Tuesday 2 June 1998 – a week later
/I’m at Denny’s out on the state highway on a long walk to work, having breakfast siting at the counter, listening to two guys down the counter talk about “free radicals,” and hearing someone’s (original) version of “Spooky” on the oldies station, thinking about how that song doesn’t really work when you change the gender from girl to guy, because a girl can be spooky, but a guy would be scary—even though Lydia Lunch did a really nice version of that song. I’m thinking she changed it to “guy”—she’d sell a lot less records if everyone thought she was a lesbian and the boys thought they wouldn’t have a chance with her… as if they did anyway. Everything in our society runs on the concept of fantasy—you couldn’t even get people to work if there wasn’t the promise of something better. Movie idea: (make a note) a remake of Fantasy Island (while they’re still remaking everything), but instead of being like that show, whatever it was like, we’ll make it a critique on the fantasy driven enslavement of the American people. The “message” will be that you should be satisfied with what you have. The “secret” message will be that we’re all fucked.
I guess the reason I’m thinking about Lydia Lunch is that she’s working here, at the counter. I’m not kidding—I’m sure it’s her. No, I’m just kidding.
When I came in here, some high school kids were in front of me, and the cop-like manager wouldn’t let them sit in the smoking section, which is like almost the whole restaurant, because they weren’t 18 and he said he needed IDs that they were 18 to be able to sit in the smoking section. “State law,” he said. (You always want to be suspicious when someone says something is a “state law.”) Now, I don’t know about you, but this is the first time I ever heard anything like this, and it sounds totally insane to me. If I happened to be a young, hot-shot, motherfucking lawyer and was looking for that kind of high-profile fame and fortune—I’d concentrate on the area of increasing discrimination of minors. Of course, minors aren’t usually the people who can pay that kind of hot-shot lawyer money, so maybe that’s why we haven't seen this. I guess I’d have to be a young, hot-shot, idealistic, crusading lawyer, with a second income.
Anyway, Denny’s is Denny’s is Denny's is Denny’s—with that multipage full-color plastic menu and hardly any food on the plate—is Denny’s is Denny’s is Denny’s is Denny’s is Denny’s is Denny’s.