By Dave Shiflett on 8.9.02 @ 12:04AM
Hooray for Hollywood -- the cemetery.
Living in the information age is no cup of tea. It is a good
thing to be able to read the major newspapers of the world for free
and to have a couple hundred cable stations to peruse, in the
slight chance that one or two has something worth watching. It is
also good to have Internet sites where vast amounts of information
are posted, even if much of that info is hardly worth knowing. This
morning, for instance, finds a story dedicated to this
earth-rattling subject: Lech Walesa has shaved his mustache, and
nobody knows why! No doubt, the cable stations presented the story
as a News Alert. You can't have an official above the rank of
postal inspector stub a toe without putting out an Alert.
But one is also quickly reminded that humans love to feed at the
bottom of the pond. It often seems the dreck far outweighs anything
reasonably worthy, though this may simply be a reflection on the
old adage: One thimbleful of piss spoils the whole punchbowl. This
week, for instance, saw the unveiling of a new "reality show" in
which a chunky air-head went about her daily business, which
included scolding a cat for breaking wind. This show isn't totally
without benefit, to be sure. It has been fashionable to dismiss low
behavior as somehow unique to trailer parks and shanty towns, while
in fact most of the people in reality shows are either hugely rich
or at least up-and-comers. Many of these people would be thrown out
of trailer parks for practicing unnecessary crassness. It is time
for the tornadoes to re-direct their fury.
Yet the fact is, there are not nearly enough tornadoes to halt
the scourge of Creeping Crapola. Who would be surprised to turn on
the television and find a station dedicated to transmitting the
antics of humans loitering in the loo? Might be called Dump TV.
Indeed, such a service is already available on the Internet, so can
be expected to hit cable soon enough -- no doubt featuring
celebrity guests. "Brittany Lets Fly!" "Rosie Thunders At Noon!"
"Mr. T Shows The Mug Who's Boss!"
At one time there was a belief that in the great marketplace of
ideas, the good ones would win out and send the bad ones very much
to the margin. In our age, a deeper truth surfaces: There's far too
much piss in the punchbowl and no way of filtering it out. That
won't make it as a News Alert, but it's the truth.
To which one can only respond: Thank God for graveyards. There's
no better way to put life in perspective than strolling six feet
above the dust of the dead. In my neck of the woods there's no
finer boneyard than Richmond's Hollywood Cemetery, the famed
burying ground on the north bank of the James River. It hosts not
only thousands of ordinary folks, but also the remains of two
presidents (U.S.), one president of the Confederacy, five or so
governors, the fierce horseman of the Southern Apocalypse, J.E.B.
Stuart, along with a few thousand rebel soldiers.
This is one precinct of the fabled Democracy of the Dead, a
Democracy that has much to recommend itself. In this Democracy, all
the politicians are kaput, as are the pollsters, lobbyists,
consultants, ward healers, talking heads, fixers, Amen Charlies,
groupies, and allied vermin. In this sacred place, human vanity is
stripped bare, and the hollowness of celebrity comes into brilliant
relief. No one is spared. Every dope gets his due drubbing. Walking
past a stone angel, a thought suddenly springs to mind: "Does
anyone really miss Timothy Leary?" Of course not, though one
recalls a plan to put his ashes into orbit. If so, the urn would
make a nice target for a Star Wars test.
Graveyards have other benefits as well. For one thing, they are
one of the few places one can go without being bombarded by canned
music. Note to saloon and restaurant proprietors: many of us avoid
your establishments for that reason alone. And I speak as a
musician. One popular version of heaven has music playing without
cease, which might not be a good idea (it is humbly submitted). The
harp is nice, but only to a point. Some of us might ask St. Pete
what's on the set list before entering. We might ask what's playing
in Purgatory.
Like other great cemeteries, Hollywood is a great walking place
-- 150 acres, as memory serves, with some interesting stops. One
stumbles upon the resting place of James Monroe, whose remains
inhabit a simple but elegant mausoleum. His wife, meanwhile, is
buried outside the structure -- in the yard, as it were, as if a
pet. Just down the hill we find the gravesite of Jefferson Davis,
president of the Confederate States of America. A statue to his
memory is totally non-heroic; Davis looks as if he might be the
fellow who ran the water department. In a sense, the designers were
ahead of their time. A British funeral company reports that nearly
70 percent of its branch offices have seen an increase in requests
for pop songs to be played at funerals. Skip those thundering hymns
written by mad monks and other divines. The top choice is Bette
Midler's "Beneath My Wings," followed by the theme from the movie
"Titanic." Other requests include "Another One Bites the Dust" and
the Village People's "YMCA." What explains this? "Perhaps mourners
want to re-create the emotion of their favorite films and ensure
their loved ones receive a funeral worthy of a star," explained a
funeral executive.
One wonders if the music is canned or if choirs will actually
sing "YMCA." Well, why not. We've all got our price, which is
increasingly two-bits.
topics:
Television, Business, Hollywood, Oil