That One Time I Used The Restroom At Sarah Palin’s House in Alaska

..and that’s not even the funniest part.

I also told Bristol Palin, “I love you, Mommy.” 

And if that’s enough to make you wince and wonder, I read, no, I WROTE Bristol’s diary entries.

What in the actual fuck am I talking about? 

Some of the homies on Facebook know because they were there, too. My buddy Rick Kleinsmith got a postcard autographed for his aunt. My buddy Brad Thomas became the unofficial Mayor of Wasilla. My buddy JustinandAmy De Nino knew the highways, er, highway, like the back of his hand. And my buddy Neil Gallegos-Rodríguez put me in touch with his buddy XXXX who hooked us up with the vegetation when we landed. My buddy Matt Lutz piloted the plane. 

So, what in the actual fuck am I talking about? 

Bruh, we produced Bristol Palin’s Lifetime reality series, Life’s A Tripp at the Pain compound in Alaska and then in LA, in a mansion with her sister, Willow. 

The opening sequence of the show involved Bristol picking up a phone and talking to Tripp. We recreated the moment, and I played Tripp on the other line–in order to make it feel ‘real,’ of course. After faking a 15 second conversation, I decided to end the call by impersonating Tripp. 

“I love you, Mommy.” 

I watched her reaction on tape on repeat with a barrel of laughs. 

So, at the end of every episode, America’s most despised teen mom opened her journal and reflected on the episode’s events. I wrote those because, you know, I can tap into single mom vibes like that. I couldn’t find a clip of an episode’s ending, so this will have to suffice.

The series lasted a solitary season. I learned enough about the Palin’s to write a widely ignored book, but I thought I’d drop this post instead.

Speaking of books, working on the show required me reading both Bristol and Levi’s books. 

No pain, no gain.

Life’s a tripp.

Raising My Son to Raise the Dead

My son, Joaquin, is eight.

Full of life.
Full of love.
Full of questions.

And as I learned yesterday, full of faith.

On Monday, my wife and I drove our kids to San Diego to pay respects to their Great-Grandmother, Leonor Baez, a pioneering woman who not only built a home, family and church in Rosarito but a lasting legacy of strength and bad-assery, forever evidenced in my bad-ass wife.

Leonor lived to nearly 90. She smoked several times a day, often waving to the priests across the street with her free hand as they walked in and out of the church she helped build.


On the two hour drive to San Diego, we listened to music, talked early childhood , listened to more music and entertained a range of questions from the kids.

“What’s a Mormon?”
“What’s a Baptist?”
“What’s peace and quiet?”

You can trust I did my best to over-explain.

“You see…Martin Luther King Jr. was named after Martin Luther, who was the person that nailed 95 theses…”

‘Actually, Dad, Martin Luther King Sr. was named after Martin Luther.’

That was Maya.

And on and on.

And this and that.

When we got to the mortuary, we were greeted with a temperature check at the door.

The viewing happened in rotating shifts by household. These things are always tough but the isolated grieving made it more difficult, less humane. Before wrapping up the viewing portion, we had one last opportunity to say farewell.

Joaquin wanted to go back in. I took him by myself. When we got to the casket, Joaquin lifted his hands, as if performing some sort of magic trick. I was dumbstruck.

“What are you doing, bruh,” I hushed.

“I’m really into this Jesus thing right now, so I’m trying to see if I can heal her. Or bring her back to life.”

It didn’t work.

But it didn’t stop him from trying, again. Down at the grave site, hands lifted, the boy tried. Again, in the mausoleum, trying.

You know what? Maybe it did work.

Not on Leonor but on me.

Blow The Whistle: Picking Up After Students at Brandeis U

I washed dishes w/ Hugo Asamoah (Kif) during our first year at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts.

We were students in the Brandeis Transitional Year Program (TYP). Me, one of 4 Mexican-Americans on campus and Kif from Cambridge’s Malden Sqaure, alumnus of Ringe & Latin and a smack talking, hood genius.

For the unawares, Brandeis is was and forever will be predominately Jewish. The college was started in the late 40’s as a response to rampant anti-semitism in the Ivy League. The student body in the early 90s was 80%+ white (this is anecdotal but I did search for exact numbers and nada).

After MLK Jr was assassinated in ’68, black students on campus demanded the administration address inequities on campus. The TYP program was created as a concession.

Then, in ’69, a black TYP student was shot in the cheek with a BB gun while on campus. The black students weren’t having it. They took over an administrative building for 11 days, presented a list of demands and renamed the campus Malcolm X University. You can read more about the ordeal here.

Both Kif and I had jobs on campus. We worked in the dining hall. Now, dining Services was a good look for us for the obvious reasons. But it was a terrible look for equally obvious reasons. You see, part of my job included picking up trays students had lazily left behind.

So, after about a week of this denigrating dumb shit, I bought a whistle. Then, when students left a tray on the table, I’d blow a whistle on their asses.

That’s on mommas.

Low Budget Rap Act Tour Story 113: Los Banos, CA

Sometime around 2005, me and the longtime homies and apostate Christian rappers, Free Agent (Mike Parham) & Budzo Supreme (Isaac Forsman) formed The Space Cadets.

I’d some limited success in Latin rap circles the year prior, performing at quinceneras, liquor store ribbon cutting ceremonies and a car wash to raise money for a DUI bail (Frankie, I hope your tia’ Lencha learned her fucking lesson).

That summer, I’d been invited to perform in Central California by a Chicano rap promoter.

Now, as a non-gang member esoteric Latino rapper with white and black group members, I thought we were safe to travel up north, where the long-standing deadly conflict between northern and southern Mexican-American youth had killed many a folk.

After the 5 hour drive to Los Banos, we landed in the two bit tavern where we were scheduled to perform.

Half the crowd loved us. The other 5 people looked like they wanted to shoot us. They were waving red rags as if auditioning for a Lil Wayne video.

After our song about traveling to Mars on an intergalactic blunt and our ditty about being caged inside a beat machine, we packed our shit up and hightailed to the Hotel 7.9 where we stood vigil till daylight broke, at which point we peeled out, leaving only the dust that greeted us behind.

Big Brown Mind Trick: How To Know What You Don’t Know

Words are magic. Watch.

Abracadabra.

My favorite example, tho, has to do with how re-framing a question can break through the noise and allow for helpful, even insightful, responses.

There’s one particular trick that’s always a hoot to deploy. I first learned it as a Literature Instructor at Harvey Mudd College’s Upward Bound program.

Often, students respond to teacher questions in class with a reluctant, “I don’t know.”

The typical teacher reaction is to move on to the next student. But, I learned, if the teacher instead responds with: What would you say if you did know the answer?” sometimes surprising and true answers follow, almost as if out of nowhere.

What does this demonstrate?

On the teaching side, there’s more than one way to ask a question in order to get a desired response. If your questions aren’t getting the types of responses you want, re-examine the question. There’s likely a better way to ask it.

On the student side, we sometimes close ourselves to the prospect of internal discovery…out of fear of being wrong or seen as wrong or ignorant or deficient. But what if you did know the answer but simply didn’t give yourself the mental time and space to articulate it? This is one reason good teachers are important. We facilitate discovery.

I’m thinking about this today because I recently used this big brown mind trick on a CVS cashier to remarkable success. I rushed into the store, headed straight to the cashier and asked if they carried paper name tag stickers thingies (I was sure to include every seo term). To my chagrin and befuddlement, she said, “No.

No? OK. But if you did carry them, which aisle would they be on?

“6.”

Raise the Sword, Praise the Lord

I wield my religion as a weapon.

For example, in 2013 I was at Memphis in May International Festival with my friend Brad Orrison and the crew from The Shed BBQ and Blues Joint, you know…out there winning World Championships and shit.

On Day 3, big ol’ bad security wouldn’t let me into the fairgrounds because my pass was this or that and red and circular when it was supposed to be blue and square or whatever.

I urgently plead my case through a chain linked fence.

Nothing.

I desperately made some calls from the other side of a chain linked fence.

Nothing.

That’s when I lifted my hands, faced down security and prayed OUT LOUD that “…the Lord would lift the veil from these rent-a-cops eyes and allow them to see the good work that is being done in here on the grill in your blessed name.”

Nothing.

Rally Tho? How Ping Pong Is Like the Creative Process Pt. 2

The longest sanctioned competitive ping pong rally is over 10 minutes long and watching it immediately reminds you that you probably have something better to do with your time.

(But do you tho?)

In part one of this three part series, we explored a few ways the ping pong volley is like the creative process, where an interplay of ideas helps establish a rhythm, set the vibe and display skill sets. Today, we explore what the ping pong rally can teach us about facilitating rewarding creative collaboration.

DO YOU EVEN RALLY, BRUH?

By rally, I simply mean a prolonged period of back and forth pinging and ponging. A strict definition is hard to come by but like pornography, you know it when you see it.

(The link above is to an entry on ostensive definition, in case you were afraid to click.)

During a ping pong match, rallying does at least three important things: 1) it signals to the other player that you’re at least as interested in the means as you are in the ends; 2) it establishes and fuels momentum; 3) it sets the table for creative flourishes.

While outscoring your opponent is the objective, it’s often not the only goal when playing. While competition is a driving force, the quality of any match turns on the players’ cooperation–literally, how well they operate together while playing. A willingness to rally is a signal to the other player that having fun, and working together, is at least as important as competing. The means is at least as important as the ends.

My favorite part of any rally is the way momentum builds to a crescendo. Momentum is an intangible force that’s hard to locate but impossible to deny. Each ping and pong of a rally pushes the game towards its unknown end and is akin to building a plane while flying it. And while you work to sustain a rally, there’s an ebb and flow to the competitiveness at play.

Rallying can appear rudimentary but it’s foundational to more creative game play. Its during a rally that players attempt to execute strong forehands, cross-body returns and slams. And during a rally, a player often switches quickly between offensive and defensive postures. This requires an agility that results in heightened game play. Acting and reacting are equally important.

BE CREATIVE

You guessed it, the creative process in uncannily similar. Rallying ideas is key to getting the most of your collaborations.

It’s important to head into the collaborative process valuing the means as much as the ends. Values like charity, collegiality and curiosity will go a long way in encouraging participation. Charity is a willingness to see the best version of an idea. Collegiality places people over product, while curiosity signals an intellectual openness.

Momentum is key to driving the creative process. When it develops, you want to feed it so that it’s potential energy continues to accrue. You feed the process by contributing ideas that move the project towards the desired outcome. And sometimes you contribute best by getting out of the way.

Every good rally culminates with a score. When it comes to the creative process, you can score by playing both offense and defense. You play offense when you generate new ideas and you play defense, if you will, when you pose questions that help refine existing ideas. An offensive approach often frames contributions in terms of “How about” and “What if,” while a defensive approach will lean into “Why?” and “Who?”.

Rallying is one of the most exciting parts of playing ping pong, rivaled only by the slam. Check for that article next.