sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2026-07-03 02:00 pm

And I'm the reason there's salt in your tears

Yesterday's heat dome cracked 102 °F and felt like 109 °F. This afternoon hovers modestly around a mere 100 °F. I would have thought the last comparably soaring scorcher had been the previous summer with all its melted daily records, but apparently for sustained triple digits it was 1944.

At this point my life is such that even were anything sestercentennially awesome happening I would almost certainly be obliged to miss out on it, but it remains exhausting to watch a reality of history ground into Christofascist clickbait so malignly uninteresting it seems slopped out entire by that insult to mediocrity, the plagiarism engine: it has the thin, unreal, nauseous feel of it, including that at any mindless second it could be prompted to bomb the Middle East. My father has been mourning the bicentennial. I still have the commemorative quarters my grandmother kept for years on the windowsill of the anchor-papered guest room with the dollars and half-dollars in the metal piggy bank.

The aetiological little murder ballad that I heard last night on my way to collect [personal profile] spatch turned out to be Mugison's "Salt" (2004). I am enjoying the photo slider of local psychogeography from the Boston Globe.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

[personal profile] sholio 2026-07-03 09:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I was born in July 1976 (fortunately missed the 4th, but only by a couple of weeks) and so, when I was growing up, my parents glommed onto every piece of random bicentennial memorabilia for me that they happened to find. I have very little of it anymore, since it really isn't my aesthetic, aside from some truly random stuff like some bicentennial Mason jars with the Liberty Bell on them, which are actually pretty cool. There seems to have been a lot more weird, random commemorative stuff for the bicentennial; I haven't actually noticed much memorabilia around this year apart from the usual 4th of July type decorations.
gwynnega: (Your Monster)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2026-07-03 11:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I was eleven years old at the Bicentennial, and I remember it well. When I wrote in Can't Find My Way Home about the onslaught of red, white, and blue on TV that year, that was from memory. It was out of control! The 250th is truly a blip by comparison.
gwynnega: (Leslie Howard mswyrr)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2026-07-04 08:41 pm (UTC)(link)
It was vividly evoked!

Thank you!

My friend Carolyn posted this 1976 cartoon on Facebook. The Bicentennial was not generally this psychedelic, but the cartoon does capture the unrelenting quality of that celebration. (It reminds me of the final line of the Steve Miller Band's "Living in the U.S.A.": "Somebody give me a cheeseburger!") ETA: Strobe warning for the video.
Edited 2026-07-04 21:10 (UTC)
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (Default)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2026-07-04 11:26 am (UTC)(link)
And the “America’s State Fair” theme was chosen years earlier under a bilateral commission, and it could have been fun! You could have had bake-offs and cook-offs and folkdancing and a hot-dog-eating contest and butter sculptures and a midway and deep-fried surrealist objects! Maybe some team of historians and FX technicians could have dug the Futurama out of mothballs, or reconstructed it or something!

(Danny Kaye voice) But nooooooo.
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (cyberpunk bakeneko)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2026-07-04 05:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Hell, these Polish LARPers are doing a better Fourth of July event: https://www.boredpanda.com/roleplaying-4th-of-july-larp-poland/

(Love the guy in the THUG LIFE t-shirt who looks like Eugene Hütz/Shea Whigham playing a character based on Eugene Hütz)
Edited 2026-07-04 17:19 (UTC)
thisbluespirit: (margaret lockwood)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2026-07-04 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Good luck with surviving both the heat dome and the anniversary in this unfortunate universe's edition! I am sorry you have to put up with both. <3
asakiyume: (far horizon)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2026-07-09 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Whoa, finally listened to "Salt," and I love it.

"We used to build castles down there, whole empires... She pulled my hair and dragged me into the sea ... while she did it, she sang like a wild animal. Like a wild animal."

And the lyric you quote in your subject line, plus what comes after: "That's how I come back ... I'll be there as a taste on your cheek, so you can remember those who are gone."

I wish it were possible to buy just the one song and not the whole album.
asakiyume: (far horizon)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2026-07-09 06:01 pm (UTC)(link)
*cackling with delight*

Wow, that takes me back! Glad to see some things from the old internet survive. Promptly shared w/the ninja girl, who will love it too.

(How did *you* get the song? Did you buy the whole album?)

This song is so, so cool.
asakiyume: (far horizon)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2026-07-09 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, that was my option, but it turns out I just ... hate having to listen to things online as opposed to having them in my selfish private music horde. I just don't like the encumbrance of having to go to a place, you know?

This way I really truly will be able to listen to this cool song as much as I want. Thank you!