Some mini-stories and mega-musings from my first couple of days at Bumbershoot (I have gone this morning for Day III, stood in line for a couple of tickets for later in the day, and am staring outside at the rain, contemplating taking a bath and reading a book, instead):
Day I, Morning
I had never been to Bumbershoot before, and I didn't know what to expect. I had avoided it (as I do almost every festival or major gathering) in my neighborhood for the last couple of years, but as I was recently re-un-funemployed, I decided to splurge and check it out. I knew that some of my friends were going to be attending--specifically on Sunday--and I live an easy four or five blocks away from the grounds, so I could walk back if I chose.
And I did so choose. I went before noon (gates opened at 11) and got a ticket to see David Cross that evening. Looked around at all of the young people and old people and ... people. And decided to flee back to my apartment.
I took a functional (if not spectacular) nap. Since my previous two naps of the week had featured nightmares, I appreciated blissful darkness.
Day I, Afternoon
I had decided to go see the All-American Rejects in the afternoon. Not because I know their stuff very well or because I simply had to see them, but because ... hmm. I don't have a good reason. Maybe in the hopes that it would be super-fun.
Well, it wasn't super-fun. But it didn't rain and it was OK.
As I txted TravelMate2000 during the show:
There are a lot of teenagers here. The bad kind.
I felt older than I normally do.
At one point, during a prelude to one of their songs, the lead singer said something similar to this:
"All the girls in the audience say, 'Dirty.' Naw... c'mon. Say 'dirty.'Not like you say it to your little boyfriends. Say 'dirty' to me... a man. A twenty-five year-old, sexually active man!"
Wow. I don't know what is wrong with me that I was more fascinated than repulsed.
I think any guy who brags to younger women about being 25... probably shouldn't. Not that there's anything wrong with that age, but... yeah.
Day I, Evening
I spent almost all of Friday on my own. Viewmaster and I spent a bit of time together before I went and saw David Cross. She was waiting in line to see Kay Kay and his Weathered Underground, so I said I'd meet up with her. I got lost about four times in the what-should-be-three minute walk from the comedy stage to the EMP stage, and Viewmaster was, like, fourth in line. I cruised up, cut in front of the other couple hundred of people (I almost typed "hundreds"... would that make me British or functionally illiterate?) and enjoyed the show. I felt a bit bad because I had a GREAT view (close enough to spit, if I so chose, on nine of the 13 band members) and I knew there were much shorter people who had circled the concert on their calendar nine months ago struggling to see.
Oh, well.
So you were the ass who stood in front of me preventing me from seeing the damn band! I wasn't at that particular show but being vertically challenged there were quite a few other people at the other shows preventing my viewing of the show...
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