Humble servant of the Nation

Like getting drunk with the Brady Bunch

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No one could have prepared us for this. I’m not talking about the dispiriting global roll out of a life destroying pandemic and its crippling economic consequences.

It’s the petty, the trivial, the so far off the map it was beyond our imagination corollaries that had escaped us until we were slap bang in the middle of it.

We always knew that politics was show business for ugly people, but we really had no idea just how ugly until our news services became replete with interviews conducted with iso subjects using some God-awful cam chat software like FaceTime or Skype.

There is little or no work for camera operators these days – a guild of men and women who hold the secrets of framing and light on the human face or make-up artists who apply almost invisible covers to some otherwise nauseating facial skin eruption.

On Wednesday I saw an interview with Kevin Rudd with the former PM sitting so close to his laptop or phone camera, I could see every blemish and burst capillary and count every nose hair. The answer is 278 if anyone is interested.

It’s enough to drive us all to drink but even that is becoming weird.

Later this afternoon, many workplaces will resort to Friday night Zoom drinks where colleagues will sit in front of their computers and pretend to enjoy themselves.

It is just about the saddest thing I can think of and I’ve been to Disneyworld. It’s like getting drunk with the Brady Bunch but somehow even more pitiful. I said this on Twitter two weeks ago and was piled on by Friday drink Zoomsters enjoying their first glass or two of the sponsor’s product. But that was when the convivial, social aspects of alcohol consumption had just kicked in.

After a few more glasses and with them the arrival of some of alcohol’s less agreeable effects, many returned to Twitter to apologise. Some were sobbing. In desperate attempts to create a pre-pandemic social environment, the Zoom drinks hook-ups merely left people feeling even lonelier than they were before.

In the first quarter of the year, Netflix added 15.9 million subscribers to its global running total of 190 million subscribers. I predict this will go into fairly steep decline next year now that all worthwhile productions have entered enforced hiatus. Netflix programming in 2021 is likely to begin and end with socially distanced sock puppets.

For now, people are attempting to replicate the cinema experience in its most irritating and annoying form by downloading an extension to Netflix called Netflix Party. People form groups and watch movies together although on screens far apart. Fair enough, we are social animals after all.

This extension shrinks the screen, which is bad enough but worse, adds a chat box where people can annoyingly type out their feels in words and/or emjois as the plot unfolds. This is scarify like replicating the appalling behaviour of cinema goers pre-COVID-19 who would scroll through their phones, chat aloud to anyone who listened and generally behaved like they were sitting in their own living rooms.

It is creating a fantasy world that is actually worse than reality and that’s tough to pull off in a pandemic.

But by far the most unpredictable consequence of COVID-19 is that almost everyone is dispensing pharmacological advice. It is like revisiting the snake oil salesmen who travelled around on bullock drays in the 19th Century offering universal panaceas which turned out to be either cocaine or heroin in alcohol solutions, depending on what they had on hand at the time.

Take the case of chloroquil or hydroxychloroquil. Remember that? Fabulous to ward off the malarial fevers if you got ‘em. It was pronounced a possible miracle cure for COVID-19 and created massive hoarding among nations and health services alike.

“It’s a very strong, powerful medicine. But it doesn’t kill people,” Trump said less than three weeks ago.

But it turns out it does kill people, especially those suffering arrythmia or pre-existing heart conditions. At least these were the findings of a yet to be peer reviewed study of treatment provided to 368 patients at veterans’ hospitals across the US.

The report reads: “Specifically, hydroxychloroquine use with or without co-administration of (an antibiotic) azithromycin did not improve mortality or reduce the need for mechanical ventilation in hospitalised patients. On the contrary, hydroxychloroquine use alone was associated with an increased risk of mortality compared to standard care alone.”

Look, when I want my car serviced, I don’t park it out the front of Spec Savers and throw the shop wallah my keys. I am not going to get a haircut from a lawyer or dental work from a panel beater. So it is sensible not to gob down dangerous medications on the advice of a politician or one of his or her barrackers in the media.

But I understand the need to find a cure, to scour the global medicine cabinet for something, anything that might make everything go back to where it was six months ago.

There is, of course, a solution. And it was one practised by the Hells Angels in San Francisco way back in 1968 and the Summer of Love.

The Angels had by fair means but mainly foul, stitched up the burgeoning hallucinogenic market and did so by securing the services of the King of Acid, amateur biochemist, Augustus Owsley Stanley. Stanley manufactured the LSD hippies and assorted freaks (of which there were many in 1968) lusted after and which bore his name, Owsley Blue.

Save a few hours spent at a UCLA library, Owsley had no training in biochemistry and his efforts in establishing a functioning laboratory could be a bit hit and miss.

And so, after Owsley whipped up a new batch, the Angels would stomp in, grab a tab and feed it to a young pledge named Trevor.

The Angels would then sit back and watch Trevor closely. If Trevor was giggling away or engaged in passionate embrace with one of the posters on the walls, all good. But if Trevor took to the fourth-floor rooftop in the firm belief he had developed powers of flight, Owsley had some work to do.

As quality assurance goes, it’s about as good as it gets with amateur pharmacology. In a world where amateur pharmacology is de rigeur, Trevors become the food tasters of the 21st Century, our gateway to health security in a COVID-19 present.

“Have a nibble on this Trevor and sit over there. Let me know if you need a bucket.”

If you’ve just picked up some bread from the shop but someone had coughed in your vicinity, ask Trevor if he would like a sandwich.

“I’ve just washed my hands, can you push the trolley around the supermarket, Trevor?”

“Can you sit in the middle, please Trevor?”

“Leave the dog alone, Trevor.”

The one thing we could not have foreseen in times of pandemic is the acute need for Trevors. The dearth of Trevors is a growing global concern. And here in this country, we’re going to need more Trevors than ever. But if there aren’t enough to go around, a Kevin will do at a pinch.

This column was first published in The Australian on 24 April, 2020.

28 Comments

  • John L says:

    Hilarious Jack.

    It should be preserved as a cutting insight into contemporary life under the Corona shutdowns .

    I have a few mates who get together for a breakfast once a month – somebody suggested a Zoom breakfast.
    I declined – I could think of nothing worse than watching somebody masticate at close range.

  • Dwight says:

    Have to confess I got a text yesterday from one of my best friends. Having Skype beers with him on Saturday arvo. We’ll see how it goes.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Further to Dwight’s spot on comment in yesterday’s topic (April 29 at 9.22pm), re the outrageous presser. Twiggie’s disgraceful performance was certainly a lot more than simply a case of him being unable to see the forest for the trees.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes Jack I agree, lawyers may not be very good barbers but I recently had some dental work done and I’m sure the surgeon was either using a panel beater’s pick hammer or a dollie while he had his fist half way down my gullet.

    That aside, I think most may agree that our politicians and CMOs have certainly clipped our wings and many folk have taken a haircut at the stock-market. Someone has to put their foot down soon so we can pull our fingers out and get back on an even keel before we find ourselves up shite creek without a paddle.

  • Boa says:

    I’m wondering how well people are going to come off from living this world of no contact – what the withdrawal symptoms will be – or perhaps rather, having to engage the inclusion symptoms once again.
    I have really enjoyed my Zoom yoga with my cousin in the UK. Morning for them – evening for me. So I’ve been able to have a couple of whiskies prior to loosen up the tense recalcitrant limbs – and join the North Yorkshire village folk. Yoga is excruciating – and the breathing they expect one to do is ridiculous. So I just breathe away as normal and am confident in the knowledge that my entire body cannot be viewed – so can cheat if and when required. But it’s fun and a social occasion.
    I just loved Prof Doherty’s inadvertant tweet about Dan Murphy’s opening hours. He’s a good old stick with a good sense of humour.
    So, as we slip back into the real world, it’s interesting times ahead. The virus remains with us. How will life change to deal with that?
    I think it will have given everyone a sense of what is important – I hope it has.

    • Dwight says:

      Saw a meme today:

      I hope they give us two weeks notice before sending us back into the world. I think we all need time to become ourselves again. And by “ourselves” I mean lose 5 kilos, get a haircut and get used to not drinking at 9am.

      I’m not worried about the haircut..but I have to remember that rugby shorts and t-shirts are not “casual business attire”.

      When my wife gets out, I foresee a spa session: hair, nails, wax, eyebrows–and then she might have dinner out with me. *laugh*

    • Trivalve says:

      Did you see the back-and-forth with Brian Schmidt over the Australian Nobel Laureate with the most followers?? Doherty picked up 1100 off that tweet alone he reckons!

  • Dwight says:

    And now Kerry Stokes. When I first moved to Oz, people would quip that Perth was closer to Asia than eastern Australia. Didn’t think this is what people meant.

  • Trivalve says:

    Owsley may have been erratic with the recipe but his product was legendary. Those may have been the days…

    Re Chloroquin, as I knew it, I was a regular with it in the late eighties when I started working in Indonesia and PNG. I moved house to northern NSW and had to get a new doctor. Filled out the usual form about general health; he read it and said, “Chloroquin, Maloprim, why are you taking that shit?” I told him, it was prescribed by the previous quack. “If you want to wreck your liver, do it drinking like me”. Long-term use is not good for you, it seems. It was soon after replaced as first choice by Fansidar, which was a morning-after sort of thing if you got sick, so no constant pill-taking with consequent side effects. Did nothing for cerebral malaria but the word was, if you got that, update your will. I’m surprised that Chloroquin is still around.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Just a quick diversion from the topic de jour. Despite a few tears, I note that Mike Kelly sadly departs politics with the grace and dignity of a genuine officer and gentleman. By all accounts he will be a loss to Labor who to their shame seemingly failed to fully utilise the talents he had to offer. Mind how you go Mike.

  • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

    Extremely funny stuff! As a habitual and highly experienced solo drinker (“alcoholic” if you prefer) and living socially isolated as a lifestyle choice rather than a plague avoidance measure I find the whole virtual party thing a bit weird. Still, each to their own.

    Incidentally, Owsley ended his days as Bear Stanley, artist and dedicated carnivore, in Queensland in 2011. I may be imagining it but seem to remember someone on the original blog said they knew him.

    Dwight – re your uni comment I especially liked your description of modern universities as “Centrelink with classrooms”!

    Bella – one would like to think that the woeful maladministration of the uni’s finances and general business would see some high-level heads getting kicked but it doesn’t seem to be the way these days. There is a growing list of occupations where being staggeringly inept and routinely wrong doesn’t seem to affect a person’s work prospects. Senior university people appear to be among them and almost all of them involve some level of political involvement and / or public financing.

    • Dwight says:

      The former executive dean (the only man ever silly enough to hire me twice) was complaining about the budget once and I replied, “let me fix it.” He asked how. “Give me the org chart and a black texta and tell me how much you need.” As you might guess, even he said no.

      Every Uni in Oz is about to lay off (which is a misnomer, they only have to not offer a contract) hundreds of casual teaching staff. They are also making senior full-time academics redundant. Very few Vice Chancellors will take a pay cut. I think it was USyd that had _seven_ deputy VCs? The other people who are secure have job titles such as Diversity Consultant, International Liaisons, Inclusion Counselors, Teaching and Learning Coordinators and all the other non-jobs of the bureaucracy.

      • Penny says:

        The VC of Charles Darwin University is taking a pay cut Dwight. I am still cynical about his intentions though…..seems like a bit of a PR strategy to me, he really does need to regain credibility after he ordered university gardeners to cut a tree down in the city to make way for the new campus in the city….unbeknownst to the Lord Mayor of Darwin and the council.

    • Mack the Knife says:

      Maybe a coincidence, but I wonder if John Lennon copped his Owsley nickname for being a huge fan of his work?

  • wraith says:

    Lost and confused and I dont like that other thing over the wall at all.
    going to sulk till someone else shows up.

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