petescully
april 2005 - april 2008

Wk 1: Pete Tosses A Pumpkin

My first week living in America, and I have tossed my first pumpkin.


It happened on Saturday, at the Sonoma County Harvest Fair, a gathering of wine-sipping apple-farming hicks which, a bit of a culture shock to a boy from Burnt Oak. Having tasted prize-winning Zinfandels and Chardonnays from all over the County, and chuckled at the hilarity that is the Wolrd Championship Grape Stomp, we put our names down to see who could chuck pumpkins the furthest. My wife chose a fairly small one, and managed to throw it an admirable ten feet; my one, on the other hand was huge. Now people had their methods - some threw it like an American Football, some held the tip and launched it, while one Chinese fellow tried to swing around and shot-put it and failed, managing a measly half a foot. I wanted to performs a footy-style throw in, but when my time came, I cannot even remember what I did. I did get a few claps though: I managed a very respectable eighteen and a half feet. Not bad for a beginner. I got a ribbon - next year I'm going for the trophy.


And so, we are finally back in the land of the huge car, the wide road, and the beating sun. After all of my emotional goodbyes, this first week has been one of conflicting feelings, a swim in a choppy cultural sea that has left me in need of a snorkel, or at least driving lessons. It is impossible to do anything here without a car. You have to get a car to go and get a car. There are freeways in even the smallest of towns because people do not like driving through the town, they would prefer to sit in traffic on a freeway than face a couple of stop signs. Fast food is everywhere - when you can't be bothered going to the supermarket, it is a hugely easy option - nobody really wonders why everybody is fat here. I am living on doughnuts (or 'donuts', rather - they love to contract their words here, to leave more room for their Big Gulps), burritos and massive sodas. And uber-patriotism - only last night there was a country and western song on the radio that glorified invading other countries (particularly non-Christain ones) and raining hell-fire down upon them ("I'll put mah boot in yaw ass") so that we can be 'free', like we wouldn't be free anyway (in fact, I wish we weren't free to invade other countries willy-nilly sometimes, then they wouldn't hate us so much).


Ah, it's all an adjustment to a new way of life. People here are politically charged, be it uber-right or uber-left. If there were any more polarization they'd be throwing snowballs at each other. I'm going to sit back, listen, try not to start fights, and report it all here. This blog will now be my own 'Letter from America', and I'll try to update every week.


Y'all come back now, y'hear?! 

4.10.05 18:08


New categories for the uncategorical

Getting on the internet has been pretty hard lately; I am however starting to settle in a bit more. Still not received a social security number (so no jobs), but I have bought a guitar - a black electro-acoustic Ibanez, sounds absolutely awesome, and helps while away the homesickness (and work off the fast food). Only cost me $199 from a place called Zone Music in Cotati - I got a free year's subscription to Rolling Stone magazine with it, but never mind eh.


So I've redone the look of the site to coincide with my new life. I'm adding another category, for my weekly essays on la vida en America titled 'From the US of Eh?', while 'Parlez...' will be for my usual ramblings and updates, and '..Kunst' for the drawings. The thing about blogs is that they are a kind of diary for the uninterested. There are magazines here that actually give tips on how to write not only blogs, but your own private diaries and journals!! People love to be told how to do stuff here. As long as there is no brainpower involved. But that's for another essay.


And it is still very sunny and very warm. And harvest season in the wine country is great.

10.10.05 20:34


Week 2: No Crony Left Behind

Santa Rosa must have the most intelligent homeles people in the world. I've just joined the local Sonoma County library, and it is full of grizzled, unwashed hobos, shuffling around the journals, poring through encyclopedias, lost in thought and pungent odours. They are there every day, like mumbling monks, preparing either for an overthrow of the regularly-washed capitalist regime, or a special tramp version of University Challenge (better watch out, Paxman). their greying pony-tails and Haight-Ashbury beards betray them as old Northern California liberal hippies, more LSD than LSE. These are not, absolutely not, the people who voted in Arnold Schwarzenegger as Governer of California.


I am yet to meet a californian who thought giving Arnie their top job - the 'one man with one veto' (and he aint afraid to use it) - was a good idea. Most people here are saying his days are numbered (a phrase I've never understood - surely all days are numbered, isn;t that what calendars are for?), but even the Governator isn't losing support like the President is. Yes, the legendary (read mythical) 'approval rating' has never been lower for George W Bush, particularly after his slow response to Hurricane Katrina (he thought it was a female boxer). One of the big political stories to fall from the Katrina fiasco was the resignation of Michael Brown, the Bush-appointed head of FEMA whose only qualifications for running large scale relief operations amounted to cleaning shit from paddock floors at the horse-shows he used to run. Now, the politcial storm is Hurrican Harriet: Bush is insisting on appointing his White House legal adviser (and long-time Texan friend) Harriet Miers to the highest legal position in America, Supreme Court Justice.


Her qualifications for being the nation's most prominent judge do not include ever having been a judge, nor ever having shown any inclination of wanting to be one. Her own judgement, in fact, is fairly dubious, having once said (to David Frum) that the President was the 'most brilliant man she knows', according to the SF Press Democrat. That such a Dubya-acolyte is being rewaded with a position so clearly above her station has naturally angered Democrats, but the real backlash has been from right-wing Republicans - even they abhor the obvious cronyism. On the internet, in the newspapers, on the radio and on TV, Bush is losing the support of his own supporters.


Yet surely he is just showing Americans another version of the American Dream? That you can become important and powerful even if you don't have any qualifications or experience - in short, ignorance, stupidity and a lack of education pays off. Those homeless guys in the library are clearly wasting their time - or will one of them be the next Secretary of State?   

11.10.05 20:44


missing: eight legged freaks

Who's been watching 'Lost'? In the UK they're about half way through the first season, while over here they are already four shows into the second. We watched the entire rest of season one on dvd this week - wow what a gripping show - and have now started catching up (we may even download the episodes we missed onto an iBook). However, I've noticed one thing - where are all the spiders? Nobody has yet had a big spider crawl down their shoulder, or had to scramble through cobwebs, or any of it. Where are they all? Can it possibly be an island without arachnids?
17.10.05 20:40


Week 3: American TV - may cause drowsiness

Coming from the BBC culture of the UK, it's easy to forget just how insufferable American television can be, whether it be the overblown news shows, the stomach-churning chat shows or the constant stream of asinine commercials.

"Do you have genital herpes? Ask your doctor for 'Itch-ditch'. Contains acropolyurinothaloethylene. May cause drowsiness or amnesia."

I've sadly been watching a lot of box lately, and I've come to the conclusion that what I am really watching are commercials with bits of show added in every so often. Channel hopping is impossible in this climate. I'll be flicking through like a gunslinger from the Old West, and still find nothing but wall to wall adverts. A half hour show such as Seinfeld or South Park will have between three to four commercial breaks, inserted at the most random moments.

"Why am I happy? I just saved money on my car insurance with E-Z-Sure! More money for me to spend on burgers."
"In theaters this Friday - from the director of 'The Cop' - He was a Cop, on the Edge, and he was Back, for More: 'The Cop II' - rated N for Not Sure"


It begins as soon as the opening credits are in - break one. A couple more leap unannounced into the show, and then a final one just before the final credits roll in. Adversely, there will very often not be one between shows - gee whizz, folks, that would be overkill. So why are there so many advert breaks? It surely can't be so people can check what's being advertised on the other side. So it's tilme to check the TV listings in the paper. Americans all have cable, so they all have about seven thousand channels, rather than the standard five most Brits have to choose between (or three if you don't count ITV and Channel Five, which are shite). So what's on? A mind-numbing stream of comedy repeats, both American and British (including a worrying double-bill of 'Are You Being Served?'), bloated ego-centric news anchor shows, dire daytime soap-operas (24 hours a day), serious-browed cop and lawyer shows, over-exposed and under-thought-out reality shows, vacuous talk-shows, the odd multi-channel publicised serial such as 'Lost' or 'Desperate Housewives' - oh, and the US edition of 'How Clean is Your House'. You cannot escape Kim and Aggie, even here.

"New at Taco Bell, huge stuffed meat beef chicken lamb and bacon burrito with jack cheese, stringly lettuce and too much rice, chili, cheese, chipotle, chihauhauas and chewing gum (ask your doctor about side effects)"
"America's most trusted urine remover - Urine-Gone (TM) - rids your carpet of any yellow stains - gets your floor so clean you can wipe your bum with it - call this 0800 URINE-GONE now - not available in shops"

And then the movies - Americans watch a lot of films, throughout the day. Now unlike Britain, which seems to air it's best films after about 11.45 at night, they are shown all day here. And I love how they rate them in the listings - The Godfather, for example, is rated 'R - contains violence, adult situations, nudity, language.' Language? What, Italian? The interesting thing is that this exact same description is used for Jerry Maguire, not a film known for its gangland murder scenes. And 'adult situations'? Harry Potter and the Sorceror's Stone is listed as containing 'adult situations', as does Back To the Future II. Which situations would those be? When Marty flies off on a hovering skateboard? Yet in the same listings appear Platoon, Hamburger Hill and Braddock: Missing In Action III, none of which have any rating. No language, no violence, not a sniff of an adult situation - what sort of soppy friendly war was Vietnam?

"The new Monster SUV - guzzles more gas than the entire population of Bratislava - for when you absoultely positively have to go off road - protect America, buy the new Monster SUV (may cause dizziness)"

At least, after all of this, they still have The Late Show with David Letterman. Half an hour with Dave and you know it's all been worth it...
18.10.05 23:08


Berkeley, left of left


It looks as though we'll be moving to Davis - my wife got a job at the UC there. It's a nice place, a college town, out in the dry, hot Central Valley, not far from Sacramento. What is interesting is that the Medieval Association of the Pacific is based there. I must join them. We went into Berkeley yesterday - it is definitely the world capital of leftyism and hippy intelligentsia. Cool place. Grungy and colourful in places, cool and scholarly in others. There were a lot of bookshops and record stores. And the UC campus is perched upon a hill overlooking the Bay to SF. We too a drive over to SF (known locally not as 'Frisco' or 'San Fran' or any of those stupid names, but simply as 'The City'), and had a laugh at the sea-lions honking away at Pier 39.
22.10.05 23:08


Week Four: God Only Knows


I'm considering writing to Apple to market my latest invention - the iGod. It's just like the iPod but specifically built for religious purposes - it's cross-shaped (useful when you meet vampires and heathens), contains over five hundred Christian rock songs, and is perfect for downloading the latest sermon, or Godcast, from any Church in the world. Furthermore you can use it to automatically register your vote for George W Bush or any other leading Republican, as well as convert other people's votes for them. I can't see it being a big seller in Europe, but it might make me my million over here.

God is everywhere in America - you are reminded of this daily. 'God Bless America', 'In God We Trust', 'One Nation Under God' - these are drills every American has embedded in them from a very young age. Ok, the British National Anthem is 'God Save The Queen', but God is no more important to most Brits than the Queen is these days. In the US, faith in religion is still a make or break issue - the Religious Right currently holds much political sway. Now I am basing this on my initial observations only, I am not trying to paint an unrealistic picture, but where in England it is usually fairly embarassing to admit your religious bent, people here wear it on their sleeves (and on their bumbers). You would not find a two-minute commercial advertising the new 'Bible on DVD', featuring scenes of whole Ned Flanders-like families sitting around the TV grinning inanely as passages from Corinthians are read to them by a soothing mid-western voice, over saccharine vomit-inducing lift-music. But you do here; I saw one last night (right after the Gary Coleman loan advert). Diaries often contain such passages as 'when I realised God loved me' and 'Bible passages that inspire my family' (I found these in a regular diary in Barnes and Noble that was advertised as a Father's journal - I don't think it meant a priest). TV shows hardly ever insult God, even if they insult organised religion. It is almost as if God is American, and to be an unbeliever is to be unpatriotic.

Of course, America was settled by Europeans fleeing religious intolerance. In the case of the Puritans, this meant they were free to cross the Atlantic and be as intolerant as they liked. Nevertheless, the Founding Fathers knew that the power of the Church must never infringe upon State affairs, as was still the case in many older European countries. People who still chant 'One Nation Under God' in the Pledge of Allegiance at school still enforce the mantra of Seperation of Church and State. In a nation in which some states have all but reduced the teaching of Darwinian Evolution in favour of Creationism, it is still unacceptable to teach religious education in schools. I find this unbelievable - how are children to learn about Hinduism and Islam and other cultures' belief systems if not at school? The Discovery Channel? Yet Christianity is still allowed to get in the way of Science. Museums trying to promote Darwinism are up against an education system whose textbooks regularly feature disclaimers concerning the 'e-word', the Chicago Tribune reports.

Christianity pervades popular culture here. A new film out soon is being premiered in churches across the land. Called 'Left Behind: World At War' it features an Antichrist created by the 'Global Community' which burns the White House down and reaks general havoc upon the planet and its environment (pretty much as the White House itself does, I think). Only those who believe in Jesus are saved, "and you don't want to be left behind", as a local Santa Rosa priest said in the Press Democrat. Christian Rock is all over the airwaves (and I have noticed something - when you hear a black person sing the praises of Jesus, it sounds good, it sounds cool, but when you hear a white person sing for God with a guitar it just sounds creepy). Political books always bring up God, linking it to this mythical concept called 'values', and using God as the ultimate patriotic symbol, like Superman. That cretinous right-wing spokesperson Ann Coulter for one says, on the back of her latest book 'How To Talk To Liberals (If You Have To)', that not only is invading other countries and converting them to Christianity admirable, but should be done 'now more than ever'. Any bookstore will find ten other new books saying the same thing (with another ten accusing the Republicans of stealing God, and even Christmas, from the Left).

However, I'm starting to wonder whether my iGod gadget would be such a good idea. I mean, should we be promoting Apples in America? Remember the bollocking God gave Eve when she chose an Apple over a PC in the Garden of Eden? You should do, if you went to an American school. Let's learn from our mistakes. Call it Eve-olution.
25.10.05 23:11


Book 'em, Danno


So are we going to Davis, or will there be a last minute move to Berkeley? We just don't know at this point.

In the meantime, I thought you'd like to know what I've been reading since I joined SR library.

Spanglish: the making of a new american language by Ilan Stavans (New York: 2003). I've enjoyed this book, which is a look at the 'Spanglish' phenomenon. Spanglish is basically the result of bilingualism of the hispanic communities living in the US, a form of spanish with lots of English turns of phrase and vocabulary thrown in. Having just written that long paper on the blending of English with French in the Middle Ages, this has been an interesting study, which has gotten me thinking about where linguistic boundaries really lie - geographically, socially, or within people's heads? I mean, a language barrier occurs when there is misunderstanding, but when there is bilingualism the barrier is broken down. This allowed English to fuse with Norman French, and is allowing spanish to fuse with American English in a similar way. Stavans' litters his English with Spanish phrases, creating his own style and paralleling that of Spanglish. This book also contains a long glossary of terms, such as 'homlan', meaning 'homeland', as in the phrase "Vivimos lejos de nuestra homlan" (p143). Stavans also gives a translation into el espangles of the opening passages of Don Quixote de la Mancha. An enjoyable read.

How We Talk: american regional english today by Allan Metcalf (Boston: 2000). This is a fairly thorough and comprehensive, if populist, look at the various accents and dialects of the english spoken in America, from the drawls of the South to the skookums of Alaska. I am a little disappointed by the phonetic methods used to describe the accents, as they are a little too far into the 'ah', 'uh', 'ee' territory, unhelpful if you speak a form of english that pronounces 'ah' and 'uh' in a different way to Standard American. It is thus a little hard to picture the accents if you are unfamiliar with them, but this is not a book written for serious linguists; terms such as 'rhotacism' to describe the pronunciation of the letter 'r' in words such as 'farm' are utterly avoided. Additionally, it provides no bibliography, so I am unable to follow up any of the sources for further reading. Nevertheless it is good fun, and proves that American English is far less standardized and homogenous than many people imagine.

Going Nucular by Geoffrey Nunberg (New York: 2004). Thoroughly enjoyable, this is a series of articles about the way language is used in American politics and culture in the Bush society. The author is a Linguistics professor at Stanford, and you can feel the Bay Area vibe in his political leanings. The articles date from around 2001 to the present, covering the language of war, the vocabulary of patriotism, modern phenomena such as blogs and google, histories of charged words, and the particular mispronunciations of Presidents (as in the titular 'nucular' - Nunberg points out that Bush practically never uses 'nucular' when describing 'nuclear families', but almost always when talking of 'nuclear weapons'). I haven't finished reading these tasty tidbits yet, but this book is one I recommend any of you read if you are interested in how language really works and is used.

Get to the library, look 'em up, check 'em out. Now, Davis or Berkeley..? Right now I'm watching the Baseball - Chicago Whitesox or Houston Astros?
27.10.05 01:47


Hanging out with Obi-Wan


So, it's rainy today, and it looks like, after a lot of thinking and mulling, that the answer will be DAVIS. Maybe one day in Berkeley? But for now, it's Davis. I have to say though, UC Berkeley's campus is by far the best campus I ever visited. Extraordinary.

Anyway, we were looking at the horoscopes today (they should be renamed the horror-scopes for Hallowe'en), and my one, Aquarius, said the following:
Exchanges with pals take on an unusually profound tone today. You feel like you are hanging out with Obi-Wan. These are not the droids you are looking for.

Seriously! That's so my life! And I was getting out my Anakin robe to stitch back together for Hallowe'en on Monday. It's a good sign.
28.10.05 21:44


American Dream Towns... know what I mean


Outside magazine, according to the SF Press Democrat, and the Chicago Tribune (the list of sources is endless), has compiled a TOP TEN of "new American dream towns", which I suppose means towns most desirble to be liuved in. And DAVIS comes in at number five!!! Woo-hoo! We are moving to the fifth-most-desirable town next Saturday.

Also on the list (which is topped, alarmingly, by Salt Lake City) are two Portlands, one in Maine and one in Oregon. we have considered living in the Oregon one, for my wife has family there. Well I was looking at the map of Portland, and I found a brilliant town to live in, it's got my favourite town name ever: Wanker's Corner!!!! I kid you not, there's a town called Wanker's Corner in Oregon, look it up!

So here's my TOP FIVE PLACES in the US for, well, you can guess:
1. Wanker's Corner, Oregon
2. Palm Beach, Florida
3. Climax, Colorado
4. Bald Knob, Arkansas
5. Old Faithful, Wyoming

Yeah, kinda clutching at straws to find others, I feel ('Old Faithful'? Do me a favour! 'Salt Lake City' might be a better choice)... More looking at the map. Aah, I can't be bothered. What can really beat 'Wanker's Corner'? I mean, really?
30.10.05 21:46


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