Then there were the beloved Red Sox games starting in February in a faraway paradise called Florida, where the grass was always green and you could play ball all year long. The announcers were ebullient, describing their surroundings as Monsignor Daly and our catechisms might paint heaven, not a cloud in the sky, perfect temperatures, the home team uniforms as white as the driven snow.
All of this bounty was provided by the munificence of radio, the ultimate source. It woke us up in the morning, put us to bed at night and played music all day long. It gave us war bulletins, told us what the president was up to, brought glee on snow days with its no-school bulletins, told us what was on the menu at Adventure Car Hop. We couldn’t imagine a world where radio played second fiddle to anything. Then one day, Jackie Mercier pulled up on his bike and spoke blasphemy. He told us sometime soon radio would be upstaged by an electronic device which would let us see pictures along with hearing sounds. “I think they’re gonna call it television.” he said.
Everybody laughed at the hilarious folly. “Jackie, that’s impossible!” said Bobby Bennett, who was extra-smart because his father was a doctor. “How can you get the picture from somewhere else to here?” Exactly! It was a pipedream, a crime against nature, the notion of fools. But gee, what if we could actually see Ted Williams smack one up into the light tower? Then one day, we did. It was a very small picture, grainy as hell, almost as if you were looking through a veil, and the sound was crackly, but we did see Ted Williams rounding the bases, never tipping his cap. If this was possible, what might be next?
| Austin, 1962. Photo by Marjorie Aletta |
Oh Lord, Won’t You Buy Me A Monterey Pop?
I didn’t know a lot of famous people in 1962. To us, we lived here and famous people lived over there. The notion of one of us crossing over to their camp was never considered. In 1962, the ultimate dream was to some day have a $100 a week job and a wife who looked like Jean Shrimpton. Fame and fortune were crafty demons seeking to lure you off the road most travelled. And there might have been no single person I knew less likely to achieve success than 19-year-old Janis Joplin, a cranky, unkempt University of Texas art student who broke every rule society put in front of her. I met her at a party at the apartment of one Neil Unterseher, a UT scholarship tennis player and friend of Gilbert Shelton. She was dressed all in black and carried a black autoharp, wending her way around the crowd of “straight people” (Janis’ description of almost everyone else). Nobody paid a bit of attention to her. Then she sang a little folk song and it was a different story.
When the party broke up, she walked off down Congress Avenue with me and Lieuen Adkins, talking about nothing. We dipped into a sparse eatery, found a booth and a bat followed us in the door, circling the restaurant menacingly while the employees sought to corner the thing. Janis, of course rooted for the bat. Loudly…earning the enmity of the bat posse, which encouraged us to leave. Eventually, Lieuen (who actually had a curfew) went home and Janis and I found some foliage to sleep in on the Texas State Capitol grounds, roused several hours later by a security patrol which was not amused. We became friends, maybe because I was just as weird to her as she was to me. Or maybe because the bent members of the Texas Ranger magazine staff enjoyed a certain status among the studentry as slightly off-kilter mavericks on a mission from a different god.
Originally, I lived in Gilbert’s condemned apartment and stayed in the deserted building after everyone had moved out and until the wreckers knocked on the door. I hitchhiked to Houston looking for a job, didn’t get it, and returned to Austin, picked up at the county line by Lieuen, who asked me where I was going to live. I told him I didn’t know and he advised that Janis had found a free house, the owners of which were in Europe for the next three months. She took me in and I stayed there for eight weeks, at which time the owners made an unexpected early return and threw us out. During those eight weeks, I was privy to endless rehearsals by Janis’ band, The Waller Creek Boys, which included Powell St. John and Lannie Wiggins. After the rehearsals, there were endless speculations about “making it,” finding some modicum of success in the cold, cruel world. Lannie and Powell were content to earn a simple living plying their trade, evading the nine-to-five trip they equated with death. Not Janis. “I want to be a star!” she raved, waving her arms in the air. Everybody laughed. Stars in those days did not look like Janis. They looked like Joan Baez, or the lovely blonde-haired Lolita, who charmed the boys at the UT Student Union’s Wednesday night folksings. Janis couldn’t even get a singing job in a bar. To earn extra money, she found a waitress gig at a Pancake House. She lasted three weeks.
There was no question Janis Joplin had talent, though in those days it was spent on folk songs, old Bible numbers, western stuff. But now and then, a St. James Infirmary Blues would sneak in and everybody would sit up straight. Janis had the musical chops but she also had an uncompromising determination to do everything her way, to barge ahead recklessly and crash into obstacles. She always wanted to be on the edge, whatever the subject. When I read her a newspaper article about a dumb high school kid who took some new drug called LSD and tried to fly off his garage roof, she said, “I want some of that stuff right now!”
One night, an English professor hanging out at the folksing told her, “Janice, it’s impossible to succeed with your modus operandi. You have to bend, to clean up your act, to be nicer to people you don’t like, to sing stuff you don’t want to sing.” She gave him a crooked smile and a confident look. “Why should I?” she asked. “Bob Dylan doesn’t do that.” The prof had no idea who she was talking about. Dylan had about one album at the time. But I always remembered that line.
Everybody knows what happened when Janis Joplin eventually hit San Francisco in the midst of the hippie revolution and hooked up with Big Brother and the Holding Company, still doing things her way. I ran into her again at the first Atlanta Pop Festival and she said, “Can you believe it, Killeen---I’m a fucking corporation?” She was utterly thrilled that the straight people finally had to bow down. But her demons never left. “How’s your life otherwise,” I asked. “You know, when I’m on that stage getting all the love, there’s nothing like it. It’s the time in between that’s tough. But I cope, I have my ways.”
The same thing which created her, alas, finally brought her down---the hutzpah, the need for a higher high, the runaway train demeanor. She was full speed ahead til the end. Any fool who thinks Janis Joplin opted for suicide is a blind observer. With suicide, everything stops. Janis wanted nothing more than to keep on going, as fast and as far as possible.
“That’s Impossible, Whether It Happened Or Not!”
On the final day of the 2026 National Basketball Association season, the hungry Orlando Magic invaded TD Garden in Boston looking for their sixth consecutive NBA victory, one which would free them from a play-in game and install them as a top six playoff team. Things were looking rosy for the Magic because the home team Celtics had announced than none of their top eight players would risk injury by participating in what was a meaningless game to them. The Celts had already sealed the championship of their division and had nothing to gain from a victory. You can imagine the mood of the Boston fans as they dutifully worked their way to their seats to suffer through the coming massacre. “I have season tickets, but I almost stayed home,” admitted John Dykes of Woburn. “I thought we’d lose by forty. I just came to watch the new guys who never play.”
That’s when the noted Celtics culture arrived at the party. Some people think the notion of a franchise’s “culture” is a corny fraud, but the Celtics have a long history of success and team pride that winning brings and such teams have elevated standards. The rarely-used players in the starting lineup intended to play exactly the same way as the regular rotation, thrilled with their rare opportunity. Things started as expected, with Orlando jumping off to a 29-20 first-quarter advantage. They couldn’t shake the young Celts, however, and at halftime their lead was by the same nine points. There was murmuring in the Garden, raised eyebrows, nervous laughter. Do you think that maybe…no, of course no It’s the NBA…things like that just don’t happen. Except, this time they did.
A big white guy wearing an undershirt beneath his tank named Baylor Scheierman started throwing up moonshots, and they went in. Another big lug named Luka Garza did the same. Pretty soon everybody on the team was hitting ridiculous threes, causing the game announcers to start screaming in delight, slapping their foreheads and falling off their chairs in wonder and disbelief. The crowd was aroar with shock and delight. The Celtics threw up 42 points to the Magic’s 20 and led by 13 after three quarters.
Dazed and confused at the prospect of what one Orlando reporter labelled a “borderline catastrophe,” the Magic came off the bench with a vengeance, geared up their defense and played with the desperation of wild dogs, eventually tying the game at 108 with 1:37 left to play. It stayed that way until with 31.6 seconds remaining Garza, well-guarded in the corner, tossed up a miracle that soared high and true. Final score, Boston 113-108.
It was an unheard of result which defied a historical comparison. Nothing like this had ever happened in the National Basketball Association before. Even blase Las Vegas was in shock. “It was like Chuck Wepner just beat Muhammad Ali,” said one paralyzed Caesar’s Palace habitue. “Things like that don’t happen in the real world.” As Orlando coach Jamahl Mosely wobbled off the court, he turned and answered a television interviewer’s question by saying, “All things considered, I’d rather be in Philadelphia.” And that’s where he went three nights later to play the 76ers.
Impossible But True
1. The original Dirty Dancing came in 1518. For some reason, people began dancing uncontrollably for days in Strasbourg, France, led by Frau Troffea. For some, days turned to months, with many eventually collapsing from exhaustion, stroke or heart attack. The cause remains debated, with theories including mass hysteria, ergot poisoning and a lively Twist concert by Chubby Checker.
2. There was no Summer in 1816. Following the eruption of Mount Tambora on Sumbawa Island in Indonesia, massive quantities of volcanic ash and aerosols blocked the sunlight and caused global temperatures to drop dramatically, leading to snow in July, widespread famine and the cancellation of Willie Nelson’s Mediterranean Tour.
3. There really was a Great Boston Molasses Flood in 1919. A 25-foot-high wave of molasses rushed through the streets of Beantown at 35 mph, destroying buildings and killing 21 people. The cause of the disaster was a leak in a hulking 50-foot molasses tank built by the Purity Distilling Company four years earlier. The resulting debris was virtually impossible to move because it was coated with molasses. Sticky wicket.
4. Giant birds defeated humans in the Great Australian Emu War of 1932. The Australian government was all adither about the soaring emu population in the country destroying farmers’ crops in the Campion wheat belt district of Northern Australia, thus deployed military personnel with machine guns to combat the enemy. Alas, the criminal emus were very hard to find and the shootings were abandoned a few weeks later. The government admitted the emus had won the war.
5. In 1950, Bill Killeen fell from the tallest tree on Garfield Street and landed on a telephone post. What are the odds? The tree was about 2 1/2 times the height of the post, high enough to see most of the city of Lawrence from the top branches. My pal Jackie Fournier, safely entrenched on the ground kept yelling, “You’re going too high, Billy!” but fearless explorers march to the beat of a different drum. When a branch under my feet finally cracked, I was able to claw at lower branches to slow my fall. Just when I ran out of branches, the top of the telephone post showed up. I probably touched every wire on the pole climbing down, but somehow was never fried. Jackie asked me if I was secretly from another planet. I told him I wasn’t sure. I’m still not sure.
That’s all, folks….
