The Most Influential American Man, Maybe Ever

No, I’m not talking about Bernard Purdie, shown here playing the drums with Vulfpeck, although it would be alright with him if I was. Bernard played on the original Kid Charlemagne, a Steely Dan minor masterpiece. I like how Bernard is wearing a Bernard Purdie tee-shirt. I think I’ll wear a Sippican Cottage t-shirt when I pick up my Nobel prize for literature. Or maybe a sweatshirt.  I hear it gets cold in Stockholm. On further reflection, maybe they can just mail me the money and the bronze coaster with the dynamiter on it, and save me the trip.

Speaking of trips, in the title, I’m not referring to Bernard, or Becker or Fagen, or even Owlsley, the LSD king that Kid Charlemagne is written about. All that chemistry was in aid of the largest deliberate experiment in subverting the culture ever attempted: The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test. Ken Kesey has had a larger influence on the United States than anyone going back to maybe Alexander Hamilton. And while it ultimately led by a very circuitous route to the wonderful agglomeration of Bernard Purdie and Vulfpeck playing Kid Charlemagne, it would be hard to come to any conclusion but one: That influence was all bad.

The Merry Pranksters, as they styled themselves, wouldn’t mind being called bad influences by the L7s, because they were rebelling against the squares. Many people thought the Pranksters were doing a good thing by telling people that drugs would expand their minds, and that these expanded minds would lead to all sorts of wonderful things, like whirled peas, face painting, and luxuriant armpit hair on women.

Well, it didn’t.

All those Day-Glo freaks who used to paint their face
They’ve joined the human race
Some things will never change

These are the Day-Glo freaks Becker and Fagen were talking about, and Kid Charlemagne was supplying with LSD:

Kesey is largely responsible for the two major problems currently haunting America. First, he wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. That made him a pile of money, and earned him plenty of notoriety. It was the lever that started the big rock of “reform” rolling downhill for US mental hospitals. Of course Chesterton’s Fence wasn’t consulted, and the benighted denizens were simply turned out of doors instead of firing all the prototypical passive aggressive girlbosses like nurse Ratched and starting over. So mentally ill people get to live under bridges and yell at cars, courtesy of Ken Kesey.

Then Kesey started the sixties counterculture, nearly singlehanded, if Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test is to be believed. Now that Wolfe is dead, I figured it was safe to read something written by him. My wife found a dogeared paperback copy of it for me in a used bookstore. If I’m still reading the frontispiece correctly, this paperback edition was printed in 1989, but was already the 31st edition of the thing. I’m always amazed at how well bad writing used to pay.

I’m exaggerating some. The book’s not bad, exactly. But the breathless praise for TEKAAT book seems a bit much to me. The author was trying way too hard, and ends up sounding like a stoned, short-bus James Joyce. But that was the spirit of the times. To a normal person, a species which of course has currently been hunted to extinction, hearing the drivel that comes out of their mouths, and the bad rock music, you realize that it only sounds like something if you’re stoned.

But that was the other Kesey shoe that dropped. Giving people LSD, including giving it to them unawares, is just one act in his passion play. The whole idea that it is completely normal for everyone to be stoned on one thing or another, or everything all at once for that matter, was adumbrated by Kesey and his coterie of Day-Glo freaks. I found it interesting that in the book, Wolfe describes what the merry band used when LSD was hard to get. They’d smoke a lot of weed and take a lot of speed, and reported that it gave them almost the same sort of trip. I immediately thought of today’s kids, gobbling ritalin and other ADHD drugs, which are a kind of speed, and smoking now-legal marijuana. Everything old is new again, I guess.

Downstream of all that, Kesey’s idea that any productive behavior is strictly for the squares now reigns triumphant. Riding around, stoned out of your gourd, and annoying the locals while filming it, just like the Merry Pranksters, is the number one career choice for young people these days, at least according to various polls:

  • 86% of young Americans say they’d try being an influencer; 12% already identify as one, according to a Morning Consult poll (ages 13–38)
  • 57% of Gen Z teens (13–26) believe they can easily make a career as an influencer, with the same share saying they’d leave their current job to pursue it
  • 40% of teenagers (13–18) are actively considering becoming social media influencers, per a Citizens Financial/Junior Achievement survey
  • 16% of teens explicitly want to become a “social media influencer/content creator,” ranking just behind entrepreneurship in a Junior Achievement/EY study

It doesn’t matter that there are no more squares to outrage. Grandma’s got an ass-antler tattoo and grandpa is swinging at The Villages hot tub with his current girlfriend. Whatever. Today’s young girls make endless videos of themselves stuffing comped food in their faces at various vacation spots, or take off their tube tops on OnlyFans to make a few bucks. The guys record their video games and publish them on Twitch or suchlike, and mention that they might also acquiesce to being a pro athlete, but pretty much no one wants a real job. Kesey did that.

So Wolfe’s book accidentally shows what happens the day after tomorrow when you take Timothy Leary’s advice to: Turn on, tune in, and drop out. Plenty of those Merry people ended up in mental, and other sorts of hospitals. An assortment ended up dead. Jail was pretty common. Eventually the hippie chicks learned that Merry Pranksters thought Hell’s Angels were just as merry, and invited them over for what sounds to me like a gang rape that Tom Wolfe should have called that. And the whole lovely worldview soldiered on through the decades until it reached its apotheosis in Fentanyldelphia, Pennsylvania:

It’s useful to recall that the original idea for giving Americans LSD was part of a CIA mind-control experiment called MKUltra. I guess you could call it a failed experiment, but then again, you’d have to know what they were really trying to accomplish to know if it was a failure, and almost every record of it was burned by the CIA. But a list of the known and likely participants in the “experiments,” some unwitting, sure is interesting. Ken Kesey, Alan Ginsberg, the Grateful Dead’s lyricist, James Whitey Bulger, Ted Kaczynski, Sirhan Sirhan, and Charles Manson. Nice bunch of people there. Very tuned in, turned on, and dropped out. Jim Jones had his own Kool-Aid test down in Guyana, too, and while no one can positively say the CIA was in on it, it sure sounds fishy, and one is reminded that denying they’re in on it is right on their business cards.

So what did it all add up to, really? Driving around in a garishly decorated bus, dressing in clown motley, taking drugs, and annoying regular people while filming it? Let’s go back to Steely Dan for the answer.

While the poor people sleeping with the shade on the light.

Tuesday Overlooked Bookmark Roundup

Well, it’s Tuesday. Time to clean out the bookmarks we’ve been meaning to read, but never got around to. Pull up a seat, and stay awhile. But be careful where you sit.

TSA Quietly Dropping Shoe Removal Requirement During Airport Screening

Even though the TSA did not formally release a statement, multiple travelers across the U.S. are already reporting on social media that they were not required to take off their shoes. At some major airports, passengers reported that some non-PreCheck lines allowed customers to keep their shoes on while others still required that they take them off.

I flew on a plane for the first time in twenty years last year. The airports had all the charm of a bus station, and none of the efficiency.

Never Work Alone, Even in the Age of AI

The question is whether—with enough automation—one person could handle everything needed to build a sizable business: coming up with a product idea, building it end-to-end, selling it, supporting customers, and more. But there’s another, similarly important question within the first one: Would anyone actually want to do all of that work alone? And would they stay sane if they tried?

I’ve done it several times, and without much automation, too. Man up, Nancy.

Investors snap up growing share of US homes as traditional buyers struggle to afford one

As home sales have slowed, properties are taking longer to sell. That’s led to a sharply higher inventory of homes on the market, benefitting investors and other home shoppers who can afford to bypass current mortgage rates by paying in cash or tapping home equity gains.

Apparently only investors read my Great Moments in Maine Real Estate series.

Musk’s Grok Update Sparks Outcry Over Politically Incorrect AI

Elon Musk’s AI company, xAI, has updated its chatbot Grok to adopt a more openly politically incorrect stance, sparking new controversy. Over the weekend, xAI publicly modified Grok’s system prompts, instructing it to view media-sourced viewpoints as biased and to embrace politically incorrect claims—provided they are well-supported. The new directives also tell Grok not to reference these instructions unless asked directly.

Oh no! Anyway…

The Nothing Phone (3) surprised me – a week in, it’s the best phone I’ve used for creating content

Phone (3)’s 6.67-inch flexible AMOLED display is one of the best I’ve used at this price, and it matters. For anyone working with visual content, whether that’s sketching UI ideas in Figma, finger painting in the best drawing apps for Android like Heavy Paint and ArtRage Vitae, reviewing photos, or editing images on the go, this screen delivers clarity, colour fidelity, and contrast.

There’s a lot of words on that page, but I didn’t notice any about whether you could use this device to make phone calls.

‘Village of one kidney’: India-Bangladesh organ traffickers rob poor donors

“Some people knowingly sell their kidneys due to extreme poverty, but a significant number are deceived,” said Shariful Hasan, associate director of the Migration Programme at BRAC, formerly the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee, one of the world’s largest nongovernmental development organisations. “A rich patient in India needs a kidney, a middleman either finds a poor Bangladeshi donor or lures someone in the name of employment, and the cycle continues.”

My local hospital was begging for kidney donations recently. I decided to help them out. They were pretty unreasonable about the whole thing, though, with lots of paperwork, and asking all sorts of impertinent questions like, “Whose kidney is this?”

Oldest wooden tools in East Asia may have come from any of three species

Archaeologists excavating at Gantangqing (an archaeological site on the shore of Lake Fuxian in what’s now southwestern China) unearthed 35 wooden tools from layers of soil dating to around 300,000 years ago. According to Yunnan Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology archaeologist Jian-Hui Liu and colleagues, all 35 tools seem to have been designed, crafted, and used to harvest plants—specifically, the rhizomes, bulb-like corms, and other underground organs that many plants use to store nutrients.

I’m a woodworker. And I can assure you that it would take me around 300,000 years to find my bevel square.

Bear-Sized Giant Beavers Once Roamed North America, and They’re Now the Official State Fossil of Minnesota

The giant beaver’s journey to becoming Minnesota’s state fossil has been a long and winding one. The saga dates back to at least 1988, when a group of third graders first proposed making the massive mammal the official state fossil, according to Minnesota Star Tribune columnist Jennifer Brooks. Since then, the proposal has come up again and again. Each time, lawmakers have said no—but that changed this year.

Bones are pretty good, but I’m going to have to see some more damming evidence before I believe in these rodents of unusual size.

Are We Star Trek Yet?

Matter replicators, organic transporters, and warp drives are a little hazy on the timeline, but it seems like the holodeck and emergency medical hologram are just about here.

I’m disappointed that “Jumping a hot green chick’s bones” isn’t on the list.

Deafness reversed: Single injection brings hearing back within weeks

A cutting-edge gene therapy has significantly restored hearing in children and adults with congenital deafness, showing dramatic results just one month after a single injection. Researchers used a virus to deliver a healthy copy of the OTOF gene into the inner ear, improving auditory function across all ten participants in the study. The therapy worked best in young children but still benefited adults, with one 7-year-old girl regaining almost full hearing.

This sounds promising, but it’s likely to ruin a lot of perfectly good marriages, too.

What’s It’s Like in Bath, Maine

Well, that was confusing. I had a Three Stooges flashback, and thought Saturday was always bath day. But we went to Bath, Maine, on a whim on Sunday, and it was Bath Day all over again. It was lots of laughs, even without the eye-gouges.

It was plenty hot. Around 90F. But while Bath isn’t technically oceanfront, it’s on the Kennebec River, which wends its way down from where we live in Ogguster, and then continues on past Bath out to the Atlantic. So there was a nice almost-ocean breeze, and 90 felt downright pleasant, at least if you stayed on the shady side of the street. Like this:

The picture is somewhat deceiving. We had just walked up Center Street, and were banging a left onto Front Street. That was where the action was, primarily, but it looks sparsely thronged in the photo. But there were a lot of people out. Perhaps they got a good look at us, and kept their distance while I took the picture.

You get a good feel for the place in that picture. Bath is a paean to brick. Real bricks, too, not awful concrete simulacrums. The sidewalks and the buildings and even the alleys are all bricks. Maine towns had a habit of burning down from time to time, and eventually the locals got tired of it and built the whole town over again with bricks. Portland is like that, too. Sometimes it was Indians, and sometimes it was Canadians or Brits, and occasionally, it was just the Know Nothing Party burning Catholic churches. They got their comeuppance eventually. Besides barbecuing Catholic churches, I gather they were also big into women’s rights. As soon as women got the vote, they outlawed liquor. Imagine 200 shipyards and zero grogshops. Fate worse than death, that.

When we crossed the street to get our ration of un-awninged July solar radiation, which resembles Venus a bit, I took a snap that shows the brick-y facades of the shops to better effect. As you can espy in the next picture, the street has remained mostly unchanged during the last 100 years, except for the Great Awning Blight of 1937:

There are plenty of relatively monumental brick buildings mixed in with the wee shop-downstairs-a-few-floors-of-apartments-above. Like this gem:

Even the more modest bank buildings are pretty elegant:

Bath has a nice mixture of federal, Greek revival, and Italianate buildings. It’s got a hell of a city hall for a burg with fewer than 9,000 people in it:

The town has been known for shipbuilding since they chased the Abenaki Indians out. At one point, there were something like 200 companies making boats in Bath and environs. There’s still one big one, hulking over everything in the town: Bath Iron Works. They make destroyers for the navy:

Well, Prohibition is over, and Bath has numerous places with liquor licenses, and they even serve guys that went to Catholic school. We went in one, the Bath Brewing Company, and had some pale ale to go with their back deck river view:

Food was good, too. We watched over the railing as all the regular folks walked along the riverfront and got fried dough and fried skin in the afternoon sun as they sauntered on the road by the park, where a carnival had set up shop:

The park had one hell of a view of the mighty Kennebec, and the new Sagadahoc Bridge, which helps you continue on Route 1 without getting your feet wet. The old railroad bridge is behind it.

Bath was pretty normal, all in all, which is anything but normal these days. The park was filled with families, and a bandstand where yacht rock covers were served. The local wildmen was just mildly off-beat:

So we had a good time in Bath. I think I could live in Bath, and like it, although whether Bath would like me back is another story. I know it’s dangerous to judge a place on a single, out of the ordinary day, but all I needed to see was three good bookstores on two blocks of Front Street. Case closed.

Never Gonna Do It Without My Fez On. Happy Independence Day From Maine

And the monkey chased the weasel ’round the flagpole.

Not really. I’d have loved to see marching bands in uniforms, desecrating some Sousa while trying to remember straw foot, hay foot, but it was not to be. No matter. It was a very Maine parade. The Augusta July 4th just passed by my window, and refreshed my opinion of my fellow man a bit, even if they couldn’t hunt up any baton twirlers.

Since we’re living the vida loca in the city, we get certain perqs to go along with the lack of peace and quiet. We were smack dab on the parade route. I got to sit on my couch and watch it roll by. I was expecting a perfunctory affair, but it took a full hour to traipse past me and my cup of coffee. It was gratifying to see the street lined with families to see the parade. Children are, after all, humanity’s opinion that life should go on. There were lots of them along the sidewalk under our windows, doing toddler things and generally wearing out their parents in amusing ways.

The parades of my youth are long gone. I think that’s because parades used to be more crypto-military. It was never one of those soviet things with missiles rolling by a bandstand filled with guys about to get airbrushed out of photos or anything, but the vague outlines of the military were always there. Uniforms, marching in step, playing martial music, and waving flags. The pennants of the various marching groups were like battalion identifiers in the army. But that was because our parents generation still had world wars and police actions on their resumes. It was familiar to anyone who had marched in step, but completely devoid of any menace. The military used to be general. Now it’s niche.

So the parade was more like a giant, charming paramecium blobbing its way down the main drag than phalanxes on the march. It consisted of quite the agglomeration of the local gentry, and a heaping helping of just plain stuff, somewhat festooned with bunting and flags, and suitable for waving from, and waving at.

I don’t keep up with the Marvel Comics scene, but even to my eye, Captain America has let himself go a bit.

It was pleasant that the parade hadn’t devolved entirely into off-topic scene-stealing by the usual suspects. Here’s a nice bunch of folks on their way to sew flags or shoot a redcoat from behind a tree or sign a document in florid cursive.

I’ve performed in Fourth of July parades, and been dragged through the streets on a giant flatbed trailer, so I won’t make any mordant remarks about marching bands that don’t march.

The various dance studios from the area made appearances, and the gaggles of young girls certainly added to the festive and un-martial air of the proceedings. Here’s one set, performing their patented synchronized handstand maneuver, which was synchronized about as well as a helicopter evacuation from a fallen ally’s roof, but much more charming.

Holy cow, Shriners! They had Shriners like Nigeria has princes. They came in drove after drove, and drove little motorcycles in figure eights like madmen. They had oversized gas-powered big wheels, and drifted in crazy loops. Then there were little NASCAR wildmen bombing around, and even spicing things up by occasionally turning right, too. I have no idea how I got tilt-shift to happen on my wife’s phone, but I did:

The Shriners had an awesome bunch of antique cars and trucks, too.

You’re officially old when cars you once rode in while new are currently antiques. Dad! He’s looking at me!

After the legions of Shriners wore us out with their frivolity, some regular old commerce reared its head a little. It’s very Maine, though, to parade things like logging trucks. The little boys wander out to the edge of the parking lane, and make the international mime motion for yanking down on a cable, and the drivers cooperate nicely and blow their air horns. And honestly, is it really an Independence Day celebration until someone cruises by towing a Japanese excavator? I think not.

The parade lasted over an hour. it finished up with every fire engine from five towns around filing majestically in a line, and sending the toddlers behind moms’ skirts with their sirens. Lots of people threw candy to the kids, and someone even had a trolley full of free children’s books they handed out as they passed along the route. I noticed them on the way back, completely wiped out of books.

And this being Maine, when it was all over, and everyone had gone home to get properly sunburned and full of hot dogs and craft beer, there wasn’t so much as a candy wrapper left along the parade route.

Drop All Your Troubles by the Riverside

You have to understand, right up front, that I’ve always hated this song.

You’ll have to imagine the various unpleasant bodily excretions I substituted for blood, sweat, and tears when I mentioned the name of the originators of Spinning Wheel. It’s a fat slice of 1968 flower power horsehockey in the lyric department. That was stapled onto jazz/rock/fusion sturm and drang that always gave me the hives.

It was plenty popular when it came out, but Henry Mancini kept Spinning Wheel out of the Number One slot on the charts for a while by the supposedly romantic but mostly depressing Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet. Considering the subject, it wasn’t depressing enough to convince people that Romeo and Juliet isn’t a romance, it’s a tragedy, but Henry tried. That was followed by another musical obstruction, the red-hot knitting needle for earwax removal and instant channel changing In the Year 2525 by Zager and Evans. So Spinning Wheel never made it to the top, but it hung around on the musical Hillary Step for a good long while.

Egads. Blattering horns. Bellowing vocals. Overwrought organ. Spinning Wheel.

And then Capiozzo and Mecco come into my life and fix the whole megillah for me. Why drop acid when benzedrine and grappa is available?

Month: July 2025

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