
- Not Pictured: The real Will and Vinny
Yeah, yeah. Long time no blog. Look, I've been busy so how about you get off me? You think with my meager amount of free time, I'm going to spend it generating ha-ha's for you feebs?
Well, sadly, you're right. But I can't I think of anything to write, so here's some excerpts from my conversation with Willyesterday (edited slightly for readability):
On Mid-90s Rock Chicks From Boston:
Will: Incidentally, I share your Kay Hanley fetish. I still pleasure myself to the image of her turning her back to the crowd and bouncing up and down for an entire song at the Paradise back in about '98 or so.
Vinny: I saw her at the paradise in '08. The years have been very kind to her
Will: Nice. She's my second-favorite 90s Boston rock girl, trailing only Juliana Hatfield, who I met at the People's last year and who has not aged that way. The woman needs to eat. Juliana was on the cusp of big-time but never fully made it. She was on the cover of Spin in '95ish and inside revealed that she was a 27-year-old virgin. So, obviously, insane and crazy catches up to you when you're not young and adorable anymore. Now she's a bit haggard, but I still creep-hugged her for old time's sake.
On Fame:
Will: I never see famous people, even in NYC. I guess Josh Hartnett was in my bar right before me and Patrick and Max got there the night before WhiskyFest, but I wouldn't have recognized him anyway.
Vinny: How can you not recognize the guy from such classics as "Pearl Harbor", "Wicker Park”, and "40 days and 40 nights"?
Will: Saw Clemens here in 2002, while a Sunday afternoon game was still going. I mean granted, he's a starting pitcher and doesn't really need to be there, but it was still strange to see him at the bar. He refered to himself as "The Rocket" in the 3rd person repeatedly, and got a few rounds for the small crowd. I hate to admit, he came across as a pretty good guy, a friendly idiot, the way you imagine Papelbon would be.
Vinny: He referred to himself as "The Rocket"? Tell me he was trying to be ironic.
Will: Affleck and Damon have been in People's on Thanksgiving and Christmas nights before, but I haven't seen them. I guess they're decent dudes but Affleck gets sloppy drunk, which is a problem because he fakes like he's sober now. We know the girls who work at [Bar name redacted], and he likes to go there because all employees sign some kind of confidentiality agreement. But he went there with his mom and/or wife a couple years ago when Guy [name aliased], the bald dude who fills in at HQ sometimes, was the GM. So he drank iced tea until his family left, then got shitfaced, left to get some coke or whatever, and forgot to come back for his tab, which was several hundred bucks--Champagne and shit. So Guy charged it to his room and he freaked the next day because his wife/accountant/whoever would see the evidence and Guy was like "Sorry, buddy, but I can't eat a $400 tab just because you're lying to your family." So, decent dude, but high maintenance in that way.
Vinny: I can see that. I feel like if I became famous I would turn into a dick. Err... that is to say my public image would be startlingly accurate as opposed to a whitewash of lies and DUIs.
Will: Oh, I'd be completely insufferable, I'm positive.
me: I'm pretty sure I'd be hanging out in the Beverly Hills McDonald's parking lot making fun of fat chicks with Megan Fox or something. or I'd be "that guy" who got drunk while hosting SNL and tried to make out with Miley Cyrus (and succeeded, because she's totally a skank).
Will: Sounds about right.
Vinny: Though to be fair, me and Miley sucking face might be the best thing on SNL since Farley died.
Will: I mean, I act like I own the fucking world if I'm someplace where I know the bartender's name, or if I've gotten a blog comment that day or something. Fame would destroy me. I can't wait!
On Same As The Dead Pool Ever Was, The Movie:
Vinny: I feel like we should take a page from the Affleck/Damon playbook and write a screenplay about Boston/Cambridge and cash in on this whole "everything to do with Boston is fucking awesome!" kick that Hollywood is on.
Will: You're right. And I will always appreciate those guys for getting guys like me laid when that movie came out. So many Harvard freshman were willing to believe they'd found the real-life Will Hunting any time they took Daddy's credit card to a bar with a wiseass bouncer. I didn't have much of an accent as a kid--my dad's from Oklahoma and my mom's parents were deaf, so she over-enunciated everything and had no accent. But I sounded like you after 16 beers when it became obvious that it was somehow sexy for a brief moment in time.
me: Yeah, play up the whole Boston thing that makes 'em think "Hey maybe there's a sensitive genius under that rough exterior" and lead them on by showing them angsty teenage poetry, get laid and they find out there's little more to me than apathy and dick jokes. Either way, we should start writing a screenplay so that we can put together the farce that we're actually working on it and bring it up in casual conversation with chicks at the bar, describing it as "Catcher In the Rye" meets "Good Will Hunting" and if they're unimpressed add that "It's got a little more heart, though" or "It's semi-autobiographical".
Will: Yup. I like where this is going. And we'll get Truck to actually write the fucking thing--that dude's hilarious and into movies and shit.
me: Excellent but he's white and hence expensive. We’ll get my Mexican to write it
Will: Good call. In fact, he's worse than white: he's a Jew too.
me: So's the Mexican! He's actually Guatemalan...
Will: Same thing, different flag.
This racism, bigotry, celebrity slander, and misogyny brought to by my lousy job and Will's boredom.
Yes, I'm aware that this doesn't really count as a blog post, but I don't care. I'm leaving here in twenty minutes and starting Thanksgiving week at the bar. See you there.
Future celebrity,
{VM}



