FOR
McCAIN
C: Yesterday when I was walking home, there was this creepy homeless guy cursing God outside of Papalote.
K: Oh my God! I TOTALLY SAW HIM TOO. But it was at about 5:30. And he had moved on to screaming about how God stole his money.
C: Yeah, when I walked past him, it was at like 2.
K: I love how this definitely went on for at least 3 hours straight.
When we first moved to our apartment in the
My first impression of Sunrise Launderette was that of repulsion. The two inches of dirt on the concrete floor and machines assured me that the place had not been cleaned since it was opened, which was probably in the 90s, based on the fact that only about 10% of the machines worked (no exaggeration - AND if you mistakenly put your quarters in a defunct machine, it would, of course, keep them. Irritation). None of the machines had any signs on them indicating whether or not they were broken, so you basically just had to remember which worked. Helpfully, one of the machines that DID work had the words "Poo Chunks" written on it in permanent marker, so that one was an obvious go-to every time.
Every single time we went to Sunrise Launderette, there was a new adventure to be had. Sometimes the homeless people sitting on the bench inside (and there were ALWAYS homeless people just hanging out in there; the door was always wide open) would grunt and nudge each other while gesturing to your lady pants. Sometimes the experience was as drab as losing 6 quarters in a dryer that tossed your clothing around, but had no heat. Sometimes a woman wearing pale pink polyester stirrups would flash you when she bent over because her elastic waistband failed to keep her pants securely at her waist. This one time Cody had two pairs of pants stolen out of the washer. It was a crap shoot, really. You never knew what you were going to get.
Every single time we would vow "Never again!" but to be quite honest, nothing could outweigh the fact that THE LAUNDROMAT WAS 50 FEET AWAY. We were just too damn inert to seek out another Laundromat.
Until…it happened.
One day we headed over to Sunrise Launderette. It was curiously empty: there were no homeless people having an intense argument with themselves about the nature of God; no downtrodden people wearing polyester stirrups sadly shoveling their clothes into a broken washer. The eerie quiet resonated as I walked over to Poo Chunks and stalwartly placed my unmentionables in it. Cody walked over to Washer #12.
He quickly slammed the lid shut. "Oh. My. God." he choked.
"WHAT WHAT?" I screamed excitedly. A new
C: "Um…you don't want to look in there. You really don't want to know."
K: "YES I DO! WHAT WHAT?"
C: "Baby…Someone shat in that washer."
After ascertaining that it wasn't some animal droppings or something (concluding factor: the presence of newspaper used in place of toilet paper), a wave of disgust passed over me, to be quickly replaced by indignation and anger. "That is SO DISGUSTING!" I shouted. It was ONE thing for a homeless person to annoy patrons by sitting on the bench making lewd comments (and possibly stealing pants), but another completely to leave the bench and venture over to a washer, unbuckle the pants, perch on the washer, and leave a gigantic crap present for some unsuspecting soul to find. While Cody retrieved our clothes from Poo Chunks, I ran back to the apartment (stopping quickly to update my Facebook status, of course) and returned with my own permanent marker.
On Washer #12, I wrote:
WARNING:
This machine contains ACTUAL POO CHUNKS.
I would end this post by taking a picture of the message, but fortunately, Sunrise Launderette closed almost immediately after The Incident. I guess the owners didn't want to deal with the actual poo chunks either.
And boy, am I glad I attended. Many lessons were taken away from Hardly Strictly Bluegrass this year, including (but not limited to):
1) You know you are getting old/lame/growing up when you identify more with the parents of babies or little kids than with the people your own age smoking weed next to you.
2) You know you are getting old/lame/cranky when you become irritated by the constant rush of people stepping on your blanket in their zeal to exit the premises after Bonnie "Prince" Billy has finished playing.
3) You know you are destined to live in the suburbs/the
However, these life lessons were nothing compared to the fashion lessons I learned from my fellow concert-goers this weekend, which include:
1) Overalls are the shit. Bonus if you pair said overalls with the genius fashion design that is the dickey.
2) Two other items of "rural clothing" making a splash at the festival this weekend were the straw hat and the plaid shirt (the plaid shirt should, however, be paired with skinny jeans -- NOT overalls -- to achieve maximum hipster-rural chic).
3) For the fellas, it is preferred that you pair your overalls, dickey, and straw hat with the ironic mustache, as modeled here by Jason Schwartzman in the hipster-friendly movie, The Darjeeling Limited.
4) Sometimes, however, overalls are a little heavy when it is warm out, so a popular choice is to cut off a pair of your (preferably tight) pants so that you are now sporting a pair of very short cut-offs (as modeled here by Never Nude Tobias Fünke). Any other type of short is unacceptable. Do you want to look like your dad, who unfashionably sports long, pleated Dockers shorts in varying shades of khaki? No, no you do not.
5) The cut-offs are best paired with tube socks in
varying patterns. And a vest.
6) Don't believe for a second that tie-dye is dead. It isn't.
7) It is, however, best worn with gypsy headbands (as modeled here by Mischa Barton; so boho-chic).
8) And finally, never underestimate the willingness of the white male (of all ages, shapes, and subcultures) to seize any opportunity he can to strut around without a shirt. Extra points if you pair your shirtless look with aviators, as seen here.
Overall, though, it was a good time, and I'm super glad we went, because we saw some good bands and it was FREE! But I have to admit that, like any event in