Something about January makes me rather reflective. I guess it’s that the holiday busy-ness is over, and it’s usually always cold or grim enough outside that I don’t want to be outdoors, and that there’s not much yard work to do, anyway.
But before we got cooped up inside, watching TV and what passes for TV these days, we spent lots of time outside. Starting in March and continuing through October, we spend a lot of time in the backyard, enjoying each other's company.
When COVID appeared in the United States in March, it immediately affected big cities on the coasts. But while people in those areas quite reasonably freaked out and began to adapt to being stuck inside their high-priced urban apartments and missing contact with the zillions of big-city people they otherwise would see every day on their work commutes, at that time COVID wasn’t yet affecting us here in Missouri much at all. Naturally—just like cultural trends and fashion, the middle of the continent lags behind. Which proved deceptive—around here, most of us started taking measures in mid-March, but there was not much sign of the disease in our area. It really hadn’t gotten here yet. Hospitals kept up with cases. Only a few people had died. This probably fed the opinions of people who thought it was a hoax.
Our midwestern numbers started their steep climb in the summer and fall. I’m still amazed at how many supposedly practical, hard-headed, no-nonsense midwesterners didn’t watch and learn from the people on the coasts. I mean, looking over at someone else’s test is only illegal when you’re in school. But in everyday life, looking over your shoulder at others just common sense. Even though we had low numbers for so long, it made good sense for midwesterners to take precautionary measures: With so many people not following guidelines for one reason or another (or, despite all reason), it wouldn’t have taken much for an infected person to hop on a plane or drive into Missouri and start infecting people willy-nilly.
So, Sue and I have basically stayed away from folks since March. We wear masks when in public. We do go out for groceries and other needed purchases. We also get groceries and supplies for my folks and deliver them. (And we wear masks when we visit my parents.) We go to doctor and dentist appointments. We go to haircuts—though there have been some postponements, as our salon has had times when it could not be open. We initially made a point to spend money at our favorite local restaurants a few nights a week, getting carryout, to help them economically. For example, we bought wine from Vines on a carry-out basis.
But our restaurant patronage, even with carry-out purchases, has dwindled as the local government has never placed restrictions on restaurants or even bars, and there are plenty of people in this city, swallowing rightwing propaganda, who think COVID is somehow a hoax. With so many of them around and going to restaurants and bars unmasked, we opt to just stay away. Apparently the leaders in this city think that the best way to keep restaurants and shops in business is to have no restrictions at all; instead, it’s “do what y’all are comfortable with,” and then businesses just close temporarily whenever they find out someone in there had the ’rona. (“Oopsie.”) I guess that’s a plan, of sorts.
But it really just means that people like us, who really do not want to get sick, or to carry and spread the disease to others, are uncomfortable going into most places in town, even for the five to fifteen minutes we may have to wait when our pick-up order isn't ready on time. Some groceries, for example, insist on masks; others don’t and thus attract more than their fair share of anti-maskers, potential virus spreaders. You have to look carefully at the signs on the doors, to gauge the degree of danger within a business.
So we’ve decided we can’t feel responsible for the success of local businesses. Apparently, they are getting plenty of customers without us. I would feel better about shopping and dining out and getting carry-out—and I’d be more likely to do so—if most people around here took the virus seriously. Or if a local ordinance made it so that everyone was required to wear masks, meaning that business owners could shrug and say, “Well, we all have to do it, so please wear a mask.” But whatever. The lackadaisical people might finally have to change their attitudes and behaviors once the new, more easily-transmissible variant becomes widespread this spring.
I keep thinking the same grim notion: that people around here, and in other small-town, hinterland areas, simply will not take the disease seriously until someone they know dies from it, or until the dead are stacked like cordwood in the streets. The bad math of the anti-maskers often goes like this: “99 percent of people who get COVID don’t die from it, so what’s the problem?” I say: Bad math, because in a town the size of Jefferson City, 1 percent of the population is 430 souls. In the United States, 1 percent is some 3,282,395 people, dead. And the notion of “surviving” COVID is problematic, as many people who don’t die from it nevertheless suffer long-term, possibly permanent health effects and disability as a result: strokes, lung conditions, migraines, etc. And you know that if the insurance companies have their way, they would like to return to the days when they could zap you for preexisting conditions—oh, they’d be happy to sell you insurance, but at a higher rate, or a policy that won’t cover the very things you need—and having had COVID would be a reason to dock you.
So, our lifestyle has changed. With us eating out less, I’m cooking much more. Spring, summer, and fall, we enjoyed grilling and eating in the backyard. Many evenings, with the firepit. It was fun.
And I’ve perfected my pizza-from-scratch making—booyah! We’ve been saving a lot of money on food, since we’re mostly eating from scratch. We also save a lot on beverages, since restaurants have such a tremendous markup on those. We’ve both lost some weight—it turns out my cooking must be fairly healthy, or else we eat smaller portions than we would at restaurants. It’s certainly not because of more exercise.
Indeed, reviewing the past year, I realized we’ve watched more TV than usual. Which is to say, we watched TV. Ordinarily, from spring until fall, I listen to Cardinals baseball radio broadcasts whenever it’s convenient. It’s the soundtrack for summer evenings. Like, while doing the dishes. Or working the crossword and Cryptoquip. This year, I really missed the baseball broadcasts. Summer just wasn’t the same without it. Then, when we did finally get a baseball season, it was weird. That fake crowd noise! But at least we had some kind of season. I have a new appreciation for the ability of professional sports to deliver us from the tedium or pain of our daily lives.
So what did we do? We don’t get cable, so everything we watched was online: YouTube, Facebook videos, Netflix, or whatever. So here’s some of what has entertained us.
First on the list was the Metropolitan Opera! With its live performances closed because of the pandemic, the Met has been offering nightly broadcasts of its years of archived HD performances. These are beyond cool! The first one we watched was La Fille du Régiment, on March 20, starring the energetic coloratura Natalie Dessay in a hilarious comedic role, and Juan Diego Flórez as her love interest, a charming Swiss villager capable of singing multiple high Cs. The live performance was in 2008, but we didn’t see it then, so it was all new to us! They’re still showing these encore performances—a different opera each night, and each one is available for viewing for 24 hours. Check it out on the Met’s website.
Another source of entertainment was a variety of our favorite musicians who have been posting regular or occasional house concerts on Facebook. These are fun and sometimes . . . interesting. We’re so used to hearing pop musicians via professionally engineered recordings, or in concerts with full bands where professional sound technicians work to perfect what booms out of the speakers. But here were these musicians, in their living rooms or music rooms, sitting alone with their guitars, sometimes reading off of music, telling stories, and occasionally squinting at their devices and responding to live comments . . . suddenly looking like real people negotiating their video devices, instead of being completely polished, shining icons. It’s refreshing. Some of these we’ve watched were Melissa Etheridge, the Indigo Girls, and Cris Williamson. I think it really takes a lot of guts to offer such casual performances, often from their own homes.
Of these, perhaps my favorite has been Lucie Blue Tremblay, a French-Canadian singer-songwriter who’s a legend in the women’s music genre. Bonjour, Lucie Blue! She has become a US citizen and, per her website, “In the summers you can find Lucie and Pat managing their new guest house ‘The Princess & The Sea Nova Scotia’ as they live life deeply and gently in a wonderful fishing community on the Bay of Fundy.”
Their live Facebook events have been really fun. In the first of these that we saw, in midsummer, Lucie and Pat were simply walking around the pandemic-empty tourist town of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, stopping in shops and showing us the sights, playing a song or two, say, in a mostly empty ice cream parlor or in a local park. Keeping people’s spirits up—including ours.
On the flip side of these casual, and I’m sure they would all admit, less-than-professionally-engineered performances, we’ve also seen some very slick, well-rehearsed and well-engineered performances by Sue’s favorite performer these days, Brandi Carlile. In case you didn’t know, Brandi and her family, and the three men who are in her group, and their immediate (and interconnected) families, all live more or less in a compound in the Seattle area. Thus, they basically have a bubble in which they’re all able to interact with each other with few restrictions.
To raise funds for charitable causes, and to provide money for their idle road crew, who would otherwise have plenty of paying work traveling to all their concerts, Brandi and co. have had a series of live pay-per-view concerts. They basically play one of her albums as a single concert. I think we’ve seen all of them. There was even a live “Still Home for the Holidays” Christmas concert broadcast from her living room. As I understand it, in their compound, they have a bona fide recording studio that easily doubles as a stage for these programs. Nice lighting, videography, and sound. The music is polished and rich; they can be together as needed to rehearse. But since it’s live and informal, there’s a fun sense of spontaneity. We’ve enjoyed these a lot. We’ve even watched a few twice!
Other entertainments we’ve enjoyed have been on Netflix, which we finally broke down and subscribed to. We tried hard not to binge-watch The Crown, once its new season was finally released. We watched a lot of old movies—Sue’s a big fan of Joan Crawford. Sue subscribed to Criterion, so we have a plethora of nifty old classic movies to watch. And on Netflix, we watched several old Star Trek shows; for instance, we looked at the (generally humorous) Lwaxana Troi episodes of Next Gen and DS9; then we watched all the Vic Fontaine episodes from DS9. All quite fun and diverting; we didn’t watch any of the episodes about dysfunctional, evil, orange-colored authoritarian aliens hell-bent on destroying the universe.
Then, of course, we enjoyed a lot of miscellaneous Christmas programming on Netflix. I’d kind of forgotten how fun TV can be.
Any videos watched on a device can be watched on a laptop, and anything can be plugged into a screen, so we watched a lot of non-programming programming together, too. Chief among these were the offerings of Virtual Railfan on YouTube. Our default is the live webcam from the Amtrak station at La Plata, Missouri. VR keeps adding new webcams, so there’s always something to enjoy. Fort Madison, Iowa, was new this year, for example, and it shows not only the train tracks but also boats, barges, and bald eagles on the Mississippi, and the turning bridge over the river. Plus, every few days, VR posts “grab bag” videos that compile the most unusual and interesting moments from all the cameras: bears crossing the road late at night in Revelstoke, British Columbia; cars that crept too far forward at intersections getting “knighted” by railroad crossing gates in La Grange, Kentucky; and a bewildering variety of executive, heritage, and anniversary locomotives, “meets,” “races,” “power moves,” “slugs,” unusual cargoes, rusty old boxcars bearing logos of “fallen flags,” railroad employees waving at the cameras and giving horn salutes, and more. The chat is well-moderated, cordial, and informative. Thousands of people tune in to VR to watch trains, chat while waiting for trains, and forget our troubles for a while.
Well, wherever you are, I hope you’re well and staying entertained. Stay safe, my friends!
6 comments:
We watch a lot of PBS shows. They're airing a new "All Creatures Great and Small" series that is very good. On Netflix we've watched the PBS show Poldark, and some others.
Donna, isn't it interesting how all our lives have changed over the past year. We got rid of cable TV a long, long time ago and haven't missed it. We dropped it when they'd upped the monthly cost to, like $70. Now, it's more than double that. But staying out of public, especially this winter, has showed us how much we CAN rely on video entertainment. But for us, often, that's simply having the YouTube live webcam of the La Plata railroad tracks on, as sort of a postmodern fireplace.
When writing this post, I totally forgot a prime entertainment that sustained us this summer: READING! Since ditching cable, Sue and I have been reading together in the evenings. In the last decade or so, we've read all of Jane Austen's works, nearly all of the Bronte sisters' works, all the Tales of the City books by Armistead Maupin, and much, much more. This summer, we read J.R.R. Tolkein's monumental Lord of the Rings trilogy, and The Hobbit.
When I say "we've read," I mean, we read it together: we took turns reading it aloud to each other, usually in the evenings. It's a really fun way to read books. You tend to stop and laugh together, or complain together, or whatever. And when you're not reading, you're still on the same wavelength, talking about the book at odd times here and there.
I can't believe I didn't mention it in this post, but we totally had the Summer of Middle Earth this year.
Also, we read Michael Crichton's 1969 novel The Andromeda Strain. It seemed somehow fitting, for this year of the pandemic.
Thank you, Donna, again, for your comment.
--Julie
I love Criterion, one of the reasons I'm so upset that Barnes & Noble left Jeff was because of their annual Criterion show. On the plus side, I live in Columbia now which still has a B&N and more people that actually appreciate it. I’ve also used COVID to read lots of books I should’ve read years ago; it’s been really nice. I’ve lurked this blog for years and now as a (former) Jeff resident I am finally commenting on it for the first time. Anyways, one section of your post really jumped out to me, so I wanted to comment on it.
"I’m still amazed at how many supposedly practical, hard-headed, no-nonsense Midwesterners didn’t watch and learn from the people on the coasts".
I think you underestimate how pervasive the anti-intellectual attitudes of people in this region of the country are. This is one of the many reasons I'm glad to be a resident of Columbia now. In fact all of Boone County is under a mask ordinance and it makes me so happy and I feel much safer living in a place that takes COVID seriously. So many people around the Midwest seem to have this belief that COVID is a hoax dreamed up by the "coastal elite" and the like. I’ll never understand it.
Anyways, I’ve enjoyed through this blog, your posts on Painted Rock, Westphalia, the various small towns that dot Osage County and downtown Jeff attractions have provided a nice dose of nostalgia for me. That said I’m a grown adult now and Jeff isn’t a place for someone like me to spend my entire life. But it’s always fun to be reminded of parts of one’s childhood from time to time.
Thank you, John, for your response and your insights. This has been a weird year for sure, and one that has shed light on a lot of things that perhaps weren't so clear before. For the twenty years I've lived in Jeff City, I have consciously told myself (and others) that it's not such a bad place, and that it's getting better (particularly our neighborhood). But with the recent death of Lorie Smith and Vines closing (this was a painful blow, as Vines seemed symbolic of this neighborhood truly rising), and with all the nonsense I saw over the past year, I'm wondering about whether I can remain in the *Midwest.*
I'm kind of the opposite of you--I was born and raised in Columbia (the "Minneapolis" of the Columbia/Jeff City Minneapolis/St. Paul relationship). I was a campus brat, a nerd, and a snob toward Jeff City. I'm a Hickman Kewpie! I never had any idea that high school was the pinnacle of anything, but I gathered that for many Jefferson Citians, it was the high point of life. (The sight of all those identically dressed Jays or Jayettes or whatever clapping and chanting in unison for their football boys...like something out of the 1950s...)
Anyway, it goes way beyond the two towns; it has to do with a city vs. rural/small town understanding, and I think there are religious connections. I've been watching the right-wing fringe since the 1990s. (I lived in Montana during the "Montana Freemen/black helicopter" years and the Oklahoma City bombing, and racists and cray-cray conspiracy people were flocking to rural Montana so they wouldn't have to interact with the "others.")
I think that America has a problem with empirical reality, and science, in large part because so many of us have been self-deluding for way too long. On the right, it's people, for decades, training themselves not to question fundamentalist biblical interpretations (Creationism, etc.)--because they're afraid they'd go to hell for entertaining such questions. And not even having the courage to question the existence of hell. Not even entertaining the idea that science involves one realm of existence ("physics"), and religion involves another (metaphysics). Closed minds; black-and-white, all-or-nothing thinking; easily deluded by someone selling some brand of snake oil.
On the left, there are people who've gotten so theoretical and New Agey that they, too, have cultivated their own soft heads. Skepticism about the safety and oversight of money-hungry tech businesses such as nuclear energy and pharmaceutical companies is reasonable--but to a point. Some on the left have rejected scientific-based medicine in favor of flat-out quackery and wishful thinking. Also, some postmodern theory is thoroughly ridiculous (e.g., we each literally have our own realities; there is no such thing as an objective reality that exists apart from us)--this kind of nonsense makes me embarrassed to be an intellectual (and a post-New Age meta-Christian)--because I'm afraid people will think I believe it. So this, too, is a form of willful self-delusion that sets people up to believe things that are nonsense.
The internet and social media has had an enzymatic effect on the action of people who would like to take advantage of our simple, soft heads, speeding a process that was on track to happen anyway.
One of my favorite books is Carl Sagan's "The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark." It's a collection of essays about the importance of skepticism and the scientific method. He was an atheist, but he also loved humanity and its culture, and he appreciated the gifts of religion and mythology. The book is a great gift to our civilization. I wish everyone could read it.
...Okay, end of rant. Sorry!
Thank you again, John.
Julie
Julie,
I have several of Sagan's book. "The Demon-Haunted World" is my favorite. I also recommend another book entitled "Anti-Intellectualism in American Life" by Richard Hofstadter. It shows that this isn't a new phenomenon, and in many ways is part of the American character. Anyways, high school wasn't really a highlight for me; WAY too many people romanticize it as the "best years of their lives" when it really isn't. Anyways, I should have mentioned that I'm not actually a Jeff native; when I was younger I lived in the KC area, I had to do Jeff before I started high school due to my dad's military job at the National Guard; so my high school years were spent in Jeff instead of vibrant KC. Not a fun adjustment, and I learned very quickly that Jeff doesn't integrate to outsiders all that well. So, when I finished my education I quickly realized this wasn't a place to spend the rest of my life so I went to CC for my undergrad and now I'm working on grad school at MU (got 1-2 years to go) and will definitely be getting out of the Midwest as soon as can be; I simply can't fathom people who wish to spend the rest of their lives in Jeff or Missouri. I've never fit in Jeff like I did in KC and it's simply not a culture of people like me (liberal, atheist, no desire for marriage or children) so I need to move elsewhere. Columbia has been good to me, but I gotta spread my wings farther than a mid-sized college town in Central Missouri, obviously.
Anyways, enjoy the blog (really like your post on Painted Rock, hung out there a lot when I was a teenager) and wish you the best of luck in your future!
John
Thanks, John, for your insights. I was lucky enough to go out of state for graduate school and the early years of my career (Arizona, California, Montana), and I often miss those places. In general, the West is simply more laid back than the Midwest and East. I think I was lucky to come back to Mo. when I did, as it has given me the opportunity to live near my parents now that they've gotten older. I think that it's a blessing to be in a position to help them. More than ever, now, with the COVID crap. For a long time I have held the view that so-called backwards places can be changed if enough smart people stay and try to change them. But as the R-word (retirement) starts cropping up in conversations more and more, and as the tenor of the civilization around here has clearly NOT improved, I'm starting to think I've put in my time. It would be nice to live somewhere that doesn't wear me out just thinking about it.
I realize my nostalgia for AZ, CA, and MT is flavored by my past experiences--being young and footloose, and it being a time before 9/11, before Trump, before all this huge division. But the signs of division and nonsense were there--the Montana Freemen and Neo-Nazis, the head-in-the-sand approach to the AIDS crisis, Reaganomics and trickle-down, the Persian Gulf War, etc. A move to the West, for me, would not take me to the West I remember.
Best of luck to you,
Julie
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