlanta. Mike Dukakis became our nominee with Lloyd Bentsen for veep. Lots of limo rides to lots of events created a kaleidoscope of memories. Rob Lowe comes to mind. And AllySheedy. We left Atlanta with a wide lead on George H.W. Bush that Dukakis squandered in short order.

Tonight Joe Biden will accept the Democratic Party nomination for President, following last nights acceptance by Senator Kamala Harris of the nomination to be Vice President. This team is very strong and my guess is they will win.

Unless, Donald Trump is allowed to steal the election. 

President Obama warned us last night this election threatens the future of democracy.

We must elect Joe Biden to save the USA from the horror of a Trump second term!

#BidenHarris2020


Sunday, August 16, 2020

RIP Babe Ruth and Elvis Presley

 August 16 is a date I always remember. 

Partly because it is the birthday of my beloved grandfather Clair J. Moore. Grandpa took me fishing in the early 60s. We always had fun on his little fishing boat in Lake Erie outside Toledo. My Mom was his adopted daughter and I was her only child and Mom was divorcing my Dad in 1963 so grandpa and his wife Aunt Lorine took me with them on their two week vacation to the upper peninsula of Michigan in a log cabin next to a river bordering Wisconsin where we fished every day. Good times!

But mostly I latched onto remembering August 16 after Elvis died on that date in 1977, then I learned it was the same date when Babe Ruth died in 1948. Two icons of American life, both men remain for me the epitome of greatness. Babe died the year before I was born but my Dad loved the Babe (but hated the win too much Yankees) so I always loved him too! 

I was really more of a Beatles guy, but Elvis shook my awareness in the 50s when he appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show and made everybody swoon. By 1977, Elvis had journeyed across our consciousness sufficiently to achieve the lofty status of superstardom. His death hit the world hard coming as it did too soon with stunning shock.

RIP Babe & Elvis! You too Grandpa!

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

July 31, 2003...the day my Mom died.

My Mom loved me. I miss her.
She told me many times what a blessing my birth had been in 1949. Medical drama played out at Mercy Hospital in Toledo, Ohio on that September 13 such that two odd sorts became parents. I was along for the ride, but not ungrateful for the gift of life.
I would be the only child entrusted by God to the care of Virginia and Virgil Warn. They did their best.
My early life gave me anything I wanted if I just cried for it. Pretty efficient system. It took me awhile to unlearn that lesson as I grew up.
The world as I knew it consisted of Mom, Dad and our Irish Setter Ringy.
Mom was always my best friend and protector. She solemnly recounted to me how badly she wanted my birth in the years leading up to it. She left no room for doubt.
I grew up in the 50s knowing the USA was number one. My parents took me to the movies in the mid 50s and when the newsreel told us about the Vice President being attacked in South America, Mom leaned over to me and confided to me about the man on the screen that his name was Nixon and we did not like him. My five year old self stared at the bad man and digested my first political lesson.
Mom was a Democrat and taught me how Republicans always favored ideas that would hurt Democrats.
In 1960, I was proud to go with Mom to the Toledo Democratic HQ and volunteer for John Kennedy over the evil Nixon!
I still smile whenever I remember riding the school bus in the days following the election. Some kids were very sad Nixon had lost because their parents told them Kennedy was dangerous. Others, like me, were overjoyed with the new President!
Mom was happy so I was happy.

Mom liked people and they liked her back.
In 2003, sitting with her at the hospice in Perrysburg, I remember a steady stream of strangers visiting her to pay their respects. One young woman drove several hours to seek her mentorship on crocheting. 
Mom had esophageal cancer and lost the ability to swallow just like my Dad did two years later from ALS. She begged me to bring in her favorite Chinese food, egg foo yung, so she could at least taste it before spitting it out. We shared many hours looking over family photos, remembering better times and cherished memories. I pushed her around the beautifully landscaped grounds in her wheelchair and took a photo of her sitting in front of a giant yellow metal butterfly. When I told her the butterfly wings made it look like she was already an angel, she beamed!
After about a month, she seemed to be improving and I was getting antsy to drive back home to Los Angeles. Since April, when I arrived in Toledo following my work on the Oscar telecast, I moved into Moms home near South and Broadway and began taking her to chemotherapy and multiple doctors appointments. By the 4th of July, I felt the growing need to seek out a new gig, so I told Mom I was leaving. She understood, but was sad.
I left her house at 7am Sunday with my two dogs and two cats, stopping off first to say good bye at the hospice. She asked me if she had done something to hurt me and I reassured her that she had not. That was the last time I saw my Mom.
I drove straight through all day and night that Sunday and again on Monday—stopping only for gas, to walk the dogs and short naps—pulling into my LA home around 1am Tuesday morning, a new road trip speed record!
Moms doctors sent her home too, but she was returned to the hospice after one week.
She did not die until July 31,2003.
I still regret allowing my innate weirdness to push me away at such a time. Knowing Mom was my source of that weirdness only makes my searing guilt understandable.

It seemed like the right thing to do at the time so that’s what I did.

Our final phone conversation on July 30 felt like it when she ended it with her last words to me,

”Bye-Bye”





Saturday, July 25, 2020

July 24, 1966 ...meeting the love of my life!

It was hot. The summer of 1966 was brutal, but just a prelude to the summer of 1967 when riots broke out in the streets. I was 16 years old and driving an ice cream truck in Toledo before my senior year at Woodward High School. My best pals formed a rock n roll band called The Mystic Eyes and I also became their manager. Part of the time, we checked out rival bands to keep track of the competition. Also, it was fun!
That Sunday night we all went to Rockland Lake Quarry for their weekly dance. A popular band drew a crowd of high school kids and others and the night air at the quarry felt cool after the humid day. 
The band began to play and all the cool kids were deciding if they liked the sound. That included us because,after all, we were scheduled to go to Cleveland in a few weeks to see The Beatles! 
At that moment, my eye captured first sight of the girl, then woman, I shared my life with from that moment until 1978 when we divorced.
She was spectacular! At 5 feet 9 inches, she had the greatest legs I ever saw that reached from her little gold sandals all the way up past her sexy gold short shorts. As her path closed to be within my ear space, I spoke without hesitation: “Do you know when the band will begin to play?”, I asked her.
She gave me a quizzical look but replied instantly,”The band is already playing. Don’t you hear it?”
We smiled at each other taking a first full mutual assessment of each other.
“What I hear is not music,”I replied. The electricity in the air at that moment was filled with the sealing of our boy-girl connection. Our eyes devoured each other, mirthfully exploring and suddenly discovering the possibilities. Luckily for me, she laughed at my joke. That was the first of maybe a million times I caused her to laugh out loud in the years we shared our lives.
Thinking of that night today, I can close my eyes and still see those long legs and little gold shorts.
Her name was Karen.
Still the love of my life.

Happy Anniversary Karen!

Monday, July 20, 2020

July 20, 1969 One small step for man...

I remember that Sunday vividly.
I was a month away from turning 20 sitting in my first wife’s grandparents tiny apartment in Margate, New Jersey watching the moon landing play out while enduring the awful moment when our evil President Richard Nixon intruded on the historic time to ensure the world would not fail to give him 
credit.
In those days, we experienced history on TV every day. Vietnam. Race riots. Moon landings.
Closing out the 60s, that glorious day gave me a rare sense of pride in America!
Fifty one years ago today lives on in my memories if nowhere else. Armstrong, Aldren and Collins, American heroes all!
We were all proud of the space program yet horrified by wars and riots.
Today, violence and immoral government actions have become first tolerated then required to enforce illegal policies. Portland citizens are facing arrest and detention by military troops with no insignia or any other identification hauling them away in unmarked minivans.
These actions are unquestionably vile and outside our standard for civilized life.
Why are we being forced to confront such outrages?

Undoubtedly part of that answer lies at the feet of our most recent evil President Donald Trump.
Joe Biden’s America will not be like this. The President will not lie to us. He will not separate kids from families. Joe just wants to do it right.

My God, ya just gotta vote for Joe Biden!

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

HappyBastilleDay! We made it!

July 14 is Bastille Day in France, a big deal there but also memorable to me since 1989 when my third and final wife and I arrived in Paris for the celebration. We stayed at a hotel off St Germaine, had dinner at a bistro near Norte Dame, then joined many thousands of Parisians in the streets on a march of remembrance and celebration for the 200th anniversary of Bastille Day!
In 1789, the people of Paris rose up in those same streets to liberate citizens in the French Revolution.
With my fortieth birthday two months in the future, this trip first took us to Barcelona for the annual film festival then we drove across the Mediterranean and the whole of France before landing in Paris.
I remember lots of moments, including dodging firecrackers as well as randy individuals using cover from the march to seek our intimate companionship. Since we were also celebrating our new marriage, we politely declined. Also, a rather large fire broke out in a 300 year old public building along our march route which provided us all with entertainment watching efforts to subdue the flames. A man captivated the crowd by emerging from a window onto the building’s ledge.
As an American, I felt lucky to be there.
Just thinking of that night more than thirty years ago brings a flood of recollections. Debbie and I were not marriage rookies and we were trying hard to be the kind of husband and wife that could last through the hard times.
We made it until July 31, 2000 when Debbie informed me she was moving to Savannah. It hit me hard after more than a decade of trying to be a good husband. It turned out to be a gift for me when she left me with our dogs and cats. I definitely loved them more than her. Now both are dead. And I am still here.
In this era of the COVID pandemic, memories like this are precious, somehow affirming me having been here.
Now at 70, I consider these moments from my life like bits of evidence looking for redeemable qualities.
Lots of bits featuring fun, others with tears, but also memorable for the missing bits like children that never arrived despite three wives giving it their best shots. Still feels like my life experience failed.
This life is what it is, which is to say I still believe I should have made better choices on many things including on my wife selection process.
Bottom line is it is not yet over!
Still time to put points on the scoreboard however I can!
I am in God’s waiting room patiently browsing old magazines for inspiration. 
The best I have so far is to use my time to share life lessons in hopes others might avoid bad choices.

I am NOT dead yet, dammit!

Saturday, July 4, 2020

FourthOfJuly—Part4

Happy Fourth, y’all!
Watched 1776 and Yankee Doodle Dandy on Turner Classics to uphold my observation of this tradition.
Also, plenty of TV fireworks courtesy of Macy’s, PBS and others. 
Meanwhile, my neighborhood sounds like a war zone tonight as many neighbors work out their COVID frustrations with pyrotechnics. Can’t help feeling sorry for all the terrified dogs and others tonight.

Reflecting on the meaning of this holiday in this most unusual year, I remember other 4th of July observations in the 50s,60s,70s,80s,90s as well as in this century. Lots of flags, hot dogs, baseball, and laughs. Joey Chestnut won his 13th consecutive Nathan’s Coney Island hot dog eating contest with a record 75 dogs and buns!

Tomorrow we return to our reality living with COVID and a madman as President with no baseball.

With thanks for every blessing, this too shall pass!

Amen.

Friday, July 3, 2020

FourthOfJuly—Part 3

Covid summer continues apace as Trump goes to Mt Rushmore in the tradition of General George Custer!
No social distancing or required masks with thousands of true believers hailing their hero.
What could go wrong?
Add today’s transgression to his latest greatest hits of lies, outrages and treasonous escapades. 
The NY Times exposed the criminal disloyalty of the 45th President to American and Allied military combatants by allowing Russia to pay bounties to Taliban soldiers for killing our soldiers!
Like so many other instances, Trump tried to hide the truth to protect his role model Putin!

When Joe Biden is elected President in November, our long national nightmare will be over, leaving just the biggest clean up in American history,
Looking forward to the spectacle of Trump family members in shackles!

HappyFourth!

FourthOfJuly 2020—Part 2

Today is Thursday, July 2 and I had delicious sweet watermelon to celebrate.
A heatwave seems right for this time of year, however uncomfortable it becomes.

HappyAnniversaryNegroBaseballLeague!

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Fourth of July—Part 1 (129,545 dead Americans from Covid-19)

Today is Tuesday, but I am making it Day One of my 4th of July celebration 2020!
Happy Land of the Free! Home of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness!
This year has been unlike any other in my 70 years.
The reality of life with this pandemic as my frame of reference is far from my wildest previous expectations of how life might change from any community or societal disaster like earthquake or tornado or flood.
The Great 2020 COVID-19 disaster brings with it suffering and death in horrific proportions, including the end of life at this point for 129,545 in this country alone! 
In the world more than 500,000 have died so far from 10,000,000 COVID cases. 

God help us.

Friday, June 19, 2020

119,000 dead Americans courtesy of Trump!

Friday update...
Bad week for Trump due to Supreme Court decision favoring Dreamers

Sunday, June 7, 2020

RIP June 6

June 6 marks the anniversary of the 1944 D-Day invasion of France by America and her allies to begin the overthrow of Hitlers’s madness.
My Dad was part of that invasion as a 22 year old draftee soldiering as a member of the infantry inserted into the battle by Army gliders, known for high mortality. He was one of the few survivors after the glider crashed into pine trees to land. Virgil Warn fought for three days before being wounded by artillery shrapnel that left him disabled the rest of his life.
I tell my story, which is my Dad’s story, to illustrate the importance of June 6 in my life
Other reasons why my life history makes notable June 6:
June 6 is the birthday of my show biz mentor Gil Cates. From 1981 until his death in 2011, he and I became goombas, as he described it. For me, he enabled me to become chief PR guy for the Directors Guild of America, hired me to be his PR guy while he became the all time leader in producing Academy Awards Oscar shows and also hired me to be his PR consultant on retainer to UCLA School of Theater, Film and TV when he became its new Dean. I owe Gil a lot.
June 6 is also the anniversary of the last time I had sex. It was 1991 and she was my third and final wife. Debbie was also an only child and had been married a couple of times when our strong sexual chemistry in the fall of 1988 led us to get married in Palm Springs early in 1989. Debbie told me she was pregnant and since I was 39 with two ex-wives, I was happy about the idea of finally starting a family. I have vivid memories from the day we married, as it turned out to be my third and last wedding. Debbie lied to me about being pregnant then faked a miscarriage when her father died in September. She lied about getting rid of my favorite dog while I was out of town. She lied about much more over the years we remained together until she left me on July 31, 2000. No sex was just one of the reasons she left. Last year, I googled her out of curiosity because we had not talked since before 911. I was truly shocked to discover her obit from early in 2006. RIP Deborah Hunt of Pitman, New Jersey.
June 6 is also the anniversary of the death of Robert Kennedy in 1968. Bobby was my personal political hero. When he was killed, it changed everything. And it changed nothing....

This year June 6 adds the murder of George Floyd to my life’s reasons to remember the date.
#BlackLivesMatter


Friday, June 5, 2020

Welcome to June Gloom 2020!

June Gloom this year has a whole new meaning!
I have always been a fan of June Gloom in the past. Cloud cover before afternoon burn off is a welcome time of year because I don’t like the heat.
2020 has redefined June Gloom to include Covid-19 deaths and racist cops exposed and protests with thugs co-opting the outrage in the finest American criminal tradition of exploiting opportunities while hiding in plain sight amongst real protestors.
The straw that stirs our national toxic cocktail is none other than the guy who got elected to unite us but has never even tried to embrace that mandate; instead, substituting his innate instinct to divide and conquer.
 For the past five years, that man has displayed his very public attempt at the destruction of American values, ideals and core objectives through intentional malfeasance as well as  stupid actions and words!
I have evolved from a Celebity Apprentice watching voyeur of his unbridled egomania as a kind of rubber necker to his outrageous statements into a wide eyed concerned citizen witnessing mental illness harnessed to Presidential power.
With the world crumbling around him, our modern day Nero this morning fiddles through an hour long TV defense of his policies on all of it.
Clearly, as a world master salesman his Willi Loman pitch fashions a hyperbolic pile of word salad filled with his rose colored economic analysis. Today’s unexpectedly strong employment numbers have given him all the fuel he needs to tout his positive narrative of the great job he has done keeping American deaths to ONLY 110,000 plus!

Just the thought of President Joe Biden makes me smile away my June Gloom!

#Biden2020


Sunday, May 31, 2020

And now...THIS!

Americans are many things by nature.
Racist is top of list.
And so our instinct teaches us to be polite but avoid excessive unnecessary interaction.
Which has worked out mostly okay for me.
Until now.
Daily scenes of young black looters fleeing with several boxes of Air Jordan’s and clothes and jewelry and more on live TV bring complicated reactions from me. First, it is just the kind of chaotic dystopian daily news cycle I remember from 1968 and 1969 with one days horror and outrage besting the last one.
Then it was Vietnam, Charlie Manson, assasinations etc
Now it is Covid Quarantine, police overreach, unemployment blues and more.
Then I was 20. Now I am 70!
Life is different now.
Each new day is a gift from God. Thank you Lord!
I am sorry that I took so much in life for granted when I was young. It never occurred to me that I would not live forever, however long that was!
With the exit clearly in sight, I find myself absorbing news events as they are without automatically rating or assessing their utility. I pretty much ascribe to the Doris Days motto: “Que ser a ser a”
What will be will be!
It is what it is!
What has changed most is my frame of reference. I no longer think long term, like in a dream.
No more mental pictures of me with a family being successful and happy. Somehow.
I am left with the gift of knowing some dreams are never really meant to be. With the warm memories of the short glimpses my life gave me.

Onward and upward with the arts!

Onward and upward with the arts!


#RIPGeorgeFloyd

Thursday, May 28, 2020

100,651 dead Americans since March!

Today we moved into six figures on Americans dead since March!
And it goes on...
Trump is Hell bent to raise that number as high as possible by leading his Trump parade maskless into a return to his good old days of 2019 by keeping blinders on to facts he cannot successfully bully into submission. Like a little kid believing no one can see him if he closes his eyes.

 My guy Joe Biden has already become our REAL President with his perfect statement noting the 100,000 milestone while sharing the sense of loss to everyone impacted.

Thanks for that, Joe!

#Biden2020

Monday, May 25, 2020

MemorialDay2020-Final Part

Today is Memorial Day, our annual attempt to express gratitude for the military service of our fellow men and women. In years past, it has been our entry into summer featuring parades and cookouts.
2020 is different.
Social distancing is now our new normal. Face masks save people around us from our germs.
Covid-19 is the enemy that has now killed nearly 100,000 Americans since February.
The scale of this pandemic has given all of us a new standard for disaster.
Temperatures above 90 outside is a reminder of what summer means. This year, however, has no baseball so that’s no good.
Quarantine in my bedroom for three months has advanced my already eager trend towards online interaction as an agreeable substitute for face to face human contact. Facebook,Twitter,AOL,Gmail,you tube,Netflix,amazon Prime, Hulu,and now zoom,webex,Skype,periscope are my daily companions. Along with eight ball pool, words with friends and now blogging this journal filling my days with activity, I am generally OK with what life has become. One benefit of surviving to be 70 years old has proven to be greater patience for accepting life lessons without mashing myself in doubt or despair. Something about my altered acceptance without whining of life’s challenges beyond my control.
Life offers us a wild ride filled with blessings and tough breaks.
My goal now is to be grateful for the former while trying to avoid the latter.

#MemorialDay2020

Welcome to the summer of 2020!

Buckle up boys and girls, we are in for a bumpy flight!

Sunday, May 24, 2020

MemorialDayWeekend2020-Part Three

Sunday mornin coming down...
Some of my best memories happened Sunday morning.
Like the Sunday in 2002 sitting with my Mom in her Toledo home reading
The Blade (“one of America’s Great Newspapers”) with her dog hanging out with my two dogs and two Maine Coon cats as we visited Mom for the first of three times in 2002 and 2003. Those three nationwide road trips gave me a true sense of being American and remembering certain moments of sleeping a couple hours in my car at a truck stop always brings a smile to my face.
Thoughts of Emma,Teddy,Ned and Lulu on those trips make me wonder what the hell I was thinking to believe that those cats could peacefully co-exist with me and my Clumber Spaniel and Shit-tsu inside my leased Jeep Cherokee for over 5,000 miles. And then do it again six months later. I did my third and final Toledo road trip from LA in April, 2003 after wrapping up my job as PR guy for the Oscar show producer following Mom’s news she had esophageal cancer. Once again, I moved into Mom’s home with my dogs and cats and stayed there through the Fourth of July. I started taking Mom to her chemo treatments everyday and we spent more time together than we had since she divorced my Dad when I was 13. Now I was her only child doing my best to be there for her despite my ingrained uncomfortableness with daily human interaction of most kinds as evidenced by my three divorces absent her fondest wish of a grandchild.
Mom’s cancer was nasty, putting her regularly in the ER then a nursing home then hospice after her last hospital visit. That last Sunday morning with her in the hospital before she was transported to NW Ohio Hospice in Perrysburg was peaceful as we again performed our Sunday morning ritual of The Blade with coffee and something sweet.
In the hospice, I spent many hours with her going over decades of family photos and sharing our memories. I pushed her wheelchair over the grounds and still have a picture I took of Mom in front of a giant butterfly metal sculpture so that it looks like she has angels wings. She liked that.
The throat cancer took her ability to swallow but she asked me to bring her an order of her beloved egg foo yung so she could chew it and spit it out. Sounds gross, huh, but who am I to question my mother’s wishes?
Like the time she insisted I go buy a power washer from Target because it was a good deal. I gently reminded her that she would be unlikely to be able to use the power washer at her next destination but she ignored my entreaties. Also, she opened a new account at Lowe’s to purchase other “good deals”
Mom never passed up a good deal, to the end.
The last week of June I spent parts of four days walking around Inverness at the U.S.Senior Open
before visiting Mom. It was an opportunity to be appropriately reflective regarding, mortality, roots, road trips, women, golf, animals and Chinese food.
The last time I saw my Mom was a Sunday morning when I stopped to say goodbye at her hospice on my way out of town back to Los Angeles. I was antsy after these months of nursing duties and restrained mobility and Mom knew it right away. “Did I do something,Chuck,” she asked.  I reassured her but we both knew I was lying. After more mutual reassurances, I left.
That was my all-time fastest drive to LA from Toledo, rolling up to my Sherman Oaks house after midnight Monday starting at noon Sunday.
Thanks Mom for naming me after your favorite brother Charles Ayres, killed by Nazis as a POW in 1942. That is true brotherly love!
Happy Sunday and Happy Memorial Day Mom!
I love you and I miss you.
RIP

Saturday, May 23, 2020

2020 Memorial DayWeekend-Part Two

Saturday is my favorite day of our three day weekends.
Particularly now, Saturday offers the beginning of the “break” with a seemingly endless  promise of “more” until it all ends on Tuesday.
This Memorial Day weekend finds me reflective about my past Memorial Days.
Thinking about my Dad, Virgil Benjamin Warn.
He was born February 25, 1922 in Toledo then died November 7,  2005 in Ann Arbor.
I was with him when he stopped breathing about 5pm then I flew home to Los Angeles, only to repeat the trip four days later for his burial on 11/11/05.
Virgil did not learn his real name until 1942 when his Mom got a letter for some guy named Virgil Warn from the government that started “Greetings”
Until then, he was always “Richard Walker” and his buddies called him Dick or Richard.
Drafted into the U.S. Army after Pearl Harbor, the newly minted “Virgil” left Toledo for the first time in his life.
Basic training prepared Virgil and his new colleagues to be infantry soldiers and he no longer remembered Richard Walker. They fought as part of the 82nd Airborne glider force that entered France on D-Day. Dad fought Nazis for three days before mortar shrapnel wounded him for the third time in the war. This time he was placed with a pile of dead guys and might have remained there if not for the miraculous discovery that he was still breathing by another GI from Toledo who happened by and recognized his homeboy then raised Holy Hell until the medics took care of him. My own mortality beginning five years later seemed very much in doubt at that point.
As a D-Day vet, my Dad remained proud of his service until his death many decades later. He advised me to pass on going to Vietnam because our family debt had been paid to Old Glory. My namesake Uncle Chuck had been killed as a POW by Nazis and Dad was 80 percent disabled after the war.
So this Memorial Day, I propose a toast to honor my Dad Virgil, a real American hero!

RIP Dad

Friday, May 22, 2020

MemorialDay2020-PartOne

And so today kicks off the summer of 2020...
Actually, this is the first day of Memorial Day Weekend which has always been a touchstone in my life. Summertime is triangular, with Memorial Day and Labor Day as bookends around the Fourth of July. Memories flood my mind as I recall past summers from the 1950s at our rented farmhouse with an outhouse and a pump for water. Party line telephone calls meant several others eavesdropping on every call. The living room carpet would rise up whenever the wind blew. We took baths on Sunday nights in a galvanized steel bathtub filled with water we pumped and then heated with a magic gizmo we plugged into the wall. I remember sitting in the tub listening to radio programs like Fibber McGee & Molly, Amos n Andy, Gunsmoke etc...
I was not yet ten so I accepted it all as normal because it was what I knew. My best friend was named Ernie and he lived across Hellwig Road from our farmhouse in Genoa, outside Toledo. Ernie’s Dad was a farmer so I got to join them throughout the year in 1955 through 1958 doing farm chores like planting tomatoes, harvesting hay, milking cows, plowing land, feeding chickens and cows and horses and dogs and cats and more like goats and ducks and rabbits.
Mom and Dad taught me to love all animals, especially dogs and our farm became like the Underground Railroad for stray dogs, including some of the best dogs I ever knew. Like the boxer with one eye who stopped by for awhile to join our dogs So-So and Ringy as a part of our family. One day, he moved on somewhere else but his intelligence and bravery have stayed with me decades later.
I cried for a week when our sweet little mongrel named Brownie was killed by a hay baler on the road in front of our house.
Those winters were cold and when it snowed the outhouse required a full measure of fortitude. The fields surrounding our farm were muddy a lot and more than once I lost my shoe to the mud in those years.
Dad worked as a lumber handler at Rossford Army Depot until JFK got elected in 1960 and cut defense spending at places like Dad’s job. I never connected those dots until many years later. I loved JFK and still remember volunteering my ten year old services to Kennedy because Nixon was evil.
Mom sold Avon then Kirby vacuums. I got to go with her to pitch Kirbys to a series of wide-eyed young couples seeking truly superior vacuum assistance. She also took me to her sales meetings where they all sang songs and pumped each other up. Those experiences came in handy when I later joined the workforce selling magazines, shoes, diamonds, watches, sporting goods then Democrats.
My parents used to host their Toledo friends at summer bbq cookouts. Lots of laughs and beer and fried chicken, burgers, hot dogs, baked beans, potato salad, chocolate cake
The dogs always loved all the people sharing food.

Sweet, sweet memories...

Thursday, May 21, 2020

TV takes down Trump! Film at eleven!

TV has always been my lifeline.
I watch television everyday, from morning til night.
All kinds of TV really, but I am consistently drawn to personable talk show hosts, news, sports, movies and all manner of episodic programming, especially cop shows, medical shows and legal dramas.
Watching Donald Trump since 2015 is like observing the co-option of my lifelong comfort tool. His use and misuse of television to secure his own political objectives is astounding, outrageous and impressive.
The impact he has wrought on American life as a result has created the swamp he campaigned to drain. And he has filled his swamp with a Motley Crue of creatures cloned to resemble his son in law Jared, Trump’s Lead Swamp Thing.
Now, it is true that television taught me decades ago not to trust most things. Trump just confirmed those instincts in spades.
My point here is that we are all now witnessing in real time a genuine three card Monty of distraction unequaled by any other public figure. Trump is selling snake oil on TV everyday and so far his customers have loved it.
Why then is Joe Biden beating Donald Trump by eleven points?
I submit it has a lot to do with the avoidable deaths of 100,000 Americans over the past few weeks.

TV gives and TV takes away.

ByeBye Trump!

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

92,712 dead from Covid-19, including Annie Glenn RIP

John Glenn was an American hero.
When I was in 7th grade, we listened to the spaceman from Ohio prove to us a man could blast off, circle the world and come home safe. Our young Ohio chests were inflated with buckeye pride.
I close my eyes today and my mind takes me back to that day of “Godspeed John Glenn” in 1962.
Of course, he went on to serve our country in space and the U.S.Senate for decades after then before his death three years ago. He met his wife Annie when they were toddlers and they remained devoted to each other until she buried him in 2017. This week, Annie returned to his side after passing away from Covid-19. Godspeed Annie Glenn!
RIP Annie Glenn (1920-2020)

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

82,548 American Covid-19 deaths

Every day brings us more death and more Covid cases.
By now, it is a familiar routine: TV brings updates and talking heads on Zoom.
Morning becomes afternoon becomes night.
Social distancing gives it a name; before this, my life was solitary by choice.
After three 20th Century wives, the last twenty years have been blessedly free from female influence.
Nonetheless, I miss human touch and interaction.
A sense exacerbated by this current circumstance.
Well, at least it offers us something different from the killings, earthquakes, fires, racism,crashes, accidents,Trumpisms,petty bullshit and more.
Change is always mostly for the good or better, except when it is not.
Like now.
Feels like being stuck in a scary blockbuster summer movie that we cannot walk out on.
Never even thought about living this long. Now I am 70 years old.
Add this to my list of life experiences along with The Beatles, JFK, MLK, Bobby Kennedy, Allard Lowenstein, Vietnam, Watergate, Nixon Resigns, Jonestown, Harvey Milk, George Moscone, ThreeMileIsland, Reagan, Springsteen, Marriages in Alexandria Virginia, Las Vegas and Palm Springs and much more...

Life is short, and then you die.

Amen.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

67,674 dead Americans: “success story?”

CoronaVirus2020 is proceeding apace. As crazy radicals protest stay at home around the country, the virus numbers show no sign of plateau much less decline;thus, a second wave of death is coming just in time to take down antsy citizens yearning to shop and play golf and get tattoos. On May 3,2020 life no longer resembles the life I knew for 70 years before.

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

58,126 Americans dead (so far)

The number of American dead from Covid-19 has now surpassed the total killed in Vietnam! This era is now on my life list of notable occurances. Along with... JFK assasinated Vietnam War Watergate Election of a black President Presidency via Electoral College, twice! Three marriages Career gains and losses Death... Family Friends Dogs Cats First baseball game Playing baseball Coming through in the clutch First divorce Second divorce Third marriage annulled Miscarriages Abortions No kids Lost strength Balance problems No contact life normal And so it goes...

Friday, April 17, 2020

CoronaVille Week 3: better to be six feet apart than six feet under

This week saw the stock market rebound while thousands more Americans died. Trump declared himself to be all powerful, but without any responsibilities. Pelosi shared TV images from her home of her freezer filled with ice cream. I received $1,200. from the Feds. Direct deposit spared me from Trump’s signature. Johnny Depp joined Instagram. Now Chris Cuomo’s wife has tested positive for Covid19. Strong week for Joe Biden: first Bernie drops out then endorses Joe followed by endorsements by BarackObama and Elizabeth Warren! All together now: Dump Trump! Best sound byte this week by Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer: “better to be six feet apart than six feet under”

Thursday, April 16, 2020

#Biden2020

Thursday U.S.A. CaronaDeaths now over 31,000 LA total about 900 Groundhog days for everyone now over a month, no real light in the tunnel to normalcy. Meanwhile, our President gifted us a new national daily obsession: Trump Time On TV! While his entire career has been driven by his egomania, until now his inner voice which urges him to assert his own supremacy merely did battle with mortal opponents. Now that he must grapple with this invisible but deadly opponent, Trump can be seen on TV flailing to distract attention from any true analysis of his job performance. Joe Biden offers Americans the chance to take back this nation on behalf of all the people yearning for the return of an adult to the Oval Office. #Biden2020

Friday, April 10, 2020

CoronaVille Week Two: RIP Al Kaline

This week it got much worse, now the total number of dead is over 17,000 in USA. Surreal is the word that comes to mind. Our lives are very different now. No one knows when this will end. I am watching old baseball games, Netflix and TCM old movies. My worst of the week was the death of my boyhood hero, the great Detroit Tiger number 6, Al Kaline. My Dad taught me to love baseball but Al Kaline taught me how it is supposed to be played. I still recall vividly my anguish in May 1962 the day Kaline broke his collarbone on a game-saving catch off the Yankees Elston Howard. My 12 year old heart was shattered all that summer followed in October by the CubanMissle Crisis when JFK explained to us how the Soviets must be forced to remove their missles from Cuba. Little did I realize then that the Russians were not really targeting my home outside Toledo. All these years later, that memory of JFK clashes harshly with the current daily cackling of Trump the Fraudster. This guy makes being patriotic seem hideous and that is a shame...this too shall pass.

Friday, April 3, 2020

CoronaVille:WeekOne

Friday of week one finds me smiling inside as I witness the world adjusting to my POV of the past few years: namely stay home and forego most pleasure and try not to die. Another day. Still kicking. Praise God!

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Joe Biden For President: America Is An Idea

April Fools Day 2020

So this is the latest... Our world has changed or maybe is just growing in new ways. Coronavirus2020: 100,000-240,000 predicted USA deaths, currently at 4,500+ For the first time in my life, everyday life has retreated from public access. No baseball, no restaurants or bars. No physical contact with anyone. Or else, those deaths will grow north of two million. That is where we are at on April Fools Day 2020.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Coronaville2020

Coronaville2020 Well, the ides of March meant it this year! Stay at home is our way of life for now...until? No is the word that answers most questions.