Archive for April, 2008

Eolai’s Art Sale

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Check out Eolai’s Spring sale of paintings going on for the next two weeks. Eolai’s work is vibrant and compelling and he’s an interesting man in his writing, art and in person. I’ve been waiting for his shop to get back online for months – he recently moved from Kansas City back to Ireland, so he’s been a smidge busy. But now it’s back and he is selling amazing pictures for washers in a Spring sale. Nothing is over $85, which is a steal when you see his work. These are some really great deals by a gifted, unique artist painting Irish scenes, scenes from around the world (he’s been everywhere – mostly on a bike), figures, abstracts and animal miniatures. Go see!

*

Just read about this: R.I.P Humphrey Lyttleton. You’ll be missed.

Bleeding Dry

Friday, April 25th, 2008

(Fair warning: it is not my intention to offend anyone’s sincerely held beliefs but I read the news today and just wanted to poke a little fun at the extremes on each side. They deserve it.)

DEAD BLEEDER DRAWS BIG CROWDS.

Rotondo Farm threw open its gates today as animals from all over the country came to pay their respects to the exhumed body of Padre Pig. Spokesman for the Rotondo Farmyard Church, Padre Creduloso, marked the gate-throwing with Mass and, in an hour long address to the crowd, hailed Padre Pig as “an important figure on Rotondo Farm and indeed the world.”

When asked why, 40 years after his death, the Rotondo Farmyard clerics had decided to dig Padre Pig up and put him on display, Padre Creduloso winked and rubbed his thumb and fore-finger together, adding “‘Ere, this ain’t on the record, is it?”

Famous for his stigmata, (unexplained bleeding from Christ-like wounds) it is said that for 50 years Padre Pig lost a cup of blood a day from his front trotters yet never showed any signs of paleness.

“It was as if the Lord was protecting him and keeping him strong as he bled for us!” cooed Mrs. Dupabla Flowers, (pigeon, 42) a dry-cleaner from a neighbouring farm.

“I have his image hanging up in the back of the shop and from the blessed day he went up we’ve never had any problem getting blood or red-wine or felt-tip pen stains out of delicates. I don’t know what we’d do without him watching over our whites and Specialised Fabrics! And now… to get a chance to see his real-live dead body? Well, we couldn’t miss it. ” she beamed. “We’re all here, the chicks too and I’ve an egg on the way in the car. Wouldn’t it just be the most blessed thing ever if it hatched today, with padre Pig’s sacred corpse only tens of metres away?”

The scene in the farmyard was a busy one with animals of all sorts clucking, squeaking, miaowing, mooing and jostling to catch a glimpse of Padre Pig lying in his bulletproof glass and 24-carat gold coffin, said to have cost 9 million pounds.

“He looks as if he’s merely sleeping” said one shiny-eyed ewe.

The throng were ably sold to by church-approved vendors offering such items as Padre Pig ashtrays and bobble-head Capuchin monks. New for this year, was a novelty Padre Pig ketchup-dispenser which oozes the sauce from its cloven-hoofs when the Padre’s snout is pressed.

“They’re sellin’ better than me ‘ot Padre Pig pies” grinned stall-’older Ivor Beenhad, the official prophet-monger for the Rotondo religious community. “Much better than them 73-virgin themed wrench-sets I couldn’t shift for love nor money last month at Sunnifest.”

TESTIMONY

Many pilgrims present testified to some of the miraculous close-shaves Padre Pig had got them through “by the hair on his chinny chin-chin” in the words of devout hen, Sister Mary-Maria, bearing witness on a small apple-crate to her own unsightly-facial-hair problem spontaneously disappearing the day she was rained on by a Padre Pig shaped cloud.

Driving instructor Mr. Nye Eaves (sheep, 38), told us “I have been in 33 near fatal crashes since I’ve hung Padre Pig’s image in my rear-view mirror. 33! God keep me but I could feel his bloody hands cocooning me accident after accident as my young student-drivers had their brains bashed out on the windscreen. Without the Padre (may the Lord bless his bleeding self!) protecting me, I’d have been mutton a long time ago. Plus 33 is the age at which Our Saviour died so that must mean I’ve reached another level of protection now – like in Quake. I think my car insurance premium decreases anyway.”

PROTEST

Also present on the fringes of the crowd were a small group of protesters. Professor Richard Scoffly-Squawkins (goose, 65) led a peaceful but vocal demonstration of around 100 animals.

“It can be scientifically proven that the cause of Padre Pig’s so-called stigmata was really just a bad prickle embedding in his hoof-cleft” Prof. Scoffly-Squawkins told me. “Initially at least. Then with the secret help of the Pigeon Nuns of The Sacred Heart Of The Blessed Bawling Virgin Convent And Dispensing Chemist, he administered a daily solution of carbolic acid to induce all consequent bleeding from the wounds. Once again, the Church tries to dupe its credulous flock with egregious chicanery of this sort. Well that’s all very well for the poor and stupid but when educated people like you and I hahaha believe in this sort of thing then there won’t be anyone left to listen to me! That’s why we’re protesting today.”

When I asked Mr. Scoffly-Squawkins about his detractors charging him with arrogance, disdain for, and a lack of any understanding of real animal’s real lives outwith the confines of pure ivory-tower academia, he said “Well, have they written best-selling books in another discipline entirely from the subject at hand? Are they professors living lives largely separate from the common experience? No. I didn’t think so. Clearly I’m much cleverer than they are and they should all be listening to me, shower of feeble-minded, crutch-leaning, dim-wits. Look, here’s a free copy of my latest book. Pre-signed. Now would you mind very much buggering off? I want to look at the stiff’s hands before they wheel him away for the night.”

Later, I caught the distinguished professor again and asked him whether or not the strategy of showing contempt for perfectly decent lay-animals and their beliefs thus leading them to harden their attitudes in self-defense, becoming, in fact, less and not more open to his ideas, wasn’t a bit, um, stupid.

“I mean for a clever man such as yourself, doesn’t it betray a real lack of understanding about your fellow creatures and the enormous mental leaps that individuals have to make to reassess their whole lives if they are born and raised in strongly religious circumstances?” I elaborated.

“No,” spluttered the eminent scholar, best-selling author and believer that “anything but cool-headed rationalism at all times is weak and, ugh, human.”

“You may well be right in your theories, Professor Squawkins,” said a bold and handsome stallion, appearing suddenly from the crowd. “But you cannot make people reexamine their beliefs by shouting at them and telling them they don’t understand. In order to carry that off you have to get at them when they’re born. That’s the Church’s advantage.

“Couldn’t it instead be said that man makes his own meaning in life? There might well be a God in His heaven but he demonstrably doesn’t seem that bothered about enormous human suffering when it happens, so he doesn’t seem to be the personal God preached by the major religions. Couldn’t that mean therefore, that the best way to understand truths about ourselves and the world we live in is through literature, which after all is just the art and science of ourselves trying to explain ourselves to ourselves in all our moods and madnesses?”

At that point unfortunately the photographer died and it started to rain and, urm, what else, oh yes, I fainted with desire and then remembered I’d left the oven on and had to leave immediately, with the stallion who happened to be going my way anyway. Reports of our being spotted at a quiet and intimate hayery 20 minutes later are exaggerated. It was 40 if it was a minute. Unfortunately, however, the coverage of Padre Pig’s corpse exhumation was cut short at that time.

Tomorrow, what new scarf trend has the Park Lane puddleducks all of a gaggle? Plus an in-depth feature on how to tell the children daddy’s been eaten, but not in the OK way they eat Jesus on a Sunday.

Report filed by Sam Problemdonkey.

Techie Update: My apologies to those new commenters who’ve been languishing unseen in my moderation queue. Wordpress has decided it can no longer alert me of new callers and it no longer tells me who’s linking to me either. Tomorrow I back up and upgrade see if that’ll sort it out. Sorry!

Telly.

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Last night I had cause to tell a pal I don’t watch much telly. “She doesn’t” confirmed my husband. Recently I had cause to tell another pal the same thing. (Maybe I didn’t have cause, I can’t tell because my internal editor doesn’t show up for duty when she knows I’m going out for a drink. She trusts me to get by just opening my gob and shooting out whatever flotsam and jetsam happens to be floating round the inside of my cranium. She is a fool. She, is also, however, just a floaty concept, I have final say over me and I can see an opportunity where I coulda kept my mouth shut and didn’t. This bothers me because noone likes to hear themselves sounding like an ass. I spend all day pretending I’m not an ass which involves time and effort and a good deal of denial, so it’s wincing when I realize I might really be the very same ass I’m pretending I’m not. If you see.)

At any puddling rate, it did so pass, that I mentioned I don’t watch tv. I know exactly what this sounds like and so I tried not to sound too airy about it. Therefore I’m betting it came across as pretty damn airy. I could tell my pal had heard people say that before – we all have, they’re usually making a big (airy) deal of it – and was probably thinking, yeah, right I bet you think you’re such an intermallectual and all, not swimming in the pop culture pond with the rest of us.

I know my pal thought that because I’ve heard people carrying on that way myself and thought the same thing. There are people who I know veg out with the TV guide every night of the week, but will declare (airily – I don’t think it can be helped, it’s an inherently airy-arse thing to say) to people at dinner that, acksherly, they rarely look at the tv much other than for the news, isn’t that right, Clyde?

They do it in the same voice that they’ll tell you they’ve never once thought an uncharitable thought about the Pakistanis/Germans/Japanese or that they wouldn’t dream of drinking red wine with turbot or that they’ve never been anything but 100% behind their son dropping out of uni to become a juggler. They’re the same people, as Medbh was saying recently, who make you take your shoes off in their house.

There’s a snotty, snooty superiority associated with not watching tv: pop culture is much too trivial for you; you wouldn’t deign to watch as much as an episode of Eastenders; you certainly wouldn’t want to sully your mind with the sort of trash the hoi polloi are watching, for good grief’s sake.

I don’t think that. Well I do a bit – I’m as snotty as the next person when it comes to supping from the common pop-culture soup-trough muchly because some spots are murkier than others but, after all, this is the thinking of a person who grew up in the days when Noel Edmunds and Mr. Blobby were big stars. Usually though, as long as the next person along’s not peeing or trimming their toe-nails into the trough, I’m happy enough. Tv dramas alone (apart from Morse) have certainly never been better and The Office was genius.

Like most of us, I lovey/love/hate pop culture, and in about these proportions: 2:1. But liking it or not was not what made me stop watching. The things that did were pretty simple.

1. I don’t want my kids to see me watching it for hours on end. I limit my girls’ telly-watching to 15 minutes a day each, while the other one’s having a bath. For kids today, certainly in the US, it’s not like when I grew up and tv shows were part of a common shared culture that we 30-somethings like to reminisce about on late pupil-dilated nights, (Ooooh, (flapping) remember The Flumps? And Mr. Ben? and Bagpuss? Aaaaaaw) so I don’t think they’re really missing out on any bonding thing with their peers who’re all watching different channels anyway.

Point is, I can’t very well sit there goggling the box myself without looking like a rank hypocrite to them. Children begin to grow up as soon as they realize their parents are fallible. They’ll find out my failings soon enough – but I don’t want to make it too easy for them. I want a few more years of being an all-seeing, all-powerful mammy.

2. A fear of time passing me by. The last thing I watched with any regularity was Deadwood, a year or so back. Since then I watch the news, The odd Daily Show with John Stewart and on Friday nights I watch Real Time with Bill Maher and that’s it. It’s not that I think I’m “above” tv – not at all. I’m a child of the 80s, I freakin’ loved it. I watched 3 series of The Apprentice, for Trump’s sake, and Project Runway and Changing Rooms and Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares.

But television’s a costly lover and it’ll eat up your life. In front of the telly, before I know it a whole night’s gone and I’ve done nothing. I’ve spent a whole bunch of time (yes time can come in bunches, doubters. It’s the Bunch Principle of Space and Time Theory. Developed by a Ms. Brady. Of immense importance to grapes) to see the 2 things i wanted to see, between which it was hardly worth getting up and doing anything else, and I’m annoyed with myself at having frittered away time like that.

It is though, much easier to give up telly if you’re an expat in the US. You have no real loyalty to any shows or channels. The constant adverts with most everything except HBO means the whole thing’s irritating anyway. But if Eastenders was still on BBC America I’d be watching that. (I signed the online petition to keep it on!) If I was still living at home, no doubt I’d still be watching Countdown, The Simpsons, a sitcom or two, one gritty police drama or another and the rest, and thoroughly enjoying them all. I’d also be reading less and blogging less and the older I get, the more time I want to spend on these two things; the more they trump telly.

This isn’t an article of faith for me: telly bad! Sam no likey telly! It’s just a new habit of watching less rather than more. I watch the odd documentary and I watch films, but these days I purposely avoid any series, reality, drama, comedy, whatever, unless something is recommended to me. Medbh says the Wire’s brilliant and I watched an episode and loved it so now I want to see them all. Curb Your Enthusiasm is great but I’m not going to rearrange my schedule to watch it.

And honestly, I don’t miss it. Instead I spend about half the evening pootling with the pooter and the other half reading. Both are participatory hobbies, demanding something of you more than just telly-watching does and at the end of the night when I’m brushing my teeth, I feel a bit more satisfied; I don’t feel as if I’ve lost an evening. I also like to re-read things but, in the past, it’s always been a luxury: who’s got time for that? Me now! A bit more anyway since I turned the tv off and keeping it off became a habit.

And that’s it. And I really recommend it. Stuff gets done.

HOWEVER…

The internet was out last week for a day or so and I felt like I’d been cut loose from the world. That can’t be right, right?

Still a slave to new media, I.

Nature Loud In Beak And Quake.

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

What the hell is up with this land? There have been birds tweeting all night long! I’m half insane with it. I mean, look here, Songbirds, this isn’t New York. Get to sleep you knobby-kneed fluffballs! This is the country and you’re supposed to know rural laws better than anyone. You’re meant to go to bed at sundown, as cutely as you can manage it – heads under wings and adorable stuff like that. You’re not meant to party til dawn. Unless you invite me, I’m just not going to have that sort of deafening twitterfest in the garden all night long. I know there was at least one of you still tweeting “I Will Survive!” at 5am. That’s not even right! You should be on to 80s stadium rock and vomiting by that hour. Pathetic.

And far beneath our feet California’s fate is being shaped (and cracked) by massive seismic forces beyond our control. Is this why the birds are tweeting at night? They know first, you know, the animals…

We live about 100 yards from a fault called the Villanova fault – part of the Lion Canyon fault complex, which despite sounding like a West Coast Woody Allen kitty-based neurosis is really something that might bring our whole lives crashing about our ears. Cos the big one’s coming.

There was a big report at the weekend saying that California is 99% likely to have a 6.7 or more magnitude earthquake
in the next 30 years
. We’re way overdue and they reckon Southern, as opposed to Northern, California is more likely
to be hit. It could happen today, next week or next decade but it’s coming, that’s for sure.

California has so many fault lines it looks like the leg of a varicose-vein sufferer. Some are gentle sliders and are less dangerous but the section of the San Andreas fault – which is the one expected to judder, setting off a chain of judders in the other faults – that goes through the LA basin is a sticker and in a 7.5 earthquake they predict surface ruptures and a shift of 12 feet. There’s a 46% chance of one that big.

California just doesn’t like people living on it. She’s* dry and fiery, then, if we’re still clinging to it after that, it’s wet, flooded and mud-slidey, and if we still haven’t got the message it doesn’t want itchy people on her back, California will heave a massive shoulder and try to shake us off. There are more hostile lands to live on, and all in all, California’s been pretty patient with us and put up with a lot, but she’s about to wake from a nap and she’ll be grouchy when she discovers we’re still there.

So what can we do about it? Bolt all the bookcases and pictures to the walls because it’s the falling stuff that’ll kill you. Have an emergency back-up source for power. Get together a kit with food, water-purification tablets and first-aid stuff, and don’t step on cracks in the sidewalk I guess. I don’t know but I think I’ll start with getting a gun and shooting all the bloody night-tweeters. As long as our every moment is potentially parlous, I want to get my rest so I’ll look fabulous when I’m being crushed under a bridge somewhere, whenever that shrieky, shaky day comes.

I worry about the kids mostly. They’re really small. It would only take a tiny wee crack to disappear them.

But seriously, poo.

* You can tell Florida is a boy just by looking at him but I’m assuming California’s a girl cos she has an “a” on the end of her name, and then there’s the whole San Francisco bay area. If you are a boy though, California, please accept my apologies.

CNN Question – Ojai Reacts

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

I was looking at the CNN website tonight and their “Quick Question” of the day was this:

Is faith or religion important in your choice of presidential candidates?

As “Our Girl In Ojai”, I decided to put that very question to random people in the street in my own town of Ojai. Yes, in the dark, what of it? An intrepid reporter must be ready to spring into action whenever she senses the opportunity for an easy poll. Some people say mere vox-pops are lazy journalism, meaningless to all intents and purposes, and just a cheap way to fill column inches better used for serious analysis. I say it’s been a long weekend and I need both a literal and figurative walk-in-the-park. So bite me.

Mrs Jennifer Ennuyer-De-Tout (39 (yeah right)) Power-walking:
“Darling, I couldn’t care less if the presidential candidates worship the blocked follicle round Dangermouse’s third whisker as their lord and personal saviour. I just want to know their plan for more affordable butt-lifts.”

Margery Toolbridey (67), walking daschunds:
“I think it’s really sad how we as a nation have lost our faith. In fact, my church has launched a crusade to teach the message to our young folks. It has a three-pronged message to remind them of the three prongs on Satan’s fiery trident prodding their buttocks for all eternity if they don’t take heed. The first message prong is “Judaism is for Jerks!” The second is “Islam Threatens Our Very Way Of Life And Wants To Steal Our God-Given Oil So Just Say No To Allah!”; and the third prong is “Mormonism Is For Queers, Gaylords And Perverts.”

What’s that, dear? A more positive message? Oh well, “Jesus Saves!” obviously, and, despite it sounding a bit Catholic, we’re also keen to promote “The Sacred Heart Of The Blessed Doctrine Of The Holy Trickle-Down” because supply-side economics and fundamental Christianity go hand-in-hand. “Jesus Saves!” is itself an injuction to be frugal. I mean it’s a scriptural fact that Jesus was a fiscal conservative…It isn’t?… Oh well it’s practically a fact and if that’s good enough for my minister, it’s good enough for me. My gosh! I mean I think we can all agree that Our Lord was certainly the type of fellow to have a savings account to look after his own retirement, can’t we. Jesus wasn’t a sponger. He didn’t expect the State to support him, he wasn’t a tax-and-spend bleeding-heart pinko. “Get up and walk!” Isn’t that what he told the cripples? Not “Here’s some free money, the number of a good support group and a pamphlet about your rights.” No!

Our Saviour was a Reagan-style Republican, no doubt about it. He even taught us “Suffer the little children.” Of course, that was the olden days and things were very different back then. We don’t believe in letting the little children suffer now – although I maintain that little 12-year-old trollope who brought the charges against my husband was asking for it!! No we no longer believe some of Jesus’ more old-fashioned ideas any more than we still believe the thing about the rich and the camel through the eye of the needle. We don’t even drive camels nowadays, we drive SUVs if we can afford them, so the analogy doesn’t work, you see. God never intended that we should believe everything in the bible – that would be ridiculous. And anyway, I personally believe a loving God would allow chronically obese people who can’t walk the length of themselves to drive to the pearly gates in an SUV.

Neil Strangefellow (23) Picking scabs, moaning softly, rocking back and forth on a park bench:
Frankly, I think there’s too much faith in things of all sorts. I would like to see a presidential candidate who utterly lacks faith in everything “known” to man. I don’t believe in anything. I mean you can’t, can you? It’s sheer human hubris to be all “E=mc2″ and “macaroni and cheese is delicious” Oh yeah? Says who? What gives us the right to make these blanket declarations, eh? Take gravity – how do we know gravity’s not just an incredible series of countless complete coincidences? I don’t believe in it. I don’t believe in you. Or me, for that matter. At a stretch I might believe in underpants, not your’s, mine. But even they could be a hoax.

Unwilling To Be Identified (42ish) Lurking in bushes by swings:
“Maybe. Who wants to know?”

Miss Alli Teratesalot (34) Jogging with cat:
“My heart goes out to the candidates, you know? What with polls and pundits and the prying press, it must be terrible trying to pander egregiously to different religious groups and maintain a flimsy commitment to the separation of church and state.”

Mr Chuck Just Chuck (49) Shooting squirrels and admiring his Jesus tattooes:
“As a religioner myself, I just have one question of the candidates: Armageddon – sooner rather than later? I mean a candidate’s position on that could affect our whole environmental policy. It might not even be worth preserving energy and pursuing renewable resources if we only have a few more years before the Rapture. If it’s anytime soon I plan to burn some tyres and diesel in a pristine spot and barbecue me some endangered species, oh yeah…go out in style wid my buddies from the bar prayer-group. I’m not voting for anyone who says the End’s coming this side of the play-offs though. I can’t get behind a President or a God who’d let that happen.

Miss Tenderfoot Rainwillow (45) Chanting and lying naked within a circle of stones beside a phallicaly-shaped wood-carving:
“Oh, I really don’t care about their faith or their religion. I just want a candidate who’s spear-i-chew-ul, you dig? O Mighty Spirit Of The Oak! Come metaphorically impregnate my fertile womb lalalalala…goddess…bracken…lalalala” (Miss Rainwillow breaks off into chanting and personal insanity)

They Grow Up So Quickly

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Might not be around much this week cos the weeyuns are on Spring Break. I shall try and keep their boozing and wild-partying to a minimum by distracting them with bicycle lessons, nature-rambles and crack cocaine.

I don’t know though, I worry that they’re a bitty too young to have the training wheels off yet. God knows what they’ll be like on the highway without them. As it is I’ve just about had it with the police dragging them home for scooting-while-intoxicated down the car-pool lane – on weeknights too! I always wait up for them, you know, no matter what hour they come staggering in, drunkenly demanding to be read a story and tucked in with teddy. They don’t know how I worry.

Oh, I could put my foot down and tell them they’re not going out with grade-school boys after 7pm, but 5-year olds these days just don’t listen, they have their own lives. And, quite frankly, at that age, I was running drugs for Charlie “Masher” MacInnes – and making a pretty penny too (I was saving up for a “Watch-Her-Hair-Grow” Girl’s World). The sick thing was, I didn’t even want a Girl’s World, but all my friends had one, see. What I really wanted was a pony. You can’t admit that when you’re 5 though, you’d get called a baby and lose all your street cred immediately.

So you see, it would be hypocrisy for me to tell them what they can and can’t do. And they’re good kids really. I just wish they had more of a work ethic. I was a Division Head for Masher by the time I was six. Regularly muling to Ullapool and everything. Nobody would suspect a child in those days and, besides, they’d find so many Stornoway stowaways under the lifeboat-tarps – kids, crofters, the mayor – that an unaccompanied minor on a ferry didn’t arouse any alarm bell. Not even when the bags burst in our stomachs and we vomited everywhere, our eyeballs rolling back into our head. Even when a drug-foal out-and-out died from the sudden rush of Class A drugs to the major organs, people – although saddened, naturally – just said it was probably down to a bad-crossing, agreeing that it was a bit choppy that day,* right enough, and that they expected that the Looooooooord** was just up to some of His famously Mysteeeeeeeerious Ways again.

*True for 98% of Minch crossings, so the only surprise was that there weren’t more fatalities. Obviously, this meant that God was smiling on Lewis folk more than we even knew and this was just divine proof that we were right in Heaven’s eyes for insisting that Comhairle Nan Eilean tie up all public swings on Sundays, the day when God looked at His creation and saw that it was probably not going to be good for a lot of people (pestilence, war, famine etc), became depressed by that, especially after all His beautiful work on the snowflake – and that henceforth, on the 7th day of each week, merriment would be most holily forbidden; proof piety pays.

** Ullulated very slightly but not in that funny foreign way they do in the Middle East, – huh, just a bunch of show-offs drawing attention to themselves. More in the gravely domestic way we do in Lewis. In fact it probably wouldn’t be classed as an ullulation at all, but fall more under the rubric of a quivering querulous quaver, or whatever.

Celebrities Take To Ojai Streets In Protest

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Chaos today as celebrities marched in Ojai to protest their being left alone too much. The march, organised by David Hasselhoff, was proceeding down main-street, largely ignored by Tuesday morning trinket and art shoppers, when a scuffle broke out between Mel Gibson and Barbara Streisand about the Crucifixion, and agitation spread quickly through the crowd of already inflamed celebs. An Ojai Snooze reporter (me) was on the scene and witnessed events as they got out of hand.

“It was like a war zone,” I told myself in an interview later. “There were crazed celebrities everywhere. Cher was stamping on Paris Hilton’s head with a 6″ heel. Hulk Hogan was upending hybrid cars and yelling something about getting that bitch Judge Judy. Hanging perilously from a helicopter, Sean Penn tried to distribute aid parcels to puzzled people below who kept insisting they weren’t starving. As she marched, Kate Hudson had an aide hold a wind machine in front of her to make her golden hair billow attractively, but the aide carrying the machine walked backwards into Kirstie Allie’s spiritual-and-menu advisor. The advisor’s beard got sucked into the wind fan and the poor man had his chin scalped clean, the bloody beard hanging uselessly from the wrecked fan, turning slowly in the breeze like some mangled pastiche of a squirrel.”

Just because I was interviewing me about the incident, though, didn’t mean I didn’t ask the tough questions.

“Just how killer were Cher’s boots?” I asked gravely, watching me closely.

“Almost fatally killer by the looks of Paris” I recalled. “But luckily the celebutante’s head seemed of a curiously rubber consistency- Cher’s boot heel fairly boinged off it.”

A gracious, and dented Paris later told me that, had she succumbed to the stamping, there would have been some solace for her family in knowing that she’d been slain by really truly killer Prada boots – “I mean like speshull, you know? – Butter-soft Italian lamb-leather, totally finely hand-tooled into, like, a poem of baby-sheep-body and sole. Sooo hot.”

This morning’s furore, which resulted in one death of an unimportant plain person, some serious ego-injuries and a half-dozen boob deflations was described by some as “the worst carnage Ojai has ever seen since the great cut-flower shortage of the 80’s.” Readers may remember that day back in the dry summer of ‘84 when mobs of angry housewives with nothing fabulous to put on their entrance-hall tables, stormed Mr. Bently, the florist’s and held him hostage until he promised to force them some daffodils in his poly-tunnel.

That day, Black Tuesday, claimed the lives of an organic butcher, an artisan baker and a sacred-herb-scented candle maker and is still marked every year in Ojai by a tasteful outdoor cheese-and-wine party, the release of three white doves and a 50% off, one-day-only mourning-sale in local shops.

Today’s demonstration was a protest on the part of the area’s celebrities ostensibly about local people failing to hound them for their autographs. But the protest was part of a larger set of grievances at being outrageously allowed to live quiet, undisturbed lives in a town respectful of its more famous citizens. Spokeswoman Kim Basinger, youthful in Roberto Cavalli sweatpants and a simple, white GAP t-shirt with “UNDERSTATED” emblazoned across the front in gold sequins, said in an interview after the riot that Ojai’s resident Stars Association were “saddened” at ordinary people’s seemingly complete disinterest in them as they tried to go about their daily business. “It goes completely contrary to what being a star is all about,” wept Basinger suddenly.

“Tom (Cruise) was in tears last week when he was able to sit in a coffee-shop and drink 8 soy lattes before a small child recognized him and asked if he was gay,” said an indignant Kim, now recovered again, her eyes flashing with anger.

Other witnesses today reported that trouble also broke out when Oprah and Dr, Phil went on a “FREE! compassionate advice-giving tour” of the farmer’s market, and that “Dr. Phil’s feelings were hurt”, when he tried to give a cauliflower-shopper some advice about “sticking with it.” The ordinary person asked him what the expletiving sexual act he meant. Dr. Phil indicated with a puffed-out cheeks gesture and a comically-affected wobbling gait, that it was clear the shopper was “disgustingly obese” and that buying a vegetable indicated that he was “owning his problem” and choosing a healthier lifestyle with his cauliflower purchase.

“The first step on the path to getting rid of that obscenely repellent gut is the hardest one to take, but you’ve taken it, my friend!” declared the self-help guru.

“What the rigourous coitus?” exclaimed the cauliflower shopper, who declined to identify himself, and proceeded to try to insert the cauliflower into the anus of Dr. Phil, shrieking “You’re not so intercoursing light on your toes your-incestuously-intercoursing-self, you son of a bestial act common in Wales-ing girl dog! How do you like this colon friendly vegetable, huh, you pompous quantity of toilet-paper? Eh? Huh?”,

The enraged cauliflower man screamed on, until police arrived on the scene and removed him from the market, kicking and shrieking, as Dr. Phil brushed himself off, delicately removed the cauliflower and blamed the man’s being an “asshole” for his poor behaviour.

Meanwhile, in the next aisle of market-stalls, Oprah was advising a 79-year old woman, Miss Betty Dearheart, that “that home-made lemon mayonnaise may look good now, girlfriend, but wait til that sucker’s stuck on your booty!”

Witnesses say the elderly woman tried to shuffle away from the wild-eyed Winfrey, but then Dr. Phil came flying over the hand-made soap stall, wrestled the senior citizen to the ground and assured Ms. Winfrey that it was OK and not to panic, he “had the b$%*h under control. They’re an unreceptive crowd,” he added, shaking his head sadly and massaging his anus, also sadly. “They’re not ready to confront themselves yet. This town is hurtin’, hurtin’ real bad.”

I asked Bassinger if moving to a small town away from the Hollywood papparazzi didn’t imply a desire on behalf of the stars to live an unmolested life.

“Well, yeah – like duh,” she said. “But, I mean you don’t really expect it, do you? Studies and studios both show that stars need almost permanent adulation in order to shine, you see, and by not revering or indeed reacting in any way to, seeing, say, Shannon Doherty in a headscarf trying not to be spotted at the Post Office, you are causing us anxiety about our own self-worth and fabulousness that translates into poorer performances in our movies. You suffer in the end.”

“Maybe people in Ojai just aren’t that impressed by stars,” I ventured. “After all, there are many talented secondary industry people living here: screen-writers; directors; set-designers, costume-designers and special effects folks; animators; producers; stunt-men and so on. And perhaps the non-Hollywood folk, the teachers and the house-cleaners and the store-owners and the soccer moms just don’t care to intrude into other people’s lives. Could it be that you’re just not that interesting?”

At this Ms. Basinger’s chin began to dimple adorably as a fat tear rolled slowly down her flawless cheek.

“But we give and we give and we give,” she howled. “Nobody knows how hard it is for us to be so free with our emotions and how we’re forced to peddle them for massive amounts of money – do you have any idea how much self-involvement that takes? It’s exhausting! Nobody but a star knows how wearying it is to have to do Leno and attend a charity gala event in one evening, ONE EVENING, people! It’s like slavery or something! Oh, it may look like an easy life to you with our limos and our stylists and our personal assistants but we’re far more sensitive than you people. That’s why we’re special. We feel more than ordinary people do, you know?…”

At this point Madonna jogged up and interjected, putting a consoling arm around the gently weeping Basinger.

“And I’m tired of being criticised for being a Kabbalist,” said Madonna, veering wildly between Cockney and Liverpudlian cadences. “They say this is just another shallow Madonna fad, a fuzzy spiritual hobby with cute accessories. But you know, wearing the humble red thread wristlet and calling myself Esther is something that moves me deeply. Until Kabbalah nothing else had ever managed to move me more than myself and my own harrowing personal struggle to make it to the top, so I feel it, like, deeply, you know?” Here Madonna inclined her head slightly and put a slim hand over her heart, as if willing me to understand the real her.

“The other day I had Posh round at mine dry-crying on my shoulder…” ranted Madonna in a possibly clinically relevant rapid change of tone, and now using an Estuary accent.

“Excuse me, dry crying?” I interjected.

“(Sigh) Posh can’t cry real tears because of make-up considerations. Do you even know how long that look takes several style-professionals to achieve every morning? A genuine emotion could wreck it. Have you any idea what it’s like to be super-super-sensitive and maintain flawless day-to-evening mascara?” Madonna’s voice softened. “Behind Posh’s joyless demeanour and cold, dead eyes I knew she was really hurting, you know?

The clearly exercised star went on in a more Home Counties/Brooklyn accent, “Babs Streisand is a wreck because she can clearly see the way forward for the country in our foreign policy and nobody will listen to her! I mean, it’s unbelievable! Ashton Kutcher can’t get anywhere with his harrowing novels of existential doubt in a 1920’s Czech surfer dude, and Kevin Costner’s thinking of starring in another crappy baseball movie. Do you know how unhappy we are?”

I said I didn’t.

“Very,” said Madonna, angular in a “Free Europe Now!” t-shirt. “And with all the money we spend trying to be happy, we simply can’t have the fans upsetting us!”

At this point Madonna spotted Demi Moore and abruptly left the interview, squealing “Demi, you look fabulous…!”

Updates on the various law-suits stemming from today’s riot will be published as they become available. Also, there will be an update on the condition of the dead person, although, sadly, he is not expected to come round.

This just in: Governer Schwartzenegger has downgraded the status of todays troubles from a “riot” to a “fracas”, and it’s been announced that all charges against all celebrities have been dropped.