
In a hotel bar. Somewhere in Brooklyn. Not at the conference.
.....A brief conversation, started somewhere in the social media landscape.....
Marji Vecchio [author, instigator-in-chief]:
oh
gawd, the stories are already coming in as to remind me why I hate
CAA...thanks folks, for confirming why I went home last week and not as
tourist this week. DO NOT GO TO BOTTINO, FYI.
NEWSgrist [aka Joy Garnett]:
Life is too short and too good to clutter it up with any or all:
conferences, committee meetings, meetings that don’t include some form
of alcohol, controlled play, endless panels. Bad food. Name tags. Did I
forget anything? Bedbugs. Long flights to an entire weekend spent inside
a hotel. Comfortable shoes. Corduroy. Greasy glasses lenses. Long
papers read out loud. Long lines to the only hotel Starbucks open at
that hour. Sweaty armpits at the committee table. Committee tables. Dry
scones. Dry art. Professional competitiveness. Interviews. Taking a
number. Slipping resumes under doors. Pretending to enjoy the
performance. Being the third wheel. MSG poisoning because you thought
that after all that you should treat yourself to the filet mignon on the
museum’s dime but didn’t reckon that even the best restaurant in the
Marriott uses heaps of MSG. GMO cornflakes. Overcooked coffee.
Overpriced bourbon. Powdered eggs. Polyester draperies. A view of the
parking lot. Broken air conditioning. A strange rash from the sheets.
Did I leave anything out??? The trots. Sinus infection leading to
légionnaires disease. Fear of flying. Taxi rip-off. Speeches. Endless
pattings on backs. Ugly branding. Ballpoint pens that don’t work when
you need them. Embarrassing encounters on escalators with the very
person from 3000 miles away that you figured you wouldn’t bump into and
hoped to god you wouldn’t, but who spotted you across the crowded lobby
like a laser-guided ICBM. Coffee stains on your last non-smelly shirt.
Heartburn. Pickpockets. Broken strap on your favorite bag. Bad wifi.
Wall-to-wall carpeting from the eighties.
And mini-muffins.
Eve Sinaiko [author, editor]:
Powerpoint. Forgetting the thingy that lets the laptop connect to the projector. People thanking each other over and over on panel after panel. No trash cans anywhere. Jargon. Jargonjargonjargon.
...
Of course, the thing I really have the most trouble with is the fact
that an awful lot of people still recognize me, whereas I am a moron and
can't remember who anyone is and have to look at their badges even
though I probably worked with them for years and really liked them and
they probably stayed at my house and I probably borrowed $5 from them
that time when I hadn't had lunch since the day before yesterday and I
helped them get their dissertation published and twisted their arm to
review a book.
Steven Mesler [who blogs about making art for the Huffington Post, among other things]:
Pitchers
of ice water, hard candies, stackable chairs, no one knows which light
switch dims the lights, room dividers, easels used for signage not art,
rooms named after the Great Lakes or Canadian Provinces or Vice
Presidents, diet coke, badges with names
and tribal affiliation that you forget to take off when your out
looking for a pharmacy because you forgot your toothbrush (again),
tourist magazines on the nite stand and gideon's bible in the drawer,
not your iron, stain guard sprayed on every surface, flat screen TV's
that wouldn't fit in your apartment much less the wall space because
your an artist and you live art and so you keep that on your walls,
cheap bad art everywhere on the walls, lamps that rip off brancusi's
endless column, staff in bad ill fitting stain resistant outfits, not
one scrap of litter, running into important professional people who's
name you have totally blanked on while standing next to someone who you
should introduce and calling them "buddy"....
And
little tiny coffee makers in the bathroom, and "continental" (this is
code for they manufactured your waffles and scrambled eggs in another
country) breakfast, and wake up calls, and broken wheels on your luggage
with a handle that is a half inch short
of being comfortable to roll behind you, and parking garages, other
people's ideas of "great food",no subways fucking no subways, nice
people, gift shops, and pocket guides to the conference with no maps...
And
boarding passes, taking out your ID and panicking later because you
stuffed in your pocket because you had to take off your belt, pat downs
that brushed against your naughty bits, layovers in Minneapolis, food
courts, carry-ons, beverage carts, aisle
seats, coach class walking passed first class, a pocket full of
business cards, knitting seat mates who are chatty, being charged $2 by
credit card only for the two pronged headphones so you can watch a
Romantic comedy starring two former child TV stars from the eighties
about their hilarious funky house in the wilderness of Connecticut...
And
lastly, shit I left my phone charger back at the hotel and can't call
my ride when I get to the airport because my phone just dies.
...windows
that are screwed shut, hidden thermostats and noisy heaters, $500
deposits above and beyond the two nights stay because you are an artist
and don't have an American Express so are operating on what cash you do
have on
your debit card, that same debit card getting declined while trying to
buy that toothbrush (and a trashy magazine you would never buy in NYC
and that you hope that important colleague who's name you just
remembered wont see you buying) because you never travel to
Memphis/Chicago/Indianapolis and therefore the bank was concerned so you
give the magazine back and pay for the fucking toothbrush with the
change left over from the Charbucks coffee and protein platter from this
morning, at which point you get on the phone with said bank, get debit
card hold released which takes 38 minutes which makes you late for the
lecture that now you can't focus on because your wondering if that
deposit is going to be released in time to pay rent on Monday.
***