THE WYMAN, WEAKLY
Underemployed. Unattached. Unimpressed.
Issue 49 April 25, 1997
April is National Poetry Month. Now if I could just
find a word that rhymes with month.
SANCTUARY
I wrote this while listening to The J. Geils Band Anthology: Houseparty. Forget yer Prozac,
positive thinking, pills, booze, love, whatever. When it comes to bringing
yourself out of a funk, pop one of these two discs into your CD player and turn
it up. This is fun blues, r&b, and rock ‘n’ roll music that is smart and played
smartly. It’ll get your toes tapping and you might even dance around your
living room. What a blast. Anyway, I’m not depressed as I write this, but I
woke up around eleven thirty this morning still feeling the residual effects of
those Summit Pale Ales that I was drinking with The God of Rock ‘n’ Roll at
Chang O’Hara’s thirty-six hours prior. I was worried about a day-long headache
(you know: what the? I paid my price yesterday.) But after a cup of joe and a
listening to Geils busting out with “Sno-Cone” and “Wait”, I was feeling
healthy and ready to slack a day away.
BETTER OFF
DEAD
Getting of off the bus on Eighth and Hennepin, I
walk by the Musicland store, which has been there for ages. The one with brutal
attempts at likenesses of Joplin, Marley, Lennon, and Orbison above its
storefront. I’ve never been in this store, for years I walked into the Northern
Lights across the street. Flash back to a hot summer’s eve in ‘92 - me: can I
drink my pop in here? cute clerk: you sure can, just don’t spill. The first
time I saw a censorship - I mean warning - sticker on an album was on The
Clash’s London Calling in a Musicland
store. And that was before the sleazy record industry backed down to our-now
second lady (please somebody tell me how progressive Al Gore is, I could use
the laugh...) and her cronies and put those parental warning stickers on
albums. From Northern Lights, I ordered a twelve-inch single of the
Replacements’ “I Will Dare” (on the flip side were covers of T. Rex and Hank
Williams songs) and didn’t see censorship stickers in that store until the
record industry totally caved in. Yeah, Wyman doesn’t like a big music chain,
so what. But it’s not just me, you must understand. My main man Joel once
turned down a temp job working at a Musicland warehouse. A matter of principle,
he told the agency. That’s called having big ones. So anyway, I’m walking by
the store and across the street Northern Lights is closed, has been for quite a
while they couldn’t keep up with the big boys and you might say tough luck but
you try ordering a long-play single at Best Buy and see what they say. I look
into the store, hoping to see a poster of the Spice Girls, that would make my
morning, just seeing them and not hearing them. And the poster on the window
says THIS MUSICLAND STORE HAS CLOSED. I immediately look for someone to high
five.
ALWAYS READ ON
THE BUS
Way back in issue #30 (I love mentioning back issues
- it makes me feel like I’m writing for Marvel comics) I mentioned talking to a
girl on the bus about Trainspotting.
This week on the bus she sat next to me one morning, said hi and then starting
talking about The English Patient. I
explained that I have never seen that movie. She thought we had discussed it
before, but I informed her that we had talked about Trainspotting. What I didn’t say was that I don’t like movies about
English patients or movies about English patience (you know - starring Helena
Bonham Carter and Anthony Hopkins and a big mansion with a big yard.) How do
you tell a girl you prefer movies about drug-addled Scots?
HOW NOT TO MAKE A CAREER CHOICE
So the director of accounting at Big Health tells me
that she’d like me to work there permanently. You show a little bit of
competence here, a flash of brilliance there, smile when you talk to people, and
you get a kinda-job-offer. And I even considered working there. Jeans every
day. Babes work there. Three weeks of vacation a year. Health insurance paid
for. Free email. But you can’t put a price on some things. Always remember
that, dear readers.
I guess a reason for me to not work at this place
permanently is that the position they had me in mind for is something called an
analyst. Who wants a job whose title starts out with “anal?” Not me. Plus, I
guess I just have a problem working in the health care (I keep it two words,
although I’ve been seeing the word “healthcare” a lot lately) industry. Is it
just me, or is there something wrong with so many people making so much money
off of sick and injured people? So what I want to do (but I won’t because I’m
chickenshit) my last day there is wear a teeshirt that says something like
PUBLIC HEALTH INSURANCE or maybe SOCIALIZED MEDICINE, which would be a cool
name for a band if I ever started one. Either that or The New Morality. Or Gino
Gasparini. Notice it’s okay for me to work temp at such a place, though. I’m
the first to admit that I’m a walking contradiction.
If you are concerned with having a career, getting
ahead, and maximizing your money-earning potential; do the OPPOSITE of the
following if you are about to make a career decision: You’ve got to have some
Grain Belt (substitute whatever vice you wish) in your fridge, for starters.
When in doubt, take a nap; but if you’re not too terribly sleepy, you may want
to crack open a cold one to get you in the mood to piss away all your precious
analytical and business acumen. Alright, the mood has been set. Now you need a
soundtrack. You’re making a nondecision, you’re saying no, you’re walking away,
and when they make the movie of your life they’ve got to have some righteous
music to set the mood. So here’s my favorite Fuck Having a Career Songs:
“Clampdown” by the Clash (the men in the
factory are old and kind they don’t owe nothing boy get running it’s the best
years of your life they want to steal), “I Don’t Know” by the Replacements
(whatya going to do with your life?
nothing!!), and “You Can’t Have Me” by Big Star (repeat chorus.)
But all this tough talk and no job offer has ever
been on the table. The vp of money probably put the kabosh on the whole idea
anyway. Way back in January, I was wrapping up my first project and they were
thinking of projects I could work on. There was something that needed to be
investigated and fixed in the payroll ledgers, and the vp said “looks like an
opportunity for improvement.” And you know how Homer Simpson’s brain will talk
to him and Homer says what his brain is thinking instead of saying the correct
thing? Well, I heard the words “opportunity for improvement” and I said
“wowwww” real slow and then the vp gave me a funny look and walked away. So
anyway, if there’s no offer I don’t have to say no thanks. But it’s always fun
to practice saying no thanks. At least that’s what I like to think. Biggest
fear: offer of a part-time job and I go through all this again.
SOMETIME TO
RETURN
This will be the last issue of The Wyman Weekly. I’m selling it to Disney. Just kidding. I am
going to come out with a revamped zine in a few weeks. It won’t come out
weekly, so it will accordingly have a different name (definitely - because to
continue to call something a weekly that doesn’t come out weekly would be like
adding a team to the Big Ten and still calling it the Big Ten.) It will have a
different format (probably), and will be just as self-absorbed and rambling as
this one (of course.) I foresee it coming out every 3-5 weeks. You will all get
free grand-reopening copies of the next issue, which will probably be labeled
issue #50 mostly because, dammit, I don’t want to start all over at issue #1
again. Thanks for reading and for all the correspondence and feedback. And
thank you falettinme be mice elf again.
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