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A couple of cop stories

Houston, Sunday

According to this story, at 12:30 a.m. this past Sunday, Houston cops descended on a parking lot and arrested almost 300 youths, charging them with criminal trespassing. Of note are the facts that it was a parking lot for a K-Mart that is open 24 hours a day and that the lot adjoins Sonic, a drive-through restaurant that was also open at the time.

The people arrested say that they were simply shopping at K-Mart (they even showed the officers receipts for their purchases) or eating at the restaurant. They even arrested a 10-year-old girl who was having dinner with her father at Sonic and took her to juvenile detention. Many of the arrested pleaded guilty to the charges because they didn’t have the money to post bail and didn’t want to spend another night in jail.

As for the cops, this follow-up report says that the raid — which was supposed to be about stopping drag racing — “went to Hell in a handbasket”. One supervisor remarked that “There are all those kids now, who have a criminal record, and don’t deserve it.”

A friend of mine down in Texas informs me that he’s not surprised. He says the Houston police “are notoriously stupid and corrupt” (apparently their prosecutors are slime, too.) They’ve been known to do things like bust everyone on Westheimer (a popular street in Houston) with no probable cause. He also told me of one particularly shocking incident where drunk off-duty officers out of uniform and in an unmarked car tried to pull someone over — the situation devolved into a gunfight, killing the woman they pulled over.

The captain in charge of the raid, Mark Aguirre, has often broken from the Houston Police Department’s policy many times in his 20 years of service. Perhaps this is the incident that will get him tranferred permanently to meter maid duty or just drummed out of the force.

I’ll bet that MP3s of the old Body Count song, Cop Killer, are making the rounds in Houston right now.

Toronto, 1991

Corner of Yonge and Dundas, circa 1991.

For the most part, my own personal experiences with police have been good. When I was going to Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, some “townie” broke into our house and made off with our ghetto blasters. By the time we’d called the police, they’d already hauled the little punkass off to jail and recovered our stereos. More recently, when someone stole my Honda CR-V two years ago, the Toronto police found it in less than 48 hours. The perp smashed the window to get into the car and left it parked outside his house with the window still broken.

There’s only one bad encounter I’ve had with any Toronto cop, and as luck would have it, it’s an amusing story.

It was the summer of 1991, and I had a job working for Mr. G.’s auction house. I hated working for Mr. G., but I needed the money to pay for school for the fall. I’d been kicked out of Queen’s engineering school the previous September (appallingly bad grades), but on the strength of my computer science marks (which were always good, even when I was operating at maximum slack) I had negotiated my way back into the school under double-secret probation.

I told my folks — who’d paid for my first go-round at higher education — that I would cover my tuition from that point on. A co-worker at my Monday-to-Friday job told me that I could make extra cash at Mr. G.’s operation, and three weeks into the job, I had grown to despise it.

Mr. G. ran a scam that only looked like an auction. He had a warehouse full of overstock bought from suppliers and retailers at a serious discount; most of it were cheap low-quality items such as off-brand walkmen, shoddily-made luggage, ugly ceramic lamps and “Swiss Army” (more like Taiwanese Navy) knives that fell apart after about three week’s use. He’d hold an item up for bidding and wait until the bid price was high enough to allow him to make a profit; the item would often go at a 400 to 600 percent markup. The highest bidder would get the item, but then he’d say “I have a few more of these items at the same price…who else wants one?” It wasn’t an auction; it was a discount store with bidding. He even planted shills in the audience to force the bid price higher.

Mr. G. was also a bigot. He paid me more than my co-worker T. because T. “was a gook who couldn’t speak English.” Mr. G. was one of those people who said “ever since we came to this country, we’ve had nothing but trouble from the immigrants.”

“He’s Laotian, not Vietnamese, Mr. G.” I said, “so technically, gook isn’t the right term. Maybe slope is the slur you’re looking for.”

“Ha, ha, very funny,” he said. “For a goy, you’re almost all right. Now get back to work.”

When we got paid, I gave T. a cut of money so that we were paid evenly. T. and I did the same work and while I could’ve always asked my folks for money, T. was here on his own with a family to support.

At that time, Toronto still had Sunday closing laws; it was actually illegal for most stores to be open on a Sunday. You were exempt from this law if you closed up shop on Saturday, but Mr. G. ran 7 days a week. On one particular Sunday, a cop strolled into the store while I was watching the front door.

The cop looked at me with a grin and said “Hey, Hop Sing! I need to have a word with you.”

Hop Sing from Bonanza was played by US-born Victor Sen Yung.

(For those of you who are a little behind on your Pop Culture Studies, Hop Sing was the Chinese cook for the Cartwrights on the TV series Bonanza.)

My first instinct was to counter by calling him Barney Fife (the sheriff’s deputy on The Andy Griffith Show, played by Don Knotts). I bit my lip, because the last thing I wanted to do was get a cop riled up, especially when I was working for a fraudulent operation that was open illegally. The TV references must’ve triggered the television plot memory centre in my brain, because I suddenly remembered a plot from All in the Family where Archie was riled that a Polish immigrant couldn’t be arrested because he couldn’t understand the Miranda rights being read to him.

I did what seemed like a good idea at the time: I used my best fake Oriental accent..

“We’come to Mistah G. auction! You rike buy some-a-thing?” I said, doing my best Long Duck Dong from Sixteen Candles.

“Hop Sing,” said the police officer, slowing down and pronouncing…each…word…very…slowly… “I need to speak to boss man. He is breaking the law by opening on Sunday. Sunday bad. You savvy?” If I ever find this guy’s address, I’m leaving a flaming bag of horse manure on his doorstep on Hitler’s birthday.

“Yessah! I get Mistah G. right away!”

I went over to Mr. G. and told him about the cop. He had a five-minute conversation with the cop and got off without being charged. I still don’t know what he said.

As the cop was about to leave the store, he turned to me and said “Thanks, Hop Sing!” with a laugh.

I replied using my regular, white bread North American accent. “Hey, officer!”

He turned around, surprised.

“Any time you want, just drop by and I’ll make sure you get a nice discount. And by the way, the name’s Joey.”

He frowned, shooked his head, and stormed out.

Don’t mess with us Filipinos, we know many ways to cook a pig.

I popped my cassette recording of Body Count’s then-new album into my walkman and fast-forwarded to Cop Killer.

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Kick Ass Karaoke, available-light photography style

Here are the photos from last Wednesday’s Kick Ass Karaoke…with a twist.

I decided to experiment with what photo junkies refer to as available-light photography at last week’s Kick Ass Karaoke. I took these photos of the Karaoke regulars (although given the nature of the folks who frequent the Bovine Sex Club, perhaps the term should be “irregulars”) without the flash, relying only on the stage and ambient lighting of the Bovine.

The photos were taken on my ancient but trusty Olympus D320L digital camera. if you carefully choose the light source and holding the camera very still — the camera tends to be very motion sensitive without the flash — you can get some very dramatic and “arty” shots. They were not treated to any Photoshoppery other than being rotated ninety degrees (most of them are “portrait” shots, taken with the camera on its side) and shrunk to about two-thirds their original size.

The Titano close up. The grill work on the keyboard side of a piano accordion lends itself very well to photography. Here’s a shot of the Titano, my “street accordion”, taken from above.

Ladies and gentlement, your host, Mr. Carson T. Foster. He always starts off the evening fully clad in his silver tuxedo, but he’s usually down to just the pants by the end of the night.

The extra burlesque is free! That night, he went a little farther stripping down to the silk boxers. It looks as though his stint as “Derek Shaw” on The Naked News did rub off on him.

Welcome to Mapplethorpe Country! He’s singing Such a Lovely Day.

Channelling Iggy Pop. I got this candid shot while he was riffling through his library of Karaoke CDs looking for the next song.

Cass!

Cass and Melanie, putting on a show. The suggestive “hot girl-on-girl” pantomime never gets old, no matter how many times I’ve seen it.

Still Life with vodka and cranberry. Ah, sweet liquor…eases the pain.

Eric! Kick Ass Karaoke’s resident ’80’s specialist gives us his serious look.

Even the local rockers and their pals come out to play. Robin Black (right) of Robin Black and the Intergalactic All-Stars and his friend glam it up.

Leila!

Melanie! Mel’s the reigning goth fashion queen of Kick Ass Karaoke.

Robin again. A close-up shot of Robin Black.

Self-portrait. This is my patented “Yakuza” stare. Damn, it feels good to be a gangsta.

I’m not Trent Reznor, but I play him on TV. This guy says he never looks good in photos, but this pose is serious album art material.

Nice effing T-shirt. She wins the award for T-shirt with the most gratuituous use of the word “fuck”.

Karaoke hip-hop specialist Special K. Believe it or not, there are karaoke versions of Eminem’s numbers, and nobody does ’em quite like Special K.

Tina! Kristina “Too-Tall Tina” Gravelson wanted to do Queen’s I Want to Break Free, but it wasn’t in the Kick Ass karaoke library.

The longs and the short of it. Tina and Dorian do a duet. By the way, Dorian is standing up, but I think Tina’s also wearing platform shoes.

Kissed by Nosferatu? Me and Tina, hanging out on one of the benches. The “vampire” effect come’s from Tina’s moving towards me.

Tina and me, again. This shot has “album liner notes art” written all over it.

Will! The half-Asian half of the Asian gang known as “Asian Gang”, I chose him to end this set of photos.
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Rolling Stones at the Palais Royale tonight?

According to someone on the TorFun (“Toronto Fun”) mailing list, MuchMoreMusic (MuchMusic’s “mellower” sister channel — the Canadian answer to VH-1) says that the Rolling Stones are playing a surprise concert at the Palais Royale tonight. Tickets are $10 and there are only 1000 available.

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The MuchMusic appearance (preview)

I’ve got to do a little work first, so I’ll flesh out this entry with the story a little bit later on today. In the meantime you can take a look at these stills from yesterday’s appearance on MuchMusic’s MuchOnDemand…

Photo: Closeup of me playing accordion at the MuchMusic studios for the show 'MuchOnDemand'. They captioned me as 'JOEY: ACCORDIAN GUY'.

They haven’t given an accordion player this much live airtime since Weird Al. I’m kicking into the first few bars of Britney Spears’ Baby One More Time in this shot. By the way, it’s spelled “AccordiOn”, not “AccordiAn”

Photo: Opening shot of my MuchMusic appearance, with Rainbow Sun Francks, Rick Camapanelli, me and Jen Hollett.

The establishing shot. My appearance was ten minutes into the show, after the second commercial break, with VJ Rainbow Sun Francks (in character as a cross between Homey the Clown and Tony Soprano) doing the into. Pictured from left to right: Rainbow, VJ Rick Camapanelli, Yours Truly, VJ Jen Hollett. In the background, my screaming teenage fans.
Photo: On-air interview with Rick, me and Jen.

“I leave polka to the experts.” A quick interview with Rick and Jen before we let the audience choose what number I’ll play.

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Me. Accordion. MuchMusic. 5:00 p.m.

That is all.

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Two conversations

Two conversations: one on the business of panhandling and one on why “Kate” is now an unforgettable name.

Street economics

I almost always toss something in at least one panhandler’s hat — the legit panners, not the twinkies (the bored kids who live with Mom and Dad doing it as a hobby) — every day. It’s a little personal policy of mine that came about partially because my being a busker makes me sympathetic to that kind of thing, partially out of inspiration by The Five Rituals of Wealth, but mostly because in some situations, I’m a real bleeding heart. I’m sure the Floating Head of Ayn Rand has put me on her shit list.

I know Z. the panhandler from playing outside Amato’s Pizza on the weekends. He and his girlfriend X., who got kicked out of her parents’ home in Winnipeg for being a little too gothy for their tastes, hand out in the doorway beside the pizzeria. I usually give them a cut of my busking money because I don’t really need it (most of the time, anyway).

This evening, I dropped a toonie in Z.’s hat on the way out of the Bovine Sex Club, and we started talking.

Z.: Quiet night tonight. Fucking rain.

Me: It wasn’t even full-on rain. It was a shower at most. It only takes a little water to make people stay at home.

Z.: Didn’t make very much tonight.

Me: You should try Queen and John around noon. Lots of people from all the bank buildings pass by there for lunch. I’ll bet 4,000 walk on John Street at noon, and if only one in twenty give you a buck, that’s still 200 bucks.

Z.: Yeah, they make like what, fifteen, twenty, maybe twenty-five bucks an hour, right? A buck should be nothin’ to them!

I get the feeling that a lot of the bankers and lawyers in the Scotiabank Plaza are making more than twenty-five an hour, but I didn’t have the heart to point that out.


Now the world’s most unforgettable name

I needed some practice for today’s MuchMusic gig, so I spent some time after last call playing the accordion outside Amato’s Pizza. One of the people who worked there asked me to drop by on Saturday night and play some requests for her closing shift. Her name is Kate, and I will never forget anyone named that because of a story I read yesterday on Maggie “Mighty Girl” Berry’s blog:

On meeting a girl who I can’t believe is still single:

Me: Hi, I don’t think we’ve met yet. I’m Maggie.

Her: Hi, I’m Kate.

(Conversation ensues.)

Kate: I’m sorry, what was your name again? I’m horrible with names.

Me: No problem, it’s Maggie. I don’t remember yours either.

Kate: Here, I’ll do the little Kate dance to help cement it.

(Throws hands in hair, shakes bum and turns in little circles while chanting, “Kate! Kate! Kate!)

Me: I will never, ever forget that again.

This “Kate” sounds like my kind of girl.

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Accordion safety

Photo: Page of British 'Fleet Street rag' with photos of Rolf Harris' accordion-on-fire incident.

Mental note to self: During TV appearance, do not put accordion down close to hot stage lights.

(Special thanks to Matt “Black Belt” Jones and Sakaama for the heads-up!)