Do you remember the Seinfeld
episode where Elaine was dating a man specifically because he was extremely
handsome and then the man and George went rock climbing and he fell off the
mountain and his face wound up completely swathed in bandages and Elaine dumped
him because she was afraid that he was – or at least might – no longer be extremely handsome?
There was that “one particular attribute.” That’s what attracted her to him. Otherwise, he was nothing special. Not overly smart, or wealthy or accomplished. The man had only one thing going for
him. He was the noteworthy possessor of,
as the Jews call it, a shayne punim. (A pretty face.)
Understandably, Elaine, superficial person that she is (or
brutally honest person that she is, take your pick), apprehensive that the man’s
singular distinction had been deleted from his resume, headed immediately for
the exit. That’s what we loved above
Elaine. As superficial and selfish as we
are, Elaine was breathtakingly worse.
(As were George and to a lesser degree though he could often be quite
horrible, Jerry.)
Consider me, in
the context of this analogy, to be Elaine.
The attractive-looking man in this case is Los Angeles. Its “one particular attribute”? The weather.
Fact: The Los
Angeles weather has gone haywire.
And right now, I am more than ready to bail.
Let’s be honest.
Aside from the weather, Los Angeles does not have a lot of things going
for it. (I exclude “career
opportunities”, because if the television business were located there instead of here, I would be
comfortably ensconced in Cincinnati.)
Let’s start with what’s important. The bagels in Los Angeles are terrible. Ditto for the pizza. (It’s the water.) There is almost no sense of “community feeling.” (Unless there’s an earthquake in which case
we are a community who cannot relate to each other because we are all in shock.
Or there’s a riot, when we discover that
we are actually two separate communities.)
Los Angeles is huge.
So getting anywhere requires you to endure the ever-increasing snarls of
traffic, navigating precarious superhighways, opening you to life-threatening
encounters with inept and infuriating drivers.
Like me.
As far as architectural beauty is concerned, head down a
street in any opulent neighborhood, and you’ll see, side by side, a house that
looks like a Middle Eastern palace standing next to a Tudor-style mansion
standing next to a “Gingerbread House” if the Gingerbread Man were a venture
capitalist, standing next to a white-columned Gigantus that could easily be
neighbors with Thomas Jefferson in Monticello.
The architectural common denominator?
“We have money. We
can build whatever we want.”
True, there is geographical beauty in Los Angeles, with a
picturesque range of mountains to the East, and the magnificent Pacific on the
West. But on most days, the smog is so
thick, you have no idea that the mountains are there. And when it is overcast – which means pretty
much the entire summer – the sky and the ocean are indistinguishable, offering
the look of an extended sky.
There is nothing special about that. You can see sky anywhere.
So what you’re left with, in terms of “bragging rights”, is
only one thing:
The weather.
And when that “one particular attribute” lets you down…
Rightly or wrongly, the residents of Los Angeles feel
incredibly ripped off.
I know it hasn’t rained much here in the last…decade or
two. But when it does – and these visits
of moisture occur almost exclusively in the winter; there have been a mere
handful of Dodgers rainouts since
their arrival in 1958 – the people in Los Angeles are really upset. You can see it in their faces, and in their Manhattan-style
short-temperedness.
The are looking for somebody to punish!
Or at least a refund.
“What do you think we came here for, the Chinese cuisine?” (Which, inexplicably, because I do not
believe metallic-tasting water is involved, is as deficient as the bagels and
the pizza.)
“We want our sunshine!”
“We want our sunshine!”
And just the right amount
of sunshine to boot! Right now… well,
let me first say this.
Los Angeles very often has the most agreeable weather in the
nation. (Santa Monica, where I live, has
the most agreeable weather in Los Angeles.)
What we are used to in Santa Monica is bright sunshine, temperatures
in the low seventies, and a light breeze blowing gently in off the ocean. (Note:
Our house does not have, and has rarely needed, air-conditioning.)
What do we have today?
Bright sunshine. But you can’t go
out into it because outside, today and for the entire past week, it has been…
Ninety-seven degrees!
(And if it’s ninety-seven in Santa Monica, it is invariably
over a hundred further inland.)
There little to no breeze, and what breeze there is, is
blowing in the “wrong” direction – from the desert towards the ocean – bringing with it the entire accumulation of urban
smog, its unwelcome presence represented by a discernible layer of rust-colored
air hovering sickeningly over the horizon.
This is not what we came here for. Not for the rain, and not for the
triple-digit temperatures more typically associated with Phoenix. And who wants to live there?
When we deliberately moved here!
The only thing that’s good here. And they unexpectedly – and highly annoyingly
– took it away.
Elaine Benes – for the first time – in retrospect – I feel
you. (Unsolicited Confession: I have never used the phrase “I feel you”
before. Maybe it’s because I innately
lack empathy. Or maybe it’s because it
sounds somewhat physically invasive. But
today seems to be a day of “firsts.” Uncharacteristic
Los Angeles weather. A possibly
subliminally provocative phrase I have never uttered before. And my, for the first time ever, ending a
blog post with parentheses.)
(Personal Note: If this blog post in not entirely up to
snuff, forgive me. It is really frickin’
hot!)
3 comments:
According to weather.com, you're weather is back to normal for the next week, at least. But when I watch the news I see SoCal on fire, winds whipping the flames as if Dante scripted the incineration. All around the world the weather patterns are changing. While I don't expect to be around when the next big bang takes us back to the stone age, I can't help but think it's a sure thing.
Not to mention the highest taxes in the nation, and a local government in Santa Monica that has so overdeveloped, there's gridlock most of the time.
I love the LA in Steve Martin's L.A. Story. Otherwise...the only way I'd live there is if I could afford a car and driver so I wouldn't have to spend my *own* time sitting in and staring at traffic.
Unlikely I'll ever be able to afford it.
wg
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