https://www.austinchronicle.com/features/2001-09-07/82886/
Austin: Look around you.
Chronicle History: We have been in the same building, with SXSW World Headquarters across the field, since August 1991. The paper seems to do well, though this issue may forever change that. Every week there is another issue.
Still, we know that -- if only because cryogenics haven't yet been perfected -- we must, grudgingly, roll with the new, and the most determined of the sprouts stick around to kick a hole in the wall of nostalgia and chart their own sentimental journey.
Then it came: my desk. First, I had to move the mountain of books and files and assorted crap from the two editors who occupied the office; they had a hairpin of a hovel in the corner of their room that I was supposed to situate myself in. I cleared away the mess and the grime, even dusted a bit
Then I had to build the desk -- My desk is here, hot diggity damn quickly translated to Your desk is in pieces and you get to assemble it yourself in your free time, here's a Phillips head. And I did. I assembled the damn thing on all fours, with the aid of a Phillips head and that surly proofer named Shawn who was tired of sharing his desk with me. It ended up being kind of fun, 'cause it was a Friday afternoon and it beat looking for misplaced commas. We had a diagram that confused us terribly and Shawn poked a hole in the cheap imitation wood, which you can still see today if you slide under the desk, assuming you can maneuver around the stacks of old issues and publicity swag and discarded iodized salt packets that have accumulated in a year gone by. We built the damn thing, and after work I drove Shawn to the mechanic to pick up his limping '79 Volvo, and then we went out to dinner and later we moved in together, and it turns out he wasn't surly after all.
Actually, the salary negotiation went fairly smoothly. It was when I asked, "So where's my desk and phone?" that I realized I had entered The Chronicle Zone. There was a long silence, and then Nick (Zen Master of the Long Silence) responded, "Well, that could be a problem." It seems there was this question of exhausted potential phone lines, and they weren't certain they had a desk for me, but there was probably a computer available, and then temporarily maybe I could just use a cell phone. ...
It all worked out, and soon I was installed in a bathroom-size office with two other bedraggled office mates, stacks of ancient documents, a love seat propped on bricks (the better for interruptions), and a peerless view of the Dust Bowl Memorial Parking Lot and the afternoon volleyball game. For a time, this office held the long-legendary Desk-Kicked-in-by-Louis when he was pissed at its occupant, Daryl Slusher (who undoubtedly deserved the Black Wrath) -- we finally switched it out over the Christmas holiday. Across the hall is the combination Meeting Dungeon and Boiler Room, where attending staff can either see or hear what's going on, but never both simultaneously.
This is a Homemade Place: part devil's workshop, part Salvation Army leftovers, part drunken elves' dominion, part oven for crackbrained genius, part last rebel holdout, part tin-pan redoubt against tyranny and dullness, part (freezing or boiling) slacker sweatshop. Either it grows on you (like something in the sink), or you grow on it.
I'm unnervingly happy to be an inmate.
The sour look on his face screamed "C'mon, write about a band people care about for once." It wouldn't be the first time, or the last, he'd give me that look.
Raoul was probably as tired of reading my references to the Abrasion Ensembles and Golden Crickets of the world as he is of our Wednesday lunchmeat buffet, but he eventually saw the light (i.e., the gushing reviews in Rolling Stone and Melody Maker) and let me publish an overwrought ode to an Icelandic beauty.
It was just another episode in a perpetual tug-of-war between past and present, in which stalwarts of the old-guard country and blues sound grapple with harbingers of the new. It's Willie Nelson vs. Sigur Rós far more than it is Raoul Hernandez vs. Michael Chamy. Sometimes I feel like a bullheaded bastard, but everybody has to pick a side, you see.
Approx. 95 Wednesday lunches; House on Haunted Hill T-shirt; The Bone Collector T-shirt; The Skulls T-shirt; Quark X-Press 4.0; Entrapment laser pointer; Light It Up T-shirt; Bowfinger T-shirt (gifted to sister); 2 issues Mac Addict; 10 Sharpie markers; Unbreakable T-shirt (pass on to brother-in-law); Me, Myself and Irene T-shirt; Adobe Illustrator 9.0; Titan A.E. T-shirt; Screwed baseball cap; 2 yellow legal tablets; Fight Club T-shirt; The Ex-Presidents comic book; Iron Giant keychain; Inventing the Abbots combs (2); 1 white legal tablet; Being John Malkovich folders (2), mask, and stickers (4); James Bond Golden Eye playing cards; Final Fantasy sports bottle with bendy straw (2); 28 Days bottles filled with various top-shelf candy; CD holder thing (secret Santa); brand-name candy (3); various Statesman T-shirts (3); 1 issue of Step by Step magazine; Love Stinks T-shirt (bequeathed to friend Joyce); 20 Dates matchbooks (3); 47 No. 11 window envelopes (sans paychecks); Ghost World script; Your Friends and Neighbors notepad; Nutty Professor II: The Klumps baseball cap; Fight Club soap; Mod Squad shot glass; Final Fantasy T-shirts (8); Up on the Villa champagne glasses; X-Men keychain; X-acto knife; approx. 25 X-acto blades; movie sneaks: Being John Malkovich, Mumford, The Muse (left before over); Man in the Moon button; Road Trip specimen collection kit; concerts attended via the guest lists: John Spencer Blues Explosion, the Roots, Pavement (twice), George Jones, Merle Haggard, Blackalicious, Giant Sand, Elliott Smith; SXSW Music Badge 2000 and 2001 (no events attended), Wristband 2000, various and sundry swag from swag bags (2000 & 2001); plain white Chronicle T-shirts with logo (3); 2 rolls of bathroom tissue; Antz joke stickers; Ghost World T-shirt; Chronicle Hot Sauce T-shirt 1999 (gave to sister); Adobe Photoshop 5.5; Chronicle Hot Sauce 2000 T-shirt; dog (Boutros-Boutros Collie); life partner (Kim).
1. Padding my hours
2. Breaking the coffee machine
3. Not washing my dishes
4. Breaking the water cooler
5. Rigging an NCAA Tournament pool
6. Being a moody, self-absorbed, passive-aggressive, defensive, paranoiac, smart-assed prick
7. Distributing child pornography
8. As a proofreader, being "lower than the interns," according to Louis Black
9. Drinking too much water
My response to those accusations:
1. Insultingly wrong. I just love being here.
2. It wasn't me, and it wasn't broken anyway.
3. I don't use any Chronicle dishes. They have germs.
4. This happened when I first started here two years ago, so it was really scary. It wasn't me.
5. I won. I'm sorry people like (Advertising Manager) Carol Flagg can't accept that.
6. Like I said, I love being here. I feel like I really fit in.
7. You shouldn't joke about shit like that, I know.
8. Well, Louis Black is a werewolf, and werewolves are notoriously exaggerative.
9. Get it while the gettin's good, take care of your urethra, and avoid any and all bodily stones. Especially in this heat.
Some of us are old enough to be the parents of our new hires. Single departments are bigger now than the whole paper was in '81. Everyone doesn't fit around two tables at the Hole in the Wall anymore. Hell, we might not even fit in the club.
Babies keep coming, so do gray hairs. There's a mix of generations in the building, and it seems to work. Chron parties now include solid food and cab rides, but the fun quotient is still high, as is half the production crew.
Volleyball remains the sport of choice. Computers have changed damn near everything.
But Wednesday nights are still Wednesday nights. Nick's picking letters to the editor, copy's coming through late, an ad just dropped out, where's page 23? Production's clicking, Taylor at his screen, Karen everywhere, Tim doing whatever it is Tim does. Someone shows up with a 12-pack. Louis calls in. Ken Lieck wanders through talking about rats again. Hey, are there any more of those cookies left?
Somehow the flats get done.
Somehow the paper goes out.
Somehow we made it 20 years.
Somehow we're still a family.
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