Right after his daily bread, the human unit needs to feel
superior to his coevals. Or some subgroup thereof. Those who lose this feeling
are surely clinically depressed – such humility is pathological. Don’t look for
it from saints – when God is your personal confidante, your edge is 24 carat. You
can no more expect saints to be humble than you can expect the taste of a
banana from a rutabaga.
The age old tale of the human unit from the sticks who comes
to the big city falls, of course, under this generalization. Although from Balzac to Franzen it is
presented as a progress in civilization, the provincial from the provinces
inevitably provincializes his city, or part of it, and proceeds to shoot
spitball as the yokels from where he was at, or, in general, who are not
counted among the elite of his quartier.
This is one of the reasons I love the NYT Styles section. It
is hard wired to look down at the plebes, and it is written, surely, by former
country mice, who have now wiggled into what they consider the cool set – aka heaven
– and kick others who are striving towards that summit. Myself, like any other
human unit, I’m all impressed. Plus of course I share certain of the
prejudices.
This Sunday’s Styles section was particularly gratifying. As
is often the case, many articles are devoted to looking down upon Los Angeles.
When, in the old days – before we moved here in August – I read about L.A., I
was basically ignorant of the geography, except of course for the four million
hours of tv and film that I’d eyeballed, all set in LA. Now that I’ve gotten
here, I’ve decided my schtick will be anti-LA. I’ll compare it invidiously to
Paris. I’m confident the Styles staff would approve. Thus I could revel in the snobbism on display
in the story, “A Café where Los Angeles Goes to Wake Up.” The name of the sorry
bistro is the Griddle Café, and it is lost somewhere on Sunset Strip.
Apparently it is one of those breakfast joints thatevery American town boasts –
joints with the bottomless cup coffee and the diabetes inducing pancakes,
joints that smell of bacon. I’ve gone to these kind of places my whole life,
which definitely shows a masochistic streak, as the experience is always the
same. Once I’ve over-replenished myself, my inner teenage anorexic howls in my
bowels the rest of the day.
Anyway, there are some great shots in the article. The
pancakes of the Griddle are described in sickening detail, down to a truly
disgusting gumbo called Mounds of Pleasure, “a stack of chocolate and coconut
flapjacks buried in whipped cream, [which] should come with a straw.” Yum! Next
to licking the garbage disposal, I can
think of nothing that I would less like to put in my mouth. But the best shot is a quote from an
expatriated New Yorker which, I think, will be my, my poetic summing up of LA:
“Another magazine editor, Janice Min of the Hollywood
Reporter, offered this analysis, having moved to Los Angeles from Neew York
three years ago: “There is no discovery in LA because you’re always in a car heading for a specific
destination. And because of that, people become very attached to the same few
places, whether the food is edible or not, and it is usually not.”
Bada boom! I salute you, Janice Min! And I don’t envy your
day at the office today after that crack…
3 comments:
100% off topic. Just wondered if you saw Lady Bitch Rey finished her dissertation and won a prestigious award for it
http://www.uni-bremen.de/aktuelle-meldungen/einzelanzeige/article/dr-reyhan-sahin-erhaelt-deutschen-studienpreis.html?cHash=58ed01a30c9fe1038b03ccfb56b365c7
Yeah! I know the lbr persona got to be too heavy for our lady of enlightenment. She definitely deserves an award. I'm giving her the Limited Inc lifetime achievement award, if she wants it.
Actually, when my wife and I visited Southern California (LA and Santa Barbara) for the first time two years ago, we were really impressed my the mountains of calorie-laden food served in the restaurants. Its very different from what you get in the Northeast. Though we both really liked LA otherwise, it was a relief to get to Northern California and get portions closer to what we were used to again. Its also a mystery to us why California is one of the relatively thin states.
The ability to just wander around and just discover things in New York City, while not entirely gone, has been much diminished. Too many places have been turned into pharmacies, banks, and the like. You can walk places, but there is not alot left worth walking to.
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