Friday, November 25, 2005

Made in Minnesota or Petaluma. Mad Hatter Tea House, St. Paul

1: I notice you have some photographs.

2: Yeah. For a long time I've been photographing traditional manufacturing processes at places like Red Wing Shoes and Faribault Woolen Mills. They're both old manufacturing companies, but they figured out how to compete in the global market, and both are doing fairly well now.

1: When I lived in San Francisco, I wish I'd had time to document a twine company in Petaluma. Petaluma was a town known mostly for chickens, but now it's more upscale. They have a lot of other things going on there now. Sushi restaurants, and everything else. But when you first get off the freeway, you see this old building with the roof caved in over the parts of the factory they don't use anymore.

2: Do they still make twine?

1: Yeah. I was so intrigued, I stopped in and the guy there showed me around. It was amazing. There was this one bank of twine machines driven by leather belts.

2: Red Wing Shoes has been around 100 years this year, and they still have some of their original equipment. They made new machines modeled after the 1905 machines, and people say they don't work as well. The original machines don't break down as often.

1: Nowadays we don't want to spend the money to make something that lasts 20 years. That's why the old stuff works better. I really enjoy the old stuff, the craftsmanship. But if you have an economic model set up to make money, purely, it doesn't make sense to sink all that money into something like equipment. When resources become scarce, as they may become sometime soon here, it makes more sense to make things that last.

2: They have some washers and dryers that are 50 years old and still work. They don't have any electronics. That's the thing.

3: We bought our first fridge in 1948, and it still works. It doesn't keep the ice cream cold, but it never did.

1: It's probably not as energy-efficient as new fridges.

3: Yeah.

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

I Don’t Trust That Lake. DeGidio's Restaurant & Bar, St. Paul

1: They asked me to go out there, but I’m not going out on that lake. I don’t trust that lake.

2: What lake?

1: Mille Lacs.

2: I used to go out there all the time.

1: Yeah, they have three ice houses out there.

3: Well, you can’t go out now.

1: No, not now! Hey, someone jumped in there tonight. There was a bunch of police cars and they were going to try and fish out the body. You know, by the waterfall? Right by the dam. Ya know, if you’re gonna do it, do it right. Do it off the High Bridge.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

People, People, Everywhere. W.A. Frost, St. Paul

1: San Francisco has a lot of people on the streets.

2: I haven't been to San Francisco in years.


1:
I was there a couple years ago. I was having a couple drinks with friends, and I thought I'd walk back to my motel. The people I was with told me to take a cab. There were people sleeping on the sidewalk. I thought, if I walk purposefully, they won't bother me.


2: Were they on drugs?


1:
They were asleep.


3:
People are wacko.


...

1: So, um, people are very surprised at the mix of people. It's a very interesting mix.

3: I love interesting.


2: I went to a poetry reading.


1: Did you have to write a poem yourself?


2: Oh no.


3: My neighbor lady has a garden tour. She has a gorgeous azalea. It's beautiful. Mine is smaller than her's.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Two Men, One Doing All the Talking. Chino Latino, Mpls.

You responded to him with "Hide the money." Hide the money? Fuck the money. Take it.

Friday, November 04, 2005

Boho Chick. Sophie Joe's, St.Paul

1: Is there such a thing as Boho Chick?

2:
You mean Boho Chic.

1: I do?

2:
Yes.

1:
So, it isn't C-H-I-Q-U-E?

2: No, it's C-H-I-C, and it's pronounced "chic." Do you know about fox fur? Some people call it faux fur.