As I was writing this week, I realized ‘What I Heard This Week’ is far more than just what I heard, it’s what I remember in life (while I can still remember), what I find important, significant moments or ideas, or just a little something that you need to know, whether you know it or not. When I started the column, one of the names I came up with was Vegetable Soup – you know me and my love for cooking, but I guess it didn’t sound classy enough, at the time. Yes, this column is just like vegetable soup. You never know what’s going into the pot. Just look in the fridge and there it is. Wash it, chop it, put it into the pot. So, thanks for sitting down and having a bowl with me. You never know what’s in the next spoonful.
Guess who is still doing hair, nails, and brows? The mortician. You want an appointment with them? Then keep going outside…many places are now requiring the public to wear masks. Do your part!
Let’s face it, during the past few weeks, we have all watched programs that we likely wouldn’t have had the time, or the inclination to watch if it hadn’t been for quarantines. The documentary show that I am specifically talking about right now, is Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness, a stranger-than-fiction story about Joe Exotic, a mullet-wearing, gun-toting polygamist, country western lip-syncher, who owns an Oklahoma zoo. The story is so crazy, but everyone is watching it and talking about it. As of April 12th, around 16,000 people are apparently committed to breaking the Tiger King out of the Federal Prison FMC Fort Worth, where he is serving a 22-year sentence on two counts of murder-for-hire, eight counts of violating the Lacey Act for falsifying wildlife records and nine counts of violating the Endangered Species Act. Whew. The ‘event’ is scheduled for May 14th and is hosted by the Facebook page “Legalize CRACK for Recreational Use.” Hmmm. “Everybody gotta dress up as joe so they cant tell who is who.” the event description explains. “We will need lots of crack and tigers and probably a few tanks.” In accordance with coronavirus safety protocols, the event reminds attendees to stay 6 feet apart. Wait a second. It gets even better. Joseph Maldonado-Passage, aka Joe Exotic, filed a lawsuit March 17, 2020 in federal court in Oklahoma City, seeking nearly $94 million in damages. And this is in addition to the story about a sheriff in Tampa, Florida, that has reopened a case (that has history with this story), where a wife is considered suspect in the very mysterious disappearance of her husband. The couple ran a wildlife sanctuary and it is believed by some, that she fed him to the tigers. I told you. I love my job…current events.
Some residents in College Park subdivision in Clute, are participating in a Window Safari by encouraging residents to put stuffed animals in their windows. As people walk the neighborhood, they can have conversation with their kids about all the animals they have seen. Way to go, Michelle. Great idea.
Some shoppers have forgotten about the hand sanitizer, disinfectants and toilet paper, and turned to puzzles, games and other forms of entertainment and education. Then Americans discovered strength in baking and the stores then became low on yeast and flour. Now, according to Walmart, hair and beard clippers, hair cutting scissors, along with hair dye, are the new “must-have” products for all the really cool coronavirus quarantin-ers. I made up that word. There’s never been a time that I haven’t appreciated the fact that I never colored my hair. Well, once. In my twenties, I used a black rinse for Halloween, then I looked in the mirror and decided that there was no way I could go to a party looking like that. I shampooed until I removed most of it, then I went to the party. Really, I think I was too cheap to color and it so happens that I am one of the lucky ones because as my hair started graying, I started highlighting a couple of times a year, just to blend my sparkle. Instead of fighting it, I figured out how to work with it. My son is home and I’ve cut his hair and beard twice in the past month. New hair-cutting scissors help. I wonder what the new, hot, must-have item will be next week. 😊
RECENT BIRTHDAYS: Movie producer Roger Corman is 94. Little Shop of Horrors. Rock musician Mike McCready is 54. Pearl Jam. Actress Nancy McKeon is 54. The Facts of Life. Actress Lily James is 31. Singer Al Green is 73. The Reverend. After an incident in which his girlfriend committed suicide, Green became an ordained pastor and turned to gospel music. He later returned to secular music. Movie-TV composer Bill Conti is 78. Rocky, Karate Kid, For Your Eyes Only, Dynasty, and The Right Stuff, which earned him an Academy Award.
Chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov is 57. Actor Paul Sorvino is 81. Goodfellas, Law & Order. Singer Peabo Bryson is 69. Beauty and the Beast with Celine Dion in 1992 won him a Grammy. Child actor Ricky Schroder is 50. Actor Ron Perlman is 70. Actor Tony Dow is 75. Wally Cleaver in Leave it to Beaver. Children’s author Beverly Cleary is 104. Actress Jane Withers is 94. Josephine the Plumber in the Comet cleanser commercials. R&B singer J.D. Nicholas is 68. The Commodores.
Sy Sperling, founder of HairClub for Men, died at 78. His commercials were popular in the 80’s and 90’s, where he’d proclaim, “I’m not only the president of HairClub for Men, but I’m also a client.”
A Florida judge has told attorneys to get out of bed and put on some clothes before court hearings via Zoom. Circuit Judge Dennis Bailey said, “It is remarkable how many ATTORNEYS appear inappropriately on camera. One male lawyer appeared shirtless and one female attorney appeared still in bed, still under the covers. Putting on a beach cover-up won’t cover up (that) you’re poolside in a bathing suit.”
The first Amazon warehouse worker has died. Carnival and Princess cruises have canceled through the end of June. More and more people are thinking about their wills. How is yours looking?
Some auto insurance companies are giving refunds and credits to those of us stuck at home during this virus time. State Farm is giving as much as 25% credit, USAA announced a 20% credit for auto policy holders on two months of premiums and Farmers Insurance is giving drivers a 25% reduction in April premiums. Since your rates are based on normal conditions, this is definitely not a normal time. If you want to know, call your insurance company and ask. If your insurer isn’t currently giving refunds or credits, they may be offering grace periods or waiving late fees. To compare price quotes on your car insurance, go to CarInsurance.com.
Hope this virus situation gets resolved before tick season or we’ll be dealing with corona with lyme.
The 1,000-square-mile Chernobyl Exclusion Zone was established after the 1986 disaster at the plant that sent radioactive fallout over much of Europe. This zone is now largely unpopulated, except for about 200 people that have remained despite orders to leave. Two recent forest fires came dangerously close recently, within 1.2 miles from radioactive waste depot storage facilities. One man said he burned grass for fun, then failed to extinguish his fire and another resident burned waste that got out of control, both failing to report the fires to authorities and both triggering devastating forest fires. Scary.
Remember: You can’t always get what you want, but if you try sometimes, well, you might find, you get what you need. The Rolling Stones
COVID-19 Testing: The Houston Chronicle says, “an analysis of testing data collected through Wednesday April 8th shows that Texas has the second-worst rate of testing per capita in the nation, with only 332 tests conducted for every 100,000 people. Only Kansas ranks lower, at 327 per 100,000.” Come on, Texas!
Wikipedia: The name “coronavirus” is derived from Latin corona, meaning “crown” or “wreath”. The name refers to the characteristic appearance of virions (the infective form of the virus) by electron microscopy, which have a fringe of large, bulbous surface projections creating an image reminiscent of a crown or of a solar corona…
As we spend more time at home, I seem to be touching more and more items that I haven’t seen, needed or bothered with in a while. Last night I happened to see a wrapped gift in my closet. One corner is dog-eared because the cat chewed on it sometime in the past 15 years. It’s the Christmas present that I never was able to give my granddaddy because he died of the flu right after Christmas in February of 2006. A Louis L’Amour big print novel. He loved westerns.
H.I. Tipps was born on April 11, 1910, was army medical corps in WWII, and handed out flattops in addition to all his other duties. I have a picture of him in the middle of a camp, cutting a soldier’s hair. When he married my grandma, she had five dollars to spend on their honeymoon, but they simply spent the night with relatives.
Granddaddy owned a dry cleaners-tailor shop in West (outside Waco) and in the early 60’s, had the first barber shop inside a mall in Waco. The Lake Air Mall. Everyone came in to see Buster, the best shoe-shine professional in town, Ollie, his right-hand barber and Mac, my favorite uncle. It was a big shop and there were other barbers, but I don’t remember names. This was a time when you hung around a barber shop like it was a Starbucks. Right next door was Lake Air Records store and across the way was the Piccadilly Cafeteria where we got to pick whatever we wanted (red Jello with whipped cream, mashed potatoes with natural gravy and the most delicious hot rolls), when we went to eat with Granddaddy and Grandma. On Saturdays, he would take just us little girls a few doors down to Walgreens Grill where he introduced us to the waitresses as his girlfriends, where we acted all grown up and drank cherry Dr. Peppers with plastic monkeys hanging off the side of the glass. (A troop of plastic monkeys because those ladies KNEW we were our granddaddy’s girlfriends.) I remember the waitresses in mint green uniforms with white collars, cuffs and aprons, but I could be wrong. If you behaved yourself, you got to go to Ben Franklin and shop. Later, when it wasn’t cool anymore to go to a barber shop (think Beatles haircuts), granddaddy went to Vidal Sassoon school to learn to ‘style’ hair with a blow dryer and products.
Everyone in town knew Mr. Tipps. He cut generations of hair (many, many first haircuts) and he just wasn’t afraid of change. He taught me to drive a tractor and he taught me to cut hair on his back porch sitting in the same chairs that now have a place of honor on my own back porch. I believe he also taught me to be a good person because you learn by example. When we were little and went back to Waco for Easter, Christmas, Mother’s Day and every other holiday, we would always ‘forget’ our pajama’s so we could sleep in Granddaddy’s white t-shirts, then we fought to see who would get to sleep under the pool table on a pallet. (Grandma didn’t learn to drive until she was in her 50’s but she WAS definitely a pool shark.)
Granddaddy could make or carve anything out of a stump of wood and if someone told me that I could use only one word to describe him, it would be gentle. All the way…a gentleman and the MOST-gentle of any man that I’ve ever met in my whole life. There will never be anyone like my granddaddy. So, for years, I kept that unopened present out in the open in my home, on a cabinet or table, to remind me to never put off until tomorrow what I should be saying, doing, or delivering today. I took that gift off the shelf last night and I will keep it out for a little while longer as I remind my two children again of what it represents.
Hope you are all healthy and finding some joy in this experience. No question, I will definitely have to water blast the inside of my house when my kids go back to school, but it sure is nice knowing that they are home and safe.
Lisa