Real Housewives of . . . . Nah.

realoc

I had to drive to and through Laguna Beach today.  While there, I saw no fewer than three Lamborghini’s and two Ferrari’s in the span of four blocks.  The other predominant vehicle of choice there is Mercedes-Benz.

Why was I there?  It’s a long, uninteresting story, but it involves ebay, Craigslist, and a complicated sale and swap of various vintage Alfa Romeo interior parts.

First stop:  the OC.

Several aspects of the area made an immediate impression on my jaded Muggle self.

First, it’s sickeningly beautiful.  Wonderful sunny weather, the smell of salt air, and beautiful wind-swept ocean vistas everywhere you care to look.

Both those positives are offset by heavy traffic, stop lights every fifty feet, and what I will simply refer to as moronic behavior everywhere, beginning with the drivers.

According to my observation, these folks come in two basic varieties:  rich jerks who tailgate you, and rich jerks who meander obliviously down the Pacific Coast Highway, with nary a care in the world.

Clearly it was time to activate Zen-me — roll up the windows, turn on the a/c, and crank up some tasty tunes, which I did.

In other words, I wasn’t bothered too much.

As I chilled myself out, I had the opportunity to view some of the folks walking the sidewalks and holding up traffic in the crosswalks.

Basically, they all looked the same to me.  (Note to self:  I love make these kinds of broad generalizations.  Keep it up, self!)

All the women were outfitted by Prada (is that right, or should I be referencing some other designer now?), and the men wore oversized shades and tried to look cool with their smokes.

Oh, right, a lot of the guys weren’t wearing shirts.

At least that part gave me some hope.  It is a fervent desire of mine to live long enough to when I’m perfectly comfortable walking around in nothing more than my brown leathery skin and a two sizes too small pair of red Speedo swim trunks.

Are they even called swim trunks anymore?  Seems very 1950s-ish.

speedoOf course, the above photo in no way, shape or form resembles anything close to me, either in the past, the distant past, or ever.  It’s basically just for reference, folks.

Fortunately, the guy I was meeting lived well off the main thoroughfare, and he seemed normal enough.  Plus, we shared the same (ridiculous) passion for kidding ourselves into thinking we’re actually restoring old Italian sports cars.  For reference, old Italian sports cars are never completely restored.  They always need something, no matter how much money you’ve lost invested in them.

And the Italians are laughing all the way to the bank, but that’s the nature of the business.

After making our parts/money exchange, I returned to the Pacific Coast Highway, waded into the OC traffic going north, and got out of there as quickly and as sanely as I could.

The Garmin directed me to my second and final destination in LA, where I made my last parts deal with a vaguely Middle Eastern guy who had been out of work for a couple of years.

Interestingly enough, we each wished we were doing what the other person was occupied with.  He wanted a steady job with a big company that provided benefits, and I wanted to work out of a scary industrial park in a warehouse space crammed with old Alfas, BMWs, and Mercedes.

He was certainly nice enough, and we spent a good hour examining his cars, his parts, and talking about deals we missed.

Soon enough I was on the way home, hopeful that a wildfire just off the Interstate wasn’t going to close it down.

It didn’t, and I arrived home to my humble San Diego Muggle abode, in our standard, sub-optimal subdivision.

About a block from the house, ambling down the sidewalk, was an older lady wearing snowboots, a hunting cap, and a crazy overcoat — all this on an 80 degree day here.  No Prada here.

Ah, home.

– Dad

It’s Downton Freaking Abbey Season Three — And I’m Not Ashamed of It!

Downton

“Dad. No. That book is not on your nightstand. Dad. No!!!”

I heard something advertised on the car radio tonight on my way home from work that I never in my lifetime imagined would happen — an advertisement for an upcoming PBS series.  Think about that for a minute.

Car dealerships.  Yes.  Alcoholic refreshments.  Yes.  Concerts.  Yes.  Paid political advertisements for the municipal government in Tijuana.  Yes.

PBS?  Never.

That was the second unique life experience for me this week.  Is the end of the world nigh?  Probably not, but the unfolding circumstances are somewhat suspicious.

Of course, the ad was for the premiere of Downton Abbey, Season Three, this Sunday — only the most popular series in PBS history.  And I’ll be there, plopped on the couch, enthralled with every moment.

That description would be really sickening, if I weren’t talking about myself here. Well, maybe it’s a little sickening anyway.

Now just to ensure I don’t transmit the wrong message here, anyone in my family will tell you that Sunday nights at 9:00 p.m. are inviolate in our house.  I have been religiously watching Masterpiece Theater during that timeslot since the 70’s.  More religiously, in fact, than attending church, it seems, over the years.

Even though the chronology works out neatly, I still get, “Dad, how could you do that then?  You were in preschool.” There is also a little problem with math in this family.

I have always been a regular viewer of Masterpiece Theater, not because I thought it made me better than everyone else.  I watched it because it appealed to me in an intellectual way that most everything else on television didn’t.

Okay, maybe I am a bit of a snob, but I truly look forward to my weekly respite on Sunday nights.  It is kind of like my own version of “The Finer Things Club” on The Office.  That is, not just anyone can join in (or understand).  Once a week, I sit down with my my nice cup of tea, listen to Laura Linney’s introduction, and I float into the world Masterpiece paints for me.  It is kind of exclusive in a televisiony sort of way.

And that’s just how I like it.

I have come to realize, however, that Downton Abbey is essentially the aristocratic version of Real Housewives of New Jersey, Orange County, New York, Atlanta, and Mobile.  Okay, I made that last one up, but I already frightened myself by being able to list all the other versions/locations first.

For context, I give the women in my house unending grief about the amount of time they spend wrapped up in the vacuous programming on BravoShi Shoot, I can remember when Bravo programming actually featured opera and theater, and other crap like that.  But I now have a really hard time distinguishing Bravo from anything on Fox, or Discovery, or most everything else on the 7,000 channels we have access to, for that matter.

Which brings me back to Downton.  I like it because:

1)  The stories are relatively believable and far enough in the past that I wouldn’t know the difference if they weren’t anyway.

2)  I’m in better shape than Lord Grantham, but he’s a lot richer than me (apparently a change is afoot there this season).

3)  His wife is the quintessential Edwardian Soccer Mom.  Remember, I Love Soccer Moms (insert trademark here).  After all, I’m married to a modern one.

4)  The dresses — beautiful, elegant, and delicate!  And brassieres were not widely used until the 1930’s (thanks, Wiki).

5)  What’s not to like having a bunch of servants iron your daily newspaper? I dig that, man!

Though I was the only member of my house to originally tune in, subsequent re-runs have now hooked my wife.

Daughter, however, turns up her Lesbian-Cult-School-Indoctrinated Nose at my Downton friends.  I’m really not sure why, but in her defense, she does watch Ghost Adventures with me.  That Zak Bagans, he’s a tatted Victorian at heart, I figure.  Yeah.  That’s the link.

I could go on, I suppose, but what’s the point?

It’s Downton Freaking Abbey.  You either get it, or you don’t.  Fortunately, I do.

Daughter, please don’t bother me on Sunday anywhere around 9:00 p.m.

Thanks.

– Dad

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