Monday, December 10, 2018

Don't Know About Art, But I Know What I Like


FUCK YOU ALL was honored to be represented in art show at our friend's awesome gallery in Joshua Tree, La Matadora.

 The show was titled DYS/function: Functional Art for our Dysfunctional World! A multitude of fabulous artists showing: Melmac Plates, Latch-Hook Rugs, Shrinky Dink Knick-Knacks, Lite-Brite Art, + Custom Lamps & Chairs.

Not being familiar with melmac plates, a lot of friends were and had made them as kids. Basically you make a drawing and mail it in and ta da! A plastic plate featuring your art gets returned! Pretty cool. Very 70s. Fun!

The company that makes them was not happy when they got the FUCK YOU ALL plate drawing and refused to print it, claiming they are a "family business." Being told it was an adult art show must have swayed them however, as the plate arrived with all the others in the gallery order.

And it even SOLD at the art opening!

FUYA!!

--Beth


Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Breastfeeding in Public

What? You want me to cover up while breastfeeding in public. Sure, no problem.



Oh, and FUCK YOU!

--Beth

Monday, August 6, 2018

Honk Honk, Outta My Way!

I was at my usual beach spot in Santa Barbara yesterday watching a Chumash ceremony in which they sing and chant and then row their handmade wooden boat out in practice for a yearly trip to the Islands. They ended up right behind this ginormous catamaran leaving the harbor with an obnoxious honking of horns. I see now it is owned by Warren Buffet. Quite the dichotomy of worlds. 




VS.


--Heather

Bikram the Peace Stealer




It was the spring of 2003 and it was my first day of Bikram Yoga teacher training. I was in Beverly Hills, California, at the official Bikram Yoga headquarters. As I walked in the door a large woman behind the front desk took one look at me and screamed (literally). She then shrieked “You CAN’T wear that! You need to change IMMEDIATELY!” Taken aback and flustered, I discovered that I was wearing the very taboo color “green,” which Bikram bans from his studio. (Apparently it has to do with a tragic incident involving Bikrams’ guru, Bishnu Ghosh… sorry I didn’t get the memo!) Funny thing is, I rarely wear anything green, and it’s not like it’s my favorite color or anything. BUT on THIS day, of all days, I had on a green hawaiian shirt, army green shorts, and camo flip flops. Unknowlingly, I was breaking rules head-to-toe. I went to the locker room and quickly changed into my black yoga shorts and a black top, which I had packed in my green camo backpack. 

Looking back, I think the cosmos were trying to tell me something. “RUN!”

Today, it’s fifteen years later, and I just finished listening to the excellent ESPN 30-30 podcast that explores the world of Bikram and his yoga. The five-part series covers Bikram yoga’s beginnings as a fitness revolution in America in the 1970s, to the current black cloud hanging over its community as its founder, and “guru” to some followers, Bikram Choudhury, is accussed of rape and sexual harrassment by former students. It’s the story of a man who I like to believe started on a path with good intentions and dreams of bringing a healing yoga practice to the western world, but got caught up in the glitz and celebrity of star-studded Los Angeles, and started to care more for fame and fortune. It’s a sad, depressing story of a man who abused, and continues to abuse, his power.

Let’s go back to the spring of 2003. 

With three years of a Bikram yoga practice under my belt and craving a career change, I had just forked over $5,000 and signed up for a nine-week Bikam yoga teacher training in Beverly Hills. I shared a room in a business hotel in Marina del Rey with three other students, and drove half an hour to Bikram’s studio Monday through Friday (and Saturday mornings), where we practiced Bikram class 2x a day, memorized and rehearsed “dialog” and sat (on the floor) through long lectures about yoga, anatomy, and all sorts of stories from a rambling Bikram who loved to go off on tangents that had nothing to do with yoga. It was a very long nine weeks, and physically and mentally one of the most challenging things I have ever suffered through. 

Most Bikram teachers, back then, when asked about teacher training, would gush about how much they LOVED it. 

I hated it. HATED it.

For maybe the first week I was having fun — if you can call it that. Sucked into the whirlwind of something new was exhilarating. Bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, I had huge expectations of learning more about my body and the yoga series, getting to dig into anatomy and physiology, and starting on my path to help others heal their bodies and change their lives. 

It didn’t take long to realize that “training” was a bunch of bullshit. 

It was NOT what I expected. At all. At times it was novel (new teachers! new friends! physically challenging myself!), awe-inspiring (teacher Emmy who was well into her 70s had the body of someone half her age), and orgasmic (basking in an after yoga glow after doing so MUCH can feel really, really amazing). But more often that not it was was culty, exhausting, intimidating, clique-ish, and even boring (memorizing and repeating dialog day in and day out was so utterly tedious, especially having to use broken english and weird grammar that didn’t mean anything like “hold your elbows each other”). The rebel in me was screaming to tell Bikram to fuck off and walk out. But I stayed. It was like an ultimate challenge to endure it all. After the initial excitement/newsness of it all and getting over being awestuck by Bikram, he just gave me… a bad feeling. I didn’t like him or his style. He is the kind of person who makes himself feel big by making others feel small. He told us over and over “not to ever let anyone steal your peace,” yet he was the biggest peace sucker of them all. The first night of training we had to, one by one, get up in front of him and recite some dialog we’d memorized. I watched him berate a plump woman with bad skin. He went off on her skin, her body, asking her what she ate, picking her apart in front of 249 strangers. I cringed inside. And afterward lived in daily fear he would put me in the spotlight somehow and embarrass me. He ruled with fear, it was his total MO.

The “business apartments” I lived in had been stripped of televisions. We were told by Bikram that it was best to stick together and advised that during training we should only associate with other classmates. To beware of friends and family during the next nine weeks, as they wouldn’t understand what we were “going through.” The first day of training I had one of those “what the fuck?” moments when I noticed Bikram being massaged - one woman on each side of him. The were massaging his back and arms while another woman brushed his hair. This was a daily occurrence. I used to tease my roommates, telling them I was going to volunteer to brush his hair. If some of his usual female indian handlers weren’t next to him he would point to a student and say “you, come massage me.” I recall him doing this to one of my classmates who was young, gorgeous, blonde and had big boobs. I was mortified for her but also slightly relieved as I didn’t think he’d ever “pick me” as I certainly wasn’t that type. 




Remember that first night of training where we had  stand up in front of EVERYONE and do a one on one with him? As soon as he saw me, he said “No more tattoos.” HAHAHA. Oh please. There were tattooed guys in my training but he didn’t say this to any of them. Needless to say, he was your typical chauvinist, sexist Indian man. He was married due to an arranged marriage. His wife, Rajashree, was Indian also, 19 years younger than him and totally gorgeous. Bikram would sit in front of us lecturing in a huge white leather chair, wearing only a speedo. Usually leopard or gold or something blingy and ridiculous. He ruled the room. If too many people got up to go to the bathroom he would bark at all of us - “No more getting up!” It was intimidating and scary. I remember many nights during his lectures, being so tired I thought I was going to fall asleep. I was exhausted and worn out and worried he would catch me nodding off and yell at me. Most nights after night Bikram class and dinner, he’d lecture until about 11 or midnight. But sometimes he’d go longer if he felt like it. Nothing made Bikram (and some of the other masochistic teachers) happier than “breaking people down.” There were a lot of tears from utter exhaustion. And looking back, confusion. There is nothing that wears me out more than sleep deprivation and I was being challenged with very little rest. Bikram would tell us again and again about how he rarely slept much. So we were all expected to keep up with his midnight storytelling, hold our bladders for hours, and just deal with it.

Early one morning I was leaving for class, in my usual training attire - a frumpy t-shirt and pajama pants, loose and comfy. I was getting into the elevator at my apartments and looked so disheveled and tired that someone got in the elevator and said “Are you just getting home from a party?” I wish I had been. “No,” I told them, “I am on my way to school.”  

One night all 250 of my classmates and I lined up to give Bikram a hug. He’d hug each person, calling each guy “boss” and each woman “sweetheart.” He didn’t say much else. It took two hours to get through the group. 

One afternoon he demanded that we all dress in our best yoga clothes and told the girls to wear makeup and look good for our evening class, as we were going to be video-taped for a Bikram training video. He had all kinds of lights being set up in the yoga room for the videographers. I couldn’t believe it — I was paying him money to be in his video? No thanks. I knew then that I didn’t want to be in his video. I felt like it was bullshit and that he was essentially using us to self-promote. I went to the front desk to ask if it was “required” that we do the class being filmed. It was balked at that I didn’t want to participate, but I was told I would not be forced to. I was encouraged to keep it on the down low if I didn’t attend the filming. Later, I went to a pizza place around the corner and hung out for the four hours while the filming happened. I was chilling out and eating pizza while everyone else was holding and re-holding poses over and over. The class went over an hour longer than a regular class. One of my roommates almost passed out she was so exhuausted and hungry — the lights made it extra hot and the “taping” cut into our usual dinnertime, so she didn’t get to eat until 9pm. 

Then there was the night after dinner that Bikram decided he wouldn’t lecture, he’d dance around for us. Outside, in the parking lot where he’d pulled up one of his Rolls Royce’s and had the doors open and stereo blasting some awful indian disco music. There we all were, in yoga clothes and t-shirts and shorts, while Mr. Chodry shook his ass under the stars. I remember thinking how super obnoxious it all was. Like a little boy showing off.

During training we had a talent show where we were all encouraged to do some sort of skit. One of my friends and I decided to play ukuleles and sing. While teaching and lecturing Bikram would often sing to us. One of his repeat tunes was “Tiny Bubbles,” so we put this on our setlist, thinking he’d get a kick out of it. So there I found myself,  strumming my uke, walking up to him as he sat watching the talent show with his family, as I sang “Tiny Bubbles” to all of them. I will never forget how he just stared right through me. No smile. No glimmer in his eyes. Just stared blankly. It was jolting and I remember thinking… You…are… such… an… asshole!

These are just little slivers of memory and highlights - or shall I say low points - of my miserable nine weeks in the “torture chamber” as Bikram calls it. As I have mentioned my experiences with him were over 15 years ago. After training I thought of how I should write about all this somewhere, express how I felt, tell others NOT to go to training, that it was bullshit. But I mostly kept it to myself. Why? I was afraid that I would get banned from the studios I practiced at if I shit talked too much. There is an understanding that at most Bikram studios, all over, if you went to Bikram training you could practice yoga for free. It was my only redemption. I thought that in ten years I could pay myself back what I’d spent at training  (about $10,000 total with tuition and living expenses). Basically, I kept my mouth shut because the hot room beckoned. I love that hot room. The sequence. Head to toe, fingers to toes, muscle to bones, inside and out. I just wanted to sweat and bend. It helps center me, focus me, like nothing else.

I have tried many different work outs and exercise routines. Pilates mat, pilates machines, all kinds of yoga -  Vinyassa, Power, Iyengar, weight training, bootcamp class, swimming, biking, running… but nothing clicks with me like Bikram Yoga. I work for Kaiser Permanente and they have this series of posters FIND YOUR THING. Find what works for you. Well, I’d found it.

After “graduation” I taught Bikram classes for about a month at a studio in San Francisco. It only took those four weeks before I decided to quit teaching. Reasons included that I was only getting $35 to teach a class, was a “contractor” so I got no benefits, was expected by my studio to attend unpaid weekly teacher pow wows, was only given about 10 classes a week to teach and then told by my studio I was forbidden to teach at a nearby competitor who had offered me work. I was barely surviving money-wise, and on top of this I kept getting pressure (again, from the studio owners) to “do more yoga,” and to start taking advanced Bikram yoga classes which I wasn’t interested in. Hell, I loved my Bikram practice but I did NOT want to live, work, eat, shit Bikram yoga 24/7. It was too much. I also found that when I taught I was depleted, sweating for two hours and really… wishing I was ON the mat instead of leading the class. 

I was really confused and let down. I decided to book an appointment with a therapist who I had seen for a year previously so she knew me well. I still remember that session and giving her the lowdown on Bikram, training, and the studio owners.  “You need to GET AWAY from these people!” she told me.

So I did. I quit teaching and took a “yoga break.”  I knew I loved Bikram yoga as a practice, and that’d I be back. But inside I just felt like something with Bikram was “off.” I didn’t want to personally represent him. I didn’t want him to have me as a spokesperson, I didn’t feel like he deserved it. This was one of the best choices I ever made. Ten years later, as some of Bikram’s darker character started leaking out, allegations of sexual harassment, abuse of students, even rumors of rape — I felt… so vindicated. Finally. (Gotta note here that the 2012 book, Hellbent for Yoga, by Benjamin Lorr, was a brave and awesome outing of Bikram’s bullshit.)

I’ve been practicing Bikram yoga for over 18 years. I like to call it “Hot Yoga” these days. I never get tired of it. Right now, I can’t wait to do it tonight. I have told people about the yoga so passionately that I recall one person asking me if I got paid if I recruited people to go to class! I don’t of course. But it has changed my life. I don’t know how to explain it. Once you make it through the heat, exhaustion, workout, you feel different. You feel and see your body change. Your mind changes. For this, the gift of this series, I am thankful to Bikram. But for everything else, he can, as I  wanted to say to him all those years ago and never did, FUCK OFF. And for his crimes and general shitiness as a human being, I really hope his peace is stolen. Namaste.


--Beth

Friday, June 8, 2018

Dystopian Haikus for Poetry Haters



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Sweet & Woodsy Aromotherapy

You are in the woods

To find peace and privacy
You took hella pics
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Bands were about to go onstage, folks were milling around outside and someone walked through the waiting crowd enthusiastically encouraging everyone to “go inside now and hear some poetry.” Say what? Not a big fan of poems of any sort, I ignored this, continuing my conversation and cancer stick. 

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Trump America

All sexy ladies

Will report to the dance floor
For deportation
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But the enthusiastic pleas persisted. “You won’t be sorry!” “Please come inside! This will be totally worth it!” “You gotta hear these haikus!” 

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Crazy Buffet

She said she was bi
But neglected to mention
She meant bipolar
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I momentarily shrugged off my disdain for sonnet and wandered inside. 
At the mic was a skinny millennial aged looking kid, flipping through pages of his book and monotonally reading haikus that were, to put it mildly, FUCKING BRILLIANT.

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Boho Vibes

We can't all wear hats
So I will go without one
To balance the vibe
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I not only had to get a copy of his book, I had to know more. This was perfect FUCK YOU ALL material.

Without further ado, meet Jonathan Rice.





Hi Jonathan, how old are you and where do you live?

I’m thirty-five years old and live in Los Angeles.

I really enjoyed your haiku reading at Desert and Denim. To think I almost MISSED your reading… because I uh… am not a big fan of poetry. What about you? Why poetry?

My general reaction to “some guy is about to read some poetry, everyone come and see” is similar to your own. So, no hard feelings. A couple years ago I just started posting haikus on Instagram to amuse my friends and myself. I think of Instagram like the walls of an enormous toilet, walls that I am free to deface with haikus.

Do you have any poets who are inspiration?

I have been moved by so many writers and poets and such.  None of them really inform these particular haikus, at least not consciously. 

Ever heard/seen those “Deep Thoughts” that used to be on Saturday Night Live? Your humor reminds me of those!

That is so cool my stuff reminds you of “Deep Thoughts.” When I was a kid, that was my favorite sketch on SNL besides anything featuring Chris Farley. 

What compelled you to start writing snarky haikus and posting them on instagram?

Like most people my age I am hopelessly addicted to this app.  I’m fascinated and appalled by the culture around Instagram, and I’d like to think I’m aware of my complicity in it. I just wanted to fill up this space that is 99% used for images with actual words. Don’t get me wrong - I’ve posted some pictures of myself for shallow reasons, and will do so again. Probably very soon.

So you have over 16K instagram followers… how fast did that happen?

I think it’s just word of mouth. Or word of post? People share the haikus they like with their friends and the audience just grows naturally from there. That’s one of my favorite aspects of writing poetry on social media - it’s totally interactive. The mob rules. One day the mob will turn on me and I’ll be decapitated live on Periscope.

Do you post whenever your haikus just “come to you”? Or do you make yourself post a certain number of them on a regular basis — like a writing exercise?

Sometimes I post them as soon as I write them because I’m reacting to something happening in the news or in popular culture. Those haikus don’t stand the test of time and they are not designed to do so. Others I save for the hours where there is peak Instagram usage - I have data analytics for that.  It’s as cold and methodical as an industrial slaughterhouse.

So you have a book out, and I hear it’s in it’s second printing! The book is compiled from some of your instagram postings from 2016-2017. How did your book come about?

The book was my friend Jessica Hundley’s idea. She is a partner at Hat & Beard Press, and this was all her concept. I was content to let these things live and die on the ‘Gram. She has legitimized me in the eyes of my parents and it has healed my family.

Why the book title, “Farewell, My Dudes: 69 Dystopian Haikus?”

When I moved to LA thirteen years ago, I had never heard the phrase “my dudes” before.  Not in the way it’s used out here, anyway. I always found it funny. Instead of “my guy,” like they say in the Bronx, or “my man” like they say in the movies.

When you are writing, which comes first, the title or the haiku?

The haiku always comes first. Then I search for the title in the “locations” section of Instagram.  All the titles of the haikus are real places on Earth. I just type in some wild shit and it pops up in some strange, jumbled incarnation. 

Who are all the hot chicks reading your haikus as videos on your instagram?

Some of them are my friends, some of them are who you might call “influencers” in the world of social media. And some, like Anne Hathaway, have won Academy Awards. Anne did not win an Oscar for her reading of my haiku, tbh.

Where do your haiku ideas come from?

They are generally reactions to things I see online. Things that I think are funny, or sad, or so sad that they are funny.

Are your haikus true stories? (Is there really a podcast about guacamole? A feather photographer at Crystal Feathers Spa? A sad selfie picture princess who father left her?)

As far as I know, there is no guacamole podcast. But I do think that there will be soon. I do think that there is someone who takes pictures of feathers as their job, but I have not met this person. There are probably several million “sad selfie princesses” with deadbeat dads. Probably more.

I feel like you are poking fun of the millennial generation and it’s awkward, all consuming, social media obessession. Are you poking fun at yourself? 

Every accusation is a confession.

Do you consider yourself an optimist, pessimist, nihilist or realist?

I consider myself an inexplicable optimist. 

And I saw you have haiku t-shirts! How many designs do you have?

The t-shirts that are out now were a collaboration with The Quiet Life and Andy Mueller. I was really stoked to do that with them. Right now we just have one design but there are plans for more. 

I think your haikus would be great on greeting cards or coffee mugs… are there plans for any more haiku stuff?

There are plans for both cards and mugs. Merry fucking Christmas to me.

Have you ever considered doing stand up comedy?

Well, when I read the book at events around the country, I am standing. And sometimes people laugh. So, that ticks most of the boxes. I’d like to think my personal hygiene is better than most stand-ups, though.

So you are musician, how can people find your music?

Wherever music is stolen, that’s where mine is streaming.

What’s the connection between your haikus and your music?

It’s all coming out of my mind, for better or for worse.

Who are your favorite bands?

The Stooges, Big Star, Dylan….

I love this quote in your book’s foreward:
Poetry, when encountered unexpectedly, can be unexpectedly loved. One might love it accidentally. 
—Mandy Kahn
Because I almost missed your “poetry set”! I’m glad i didn’t, thanks for making me laugh!

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Order “Farewell, My Dudes: 69 Dystopian Haikus” on Amazon or directly from Hat and Beard Press, at hatandbeard.com. Follow Jonathan on Instagram at mrjonathanrice.

Listen to an interview with Jonathan on my friend's podcast, Jedbanger's Ball.

--Beth

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

It's Just "Frisco" Now

When I moved from San Francisco six months ago, a friend made me a button that said it all:

"It's just Frisco now."



She was referring to the slang term "Frisco" and the disdain many folks have for it -- associating it with tourists. It sadly summed up what had been happening the last 10+ years with the tech industry and  developers moving in and slowly sucking SF's cultural soul away.

Yesterday I saw a picture from a new advert campaign in Bayview Hunters Point. HP is basically the ghetto of San Francisco, and one of the last areas to be gentrified, but unaffordable high-rise housing is creeping in. When I saw this bus stop campaign I immediately jumped to the conclusion that it was to promote said high-rise housing.

But after further investigation I discovered it's not a housing ad. It's part of a warm, fuzzy, we're a diverse "neighborhood" campaign promoting the idea that "Bayview" is made up of all kinds of nationalities and ages, genders and such. Apparently the bearded dude has lived in "Bayview" for eight years and loves it there. I lived in San Francisco 26 years. If I ever went to "Bayview" -- which I did many times, I always called it "Hunters Point." But doesn't "Bayview" sound so much more pleasant?

I get the good intentions and idea behind the "it's a small world after all," life is about diversity stuff, but this just screams "young, hip, white people are taking over" and it's like a slap in the face to those who are being pushed out and displaced -- mostly black people, who live in HUNTERS POINT.

And to that, I say, FUCK YOU ALL.

I would love to see a campaign "I WAS (insert SF neighborhood here)" with photos of all the friends I've had who have been evicted over the years and had to leave the bay area.

I can't help but want to fuck with this campaign...







I guess if the posters said "I am PART of Bayview" it'd be easier to digest. POOR, poor San Francisco. How I miss what you used to be. I know SF is not alone, it's happening all over... but it hurts.



--Beth