Help!

“Won’t you please, please, help me?”

Is the pen the writer? The brush the painter? The motor the cyclist?

Grumbling over coffee about the lack of interesting reading material online — just about any old thing that wasn’t about fascists, eejits, or fascist eejits— I stumbled first across a piece about artificial intelligence worming its way into the handmade world of ’zines, and then another about bearing your own burdens from the deep, deep well that is Mike Ferrentino.

Lo’s letta.

I appreciate ’zines, with their homemade artsy feel. In January our friend Lo sent us a tiny one she’d made, about the size of a hang tag, that was miles above the tired old “What we’ve been up to” family newsletter.

The niche seems to share some DNA with the underground newspapers I enjoyed Back in the Day®. I did a little cartooning for a few of those, and even helped start a short-lived one while wrapping up that B.A. in journalism from the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley.

This may have followed my ouster as cartoonist for the college newspaper following a series of mildly vile attempts to bring Bay Area Rip Off Press-style hijinks to Weld County. My derivative bullshit failed to dollar up on the hoof in cattle country.

And the new venture somehow managed in short order to crawl right up the arse of some student-government numbnuts who threatened a lawsuit over a bit of unpleasantness we’d published.

“Good luck with that,” I said, referring him to our paper’s masthead, in which my dog Jojo was listed as editor. “Not only are you a public figure for the purposes of this story, but my dog is the editor. You’re the only person I can think of who is taking us seriously.”

Still, one longs to be taken seriously. Or at least laughed at for the right reasons. Also, paid. The Revolution was not only untelevised, it was underfunded.

So I left handmade hellraising for “straight” journalism, overstayed my welcome there, and now, here I am, a half century later, comfortably underground again and still waiting on the Revolution.

• • •

Blogging the way I do it has some ’zine-like qualities, I think. But what once was called a “weblog” actually has its roots in “journaling,” another handmade, offline sort of pasatiempo that’s enjoying a comeback of sorts. Though like everything else you can take it digital if you must — your iPhone has had a “Journal” app since 2023.

George suggested I start keeping a journal, and Lord, have I ever kept ’em.

I started keeping a journal in 1974, at the urging of George Gladney, then a reporter at the Colorado Springs Sun. In the Year of Our Lard 2026 I have 15 pounds of them, a cardboard box overflowing with old-school composition books defaced with ballpoint graffiti. And what a ’zine they would make, if anyone could decipher my scribbling (cursive early on, block lettering afterward).

The cops could clear many a cold case on the evidence therein.

“Honey, you’re making a scene!” Herself would exclaim as the John Laws burst through the door.

“No, I’m making a ’zine,” I would quip as the cuffs went on and the flashbulbs popped.

Those bracelets would come off again, and quickly, too, thanks to various statutes of limitations and a general unavailability of surviving/credible witnesses.

And then I could forget about ’zines and get back to the blogging, which I’ve been beavering away at since the Nineties, shortly after I abandoned newspapers for freelancing — basically trading one boss and regular paychecks for several bosses and “It’s in the mail. …” — and thought it might be fun to be my own underground, unpaid, hands-on publisher again, if only as a sideline.

Sadly, my editor Jojo was long gone, and his daughter Fuerte had no interest in journalism.

• • •

In the Nineties scribblers didn’t have to worry about A.I., unless they’d read a lot of science fiction. Some of us were short on intelligence of any sort, artificial or innate. My comp books and Bics got demoted from deep thought to training logs as I acquired a series of Macs, modems, and text editors. I taught myself some basic HTML, paid a rural hosting outfit to house my monstrosity in one of their cages from which it could screech and throw shit at passers-by, and hey presto! A blog.

The rest, as they say, is history, and quite a bit of it. My earliest efforts are lost in cyberspace, but the Archives contain about a quarter-century’s worth of bloggery in various states of decomposition.

What I brought to my little peepshow in the virtual carnival was decades of experience in newspapers and magazines as a reporter, editor, and cartoonist. I turned pro in the journalism racket just as newspapers were stumbling through the transition from hot type — for-reals hot, lines cast in lead by a clanking Linotype machine — to cold type, which meant computers. The times they were a-changin’.

Your Humble Narrator in the Mitchell High School Echelon‘s newsroom, circa 1971.

And once the Internet became A Thing, and those computers evolved from rumbling gods behind locked doors to perky little desktop numbers that anyone could own for the price of a decent used car, they were a-changin’ again. If you wanted to keep your head above water you had to go with the flow.

Which brings us back to the process of creation, and how — for me, at least — it’s changed since I submitted that first cartoon to the Mitchell High School Echelon back in 1971.

• • •

I had only ever been a cartoonist.

Self-taught, of course. A comics junkie from jump. Superman and Batman, Mad magazine, Bill Mauldin, Herblock. I learned that you draw in pencil so you can erase your mistakes, and then try very very hard not to make more mistakes when you finally ink the penciled sketch because then you have to start over. Add ink washes or sticky halftone film to achieve shades of gray; use watercolors or colored pencils to go full Disney.

Luck of the draw.

But mostly I stuck to pencil, eraser, and black ink on paper because (a) I fucked up a ton, and (2) anything that got published was going to be in black and white anyway. Simple.

So I was I. Lord, was I ever.

And one day I found myself hired as a copy boy at the Sun, stripping wire-service copy from the teletypes, walking photos to engraving and page proofs to the copy desk, and waiting to be recognized as the next Pat Oliphant, who was then at The Denver Post.

Shortly after I’d proved competent at the basics the city editor handed me a press release to rewrite.

“But I don’t know how to type.” I said.

“Better learn,” he replied while walking away.

So I learned. My typing style remains unique, three fingers on the left hand and two on the right. Oddly fast, but a thing of beauty it is not; “touch typing” in the sense that each of those five fingers will eventually touch a key. The endless rewrites ordered by the city and/or copy desks were heavy lifting for a rookie scribe who couldn’t even fucking type, pounding away at the keys of a manual typewriter that was probably past retirement age when Damon Runyon was learning the newspaper racket down south at the Pueblo Star.

Nevertheless, I persisted. Learned. And adapted.

• • •

A few years and one B.A. in journalism later I was at the other newspaper in town — not as a cartoonist, but as a reporter — and I was delighted to see computerization finally rear its ugly head. Instead of going 10 rounds with that typewriter I could do a brain-dump into the terminal, then root through the pile and pick out a few shiny objects that might amuse an assistant city editor. If they didn’t, the rewrite would be a lot faster. And they couldn’t wad up my copy and throw it at me anymore.

Some of the veteranos in the Gazette Telegraph newsroom were less gung-ho. They would pound out their reports as per usual, on their ancient typewriters, and then with hard copy in hand retype them into their computer terminals as smoke billowed from ears at the city desk. Eventually the typewriters were removed. Some of the typists, too.

Forty-nine years, five newspapers, and countless magazines later I have written and/or drawn on just about everything using whatever was handy: pencils, pens, crayons, and keyboards; comp books, reporter’s notepads, bar napkins, and hotel stationery; manual and electric typewriters, dumb terminals hooked to mainframes, Macs connected to the Internet, and iPhones. Even shithouse walls.

Writing is never easy, because I have read so much of it, by more talented people. But it has become easier, with the advent of computers, and especially the laptop, which liberates you from the desk. Tip over the cranium wherever you are, let its contents spill out onto that solid-state floor, then root around in the pile until you find what you need.

A 14-year-old hammer and chisel: My 2012 MacBook Air.

It should still feel a lot like work. Sweaty, irksome, a daylight-burning, down-the-rabbit-hole time-suck, just one goddamn thing after another. Michelangelo looked at a block of marble and saw David within. But he needed a hammer and chisel to get to him. Got his hands dirty.

I’m no Michelangelo. Just some fool with the brain farts in search of a few perverts who like the smell. Pull my finger! And I’ve tried to choose my tools wisely.

For instance, while I love me some laptop and text editor, I hate spellcheckers and grammar widgets. If I want something looking over my shoulder I’ll get a parrot. I do my own stunts, bub, and I work without a net. Now stand back and watch. Gimme room!

The cartooning got a little involved there for a while, once color became available. I needed a flatbed scanner and a lot of pig-ign’ant careening around in Adobe Photoshop to deliver 300-dpi CMYK images to the masses. But the ideas all came from the same old place (behind the increasingly powerful spectacles), and first sprang to hideous life using the same old tools (paper, pencil, pen, and ink).

My office in Bisbee, Ariz.

Between you and me, I think the march of progress developed a hitch in its gitalong a few years back. I work on a 14-inch 2024 M4 MacBook Pro now, but it’s no great improvement over my 11-inch MacBook Air, which dates to 2012. Better display, faster processor, yadda yadda yadda. I write a blog using a browser. I could do it with an iPhone from a tent. And I have.

So, if I ever run out of things worth saying, and interesting ways to say them, I won’t acquire some RoombaRite 9000® to hoover up all the words on the Internet and empty its bag into this blog. A.I.? N.O. It’d be like bolting a motor onto one of my Steelman Eurocrosses. Ferrentino and his father got it right: If you can’t lift it, don’t drive it.

No creative sort ever goes it completely alone, of course, unless they have a paper ranch, an ink well, a canvas farm, and a paint horse (har de har har). Find the lever and fulcrum that suit your needs and see if you can move the world. Without breaking it, if you please.

It doesn’t matter how you do the work as long as you do the work.

15 thoughts on “Help!

  1. Wow. That was quite a piece. Nicely done. Reminiscing about the work life, or just looking back at your career like we old fart do, asking “what the hell did I do with my life, and why the fuck did I make those choices?” But a successful writing career sure beats doing analyses of shit that goes into nuclear bombs.

    Sometimes I think back on my own 49 years…and wonder how the fuck this all happened.

    1. Aw, I just felt like rambling. I really appreciated Ferrentino’s column — if you didn’t read it, you definitely should. “More” is not always “better.” Shit, sometimes even “better” isn’t “better.” And as the song goes, you gotta know when to hold ’em and when to fold ’em.

      As to the ’zine thing, I just enjoy seeing any kind of analog backlash to the always-online culture. I’ve read pieces — online, natch — about how letter-writing and postcards are starting to grow legs again, and I’m all for it. Herself and friends regularly fire humorous greeting cards at each other. Jacquie Phelan sends me the occasional postcard. What’s not to like?

      I can’t wait to see what’s next to come out of Ferrentino’s pen.

      1. I just read Ferrentino’s column. Wow. I’m still sitting here sorta overwhelmed. Hit a lot of things. Motorcycles. The old man living on his motorcycles until he could not any more. He rode Harleys, Indians, and Moto Guzzis when I was a kid. My old man gave it up when he broke his leg holding up a big bike and thereby finding out he had severe osteoporosis. Proudly measuring the metal I scraped off the footpegs in my twenties while only laying the bike down a few times. The stupidity of riding E-bikes for all the wrong reasons. Fountain pens, like the one I was given by my elementary school upon graduation in sixth grade, a Parker with an iridium nib, that I loved to write with until I lost it in one of the many moves. His dad dying and my old man currently hanging on by a thread. Wanting to live without the urgent need to do more. That was an impressive read. Gotta read it again and think more, if that is possible. Thanks for the recommendation.

  2. Yea Khal, me too. When I was an electronic equipment repairman, life was good. They give you something that does not work, and you repair it so it works as well or better then when you got it and give it back. Feels good! How many times you can do that in 8 hours depends on the equipment. At the end of the day you clean up your bench and area, turn off the test equipment, and lock up your tool box. Go home feeling good without a worry. Then I went to college and became a desk jockey. Duh. I was a good technical writer, but I didn’t create anything. After 33 years of DoD work are we any safer. Nah. I shoulda have taken the tool and die maker apprenticeship the union offered me in 1968.

    Now, I am trying to write lyrics. That is a tough row to hoe! Dave Stamey learned that in the early mining days, they would hoist mules down into the mines to pull the ore carts. They lived in mine their whole lives. Never came out unless lame or dead. Damn sad. Dave wrote this song, it’s a good one. An example to reach for.
    A master’s class in lyrics and melody writing. I hope to play it in Tombstone tomorrow. Caution, it’s a world class ear worm.

      1. John Mayer and “Gravity” got a couple of good lines related to your comment above. “Twice as much ain’t twice as good, and can’t sustain like one half could. It’s wanting more that’s gonna send me to my knees.”

    1. Speaking of writing and music, anyone who has not yet read “This is Happiness” by Niall Williams should rush down to their local bookseller right this very minute and pick up a copy.

      I just read it for the third time and I keep finding gems everywhere.

      It’s about love and loss, life and death, friends and foes, past and future, new ways and old, joy and sorrow, and music. Beautifully written, too, more of a song than a novel.

      What the hell? Buy two copies and give one to a friend.

    1. As Robert A. Heinlein had Lazarus Long say to Ira Weatheral regarding a much earlier edition of himself in “Time Enough for Love”:

      “All I have in common with him is continuity of memory — and not much of that.”

  3. Interesting to read the various trips down memory lane here. I think it’s like we have a pop up turkey timer embedded. Yup…reach a certain age, retire and out pops the memories of years ago. I tiptoed around any second guessing or lament about Coulda-Shoulda (I could have been a contender goddamnit!) and ruminate these days on trying to figure out the Great Why of past years. And sometimes the Great How. As in “Why did we decide to take that trip to rain infested Algonquin in the spring of 79′”. “How did I get that job at the cement plant that literally almost killed me?” And there is the Great Where as in “Where did I put that Eclipse handlebar bag I moved from one house to another thinking there would be yet another epic bike tour with a bag that kept the weight up too high and made decents harrowing?”
    And….there’s the That Guy pondering. “Geez, I wonder whatever become of That Guy? He was a character all right”

    1. Getting that celestial view of the Wandering sure gives a feller some perspective, yeah?

      Things didn’t change much until suddenly they did. “Gradually and then suddenly,” as Hemingway wrote of a character going bankrupt.

      That first cartoon I did for the high-school rag in 1971 was pen and ink on paper. Eighteen years later the ’toons I was drawing for VeloNews were all samey-same, and would be today if I had someone to sell ’em to. I had to FedEx the originals to Boulder from Fanta Se, and a bunch of them vanished when the outfit moved its offices.

      A couple years later VN went electric like Dylan, and ’toons and stories were digitized and zipping along the Infobahn from Bibleburg to Boulder. The files for the print edition of the magazine were doing likewise, to a printer somewhere in the Midwest. VN never had its own print shop, and these days neither do a bunch of newspapers, among them our local one.

      VN was quick to launch a BBS and then a rudimentary website, but soon online-only competitors arose, chief among them Cyclingnews, and it was beating on VN pretty hard, same way the every-other-week newsprint version of VN had beat on the slick mags Back in the Day®, with their long lead times that had Tour coverage hitting the newsstands about three months after the final podium in Paris.

      Newspapers were evolving too (or devolving, depending upon your perspective). The new tech made it possible to eliminate a shit-ton of jobs and consolidate more tasks in fewer hands. Copy editors, who once edited copy (hence the job title), were suddenly doing that alongside writing headlines, sizing photos, writing cutlines, laying out pages (and eventually building them, a thing called “pagination”), then shepherding everything through production before all the backshop gigs got eliminated too.

      As this winnowing process accelerated newspapers lost a lot of eyeballs between the reporter and the printing press, and it showed in the final product. When the vulture capitalists and bloated chains bent on consolidation got really busy — “Scale! Scale! Scale!” — and the headsmen came for the copy editors it was all over bar the shouting.

      These days a reporter might be reporting and writing, but also doing TikToks, ’Grams, podcasts, XTwitter, and for all I know delivering the final product to your doorstep. I remember a colleague saying that after he quit writing for the paper and started delivering it he was finally making a living wage.

      That, I suspect, is something that hasn’t changed.

  4. Thanks for the Ferrentino link.

    A lifelong motorcyclist here, after a bicycling youth.

    I’m probably done with motorcycles at 80, been trying to reconcile that for a couple of years now. I still have the 500+ pound 100 +/- HP bike that scared the snot out of me last time I tried to ride it – 2 summers ago. I still have the 300 or so pound 20 hp single that I tried to love, maybe I can ride it one more time and experience scaring the snot out of me one last time – yeah, it gets up to 80 mph on the rural backroads here.

    I did learn from those two bikes that More isn’t invariably as good as more.

    Most of my riding was to empty my mind. Earplugs to kill the wind noise. Nothing but the bike and the road. Connecticut to Jacksonville to have a lunch time ride with my niece, her Harley and my Beemer making as strange a pair as she and I. Multiple Connecticut to Ohio rides with my sweetheart, her Yamaha cruisers and my low bar sport bikes moving easily in sync.

    I’ve been listening to Joni Mitchell’s Refuge of the Roads. It captures why I had to ride. And the Jaco Pastorius bass!

    Cars and pickups were for transportation, bicycles early followed by motorcycles were for sanity.

    Thanks again for the Ferrintino link.

  5. there is an element in your ability to pull off satirical writing that is the envy of all current writers period.

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