adventures


20
Mar 16

All that talk of spring …

And here we are, in mid-late March, driving through Kentucky.

What gives, Kentucky?


19
Mar 16

I have three theories about weddings

My cousin got engaged some time back. And it seemed I was going to be asked to be the photographer. Most weddings in my family seem to be family affairs. I’ve been a DJ and a photographer and even in a few wedding parties. So this was not so surprising, even if just attending is an easier day.

So I figured on the nondescript tie. Doesn’t draw attention, projects authority and authenticity.

But I ultimately wore a different tie. On Tuesday of this last week I got a text about not shooting the wedding, but taking on some other role. These things are family affairs.

I have three theories about weddings: The first theory is that every wedding has its own character. Usually it is a flaw or something quirky or some environmental condition or something going on in the world that day. But its the thing that everyone remembers when your wedding ceremony comes up. Oh, a bridesmaid fainted? Yep, people will laugh at that for years. It was a 128 degrees at your wedding? That’s always the first thing people say about the lovely ceremony. (This one I know from firsthand experience.)

So I did some research and did some other work chose a different tie and then last night helped assembled the bulk of the wedding venue’s decorations. The bride had done a great deal, of course, and I’m sure her kids were kids and the groom was a groom and so I was up on the top of a 10-foot ladder in this event venue last night, clinging to a mount bar and stringing lace and tule and beads and lights for reasons that make sense to smarter people than me. And we did that because we’d already put all of the table centerpieces in place. I figure just doing the work, just being seen working hard, might mean something to the teenagers who are present, but who can say? I realized, too late, that if I’d just told them to do things, they would do them. They don’t always take initiative. Sounds familiar.

But I was happy to do all of that. Ask me to be anything but a wedding photographer. If you do ask me, I will take your pictures and send you a flash drive of unedited photographs and you can do whatever you like with them.

I have three theories about weddings: The second theory is that weddings are needlessly expensive. (I know, this is more of an immutable, universal law.) Just adding the word “wedding” to a vendor’s order increases the bill by several orders of magnitude. There is a reason wedding photographers get to charge what they charge. And that’s also the reason that I get asked to shoot weddings, because I can’t do that to family.

So after all that last night we left the venue and sat around and told jokes and the bride did last minute things for her wedding and then shifted to working on one of her class assignments. She’s a woman in her 30s who is raising a brood of kids and going to school and it is all a level of impressive that the rest of us who merely did college or parenting one at a time probably can’t understand. Also, she planned and pulled off her whole wedding.

And it was held at that place. The wedding got a late start, because fires and other crises had to be addressed. Photos had to be taken. Vows had to be written at the absolute last possible minute. And then the music played — one of my folks pushed play on the tablet, because these are family affairs. The playlist was shared, literally, as we were on the way to the venue. Oh, and also the matron of honor backed out, and the dresses were late, too.

Which is what I told them when they came to stand before me. Yes, I married them. This amused some people to no end. Others probably had different reactions. But it was a pretty decent service. And it had happened after a heck of a week. They’d lost their pastor, because that guy’s son had to go sign a college football scholarship. He’d set them up with a backup, but they didn’t like him. So they asked me on Tuesday if I would marry them on Saturday. So I wrote a ceremony that day and today watched as my aunt and uncle sat down at the front of the room. My uncle married us in 2009. I stood there watching him while everyone else watched the groomsmen and the bridesmaids all came down the aisle.

Before I started the service I said, just to them, “Do me a favor. Becky, look at Jeremy. Jeremy, look at Becky. Take a deep breath.” And I shared with them my third theory about weddings: At the end of the day, no matter what else happens, you’re still married.

I realized, midway through the service, what I forgot to add to it. I thought about ad libbing, but things were going pretty well and the bride and groom hadn’t mentioned it when they previewed the thing anyway. And, at the end, I realized that no one stood when the bride came down the aisle. And, sure, dresses were still getting hemmed moments before the service, and that even as we started almost half an hour late. Of course the pictures between the ceremony and the reception took way too long, so everyone was hungry. After all of that and more, which had happened in the weeks and days and hours just before this important day, they were still married.

So I signed the license and then played songs, because I somehow got tricked into being the DJ anyway. But I didn’t take the first picture. They still got married.


8
Mar 16

Those are Virginias, not Valencias

Took a carload, and I do mean a car full, of stuff to Goodwill today. A nice lady came out with two giant bins and helped me pull stuff out of the car and then into their storefront. She told me stories of things she has found in the donations they receive. You wouldn’t want to believe them, really. But then she also noticed a pair of cufflinks that she was pretty sure I didn’t want to donate. And she was correct.

She thanked me and told me to bring the rest — because there’s more to donate — and then gave me the tax forms that I tried to avoid and then literature:

That trip thinned out two closets and some stuff from the attic and garage.

Later there was baseball, which has become an event more about people and friends than the game itself. And, also, peanuts:

You don’t see as many three-kernel peanuts as you used to, you think. But then you remember, oh that’s about varieties. And when you get the three-kernel prize out of a giant bag of Virginia peanuts. Or maybe runners. Hard to tell.


4
Mar 16

“Lucky we were there! It was a historical event!”

There are two days left to see “Assassins,” a Stephen Sondheim musical, at Telfair Peet.

It is powerful show, which goes some good way toward humanizing the people who have attempted, and succeeded, in killing American presidents. The entire production is students and they did a GREAT job. It is dark and comical and thoughtful and full of characters who are inept and darkly successful.

The primary players are: John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, and his accomplice David Herold; Charles Guiteau, who killed President James Garfield; Leon Czolgosz, the assassin of President William McKinley; Giuseppe Zangara who tried to kill President-elect Franklin Roosevelt. There’s also Lee Harvey Oswald, Samuel Byck who targeted President Richard Nixon, John Hinckley who shot President Ronald Reagan and both Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme and Sara Jane Moore, who attacked President Gerald Ford.

(Also, Ford did a walk-on spot and tripped on the stage. The few of us olds in the theater got it. No one under 30 understood the bit.)

The Broadway version of the play won five Tonys Awards. I wonder if anyone ever told Hinckley, who is still taking family furloughs from his institutional psychiatric care (but may soon be released). Fromme was paroled in 2009 and apparently lives in the Mohawk Valley region of New York. Moore was released in 2007. You figure they have to know there is a play featuring them as primary characters.

A friend of ours is the director of the show. I can’t wait to sit down with him soon and hear more about it. Mostly I just like to brag on the players and crew. They always do such a great job, as full time students no less, of bringing together incredibly productions.


29
Feb 16

Root, root, root

Lovely weekend, weather-wise, for being outdoors. I shot a brief video of the ambiance:

Boomerang bubbles with @lmrsmith

A video posted by Kenny Smith (@kennydsmith) on

And I took a selfie, mostly for that sky.