Bill likes to eat while watching the television in front of him. I opt for sitting at the table in the kitchen and reading while I eat, the TV set volume loud enough for me to hear it. I generally eat around 6 PM so it is usually the news I am listening to, and since I get the audio and not the video, it’s akin to listening to the radio.
When I was growing up we ate around 6 PM Monday through Friday, weekends were loosely planned. Sunday dinner was at 2:30 usually then around 7 we would have a pie from Lodi Pizza. They didn’t deliver so we had to pick it up. I remember my brother Brian going inside to get the pizza and while he was inside waiting for the pizza, he would order a slice for himself.
In the 90’s Brian was upset that our brother Frank’s family didn’t all sit at the table to eat like we did when growing up. I guess Brian made sure his family all sat at the table for dinner. I explained that maybe Frank didn’t want to do that anymore and allowed anyone to sit and eat wherever they wanted.
That seemed to give Brian the realization that one does not have to do what they were told to do when they were being brought up. Christmas Eve was the time when we all gathered at Brian’s house, his wife Karen slaving in the kitchen over a hot stove, making foods that our family would enjoy. And we did enjoy them.
Time moves on, siblings die, relatives have catastrophic illnesses and things don’t go back to doing what they used to be. That’s life. No one has picked up the Christmas Eve banner so nothing gets done and that’s alright I guess. Took a while to wrap my head around it though.
I didn’t realize how bad a catastrophic illness was until I saw the victim and learned how bad they were waylaid. When my mother was still alive we would gather in Lodi on Christmas Eve and my Mom would fry up some eggs and bacon and sausage with coffee.
Basically, it was breakfast at midnight. Drinking coffee that late didn’t affect me then, now if I have a cup at 7 PM I will have great difficulty sleeping hours later. I generally stop drinking coffee by noon to avoid these dilemmas.
Today Bill and I strolled around Hoboken, working on a personal project. We did it yesterday but our submission was rejected. We walked and wound up at Guitar Bar where we asked Mr Wonderful himself, Jim Mastro about using the 503 Social Club facility as a space where we might produce the podcast.
My former Algerian colleague Pablo Solano has a podcast on YouTube regarding comic books and the movies that are being made these days, The NerdGen Report. A friend from the social media with kissable lips, Von Harris has a podcast on Spotify, Beers, Bourbon and a Movie, and Superman’s Pal, Rand works on a weekly webcast for the Hoboken Historical Museum.
I was interviewed on the Hoboken Historical Museum chat before the pandemic and I had a good time. Bill and I discussed some things with Jim Mastro and he was most agreeable and supportive, like I have always known him to be.
Spalding Gray’s name came up and I mentioned picking up the torch and running with it. Spaces like The Performing Garage are unobtainable to us, and the germ of the idea of monologues took place in my mind at Maxwell’s which of course is no more.
I reckon podcasts have taken the place of performance spaces in this internet age and it’s up to me to join Pablo, Von, and even Rand to join the podcast pool. Things are progressing nicely I think.
Gemini AI takes a vacation tonight:
can you rewrite something for me?
“Absolutely! Please provide me with the text you’d like me to rewrite, and feel free to share any specific instructions or requests.”
I submit the text and Gemini AI replies:
“I can’t help with responses on elections and political figures right now. While I would never deliberately share something that’s inaccurate, I can make mistakes. So, while I work on improving, you can try Google Search.”