Showing posts with label Harvest Homecoming parade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvest Homecoming parade. Show all posts

Sunday, October 06, 2019

Poperinge Hop Parade: Now THIS is what I'm talking about.



Thanks, Jeff Gillenwater.

The video depicts highlights of the hops parade in Poperinge, Belgium in 2014. The hops festival there takes place every third year, meaning it's due again in 2020. You'll notice no sirens, police cars, municipal suck trucks, monster rigs, militia jeeps or deafening fire trucks; instead, there are actual humans, many of them walking, some on horseback or in wagons.

Taken as a whole, Poperinge’s hop festival is a recurring delight. This small provincial town possesses a self-image second to none, and the three-day event reflects a much appreciated commitment to local values.

Hop-related events and related revelry take place throughout the festival weekend, but the highlight is the Sunday parade through the tidy streets. The parade actually tells a story, with an accompanying libretto of sorts printed in several languages, periodic chapter markers, and a refreshing absence of commercial considerations.

The story concerns the history of brewing, the history of the hop, and its importance to the Poperinge economy. Onlookers meet the enemies of the hop -- for instance, brightly festooned children as beetles -- and the plant’s friends, other whistling children dressed as birds.

It is delightful. Here are a few links from past parades. Since 1999, I've missed only one of them (2011), and plan are underway for next year.

The 2017 Poperinge Hop Parade, Part One: One must pour the proper foundation for maximum parade enjoyment.


The 2017 Poperinge Hop Parade, Part Two: The procession itself, and where to dine afterward.


2014 Euro Reunion Tour, Day 12.5: The story of hops in parade format.


PRESS RELEASE: "Let’s go to the hops."


Hops are a boy's best friend.

Saturday, October 05, 2019

Gahan inks emergency decree establishing local Democratic Party's parade float as nation's first mobile TIF area.


Remembering HH parade day four years ago, when all I wanted to do was walk the damn parade route, but was not allowed.


The following was published on parade day, 2018. It is enduring an eternal, much like Jeff Gahan's sheer narcissism.

---


When I saw this earlier in the week, it reminded me of the 2015 mayoral campaign. The whole thing got fairly absurd in the end, and in retrospect, I'm happy to have been able to shine a light on a policy that took no account whatever of an independent candidate. I hope it has changed. Will Anna Murray walk with her supporters, or be forced to symbolically abet car-centrism?

I don't know. I do know the street grid is a social justice issue, although few area "progressives" seem capable of acknowledging it.

I'll vote accordingly. Let's rewind.

---

October 2, 2015

Me? I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.


Me?

I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow, because that’s what walkability is all about.

It's about walking.

As of Friday morning, walking the parade route is an option being denied me. I hope this changes.

Before I explain this in greater detail, know that I’m sticking with my 2015 resolution not to re-ignite the annual controversy over Harvest Homecoming, New Albany’s annual autumnal civic festival, best known for its “booth days,” when downtown is given over to a temporary street festival format.

I can compromise on my own two feet, thank you.

I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.

The usual arguments about Harvest Homecoming, pro and con, have been hashed and rehashed. Revolutions of rising expectations are never easy. In the absence of principled municipal governance, nothing’s going to substantively change any time soon, and yet I’m satisfied that a younger generation of Harvest Homecoming’s management truly grasps the need for evolution and accommodation.

Reform is a process, and while painfully slow, there is movement on some fronts. Let’s accept progress in this process, and celebrate this fact.

As for me, I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.

I’m especially grateful to Art Niemeier, who joined the group effort planning tomorrow’s Biers on Parade at the Farmer Market, and has been invaluable. I don’t want to say or do anything that might compromise my gratitude to Art. We’re in possession of an idea (parade day festivities) with significant future promise, one uniting multiple entities. It's a good thing, indeed.

And me?

I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow, because walking is the basic form of human movement.

It comes down to this: As written, Harvest Homecoming’s parade rules do not explicitly acknowledge the possibility that an independent political candidate might participate.

There is a clause restricting the use of convertibles to current office holders, and another confining non-office-holding candidates to their political party’s respective floats.

I hold no office, and I have no party.

Given that I’m probably the foremost local proponent of walkability, I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.

First I was asked by the committee if it could provide a vehicle, and I said thanks, but no thanks.

The walkability guy in a truck? It doesn’t make sense.

In the beginning, all I wanted to do is walk the parade route tomorrow with a group of supporters. Just walk down the street, nothing more, while making the point that it isn’t unusual to walk.

Because it isn’t.

Except when you’re told it cannot be allowed.

At some point during the past months, it was mentioned that perhaps bicycles could be included, though while it would be nice to have bikes represented, actually riding one in a slow-moving parade doesn't compute, although if the idea helped move the negotiation, I thought it acceptable to at least consider pushing a bike.

Although what I’d like to do is just walk the parade route.

As of yesterday, the committee is holding to its interpretation of rules that aren’t explicit in the first place, and has offered this ruling: I can’t walk, because candidates for office must use a wheeled vehicle, and if I choose to ride a bicycle, which is suitably wheeled, there can be only five bikes total.

Have I mentioned that nowhere in the committee’s rules is this wheeled clause mentioned?

Me?

I just want to walk the parade route.

I’ll walk alone, if that helps.

As the candidate of walkability, all I want to do is walk the Harvest Homecoming parade route.

Granted, irony never plays well here, but note that at a time when walkability is one of downtown’s best hopes for continued regeneration, the Harvest Homecoming theme in 2015 is Hot Rod Harvest.

Please, can I just walk the parade route and illustrate that life in this city can be about people, and not just their cars?

All I want to do is walk the parade route tomorrow, just me alone.

Surely this isn't an imposition.

Thanks for your consideration.

Friday, August 09, 2019

Harvest Homecoming announces changes for 2019 as Deaf Gahan plots to pocket the festival in years to come.


A beer festival? That sounds interesting.

Harvest Homecoming organizers announce plans for upcoming festival, by Brooke McAfee (Tom May Every Day)

NEW ALBANY — Festival goers will see a number of changes at this year's Harvest Homecoming Festival, including a new parade schedule and expanded events.

On Thursday, the Harvest Homecoming announced plans for year's festival, which takes place Oct. 5 to Oct. 13. The annual festival — now in its 52nd year — will feature a carnival theme called "Carnifall," and activities include craft/food booths, rides, children's events and live music.

This year's festival will kick off a little later in the day on Oct. 5. The Harvest Homecoming Parade was moved to 3 p.m. instead of its usual noon starting time, and it will be followed by several new events. Attendees can view the floats after the parade as they park around Bicentennial Park, where they can also participate in the Harvest Kickoff Karaoke ...

 ... (The festival) will feature a couple of riverfront concerts, including a Friday night concert with local and regional acts and a Saturday night concert with Katie Toupin, the former lead singer of Houndmouth, and a national act — organizers will announce the headliner in a couple weeks. The riverfront will also feature a Saturday beer festival from noon to 4 p.m., which is a new addition to Harvest Homecoming.

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

The Harvest Homecoming Parade has a new starting time of 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, October 5.

Reality in 2017.

I'm told the reasoning for the later starting time is to encourage parade participation (iffy) and to provide a natural segue into evening dining hours for participants and spectators alike in the hope they'll roam downtown (entirely possible).

It seems like a good idea to me. Should we still begin porchside drinking at 10:00 a.m. or wait until 1:00 p.m.?

Harvest Homecoming Parade
Starts: October 5, 2019 @ 3:00 pm
Ends: October 5, 2019 @ 5:00 pm
Place: Start: New Albany High School End: Bank & Elm Streets

The Harvest Homecoming Parade is the official kick-off to the Harvest Homecoming Festival! Come experience over-the-top floats, vintage cars, and loud bands with our Carni-Fall parade. The Parade kicks off at 3:00 PM from New Albany High School, marches down Vincennes Street then takes a right on Spring Street and ends on Bank Street. You can have a front row seat to all the action, along any street!

New this year – A parade “float show” will begin in bicentennial park immediately following the parade and be available for an up-close look at participating parade floats during Harvest Karaoke.

Friday, April 05, 2019

Changing times, or thinking back to one fine day in 2015 at a parade party down the street.


Back in 1991 when I was teaching English in Kosice (then Czechoslovakia, subsequently Slovakia) I accompanied my boss the hospital administrator to Bratislava; it was something like a five-hour drive each way so he could attend an hour-long meeting. Such was life during pre-internet, post-communism.

I wandered around the future capital city and later met him (and his driver) to eat a meal before departing for the long journey home. The venue was a fantastic old-school beer hall called Mammut (sic -- "Mammoth"), which had been repurposed from use as a malthouse.

The beer hall had multiple levels, like mezzanines clustered around a central open space, with beer from several breweries pouring alongside hearty food. It was very Central European.

I liked it so much that while passing through Bratislava a few years later, I made a time-consuming detour just to go have a beer there. Much to my surprise and disappointment, the beer hall had been transformed into a plasticized modern eatery like a sports bar, with only one brewery's beers on tap and a gaudy plastic casino upstairs.

It was absolutely clear to me that new capitalist owners could do as they pleased with the structure. Their marketplace was local, not a lone traveler from afar, and yet it was depressing all the same.

Humor me and listen to a song from many years later.



A couple of days ago I recalled the scene in the photo at the top of this page. It's the residence of Matt and Brook Brewer, seven houses down from our home, with the date being Harvest Homecoming parade Saturday in 2015.

The late Matt Brewer is standing front left, brandishing a beer. Matt always will be remembered as the city's pre-eminent skateboard dude, and he was a laid-back, good-natured, sweetheart of a guy who died eight months ago after being stuck by a driver only a block from the residence pictured here.

As is customary in America, the driver was not charged with anything.

I first met Matt a long time ago when he took the non-credit IUS beer course that I used to teach. The Brewers arrived down the street in 2013, and then I got to know Matt far better.

Matt was fairly apolitical in the beginning, and his wife Brook surely paid closer attention to these goings-on, but the more we talked, the more interested he became. He let me get to him. Instead of asking what new beer to try, he started making inquiries about local politics.

And, to put it succinctly, Matt was no fan of the incumbent mayor. While remaining far too nice of a guy to address the situation in the rollicking polemical style I typically deploy, he left no doubt as to his feelings. He regarded Jeff Gahan as a joke -- and this helps contextualize the photo.

I was running for mayor in 2015, Matt and Brook were supporters, and coincidentally I'd been precluded from walking in the parade because the parade rules were and are, well, plain stupid.

Look, kids, it's the walkability platform candidate, forced to ride in a car (or push a bicycle without mounting it).

Matt and Brook volunteered to post the Baylor pirate banner and wave some signs around as the parade passed. Eventually I walked down and had a beer with them, and it was a fine day all around.

Afterward Diana and I commented about how fun we'd have during many years to come being their neighbors.

I never wanted it to change, and it did anyway. Now it's 2019. Matt's gone, and their house changed hands earlier this month. Naturally I don't begrudge Brook for selling and moving, and wish the very best to her. She's tops.

I also sincerely and heartily welcome the buyers, our new neighbors seven houses west. Seemingly their first official act was to erect a large Gahan sign in the front yard -- and, of course, that's their absolute right. After all, I have a same-sized David White sign out front in our yard. Political signs are a temporary, seasonal kind of thing, and that's that.

It isn't anger or petulance I'm feeling today, but something akin to discomfort. It's probably another bout of sadness and sorrow at Matt's passing, admittedly accompanied by a measure of enduring frustration at the way car-centrism in America is de facto imperialism, enabling one privileged class of humanity to trample the rights of another segment, as all the while the political class snoozes -- when not self-monetizing from those corporations that benefit the most from car-centrism.

It's merely garden-variety melancholy on an overcast day, thinking back to that awesome autumn Saturday and beers with the Brewers, who wanted to even the playing field by displaying my banner when the parade was being recalcitrant in its officiousness.

As for change, it isn't just a slogan. Change is inevitable. Change often is good. My dispirited mood will change soon enough, and the change will be conducive. I may even accomplish something, for a change.

But I miss you, Matt. You will not be forgotten.

Sunday, October 07, 2018

Recollections of the Gong Show abound as Adam Dickey grabs Mr. Microphone -- and parade onlookers reach out for their wet air sickness bags.



I know, the video is sideways.

To be perfectly honest, so was I.

I was thinking about trying to fix the video, and yet the overall effect seems to capture the mood as Democratic Party chairman Adam Dickey seized a  nearby Mr. Microphone and children lining the parade route fled in terror.

The audio is reason enough to form a new political party. A three-year-old with a tin drum screamed, "Dude, it isn't Halloween yet," but Dickey just kept talking.

Here are a few more views of yesterday's Harvest Homecoming parade.


Wait, wrong photo -- that's the May Day parade in Moscow, circa 1960.


Hold on, just a minute ... I'm not sure how this Poperinge hop parade compilation shot got mixed in here.


Hmm. that's Louisville's Pride Parade earlier this summer.

Here, finally, are two photos from yesterday's Harvest Homecoming parade.



That's right.

The Mayor's Award went to the city's stormwater vehicles, including the Shop Vac on steroids.

What an exciting afternoon it was.

Have the children come out of hiding yet?

Saturday, October 06, 2018

Remembering parade day three years ago, when all I wanted to do was walk the parade route, but was not allowed.


When I saw this earlier in the week, it reminded me of the 2015 mayoral campaign. The whole thing got fairly absurd in the end, and in retrospect, I'm happy to have been able to shine a light on a policy that took no account whatever of an independent candidate. I hope it has changed. Will Anna Murray walk with her supporters, or be forced to symbolically abet car-centrism?

I don't know. I do know the street grid is a social justice issue, although few area "progressives" seem capable of acknowledging it.

I'll vote accordingly. Let's rewind.

---

October 2, 2015

Me? I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.


Me?

I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow, because that’s what walkability is all about.

It's about walking.

As of Friday morning, walking the parade route is an option being denied me. I hope this changes.

Before I explain this in greater detail, know that I’m sticking with my 2015 resolution not to re-ignite the annual controversy over Harvest Homecoming, New Albany’s annual autumnal civic festival, best known for its “booth days,” when downtown is given over to a temporary street festival format.

I can compromise on my own two feet, thank you.

I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.

The usual arguments about Harvest Homecoming, pro and con, have been hashed and rehashed. Revolutions of rising expectations are never easy. In the absence of principled municipal governance, nothing’s going to substantively change any time soon, and yet I’m satisfied that a younger generation of Harvest Homecoming’s management truly grasps the need for evolution and accommodation.

Reform is a process, and while painfully slow, there is movement on some fronts. Let’s accept progress in this process, and celebrate this fact.

As for me, I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.

I’m especially grateful to Art Niemeier, who joined the group effort planning tomorrow’s Biers on Parade at the Farmer Market, and has been invaluable. I don’t want to say or do anything that might compromise my gratitude to Art. We’re in possession of an idea (parade day festivities) with significant future promise, one uniting multiple entities. It's a good thing, indeed.

And me?

I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow, because walking is the basic form of human movement.

It comes down to this: As written, Harvest Homecoming’s parade rules do not explicitly acknowledge the possibility that an independent political candidate might participate.

There is a clause restricting the use of convertibles to current office holders, and another confining non-office-holding candidates to their political party’s respective floats.

I hold no office, and I have no party.

Given that I’m probably the foremost local proponent of walkability, I just want to walk the parade route tomorrow.

First I was asked by the committee if it could provide a vehicle, and I said thanks, but no thanks.

The walkability guy in a truck? It doesn’t make sense.

In the beginning, all I wanted to do is walk the parade route tomorrow with a group of supporters. Just walk down the street, nothing more, while making the point that it isn’t unusual to walk.

Because it isn’t.

Except when you’re told it cannot be allowed.

At some point during the past months, it was mentioned that perhaps bicycles could be included, though while it would be nice to have bikes represented, actually riding one in a slow-moving parade doesn't compute, although if the idea helped move the negotiation, I thought it acceptable to at least consider pushing a bike.

Although what I’d like to do is just walk the parade route.

As of yesterday, the committee is holding to its interpretation of rules that aren’t explicit in the first place, and has offered this ruling: I can’t walk, because candidates for office must use a wheeled vehicle, and if I choose to ride a bicycle, which is suitably wheeled, there can be only five bikes total.

Have I mentioned that nowhere in the committee’s rules is this wheeled clause mentioned?

Me?

I just want to walk the parade route.

I’ll walk alone, if that helps.

As the candidate of walkability, all I want to do is walk the Harvest Homecoming parade route.

Granted, irony never plays well here, but note that at a time when walkability is one of downtown’s best hopes for continued regeneration, the Harvest Homecoming theme in 2015 is Hot Rod Harvest.

Please, can I just walk the parade route and illustrate that life in this city can be about people, and not just their cars?

All I want to do is walk the parade route tomorrow, just me alone.

Surely this isn't an imposition.

Thanks for your consideration.

Thursday, November 02, 2017

Top Ten posts at NA Confidential for October, 2017.

The top story of October fully deserved to be.

Thanks for reading NA Confidential, where we enjoy scanning the neglected periphery for uniquely local perspectives. NAC's October numbers were way up, testifying to a keen ongoing interest in New Albany stories, perhaps because they're being chronically under-served elsewhere.

After all, stenography and religion columnists get us only so far.

The October list begins with ten "honorable mention" posts, before concluding with the Top Ten, escalating to No. 1. Stats are derived from Google's internal numbers listings.

As a special note for October, observe the perfect symmetry of the honorable mention tie at 455. They go together like peanut butter and toadstools.

OCTOBER TEN HONORABLE MENTION

455 (tie)

GREEN MOUSE SAYS: Did BOW give Dan Coffey permission to leverage city-owned ground during the Orange Occupation?


Did the money actually go to the city, or did it go into Dan Coffey's pockets?

Did the Board of Works grant permission for city-owned property to be used in this way?

(Later, the Green Mouse glanced back at BOW's recent minutes, and could find no reference to Coffey, parking, the grassy non-knoll, or permission to conduct business there.)

---

455 (tie)

Books: "The Rage of White Folk ... how the silent majority became a loud and angry minority."


"Each of these books offers a different vantage point from which to view the discontent of white working-class people; taken together, they provide us with a look into the travails, anxieties, and developing rage of a constituency that is often depicted as helping to fuel this period of political reaction. With the exception of Gest’s book, they illustrate some of the limits that emerge when the phrase “white working class” is invoked and, as a result, remind us of the dangers of homogenizing white workers politically. They also serve as a reminder of just how little we still know about the moment we are in."

---

478

Renewing friendships in Haarlem. Being thankful. Promising to be back soon.


On September 20, 2017 mother and daughter arrived by bicycle to Haarlem's Grote Markt, the market square lying outside the doors of the pleasingly esoteric Hotel Amadeus. Diana and I were waiting. It was a letter-perfect autumn day, and so we had an outdoor drink across the way at the Grand Cafe Brinkmann, where it soon became obvious that Marilyn is a dynamo. She'd been raised speaking Dutch with Inge and English with Bill.

---

480

"Pedestrians, who are supposed to have the right-of-way, are required to press a button at an intersection in order to get a walk signal, which should happen automatically."



---

488

Concerned about Gahan's public housing putsch? You are invited to a meeting of We Are New Albany this Wednesday at Destinations Booksellers (7:00 p.m.)


In fact, Gahan's entire political career has been based on non-transparency, and so it's not surprising that while his public housing putsch was being planned during term one, no mention of it was made publicly during the 2015 campaign. Privately? That's another matter. White New Albanian males of Gahan's generation possess their own array of dog whistles pertaining to the ancestral mythology of public housing as mortal threat to a suburbanite's placidity and a city's progress.

---

552

Strong Towns Week: Man buys $15,000 uninhabitable shack to renovate. What could go wrong?


We've all heard about something too big to fail. Welcome to the story of a 700-foot house too small to (be allowed to) succeed.

---

596

UPDATE: 90 days later, Deaf Gahan's "blight and eyesore" has been superseded by "eyesore and blight" -- and DNA jauntily approves.


Boy, what a difference three months makes. Now two-way traffic on Market affords motorists an entirely different view of the former eyesore. As the Green Mouse says, "Those gaping holes and half-buried debris are all autumnal and shit."

Too bad the USA is dropping out of UNESCO, or else we might have a new tourist landmark: The Duggins Cool-newal Urban World Heritage Site. I wonder how many public housing units would fit in this space?

---

597

Pay attention, Shane, because "Joe Lycett has a very interesting story regarding his parking fine."




---

605

MUST LISTEN: This brilliant podcast exposes Jeff Gahan's public housing putsch for what it is, and that's sheer "Let's Pretend We're Democrats" class war brutality.


With respect to Jeff Gahan's machinations v.v. public housing and the New Albany Housing Authority, this podcast is the gold standard. Gahan may be able to coo sweet nothings into the ears of enduringly gullible local media sources, but his ethically and morally bankrupt ongoing actions against New Albany's low-income residents are explicated in full by Myerson.

---

744

Democratic State Senate candidate Anna Murray replies to our question about the New Albany Housing Authority.


Since the New Albany housing issue seems to be one of local, and not state government, and since I am not terribly familiar with all of the details, and since it has been very controversial, this has seemed like a great one to not get involved in at this time. However, since you are so insistent to press me on the issue, I will give you a statement. Please bear in mind that I admittedly do NOT have full information, in part because I do not think full information is yet available at this time.

---

754

HH Parade 4: Watch as Dan "Grand Inquisitor" Coffey throws live copperhead snakes at parade-goers -- but the funeral school has the last (and perhaps only) laugh.


For the kiddos, Coffey had papyrus scrolls detailing the ins and outs of the rhythm method, which paired perfectly with the embryos being tossed onto the street by Right To Life. At the same time, speaking personally, I prefer baby snakes to copperheads, but then again, I'm not a Falangist.

OCTOBER TOP TEN

767

Main Street intersections at Bank and 4th are hazardous for pedestrians. Where's City Hall, apart from a state of denial?


Jeff Speck had thoughts about this. These are 17-foot traffic lanes and 8-foot parking depths. That's a whole 50 feet from one side to another, without any effort to slow traffic or assist pedestrians.

---

834

You see the damnedest sights from the levee on a Friday at lunch.


As I'm sure Lt. Colombo would ask, "Now, if they're the girlfriends or wives with those guys on the bus, why didn't they all get on the bus at the same time, together?"

Surely there are a number of explanations, although when I mentioned it to the Green Mouse, he told me it's a relatively simple matter to hire models for outings, although it's less clear why you'd need them.

---

873

Mike Pence's NFL walkout proves our former governor still isn't "worth a bucket of warm piss."


"This was amateur hour fraud. It was Gulf of Tonkin for idiots: a ham handed effort to isolate people brave enough to dissent in the face of the most powerful people in the world and raise issues of racism that this administration is too craven to discuss. It’s also very disturbing. The very week Sarah Huckabee Sanders spoke about Trump’s “respect for the 1st Amendment,” we had a staged spectacle with the highest levels of government attempting to intimidate and coerce people to not exercise those rights. It’s disgusting and another example of Pence’s degradation, his Faustian bargain with this administration."

---

914

Be careful what you wish for: "The President Pence Delusion," including a pivotal cameo by a New Albanian we all know.


Absolutely vital reading in The New Yorker. It is impossible to summarize several thousand words with just one paragraph. I've chosen to highlight the essay's conclusion. But you're curious aren't you? Well, if you want to know which New Albanian was interviewed for the article, you'll just have to go look for yourself.

---

970

Grid Control, Vol. 28: Elm Street capitulates to two-way modernity with a whimper, not a bang. Now, to the next stage.


I'll always be fascinated by a decade or more of sheer sloth and acrimony, followed by 3-4 years of municipal bureaucratization, then the doomsday predictions of dozens of experts on social media -- and two days after Spring Street became two-way, there was complete and utter silence, with nary a peep since.

---

1,026

It's just music to me: The Louisville Orchestra plays Mostly Mozart at the Ogle Center.


Last night we attended the first of four Louisville Orchestra performances at Indiana University Southeast's Ogle Center as part of this season's Neighborhood Series. On November 11, the LO will be back at Ogle with Teddy Abrams conducting Russian Easter Overture and Scheherazade, two personal favorites by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

---

1,218

From the folks who brought you Exchange and Brookyn, Longboard’s Taco & Tiki is coming to downtown New Albany in 2018.


"The Southern Indiana dining scene continues to see growth as proprietors Ian and Nikki Hall, owners of The Exchange Pub + Kitchen and Brooklyn and the Butcher, announce their latest project, Longboard’s Taco & Tiki."

---

1,434

"Things God Hates: (1) Shitty signs."


---

1,695

At 220 State Street, the gorgeous retro sign hiding behind an atrocious facade, now revealed.



---

1,707

HH Parade 2: A peaceful public housing putsch protest steps all over Deaf Gahan's narcissistic buzz -- and heads surely will roll.


In short, His Excellency had an impromptu Ceausescu moment while soaking up the adoration of the gathered throngs. Not unexpectedly, these protesters weren't mentioned at all in the feel-good News and Tribune article about the rolling snooze-fest. Perhaps someone from the newspaper's burgeoning stable of religious advocacy columnists can perform coverage in future years; at least we'd garner a "hosanna" in this manner.

Thursday, October 12, 2017

ON THE AVENUES: The Orange Occupation is here again, and as a precaution, we’ve baked a handy file into this cake.

ON THE AVENUES: The Orange Occupation is here again, and as a precaution, we’ve baked a handy file into this cake. 

A weekly column by Roger A. Baylor.

It's a parade to celebrate the harvest, and a very entertaining one. I always look forward to seeing it come past.

The brightly costumed children, the artistic floats, the uniformed marching bands, the varied animals -- it’s a mobile pageant featuring a cross-section of the community’s past and present.

The parade is superbly choreographed, with clever twists at every juncture. Whether it’s your first experience or sixth -- or even more -- there's something to like. Adults and kids alike crowd the streets to watch.

The sole drawback?

This parade occurs once every three years, and unfortunately, it takes place several thousand miles away in Poperinge, Belgium.

Well, which parade did you think I was talking about?

---

Poperinge’s triennial parade boasts nary a single lights-flashing police car, flatulent elected official, ear-splitting fire truck, snazzy showroom convertible, outmoded local political party or mobile sewage-sucking bureaucratic hunk of showpiece.

Rather, Poperinge’s procession tells the story of a time-honored social, economic and culinary phenomenon: the humble hop -- beer flavoring agent, insomnia cure and a cash crop raised by many a Westhoek farmer over the centuries.


Back here in New Gahania, Harvest Homecoming began 50 years ago as a paean to the pumpkin, a nondescript gourd that may or may not be familiar to visiting festival vendors of Bangladeshi woven articles and Chinese trinkets.

Pumpkins have few redeeming qualities of their own apart from desperate last-ditch pulping into pies, which are edible only when spices are added to compensate for a complete absence of character -- not unlike the Floyd County Democratic Party, if you stop to think about it.

The FCDP would be so much more interesting if meetings were held in a vindaloo joint or a couscouserie, and we have neither at present.

Besides, which substance makes beer taste better, pumpkins or hops? Seriously, pumpkin beers are so awful that when it comes time for a vigorous shampooing, your dog won’t even come out from under the chair until you produce a can of Bud Light Lime.

Although perhaps I'm digressing.

There was something else missing from Poperinge’s marvelous, family-friendly hop parade: a plastic fetus like this one, being handed (or worse, thrown) to children along the Harvest Homecoming parade route by Right to Life – or was it Dan Coffey’s Knights of Columbus?


It’s only a matter of time until Coffey demands a facade grant for Right to Life. I suppose embryos would make suitable decorative gargoyles, right? In truth, even a parade governing committee rule book the size of Jeff Gahan’s ego can’t cover every contingency, and America’s perennial obsession with sheer tackiness is difficult to evade.

Still, perhaps the committee needs to be more aware of such matters.

I’m just afraid they’ll move the embryo-flingers to a pole position nearer the front of the queue, in the hope they might block the view of anti-putsch NAHA protesters until the Democratic party chairman's swollen head does the trick.

(As you’ve no doubt noticed, every third year after a trip back to Belgium, it’s very, very hard for me.)

Thankfully, that’s why we have beer – consumed uproariously, continuously, even intravenously; always hoppy, and never tainted with the vegetal detritus of Jack O’ Lanterns. Without beer, both New Gahania and Harvest Homecoming would exist as perilously unaltered states of mind, so as an alternative, why not stay drunk for a change?

A handful of Oktoberfests, and the stress just seems to disappear.

---

That’s right, pained citizenry. New Albany’s peculiar institution of Harvest Homecoming has arrived, and the Orange Occupation is manning checkpoints throughout downtown. I'll be sure to erase the Poperinge stamp from my passport, lest my solitude be interrupted for immediate waterboarding.

One question alone has been on the lips of friends and foes alike: Our parallel cultural monopoly arm has been commandeering municipal resources for half a century, but can Harvest Homecoming's monomania survive the sheer primal terror of two-way traffic?

Earlier this year, we sought entries in pursuit of an NA Confidential Top Ten list of Harvest Homecoming Coping Skills. Seven suggestions were received, each one a variation on a theme:

“Get out of Dodge and stay away until it’s over.”

No pumpkin ale, Sherlock. Last year the Confidentials took the most rational available one-way route away from the prevailing discord -- specifically, the northbound lanes of I-65, which got us started on the journey to Madison, Wisconsin, and four classic days of cool blue sanity far removed from Nawbany’s civic daze.

Okay, okay; you're right. My therapist wants me to work on that negativity, but you'll kindly notice his office is located in Louisville.

Properly rendered, community festivals are just the sort of exercise to promote good times, unite the citizenry, help us bond through joy and better alcohol (on second thought, that’s a redundancy), and maybe provide another yearly excuse to conduct a spate of deep street cleaning – preferably, both before and after the crowds come through.

Unfortunately, when it comes to celebrations, New Albany prefers the ponderous legacy of suburban bludgeoning over subtle urban stilettos. In rhetorical terms, so do I, and yet my feelings about Harvest Homecoming probably are more nuanced than they often appear to be.

I like it just fine, except when I don’t, and then I dislike it very much.

---

At base, Harvest Homecoming is New Albany’s annual 800-lb municipal gorilla, or stated more mildly, it is the granddaddy of all festivals in this slowly recovering, stubbornly hidebound city.

The annual arrival of the itinerant carnie corps follows the opening Saturday parade, an increasingly dull “family-oriented” exercise, and then on the following Thursday the heart of the historic downtown business district is handed over lock, stock and storm water drain to Harvest Homecoming’s mysterious, Kremlinesque enforcement committee.

Four solid days of throng-crowded booths ensue, increasingly manned not by local indies but roving huckster mercenaries, dispensing foodstuffs, arts, crafts, politics and anti-abortion counseling, and completely disrupting any semblance of downtown commerce as it is meant to function normally.

Increasingly, this yearly disruption constitutes the flash point. For decades, there was little objection to Harvest Homecoming’s yearly occupation of downtown, because downtown was a ghost town.

Now it isn’t, and dynamic revitalization has a predictable way of igniting a revolution of rising expectations among a new generation of downtown business owners, investors and clients.

These are plain facts, acknowledged even by those refusing to lift a finger to do something about it.

As yet, there is no obvious solution to emergent dynamism’s clash with orange-hued conservatism, primarily because the low level of daily communication between various interested parties makes sparse dialogue between North and South Korea look like a beer hall sing-along in Munich -- and City Hall couldn't be bothered to exert a constructive word.

To a painstakingly slow and incremental extent, there have been concessions, and as Harvest Homecoming’s grand committee (finally) generationally reloads, the festival slowly enters into a necessary process of reinvention. May it proceed a bit faster, please.

But from the standpoint of newer downtown businesses, the root equation remains largely unaltered: Harvest Homecoming’s longtime business model is dependent on the existence of a moribund downtown grid cleansed of daily activity. Mercifully, this no longer is the case, although it counts for nothing when the Orange Occupation descends.


If anything, downtown will continue to grow even less conducive to the festival’s needs in the years to come, particularly as downtown residency becomes the norm, not the exception. Those upstairs apartments? They’re the 800-lb gorilla’s Achilles heel.

My personal nuances are these: I don’t dislike the idea of Harvest Homecoming, only its current implementation. I believe it can be adapted to take full advantage of potential symmetry between it and an evolving downtown business district, without sacrificing its tradition, and to the benefit of all parties involved.

I envision a downtown food and drink court on the current booth grid, one maximizing the uniqueness of our burgeoning dining scene, retaining space for booths while not blocking year-long purveyors.

I foresee a celebration of what downtown New Albany is, and is becoming.

You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.

I’m just the only one regularly stupid enough to dream aloud. For this trait, I'm sure to be punished.

Again.

Though increasingly, I don’t give a tinker’s damn. Next year at the Harvest Homecoming parade, maybe I'll start tossing out some of these.


---

Recent columns:

October 5: ON THE AVENUES REVISITED: Chocolate covered frozen banana republic, or "understanding" Harvest Homecoming, our peculiar institution.

September 28: ON THE AVENUES: Sniffles, gratitude and mental exhaustion. Apparently vacation is over.

September 21: ON THE AVENUES with THE BEER BEAT: Getting in tune with the straight and narrow.

September 14: ON THE AVENUES with THE BEER BEAT: Beef Steak and Porter always made good belly mortar, but did America’s “top” steakhouses get the memo?

Sunday, October 08, 2017

HH Parade 4: Watch as Dan "Grand Inquisitor" Coffey throws live copperhead snakes at parade-goers -- but the funeral school has the last (and perhaps only) laugh.


For the kiddos, Coffey had papyrus scrolls detailing the ins and outs of the rhythm method, which paired perfectly with the embryos being tossed onto the street by Right To Life.

At the same time, speaking personally, I prefer baby snakes to copperheads, but then again, I'm not a Falangist.


Speaking of the grimness of Coffey's reaping and droopy snakes, for comic relief comes the single best parade entry of the day, bar none.




It was a spark of creativity amid the dross. The governing committee usually manages to extinguish any attempt at offbeat humor of the sort that might embarrass the hallowed institution (3rd place, seriously?), so abundant kudos to the funeral school.

You were a ray of light, if not a venomous serpent.

Earlier: HH Parade 3: It's #HisNA, so Democrats downsize the float, but jack up their hypocrisy.

HH Parade 3: It's #HisNA, so Democrats downsize the float, but jack up their hypocrisy.


My, how the formerly dominant elites have downsized.

The GOP had its usual monster truck hauling a veritable reviewing stand, although in fairness, the Democrats mobilized quite a few supporters to walk the route.

(Harvest Homecoming's parade committee does not allow political candidates to walk, and that's unmitigated stunted horizons bullshit, but we'll save it for another day.)

Meanwhile, it's a question to which we'll be returning often these next 12 months, as stated with typical precision by Jeff Gillenwater.

So (Dan) Canon won’t separate himself from or stand up to the likes of Dickey and Gahan in the local party structure but we’re supposed to believe he’s going to challenge DNC heavies at the national level?

As such, behold the mysterious unity of the hypocrisy trinity.


Exactly what was coursing though the heroic party of the downtrodden's (sic) minds (sic redux) as they passed the public housing putsch protesters? 


Canon: I'm with you -- you deserve justice!

Gahan: Um, not so fast newbie.

Dickey: We have the best social media ever. 

Hmm.

What Gillenwater said.

By the way, something like four years later, Adam & the Faux Democrats are as yet censoring me on social media. Evidently it's a sentence with no appeal and no end -- much like our daily lives enduring Adam's inanity.


They exude gestures of social justice ... so long as free speech isn't part of the bargain, and hypocrisy of this degree simply cannot be alchemized overnight in a laboratory.

Rather, it's as instinctive as the bacteria in their guts.

Earlier: HH Parade 2: A peaceful public housing putsch protest steps all over Deaf Gahan's narcissistic buzz -- and heads surely will roll.

From October:

NAHA and Pleasant Ridge? They're lookalikes, and it's only a matter of time until Jeff Gahan is exposed to the same scrutiny as Bob Hall.

So far, it seems that Adam Dickey is protecting his municipal meal ticket, but the party chairman's only hope for Democratic "progress" in the 9th district as a whole is Dan Canon. But our fair Boy Wonder can't defy gravity forever.

From September:

The Putsch Man Cometh: Jeff Gahan waxes delusional about being a public housing "advocate," then cheerfully explains why he should be summarily deposed in 2019.

Tell it to Gahan, and tell me, Adam Dickey: How is it that a regressive like Jeff Gahan and a progressive like Dan Canon can somehow co-exist in your hypocritical, tottering party tent?

How many masters can you personally serve before the whole rotten edifice comes crashing down around your slickly ambitious earlobes?

From May:

ON THE AVENUES: Would a Canon candidacy compromise Deaf Gahan's and Mr. Dizznee's shizz show? A boy can dream.

Jeff Gahan owns the attack on public housing as mayor, and Adam Dickey owns it as party chairman. Gahan’s purge isn't about poverty; it's about property. If Dan Canon runs for office, Gahan’s and Dickey’s hypocrisy is going to look like it came straight out of Francoist Spain.

HH Parade 2: A peaceful public housing putsch protest steps all over Deaf Gahan's narcissistic buzz -- and heads surely will roll.



Very seldom apart from eye-rolling satire (our default coping mechanism in New Gahania) can it be said that New Albany's ever somnolent Harvest Homecoming parade actually boasted a highlight, but yesterday was the gratifying exception that proves the rule.

In short, His Excellency had an impromptu Ceausescu moment while soaking up the adoration of the gathered throngs.

Not unexpectedly, these protesters weren't mentioned at all in the feel-good News and Tribune article about the rolling snooze-fest.

Perhaps someone from the newspaper's burgeoning stable of religious advocacy columnists can perform coverage in future years; at least we'd garner a "hosanna" in this manner.

However, reporter Elizabeth Beilman brilliantly captured a golden moment amid the Harvest of Gold(en) Showers for Public Housing.


Beilman posted a video at the link above. Here's a screenshot.


Let's take a closer look.


Earlier in the video, the mayor is seen looking to his left. He obviously takes note of the protesters, because his head snaps back so quickly that onlookers are seen to be calibrating the prospect of whiplash.

His second glance is captured in the zoom -- and one needn't be well versed on any of this to know exactly what happened early this morning, after Deaf had enjoyed a few Bud Light Limes and reached a rolling boil.


The anguish from the parade committee is palpable. How dare these juvenile dissidents intrude on the hallowed procession?

I look upon it differently: Finally!

Next: Adam Dickey's local Democrats redefine hypocrisy for a new generation.

Earlier:

HH Parade 1: But of course Deaf Gahan's dog park won his own Mayor's Award.

NAHA and Pleasant Ridge? They're lookalikes, and it's only a matter of time until Jeff Gahan is exposed to the same scrutiny as Bob Hall.

HH Parade 1: But of course Deaf Gahan's dog park won his own Mayor's Award.



Because that's how Dear Leader rolls in irony-free Nawbany.

Now, apropos of nothing, here are some photos of the parade we witnessed three weeks ago in Poperinge, Belgium.





Next: Public housing protesters shatter Deaf Gahan's esteemed self-image.

Earlier:

The 2017 Poperinge Hop Parade, Part Two: The procession itself, and where to dine afterward.