Hudson Wisconsin Nightlife

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Build it for a party and they will come, despite multiple woes that might make you hit the wall. But we will party in the fields, on the hills, and in the waterways and the skies. We will never surrender.

Sunday, September 26th, 2021

Partying, whether it feature sports contests or karaoke or creepy creatures, continues to be where and how you find it.
One of the attractions seen on a walk along the Hudson-to-North Hudson construction zone, as the midnight hour neared and I’d bet turned into Living After Midnight, was what appeared to be a karaoke party at a two-story private residence — the upper floor, presumably, could be used as a respite if singers were really bad.
Garage parties, especially those double-dipping at duplexes and thusly double the space means social distancing is followed, have now more than ever filled the nightlife void, as a way to confront virus-based restrictions.
The first of the Halloween decorations went up at one of those North Hudson houses, in mid-September. It had a (fitting) Ghostbusters theme. Slimer was on the left side and the decked out hotel butler on the right, overseen by not a plasma machine on the upper floor, as in the movie, but by a stream of orange lights hung from overhanging branches. Other party-makers have left their drapes open well into the evening to show big-screen TV sports and orange lights both in big globes and small strings, and thus entertain late night walkers. A property along Sommers Street North was making full use of a new big tent out back to watch Big Ten games.
And Packer games were attracting people at sports bars down the way, even though there were lane closures and you had to read between the lines, and the signs, to know that you could still drive to places like The Village Inn. Its lot was full for a recent game, now that the regular season is here and patrons can finally watch the regulars take the field, but there was not the often-seen need to create a few more feet to have a parking space, or have drivers resort to the typical overflow parking area that is the adjoining Zappa Bros. lot. Frank in-concert would be dissed. And across the street, Kozy Korner has been known to close quite early, as customer traffic has only been in streaks because of the construction that has the pizzeria right in the midst of its zones.

— Like what you are reading here? Many of you have said you do. So to those who have contacted me — and there have been quite a few — and asked for permissions to, in various forms, reprint small portions of my posts and refer the attribution back to my site, go for it! Hey its extra traffic to my site, so why would I mind, as it could even be seen as flattering that so many of you would find this worthwhile. And speaking of traffic, note the content in many parts of this post —

Longing back for the days when it was just the virus to combat and we were single-minded of worry, as when pro baseball fields finally opened up not this year but the last, and the only concern was if all the hard throwers could find the strike zone consistently. These were not your typical household names at that point, and they could paint the corner carefully to get the count to say, 0-2, then also in Cleveland Indians style throw one to the backstop ala Charlie Sheen. And the team that those from Minnesconsin would play right off the bat were those same Indians. But Bob Uecker was not in the press box, no matter how many boxes of disinfectant were applied, rather relegated to a virtual location not in the front row.

Looking back 20 years, on a day that was a race against time to publish news info on the breaking calamity that was 9/11, as this was the deadline day — or should I say hour — of the weekly paper. And this reporter’s other connection to that event was his gut instinct that it would occur.

Thursday, September 16th, 2021

Tuesday’s gone with the wind. But the impact will always be there.
But on that fateful day 20 years ago this past weekend, arguably the most devastating Tuesday in the country’s history, we are prompted to remember things and emotions and conversations, so I am doing so right now, on Wednesday — this being after a day or so of reflection with yesterday’s starting day of the week of what transpired in my life on that Tuesday, a deadline day all day at the local weekly, The Star-Observer, where I wrote the sports page(s) for 16 years. Monday night was always a near all-nighter, to get a jump on things, and this is how the popular column I wrote on nightlife, which later became this blog, had its origins.
I would try to get to the office as early as possible after a quick breakfast, usually just a quickly scarfed doughnut, then stop first at Hudson High School to pick up any last sports submissions and scoresheets. This was before the advent of most social media, and I’d race to get together without the local TV news on. So I was not tuned into the carnage and chaos as I drove the three miles to get to HHS. But I did know upon waking, in what way specific to that morning I do not exactly remember, (more on that later), that something big and bad was afoot.
When I got to the athletic directors office, a clearinghouse for anything that had not earlier been faxed (this was before the heyday of email), I floated the idea of hey did you hear, there is some kinda way, way out there, in the news, not yet knowing anywhere nearly how big, thinking I had an ill-formed scoop.
The various staffers, in short order, let me know that this was far beyond even the latest weather disaster.
Back at the office, things were already hopping even more than usual. Everyone there had heard, long before me, that this was a megastory and plans to cover it would not wait until the 10:45 a.m. editorial meeting. We all had the idea to try to wrap up our regular stuff fast, put on hold anything that could wait until the next week, and insert some local reaction and connection to what has been called, unfortunately, the story of a lifetime. The first of a series of hourly deadlines, depending on the news department or section on which it is found, was 1 p.m. That’s when my sports stuff was due, although I often ended up pushing the deadline back a bit, just to try to sneak in Monday night’s game results — with the editor occasionally standing over my shoulder for a few moments if that last headline took too long to compose.

— But enough seriousness. Let’s rock out and roll forward fast in Ellsworth. See Picks Of The Week. And for a tad of trivia on observances from last weekend, dial up the Where Did You See It department. A hint: The answer also involves trucks from fire departments —

Aside from political stances, the fact that the crashing planes would do their evil deed should not have been a big surprise to me. I had been doing karaoke at the old Sports Club with a friend of mine, a gifted psychic, the late Joe Miller. I share with him much of this same ability, which plays out especially with musical out-there-ness and which be written about at length once other more immediate topics are off the plate.
While waiting for the air to clear and Air Supply singing to be concluded, so we could get up there and wail, we looked at each other, then looked away, and then checked out each others eyes even further. Something struck both of us at once. We collaborated a bit and agreed that there was something horrific afoot, and though all was still OK on that particular evening, that it would not be so just days down the line. We also concurred that this joint premonition did not involve any of the usual suspects in our lives, the typical source.
That fateful night that transcended karaoke, was the Saturday before the following Tuesday, which was 9/11.
The rest is history.

You will have it all at — fitting name of host bar — The Gaslite: Chili feed over more than one day and the band Hit Faced, as they double up days and fit their billing, with crossover country, dance/funk and even disco! And Lennon and Led Zeppelin?

Wednesday, September 8th, 2021

With the likes of Zepp, whose namesake band was known for playing all sorts of this and that, you know there will be musical diversity.
Join Brian Zepp of KQRS from 6-8 p.m. at the St. Croix Valley Riders 31st annual chili feed on Saturday, Sept. 11th.
This Ellsworth motorcycle outing is held at The GasLite Bar and Grill.
This is a 21-plus event. The motorcycle activities will include a bike show on Friday night, free chili and more. Camping will be available, just see their website photo for spaciousness, and it is encouraged for those who want to spend the full weekend.
Hit Faced will be the band, in a two-faced way – and that’s a good thing. The favorite rockers and more will be at The Feed for two straight nights, Thursday and Friday.
Let them tell it: “Spanning over four decades of music and covering material from the most recent pop to classic rock, Hit Faced also covers over a dozen ‘crossover country’ artists as well as ‘dance/funk’ and even some ‘disco’. Finally you can hire a band that is as musically diverse as your audience is. Old, young, dancers, pop music fans, cowboys and rockers and even headbangers will all find something to enjoy spread throughout the show.”

For Labor Day, everyone loves something right? Isn’t that the idea of a buffet? So empty your fridge, within reason, and along with grilling to the max make use of salads and such topped with even the likes of asparagus and pistachios and summer sausage, to go your festive a different route!

Saturday, September 4th, 2021

Got plenty of those meats that make Labor Day a labor of love for those who appreciate your grilling, but what of all the stuff still in your refrigerator? Here I go, to the rescue of all hidden foods again.
For you see, so many things can be mixed together and put out, en masse, buffet style because I think – and this isn’t a universal opinion – that everyone will love something. And salad and its toppings lead the way. And what can you not throw on top of a baked potato, or mashed, even a drizzle of leftover BBQ sauce, and mixed veggies can become whatever you – reasonably – want them to be, so just give plenty of options in different bowls via a little extra cutting and dicing and combining.
But back to the situation room — your kitchen and deck — with salad.
Joe’s go-to place for groceries, Family Fresh Market in River Falls, and New Richmond, has Labor Day prices on more than a dozen things that can be chopped up and made available in small bowls on a big table next to your grill.
These next three paragraphs might reveal usages of these things you have not thought of.
For a different twist on “we have the meats” inserted into your salad, try a bit of summer sausage, or other such flavors that are many, chopped into nuggets, like smaller versions of the popular chicken ones. (OK they can be put alongside). Again, the sausage is right now on sale at Family Fresh. Drizzle a little extra tangy French dressing where these nuggets tend to clump together.
And as far as that asparagus? It’s a different take on your taking on of salad, but put it on the side for the adventuresome to try. And here’s the rub for many of these suggestions. Many of us like something, but only in small doses, especially if its quite spicy, so have one half of the bowl boast bigger pieces and the other half those of half-size. And a tip to that cook who is looking at their credit card bill after all that back-to-school shopping and needs to cut back until, say Thanksgiving (installment payments?): Mix in with very small slices, cut both vertically and yes horizontally, some of your also-ran stuff, oh ye of lesser taste, just to use it up so you don’t have to buy more until … say Thanksgiving. Then do it again?
And those pistachios? Some other nuts can serve the same purpose, and they don’t have to only be cashews, but I have to invoke the conversation with my sister-in-law over the big family meal, at The Forum. This was the nature of that “forum.” We agree almost any veggie from your crisper can be thrown into stir fry and made tasty, one of the topics of this post. Where do we both draw the line? Water chestnuts and other such nutty things. Why? The texture does not match the only slightly crisp items browned and put into a stir fry. But hey, this variation could be part of the joy. If needed, meet halfway and pick out nuts that are a little softer, a kinder and gentler nut. Watch out for those filberts though. But take some of those cocktail peanuts from the dish atop the TV and plop them on top.
And then there again at Family Fresh is the ground beef at 80 percent lean at only $2.49 a pound, six cobs of corn for $2, and the other things you will need to round out your Labor Day. And a bit of that crumbled burger could even be put on your salad. Along with the stuffing pieces — uncooked — that could pass for croutons?

— More on Labor Day and what it means, as a summer last gasp, under Uncategorized. And for more tips on grilling and more, see my pre-Father’s Day post on the home page under the heading, Where’s The Beef? And Just As Importantly, Where’s The Sauce?–

And now before summer officially closes, get the most of those summer salads, and do we see a theme here? If you can’t get them in good as a part of your grillin’ here is an option. Go to a few select places that either have kept their killer salad bars open through most of the pandemic or have reopened them, so get them while the gettin’ is good.
Ruby Tuesday leads the way. As I’ve written before, I judge a salad bar for starters by the number of greens offered, going beyond both iceberg and even romaine. Ruby Tuesday has added two more options to their lettuce and more lineup, bringing to four the sets of the tossed greens arranged in a square nearly half the size of a square yard. And their toppings range upward to two dozen, including some you might not guess, so this is the clear choice, if there is one in your city. There is one in Greendale, Wis., where I am currently visiting, and they did not have any kind of salad bar prohibition because of the pandemic. That and their special of a $2 draft beer after 3 p.m. is valid EVERY day.
And you can always go Greek. Or could have. Like the aforementioned Forum, and across the byway in these Milwaukee suburbs, Genesis. The former really packed them in for their salad bar, which took the length of counter that you normally see and added a second wing to form an L for easier serving, and also a side area shooting out. But these days, weeks and months it is shut down, even to the point of having yellow “caution” signs across the front areas. But the nearby carpet still reads “salad bar.”
This is where some grocery stores have seized the opportunity, and Family Fresh right now offers various salad kits from Taylor Farms, not just the national big boys, for two for $7 in case a glance at your fridge is uninspiring.
Moreover, such places have set apart in prominent areas the things that set them apart, such as olive bars with often a dozen or so options that go beyond Greek, hot broasted chicken and tenders and beyond stations, and even their own salad and soup bars, although the choices can be fewer.
But hey, that’s where you can, again, supplement with your own stuff that’s lurking about in the fridge!

The fireworks of fashion, and how they reflect in our finery, play on long after the Fourth and the Bucks, and all lead the way in glitter and glitz, as brave and robust styles continue to evolve in this the summer season of skimp. But they got started with the costume parties of late 2020. And with those retro ’80s orbed glasses.

Tuesday, August 31st, 2021

What is higher, the temperature these days on the thermometer in your mouth, or outside, on your body’s killer clothes, and possibly paradoxically, on your shades? So I mix topics, again, like the ingredients in those gonzo Brandy Old Fashions that are again becoming the purchasing rage in many parts of Wisconsin and paying their due as part of the economic stimulus — like they ever left?
So, this is the summer of my loving. The second season I’m to know. Since Robert Plant was known in more than one way for his “microphone,” it’s in the 90s for temps, as opposed to the ‘70s in music, so I’ll wrap up the latest sweaty styles and anything in summer skimp that can’t be left go, then catch up with the rest come the fall fashions. So I Put My Bid In to Ramble On ….
Come the Fourth of July, and continuing on, the fireworks are not the only things blazing, except for those babes who are little more than knee high, as yet other turns were given to all things fashionable and boldly going where no man, or woman, had gone before – or at least since the 60s, 70s and 80s. Yet again over-the-top as the revealing wear hiked it up a notch, both in sexy and in positioning upwards on the body.
But back to another kind of sheen far into the summer — starting with but not limited to sparklers, the shooting off was extended and overblown by the strongly vertical up-shoots after wins by the Milwaukee Bucks to take a title — for more than their flash and noise, although they had that on the court also. This went on until games well after The Fourth, and fans in the Milwaukee suburbs continued playing it out until almost After Midnight on those last four straight victories. And the pop-goes-the-weasel-and-worse form of cager worship continues to light up the sky in the southern metro – Milwaukee now, not the Twin Cities. And the fireworks shops, like the one still seen on a big billboard heading back to western Wisconsin, continue to cash in.
So money talks. But it can’t sing and dance and it won’t waltz. So we need to go elsewhere for those forms of entertainment. An online commentator asks it this way, as I start with that woman’s – I’m assuming here — whole line of questioning: Can someone recommend (inexpensive) Fishnet Tights and Suspender Tights? Cheers xx.
Then backing up again, another top online post from local late last month, about fireworks, following up on others that tied in the effects on animals of many kinds, sleep of many kinds of quality and even the nicked windshields of cars of many kinds, was simply, “please stop.” At this late hour, we’re all in our nighties, which in these days of finally getting groovy in teddies, means you can’t go outside to grab the matches of alleged offenders until your tank top is on just right.

And Then It Came Around To Fashion, She Said …

The style changes go to the top, as indicated, and thus the eyes have it, as the big rounded glasses of the ‘80s have made a big comeback, going back months and adding different types of tints as we progress, and make progress, through time. Moreso, this conversation: “What about those glasses?” Pink! “What color?” Lastly, the woman in Walmart, who had the biggest and best looking if not over-the-top, tear-drop shades. I wanted to tell her so, but then assessed her way-pulled-to-the-side-hair and the way of the rest of her dress and thought maybe she was a diva. Then went boldly where … But I accidentally said, “heart-shaped glasses,” like the Nirvana “heart-shaped box?” Still, she liked the compliment.
And leading the rest of the way is this recap of the caps, (but there were none, or few except for that on the one obligatory female cop in the shop, that being T-Buckets with their killer contest), of the many in-costume parties that can be an indicator of where fashion trends are going. These were seen when the pandemic in its first blush allowed some normalcy to come to prevalence, and that of course was Halloween. And we love The Guv’nor, so we all did what we can do, in my case a synopsis of what shook out at Guv’s: And again, the leading lady was in a costume that was recapped for New Year’s there.
It showed great-big-holed fishnet stockings, freckled tank-top-type thing just above belly level; and all-around just lots of Gaps in clothing. And oh, the (stocky) footwear … Fishnets are no surprise to Guv’s, as a good friend stole the show with hers at a previous Halloween at their original Northern Exposure location – although telling me she felt quite self-conscious — but then two years later to the day, at Woody’s in Bayport, sauntered up and offered at redux.
But there were more celebrations of style that governed that night, last year on the 31st which I think was also a full moon. Back at Guv’s, way on the late end, there was the lovely Lana, sporting again her flapper costume. But seen when first walking in were others more unusually creative then something fueled by prohibition at last call, an interesting juxtaposition.
One of the ownership mainstays had a shirt showing how to shoot a combo — mesh featuring holes bigger than that fishnet stocking babe, and scads of suction-cup-type-things tacked on here and there. With logo to boot.
Across the way, there was a woman singing a song, but not for long. She was pushing herself against another lady that evening, seated, then pulling up and then down over the top of her. Another way to get your rocks off as a culture that for months had gone stir crazy. Waltzing by was a man who would be standard at open-mic nights, as they could be found, in the coming months, sawing on a fiddle and playing it hard. Other extended play versions of songs, this time not just string instrumental solos, was featured by the band, almost to the point of some Led Zeppelin live albums where it is a song a side.
Then on New Year’s, drumming home the point of robust style: Seen outside to start the eve off was a woman, one of a trio that was given their distance, walking down Walnut Street (south side) sporting extra-clunky heels that were still strappy with many strings, way up her ankles. This set that particular ensemble apart from all those soon-to-be-trite, ripped-cut-sideways jeans seen that night, and later was pre-empted by views of shoes composed only of several leather straps on each that were not even the width of a man’s belt.

The cultural silliness has not gone asunder. And if its that easy to poke fun at, should it not be as easy to get our heads together — but you don’t want to enter into mine — and come up with solutions? On things from shots to Switchfoot to cicadas?

Sunday, August 29th, 2021

An ongoing CNN series on the history of the sitcom had this to say: When things get more serious, Americans get silly. So here goes more gallows humor. Is this me being warm and fuzzy, with forked tongue or that utensil stuck in it, and would that lead to another infection? So ever listen to Pantera and their version of tough love? It takes all kinds, especially in today’s world.

So here‘s my take, again, on The Ways Of The World, that I hope will bring a sort of dark-humor cheer. I just hope I don’t go for that wide open neck that has a jugular, as rigidly as say, Stephen Colbert.

The new form of fake ID is to prove not your age, but your vaccination or testing status, as these figments of fictionalizing your position are popping up in many places. And we can’t say this one is from us being, geographically, close to the border But south of the border? From Canada? Can we learn a thing or two?.
And could we pump up the prize that’s an incentive for getting a shot, by offering a shot when going out in the areas where masks are needed most, pull one down and scarf up a chaser of whiskey? I do realize that these days, a free drink like the one your favorite barkeep used to throw toward a regular like you, so they could throw one back on the house, went out the window in about 2007 – remember what happened then!
But bring back the banana brigade, that is like the one that got you inside Dibbo’s for free back in the day, as a form of charity to replace the fourth stimulus check, but I’m afraid would only be allowable if you got tested first. Or twice, as in a Friday-Saturday night.
Could hospitals that are less taxed by the virus, if only to a degree, like those up our way, fill in some of the slack? But if those chose to be this noble, would people rebel, with a pushback like that seen when Hudson weighed in on becoming a sorta super sanctuary city? Think that would have out-strapped capacity for services. And then add on Haiti and Afghanistan.
It is kind of fitting that the place the Delta variant is making the most headway is a place where there is indeed a delta, and because of lack of vaccinations a state of emergency – the state of Louisiana. And in India, where the new Delta variant got much of its start, there is New Delhi. Lord knows, it might be safer there now.
A new school of thought on schools where there should be such thought. The School of Rock should disallow body surfing if not vaccinated. And this time around upping the ante to provide enforcement, by bringing in security by the Hell’s Angels, is a legitimate need. Does their leather mandate apply to masks? Only symbolic death at the death metal concert.
Another school going all out gonzo in their take on whether masks should be mandatory. After, and maybe because of, such a long run at the box office, the Old School superheros will soon retire from the rigors of film-making, instead setting up their own all-star academy to teach the lessons learned from all those sequels to those who will pick up the torch and run with it. But all will be required to wear masks, whether in the classroom or more likely, doing their good deeds out on the street, saving the world in two different ways over which to marvel. That mandate goes 24/7, as you never know when a damsel will be in distress. And who is in a better position to lead social distancing by example then Spiderman, who isn’t near anyone when swinging between skyscrapers. But as far as vaccinations? This is the one thing Ironman could not get done, as his unpierceable skin is obviously made of, what? Metal.
And not matter what your status of “motivation” is at concerts, forget about pulling off your panties, and even more importantly, don’t you dare throw your mask at the lead singer. A saving grace involving the lotsa people at Lollapalooza, most of those singers are just too scrawny and aren’t that hot anyway.
The kill count from the Deer District crowding is rising, surpassing that of the November hunt even though we’re not to that month yet. Need more of the doe than dough, feet on the floor, to lead the effort at nursing care – is that sexist?
And then there is the Boston Symphony and the million people it attracts on the Fourth of July. Word has it that even before the show went on, they could only scrounge up two people well enough to play the trumpet. Forgot the chances with the bassoon. And to get that number of players with the almost infinite amount of lung capacity needed, they had to reach out to Wisconsin for – drum roll please – a tuba player. I hope that didn’t offend too many of you, as it is meant to be a slam not on those who are ill, but those who slam dance to the polka, and there are many. Ever see how big some of those old meat and potatoes Germans are when they fly around the floor, and careen out of control too close to Whoopie John? And we all thought moshing was dangerous.
The pope has chimed in more sternly than some of those in various flocks, calling getting vaccinated “an act of love.” So the Lutherans and other denominations – the Evangelicals are dragging – otherwise quickly weighed in, issuing statements saying that they for a change are one with those Catholics, at least their fearless leader, after listening to Schism by Tool several times through. “I’ve seen the pieces (of vaccination) fit …” Why can’t we not be sober? Just want to start this over. And as far as the Flock of Seagulls, it’s likely percentagewise that most everybody in the band but the girlfriend that broke it up has gone with the shot. Even Ozzy sang about that Shot In The Dark (pun intended).

They said that on the medal stand, the Olympians winning gold would have to stand alone, and the silver stand alone, and the bronze stand alone, and the brass – well they can have the delusions that they are actually titanium and merit such treatment. And that they would have to place these over their own necks themselves? That’s where the “rusty” old Irons Up (again on these pages, see the Iron Maiden video) veterans of Games Past pinch-hit.

And that stellar skier from the area whose Winter Games glory were, and I have to say it was tragically, cut short by the Covid? That really does bring tears, but where there’s that life-giving water, there’s a way, and if anyone has the talent to pull off such a Switchfoot, then it’s this Afton athlete. Seems with her skill-set, she could have added to her globe-wide glory by training in a slightly different way and putting her bid in as a water skier! But unlike synchronized bowling (see a past post) it is not a sport yet, so let’s get behind her even though she’s from The Enemy State and start a write-in campaign for official worldwide inclusion, all you Wisconsin Up-North Vacationers …

All of them noticed that in the life-span of a typical teen to get through high school, if they graduated on time and now that might be harder then ever, a newer bug has returned, and it is not another virus variant. The cicadas are back! But upon further review, seeing what new threats have come about in 17 years in our virus-laden world, they hedged their bets and decided they might be far better staying underground! Oh wait. Was that a different vermin?

I hope you all gained a laugh or two from this post, as that is what was intended, and it really helps these days. I also hope that no feelings were hurt in the production of this piece, although sometimes I could use a bit of monitoring.

But with all chuckling aside out there, be safe! And get home and may it be a safe haven, wherever that is. Joe.

Hey buddy can you spare a dime? Or you might need ten of them or more if doing laundry the Old School way, via the machine at your apartment building or dorm. But there is a way the cut that down to the price per month of a cheap sock. And a dibbly dab of detergent or other spruce up, or far less, will do ya …

Wednesday, August 25th, 2021

(Can’t find as much live music these days, as the grand reopening is not that grand or consistent everywhere? Don’t pout. Go see Poot tonight! Visit Picks of the Weeks to see where).

If you are going back to school in another state, these are tips to do your laundry for less than half the normal cost, as it can’t always be on mom’s dime and using her machine. They could also go for most anyone living in an apartment complex. And if you are not a college-aged male, you might not want to tell your wife about these tips. Kind of like a guy’s way to do the shirts and pants, but hopefully not boxers and briefs, quick and easy. But the creative person is never revered in his own country – or domicile. But still, discuss it over a beer with your (new?) roommates.
We all have been there, the laundry is a little dingy but not really dirty. And there is a scant odor, but not odorous. After all, few of us are pro athletes, as we just watch them on sports TV and don’t break a sweat unless there’s an upset. And not many of us are construction workers either. For us grunge is a music form, not the state of the laundry. Simply put, we don’t get that dirty, even if rained on during the walk/run back to our student housing. So the following is for my niece Hannah, halfway through college, and the need more than ever these days to conserve as much as you can of that quarters fund for doing laundry.
Take that stuff you’d worn for a day and give a quick sniff to places like the pits. Unless they are actually smelly, or stained mildly, consider just placing them into the dryer with those fragrant laundry sheets. And you can reuse them a time or two, or even three, by combining their numbers into what’s put into a single spin – of only about five minutes. And add to their productive life by freshening them up with a bit of cologne (don’t need much at all, mind you, and don’t be that guy), or just a touch of fabric softner or air freshner, then give a couple extra minutes, or maybe even a few less, in the dryer. You also can have added value via freshner or even a bit of Shout if using a color catcher sheet as the base for All Those Many Ways To Spruce Something Up Now That Mom Has Abandoned You.(Just kidding mom). And she might not like it, but wipes, flushable or not, will serve a similar purpose.
Why is this important? If you have a coin operated machine, either onsite or at a laundromat, it can eat enough quarters after a week of clothing wear, to tear your hair out. My method, for each time through, will cost you only 25 cents. And when done, or so you thought, stuff them into your shoes and wipe as you go, for more overnight freshening power, as dirty socks just won’t work with my method, and in walking to class the shoes may get a bit stinky.
And how to get things dry, if you indeed wash them first? Top it off by placing the item on the barred face of the air conditioner in the room – and a lot you students probably do need the services of that air machine, as you are “central” to your friends and family, but not necessarily the landlord. You may need to keep the clothing item in place by doubling it over and thus flip-flopping it once you get to the next chapter of your biology homework, as the basics of home ec were for back in high school. If the lid on the AC is flat, you might have a chance to weigh it down and keep it from falling, with the armpits laid strategically on the blower right below. I know that you as a college student possess just the right weighted ingredient to keep the drying process going, it’s called Miller Lite doing double duty. And if you have a whole six-pack, you can separate it out and place the cans in a line parallel to the wall, and get a second clothing item, or maybe a third, dry all at the same time.
And don’t buy what your new bartender friend down the road from the dorm might tell you, that if you purchase dark beer for such a noble purpose, you can get more weighted-value than light beer. How is all this noble? You save energy as well, that would normally go for running a washer and to a certain degree, a dryer.
On the topic of drinks, and this is Joe procrastinating like a college student on a Saturday with an exam first thing on Monday, I will soon – hopefully sometime in the fall semester – get back with some of the caffeine tips you will only find in places like this. Been there, done that.

He just might be the Clark Kent of blues, with deep and rich and southern and powerful vocals and self-taught guitar from an early age. Don’t Muddy the Waters at Prescott further, check out Craig Clark there on Sunday. And see Notes From The Beat for another (not so little) concert that could, but uhm … this time couldn’t.

Saturday, August 21st, 2021

Craig Clark’s bluesy voice has been called the best in the U.S.in its genre, and that national appeal will be brought to Muddy Waters nightclub in Prescott late Sunday afternoon. They continue to be bringing it, now that the music scene in at least some fronts has reopened, and in the cases of many other clubs is only slowly going forward..
Clark belts out the blues rock – deep and rich and southern — along with a whole big heaping cup of soul that will rival as a play-on-words namesake, The Lovin’ Spoonful, to bring to the table a style all his own.
He started singing Gospel at age five, when most of us were trying to master tying their shoelaces. Since moving to Minneapolis from Pennsylvania in the ‘80s, and being part of a scene that saw some great music of all kinds, Clark added gusto to his self-taught and compelling guitar style, and dynamic vocals. He has performed with Big Brother and The Holding Company, Jimmie Van Zant and Big John Dickerson, and at the Broken Spoke in Sturgis. (See that, Forrest and friend). Clark is influenced by the likes of Sam Cook, Bobbie Bland, Robert Cray and Buddy Guy, his bio says.
He can also play with his full band, and a sidekick has also been around for decades and got going on the bass and vocals at a very early age. The show goes on from 4-8 p.m. on the 22nd.
In a variety of sub-genres within the Gospel and folk music scope, the willingness of Minnesota groups with big musical ties – think along the lines of sharing the stage with a Grammy winner — to travel to get gigs has been amped up. In a number of cases this summer, such acts have trekked down Hwy. 29 as far as central Wisconsin to perform rather high-profile shows that are things a bigger, local church has hung its hat on as a key fundraiser.

Do you believe time is fluid? And so can go backward and forward, and vise versa?
So here I come again, and here I go. I wrote yesterday that there would be more coming on the front of shows that could be no-shows because of stuff like hurricanes. It was posted under Notes From The Beat, saying more was coming of the sort as a lead item, but here it is as the second one down so you guys can read both (I think I needed to give myself that one more plug).
When your rock show goes electric, watch out for the electricity in the air, in the form of thunder and lightning, very, very frightening. Thus was the case way back when, when I saw Styx play just weeks before their first album (yes Old School term), put them on the map in more than the Midwest. So as they toured to support the soon-to-be groundbreaking effort, what was the venue? In their greatest coup ever, the Lincoln County Fair in north-central Wisconsin, in a county where there are more cows then people, not exactly a hotbed of anything artsy.
But not a name act just yet, so the show simply had to go on, come hell or high water. Black Oak Arkansas opened and was able to do their whole set, as a band that again was first popping themselves up on the musical map. But before Styx got too far into theirs, the electric eye in the sky storm was well on its way, then right overhead. This was about the time Styx, although still forming its sound, was starting to riff on the electric guitars and they wouldn’t want the high-amped-up jolt for their fingers to come from a lightning strike .. rather a killer solo. So the show went on to close, and although potentially in harm’s way, the solos were not cut short.
(An aside. The fairgrounds where the show was held had great seating capacity, even though not a venue in demand but for one thing, mainly … thank God for the demolition derbies and any auto racing that could be booked. Still, people such as myself ran to the hills, or actually the midway cul-de-sac thing nearest the stage area, to catch the first-loud-sound-to-be-found show as the skies grew dark, and not from nightfall).

Here’s some feedback to my reader feedback. And if you want to exchange columns with me about things like music feedback, it now might be the time it could work — especially because, alert the (other and even enemy) media and give a drum roll, I will likely soon be including a subscription option for additional content each and every week! Again, I want your feedback.

Sunday, August 15th, 2021

Gimme back my bullets!
I just did that, and more on it later. But more broadly, this is an answer to some of the questions readers have raised in the tens of thousands of comments I‘ve received.
For those of you willing to write or exchange an occasional guest column, there for a long time was no market for me, for what you would write. That has changed now that I’ve broadened my coverage area and subject matter, and feel free to beg, borrow or steal. So if you can tie it to something pertaining to my area, that might be up my (bowling) alley. (Note the blatant Wisconsin reference). That is particularly true since I will likely soon provide an option to offer additional weekly content – the rest of the story and updates and specials – for those willing to throw a scant few bucks my way by subscribing. And cross-marketing could be valuable and even links back to each other’s sites.
If you would have interest in subscribing, please send me a note so I can assess its feasibility and favorite forms of the added content. For the monthly cost of a cover charge or two (cheap Wisconsin prices) I can guide you to the places where there is no cover, hear about where to go and what to do, get consumer tips of all types, coverage on how politics affects the bar scene and the silliness it creates, and more related categories of content that will be added. And let me know how much you would be willing to pay for such a service – I promise to keep it very cheap.
And on another heading, unfortunately, I don’t know much of anything techno, so I can’t help you there.
In regard to the comment that spurred me to finally shoot this note back, I do have a unique writing style, and people tend to either love it (most of you) or hate it (many in the Twitter generation). See a further explanation, including use of bullets to break up written copy, see inside in the Uncatagorized department.

The guys from the smaller Olympic countries are so buff, so they bare it with bare-chested boldness when walking in: I’m Too Sexy For This Sport — or at least its opening ceremonies, Seem To Be On The March — for Milan or even Japan! (Then also marching into Ellsworth by air is a military copter giving visual appeal to a vet’s gathering and benefit; see under Picks of the Week).

Monday, August 9th, 2021

The Olympics is a well-oiled machine, or so it was before Covid, but nothing could set you up for what it can do for a bare-chested athlete. That was the most dwelt upon part of the TV coverage of the opening march at The Games.
And get your mind out of the gutter, as we are talking about men, not topless competitors that are of the opposite sex. And some of them have trained so well, and reduced their body fat to near zero all over their flesh, that there’s not much difference in the cup size between them and a beer guzzler watching the Bucks (see below). In fact, the guys at the neighborhood pub likely have a lot more up there. And indeed, from The Cities, a close friend of mine is — let’s get this straight right off the bat for all concerned including the above mentioned — good looking enough to have stellar model credentials, but as well was an Olympic caliber sprinter around that same time. Having her type of slim frame is simply what’s necessary to carve a second or two off your time, because there is no drag from extra pounds. And in that case, so be it. Especially when you consider that most swimmers trim off all their body hair to more quickly glide through the water, and that includes a shaven head – and that can go for both sexes.
But the men that were on parade were different, bulking up not down, and showing it off. Thus they were not like the Olympic gymnasts who went to wearing less revealing fashions as a protest against sexism. They should likely take the same tack in their programs in our high schools.
To wit, these guys looked like they were right out of a live Danzig sweaty video. There was one and then seconds later from a different country, there was a second such guy. The first one had also done this in the games four years ago, so maybe the media was primed. Whatever the case, the cameras were on him – along with commentary — much longer than any of the other athletes from any country, including the U.S. Which brings this to mind: Why aren’t we showing some of the other, more buttoned up, competitors and at least giving them close to the same air time, in real time? Even if they are just the ping pong players. (My mom says that’s not a real sport, but recalling our youth, my brother begs to differ and put a different “spin” on the topic).

–News break: It’s all the slight of silly hand numbers that may mean something about the local sports scene, or nothing at all! Make up your mind for yourself by checking out Notes From The Beat –

Some of that, however, is kind of refreshing, since the uniforms of choice at the Opening Ceremonies were drab and uninspired. Isn’t such a media event and photo opp the hallmark of what top designers are after? Doesn’t look like it was that way, just regular pants that might as well be Dockers and button-down shirt without tie. At least some of the colors were flashy, from the top end vs. the bottom end, but they were single colors and not any kind of pattern. So the choices sometimes clashed.
And which was perhaps the worst culprit? Of all places Denmark, and it was made worse by the blah boots. Isn’t that where we would expect flash and flare along the lines of a Jenna Jameson? (At least through the opening credits, if they have those, before it all gets taken off)
There was one saying grace to all this, and it showed up again and again. Countries with a strongly indigenous people. The smaller the population of these countries the better, as they showed with designer savvy and splashes of color that were perfect to compliment shades of brown and green gleaned from local flora, the garb that goes back to native roots, lavish layer upon layer, headgear included. But even when it was something of a less obvious gender choice like wearing a dress, the men were (uniformly) attired more flamboyantly then the women, and the styles sported by each varied tremendously.
And now that we are the point of sports comparisons, let it be known that down in Milwaukee the blockbuster twin-release of Parise and Suter by The Wild merited all of two graphs on sports page two, as the last item in a column of briefs. What was the treatment back in the Twin Cities when the Bucks won their title? Probably more like whole graphs as images depicting scoring patterns. And the Pioneer Press vs. the Strib probably played it differently, for reasons of those few extra miles past the point of geographical things Wisconsin. And stories about how Hudson got behind the title run, just as they’d at times shifted over to Twins playoff hopes if the Brewers tanked.
And psst, hey buddy, did you know that the late JP Parise, father of Zach, played hockey for the Islanders for several years. We first were reminded, in the media, of this now. Like father like son?

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