Lie Detector
Hello, Denizens Of The Internet. Haven't chatted with you in a while, and I apologize for that. See, I've been slammed with things to write, read and edit. I've been so overwhelmed, I haven't had a chance to pre-order a copy of The Black Parade Is Dead (with v. cool mystery death mask), find a store that has a physical copy of Nine Inch Nails' The Slip or wish my sister a happy birthday. (Jill, if you're reading, I love you and everything you do for our family.) Hell, I'm such a spazz, I couldn't even decide on a frickin' cover for the next issue. (Really. All will be revealed next month.) So, I had nothing to say, nothing to tell you, nothing to impart.
Aren't you glad?
The combined efforts of Scott Heisel and production manager John Millin demanded me to update my blog. I swear I'm not being obstinate, vindictive or lazy. I didn't have anything to say. Yet by not having anything to report, I somehow found something to gripe about.
A long time ago (when compact discs were $16.99 and the term "MP3" might have meant Mike Patton Trio), I used to work for a record store chain in a shopping mall. Real corporate. It was working at this record store that completely forged my misanthropic worldview. I dealt with legions of halfwits, dullards, upper-class d-bags, dudes that smelled of pot and girls that smelled of bleach. (BTW, Tim Karan has a past similar to this, and we've bonded over it, repeatedly.) But the type of customer I hated the most was the Connected.
You know the Connected ones. He's the guy who "knows somebody who will get us front row seats." The person who is "close personal friends" with the guitarist in Band X who always hang out together when they're in town. To this day, these people really grip my shit.
In my Western Pennsylvanian white-trash hamlet back then, everybody claimed they were fast buddies with Paul Gilbert, the hyper-drive metal shredder who cut his teeth playing in an FM-Rock cover band called Real Steel, before being discovered by Shrapnel Records and ending up as the guitar gymnast in the band Mr. Big. Eight out of 10 purchases of Mr. Big cassettes always resulted in the need for the customer to say to me, "Yeah, Paul's a buddy a mine." This exchange would always end with me saying, "Well, he's not much of a friend if he didn't hook you up with one for free. My opinion of him just fell, dude. Hope you enjoy it anyway." I love Rachel Dratch, but girlfriend, I was rockin' the Debbie Downer triphard back then. (The ironic thing was that I actually hung out with Paul on occasion. His mom had a cool stationery store called Animal Crackers, and I was a frequent customer. In addition, I remember Paul and a dude named Dwayne Davis practicing metal versions of local kids entertainment show themes [Captain Pitt, anyone? Bueller?] in a condemned building in downtown Greensburg.) And it was always great to see the ticket-connected dudes at shows sitting in the second balcony while I was rocking fifth-row center.
What am I going on about? The internet has always been touted by optimists as a way to keep the world "connected" to one another. Unfortunately, it's also the playground for people who have nothing forward-thinking to bring to the party. "But dammit, I have a voice and you, Jason Pettigrew, you simpering puke, will not stop me from proclaiming about my close friendships with celebrities or the time when the bassist from Tear-Stained Hanky punched a girl in the face and I was the only one who saw it and he sucks but I have a friend who can get me into their show for free..."

















