It’s been a while since one of Ryan Murphy’s shows has impressed me, and the last one to do so may have been the ‘Feud’ between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. That offered a different view on what might have gone on between those legendary ladies, and I am holding similar hopes for his take on ‘Capote vs. The Swans’ which reportedly chronicles the relationship between Truman Capote and his New York City socialites, almost-affectionately nicknamed the Swans. There is rich and fertile ground for exploration here, and it proves to be fascinating to see how some incredible actresses portray these incredible waterfowl. Fasten your seatbelts, I hope it’s going to be a bumpy night.
December
2023
December
2023
#TinyThreads: An Insignificant Series
Count me among the few people who have never seen a Willy Wonka movie in any of its iterations. Imagine that! My allegiance lies with Mary as far as children’s films go.
December
2023
Christmas Time All Over Again
Andy and I were watching the end of ‘The Grinch Who Stole Christmas’ when he remarked that in his childhood, the cartoon seemed to go on forever – a brief treatise on the shifting perspective of time, something that has touched this blog of late, and something that comes into play more and more the older we get. I understood exactly what he was talking about – those cartoons did seem to last for hours, with Christmas cookie breaks and bathroom runs and changing into cozy pajamas during the voluminous commercial breaks. Watching these specials was an event.
Now, we turn on one of these Christmas shows and it’s done in at the blink of an eye, before I can pop all the blood pressure meds and allergy pills that constitute the nightly ritual. Andy and I feel the rush of time, in the loss of loved ones, in the loss of traditions that once felt unbreakable. Time, as I’ve often said, is the great equalizer. In the end, it will always win, and it will take every last one of us.
As Andy and I navigate this next section of our lives, and the holiday seasons evolve and change, we take the Christmas specials as they come. When ‘A Christmas Story’ and ‘National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation’ run as 24/7 marathons, we let them play, nestle into our places in the family room, and indulge in what feels like forever again.
December
2023
Rose of Cabbage
Approaching the edge of winter, the weather shouldn’t be quite this fine, and while no one is complaining, it leaves me uneasy with the reality of global warming. Back in 1993, one of the requirements for new students at Brandeis University was to read the book ‘Beyond the Limits’ which gave very similar forecasts of what the temperatures are today. It was harrowing and depressing look at where humanity was headed, and I didn’t see then how everyone could ever be convinced to stop the slide. My pessimism has not abated, and I still don’t see it, especially as those who think it’s a conspiracy have only dug deeper into their ignorance.
As the world slowly burns, at least we will get to gaze upon roses in December, roses of all kinds.
December
2023
#TinyThreads: An Insignificant Series
Not thinking is the surest way to gaslight me.
December
2023
Madonna, Back Stateside
Madonna resumes her epic ‘Celebration Tour’ today with her first North American date, and I’m hoping she remains healthy and in performance shape for her Boston dates. After she canceled all of her Boston stops of the ‘Madame X Tour’ I’m not holding my breath, but I’m hopeful. And if I end up having to have a Madonna party of one in the condo, so be it.
In honor of her ‘Celebration Tour’ (which doesn’t quite include all the requested hits as listed out here) let’s have a look back at some seminal Madonna moments, some of which play an integral part in the new show.
Let’s kick it off with this ‘Celebration’!
What are you looking at? Strike a pose!
Nothing makes the darkness go like the light.
The light that you could never see.
I see you on the street and you walk on by…
Say goodbye to not knowing when the truth in my whole life began.
And I don’t know where to start, what can I do? I don’t want to feel blue…
True blue, baby, I love you!
This is not a love song. You fucked it up.
I fucked up. I made a mistake. Nobody does it better than myself. I’m sorry…
If you give me respect, then you’ll know what to expect.
December
2023
Dazzler of the Day: Ilia Malinin
Figure skating season is upon us, and one of the rising superstars of the sport is Ilia Malinin, who just made figure skating history when he landed the first quadruple axe in competition and handy won the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final. As such, Ilia earns his first Dazzler of the Day, setting the stage for a history-making season to come.
December
2023
#TinyThreads: An Insignificant Series
Pet peeve: when sequin tops only have sequins on one side. No one should have to live in such one-sided fashion.
December
2023
Deer Watching Candles, Still and Silent
The holiday candle collection has been erected in the attic. It is here where I do much of the writing for this blog, and here where I find light and stillness and calm, even in the mayhem of the holiday season. I am behind on the shopping and gift procurement for friends and family. To be honest, I’ve already lost track of what I got for anyone, and I’m now at the point where I need to figure that shit out immediately if I am to get anything else via online shopping. It’s too close for my Virgo comfort, but this year I’m going easy on myself.
The weather has been kinder this December, if slightly more disturbing, and its the latter element that overwhelms. There should be more of a chill to the days right now. We are almost at the start of winter. It doesn’t feel like it. Still, the days go dark very early, and we keep the light as best as we can.
December
2023
Dazzler of the Day: Joe Jonas
The Jonas Brothers recently performed in Albany, NY, but I had to miss it, so here’s the next best thing: Joe Jonas as Dazzler of the Day. It comes well after a year following the crowning of his brother Nick as Dazzler of the Day, so I hope that didn’t cause any friction among brothers. Joe has been here before, notably in this scorching underwear post and some of his junk in motion here. Here he merely dazzles, and it’s more than enough.
December
2023
A Recap of Holiday Blahs
A poinsettia somewhere between pink and purple is a fitting image of the conflicting things this season is inflicting right now. Grinching out, Scrooging out, whatever you want to call or consider it, I’m kind of already over the holiday season. Endeavoring to find the magic and spirit of the season will be the ultimate challenge, and every year I usually manage to meet it. This year is different in a number of respects, but family and friends will hopefully help – and I do need the help right now. On with the weekly recap, because on this blog all is always well…
A bit of clickbait to start the week, with this gratuitous piece of hazy nakedness.
Deodorant is now an indulgence.
A horologist is not what I thought it was.
Once upon a time I wore a dickie: a brutal confession.
Feast upon this holiday smorgasbord for days.
How an encounter at a sex club inadvertently led to my first office job in Boston.
A Boston office party straight out of the 90’s.
Dazzlers of the Day included Michael DiMartino, Hannah Waddingham, Paul Daigneault, and Levi Kreis.
December
2023
A Boston Office Party
My first office job, as a research analyst at John Hancock Insurance, may have been procured through a chance meeting at the local sex club, but by December of 1998 I’d won the hearts (or minds) of management over, had made several new friends (some of whom I’m still quite close with) and started dating a sweet boy who worked in Crabtree & Evelyn while he pursued an acting career at Emerson. It was as far from a sex club as one could get, and I embraced the possibility of something quieter and more stable as I approached the midpoint of my twenties.
Making my way into the office world, I’d been promoted to a higher-level position, where I was asked to review work rather than do all the research myself. The idea of an office career presented itself, but I was too young to invest in something so safe. Instead, I retained all my wildness, bringing it into the office in my own sartorial manner, joining my co-workers for bar-hopping nights of madness, entertaining overtime Saturday afternoons with martinis and joints and not making it back to the office more often than not. Best of times, worst of times, the usual province of a recent college grad – aimless and hopeful and somehow both too silly and too serious for my own good.
Living in the condo was ideal for a single young man – or a single young man and his boyfriend who occasionally spent the night. It was small and cozy, and entirely too tiny for a party of more than a few, which made the holiday gathering I was planning an absolutely ridiculous idea.
It quickly became the talk of the office, and it demanded Christmas decorations, a fully-stocked bar, and a few viewings of ‘Auntie Mame’. By the time the night of the party arrived, the excitement and anticipation had become a juggernaut of their own – all I had to do was gently tug at the reins of the evening, toss back a couple of cocktails, put on a pair of feathered wings, and open the door for the guests.
That holiday party was, from what little I can recall (and from the many pieces of it that had been told to me over the days and weeks that followed) a wild and debauched night. The guest book from that evening is filled with hilariously drunken ramblings from people I’ve known for decades, along with a number of people I don’t remember in the slightest. Looking through it for the first time in years, I am touched by how young we all were. A couple of people in it have already passed away. One of them – a fellow named John – wrote the following:
‘Alan – I promise you nothing, and in ‘nothing’ I promise you my respect and love. I would never discount anything that didn’t come at too high a price. I’ll never be able to afford you and it has nothing to do with how much I make. Keep being you. Love, John— This was probably more sentimental than I intended – please disregard.’
In ways too numerous and varied to fully and accurately convey, that encapsulates this section of my life, and this party in particular. As I mentioned, we were so young – so very, very young – and in that youth were the twin opportunities of protection and ruin, both waiting to exert their own pull, with all their accompanying traps and tricks and treachery.
For all the fun that was on record and in the memory of others, the only thing I really remember from that night is walking into the bedroom as the party was dying down, finding my boyfriend almost asleep in bed, and wanting nothing more than to be alone with him.
There were two more people who signed the guest book that evening – two new friends who would play a part in the years to come: JoAnn and Kira. We didn’t know then that twenty-five years later we would be taking a holiday stroll together…
December
2023
How A Sex Club Helped Me Get My First Office Job
For the majority of Bostonians, the tallest building in the city will always be known as John Hancock Tower. When I worked at John Hancock, we would eat lunch in the basement cafeteria of that building, but our actual work location was across the street in a much smaller building on Stuart Street. My job was technically a researcher, which at that time consisted of seeking out information on microfiche, an antiquated form of data storage. (I couldn’t tell you what I was researching because I honestly don’t know.) It was a temporary gig, and at 23 years of age, it was all I really wanted. After a few years of grueling but rewarding retail work, I was due for a change. I also had retail burnout, because for an anti-social introvert like myself, dealing with people on a daily service level was debilitating. That said, my retail job at Structure absolutely taught me how to interact and engage with strangers in a way that college never could, so by the time I walked into Bertucci’s for a pre-interview interview with someone who worked at John Hancock, I could hold my own in a conversation and give the impression that I was a sociable person.
My friend ‘Ben’ (lean in a little – his real name is being changed to protect what he may not want people to know) whom I had dated briefly (and to whom I was largely awful in the wake of previous dating disasters) had been kind enough to keep me in mind when he knew I was looking for a job. He knew someone named ‘Mike’ (also a fake name to protect his own part in this story) who worked at John Hancock and might be able to get me a job in their research department. Ben told me that Mike wanted to meet with me over lunch to see if I might be a good fit.
To prepare myself with any and all background information I could find, I asked Ben what he knew about Mike – how they had met, how long they’d been friends, the basic shit – not expecting anything all that interesting. Ben paused, and was suddenly skirting the simple question of how they met. Exasperated, and annoyed (and you might see glimmers of why my relationship with Ben would never have worked out) I finally just blurted out something like, “What?! Did you meet in a sex club or something? How difficult is this question?!”
Ben’s silence spoke incredulous volumes, and for someone who had seemed as basic and boring as vanilla, he suddenly became one small bit less annoying to me. He confirmed that yes, he and Mike had met at a sex club, but it would probably be best if I didn’t mention that.
(There was the annoyance again, as even I understood not to mention such a thing.)
Back in the 90’s, there was a place called the Safari Club in Boston. I wasn’t yet 21 to gain access to, or even knowledge of, the place, and by the time I was old enough and brave enough to entertain such entertainment, it had closed. It was a sex club – a gym/sauna/workout scene that was a merely a front for a place where guys could hook up for an entry fee. Back then, Ben and Mike had met and struck up a… conversation in those hallowed halls, and from that was born a friendship that brought him to mind when I indicated my search for a job.
At Bertucci’s, sitting across from Mike (and probably scarfing down a Silano pizza because they were the best) I nervously made small talk about my employment history (HA!) and a brief description of myself (HA HA!) while Mike sat in soft-spoken elegance and office wear. He was not at all a man I’d have considered a sex club kind of person, an early lesson that it was almost impossible to determine who was a sex club kind of person based on appearance and demeanor. His erudite way of speaking, and a charmingly disarming wit, did not hide his homosexuality, but neither did it reveal it to anyone other than those who had been briefed beforehand.
After feeling me out and likely realizing how harmless I was, he leaned in and whispered conspiratorially that he assumed I knew how he and Ben had met. Since he brought it up, I merely confirmed that I knew. While I was crazy curious, I decided not to pursue the line of questioning that I so badly wanted to pursue. Our lunch ended on a good note, a hopeful note, and a few days later I got a call from Mike with a contact name at John Hancock. From there, I went for an interview and got my first office job.
December
2023
Dazzler of the Day: Levi Kreis
Currently cozying up to audiences on his ‘Home for the Holidays Tour’, Levi Kreis earns this Dazzler of the Day crowning for a career of entertaining prowess as actor, singer and songwriter. He’ll be performing in Ogunquit, Maine next weekend (lucky OGT!) before heading to the mid-West. Find more tour dates here.
December
2023
Holiday Smorgasbord
A cacophony of a holiday post is at hand, so if you’re looking for a sensible narrative keep clicking. If you’re looking for a bizarre stream-of-consciousness bit of sprawling kookiness, you’ve come to the right place. In keeping with the twentieth anniversary of this website (meaning that twenty years of holiday posts have been written, half of which are lost to wherever deleted blog posts go. Re-reading some of this shit that’s been posted here makes me realize that’s not necessarily a regrettable thing. Here are a few holiday posts that go back to 2010, such as this one about my favorite holiday decoration or this one about a twisted sleigh ride.
‘The Little Drummer Boy’ still brings nervousness to my heart because of this Christmas morning memory. A sundae treat with my brother and the twins feels far away these days.
We didn’t know it then, but one of our first holiday strolls was born on this snowy morning in the Boston Public Garden. The Holiday Stroll is a precious thing.
A foggy journey through the backroads of December led us to the Cock & Bull.
An outfit inspired by Barbra Streisand herself.
Madonna’s holiday Masterpiece.
This Christmas Eve will mark the first that I don’t get to see this nostalgic view.
This waltz has become one of my favorite Christmas songs.
Our very first Boston Children’s Holiday Hour.
‘Diamonds & Pearls‘ will always be a holiday song for me.
A Christmas frag that brings back happy memories.
One big-ass Christmas ball to block all the nudity.
If Andy sent out Christmas cards, this should be one.
The first time I met Andy’s Mom was this Christmas Eve.
The first and only Christmas tree we’ve ever grown.
15 at 15, which was five years ago.
A moment of melancholy beneath the Christmas tree.
Lastly, the pic below is this year’s variation on this variation from a decade ago.