• Tag Archives Willy Wonka
  • “I’m hot, sticky sweet, from my head to my feet. yeah.” – Joe Elliott

    This morning I regained my sense of smell.

    I’m not sure if it’s temporary, but my sense of smell has never been that strong – or at least not as strong as other people I suppose?

    The only thing I can attribute it to is the massively sugary cake that I made yesterday. The original recipe called for whipped cream, but instead we opted for some homemade vegan icing, of which the primary ingredient is powdered sugar.  After it was all said and done, I fell into a nightmarish sleep reminiscent of the trippy tunnel scene in the original Willy Wonka movie.

    But the reason I think that it affected my sense of smell so much is that it reminded me of one of my first real jobs – Soda Jerk at the 59 Diner.  I worked there back in the halcyon days in the 80’s. Wandering around Houston at that time, you tended to run into a lot of people who jerked (hee-hee) for the 59 Diner. It was almost like a secret club.  From my understanding, the SPRAWL house was right behind it, but I wasn’t cool enough to be running in those circles.

    The name should give it away –

    While the place did have a certain retro appeal then (it was actually a really cool place), it’s changed owners several times since and has lost some/all of the uniqueness that it originally had when I was there. I’d certainly stop by for some fries or something, but I never expect truly greasy diner food any more (which is what made the place so great). It didn’t hurt that it was across the street from Rockin’ Robin.

    Rockin’ Robin holds a special place in my heart, but only because of one of my favorite guitar teachers and a really great friend of mine (who plays for The Guzzlers) put up with my teenage shenanigans there (practice your guitar? What’s THAT?).  I learned a lot and made a lifelong friend. I still recall his response, similar to everyone else’s, when I told him I was getting a job at the Diner, “Really? My friend got food poisoning there.”  I’d love to say that as a young lad I hung out at the feet of the coolest guitar store employees around, but that really wasn’t the case. My experiences in the downstairs store part from that time period were tainted by one of the most bitter, washed-up, ex-roadie guitar player/store employees named Dennis.  I kid you not here’s a sample exchange between myself and him:

    Me: “Hey, uh, what does a flanger do?”

    Dennis: (looks annoyed) “It flanges”

    I sheepishly walk away.

    This isn’t to say that exchange today might not be somewhat similar to any Guitar Center these days, but Dennis seemed to just go out of his way to be an immense prick.

    Anyway, back to the ’59.  These days, when people ask for a full resume including EVERY job that I’ve EVER had, I make sure to include the Diner and pad my resume with such things as “Extreme time management” and “Made custom desserts to order”. In all actuality, there’s not much padding. That job is certainly one of the toughest I’ve had.  Working in food service is a special circle of hell – one of which I’ve  managed to escape from a few times now. Some of the recruiters have joked with me about it, but typically only because they’ve worked food service too – so they understand the “battle” mentality of an understaffed dinner rush.

    Photo by Texas.713

    The upshot of making desserts in such a time-stressed environment is that my sense of smell and taste were severely jacked up. The entirety of the time I worked as a Jerk, my diet subsisted of Cheddar Cheese blocks and Pink Grapefruit Juice cocktail.  Coming home reeking of ice cream and whipped cream and syrup was disgusting in its own way.  Soda jerks tended not to last very long, I’m not sure if it was always the trial by fire, or first rung of the ladder kind of deal or not. Typically everyone who jerked eventually hosted or waited tables. I’m sure there was more money in waiting, but I got out as soon as the summer ended.

    Photo by The Rocketeer

  • “Invention, my dear friends, is 93% perspiration, 6% electricity, 4% evaporation, and 2% butterscotch ripple. ” Willy Wonka

    I have to say, as I mercilessly plug a burlesque show, that the marketing scheme cooked up by vivadallasburlesque is genius. Ingenious even.

    Their upcoming show is a Charlie and the Chocolate Factory theme – here’s the flyer:

    The thing that REALLY impressed me is that they’re running a “Golden Ticket” marketing campaign.  In an era where most people use Facebook as a their sole source of advertising, the addition of the “hunt” element was really a cool idea. I almost wanted to feign sickness and start driving around town looking for these tickets. I know where a few of them are, but I bet I can’t get there before someone else does. I’ll try this weekend maybe. Frequent the places the tickets are known to be….spend some cash at these places so they know that this was effective marketing….

    Seriously, how much more fun could this be?

     

    *EDIT*

    Here’s a pic from Facebook:


  • “A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men.’This was said by gene wilder … what does it mean ?” Gene Wilder

    Wow, is it already the 40th Anniversary of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory? The original I mean, not the Burton remake.

    The first time I saw it was at my friend Justin’s house. He was one of the lucky few people that I knew in the late 70’s/early 80’s that had cable at home. For those of you keeping score, my childhood home never had cable – ever. Even up until the house was sold in the late 1990’s, there was no cable line. My father refused to have it installed because the line would have to be run through the crawlspace connecting the garage to the house. Which is strange since he wouldn’t ever have been the one installing – it would have been the cable installer’s problem. Anyway, Justin’s house at the time was different and to this day I still think has that weird decorative clear glass walls that everyone was so fond of. I still like the look, even if it was a little dated. I just google mapped it and it’s been remodeled. Shame.

    So back to the 80’s, watching the group walk into the main candy room (chocolate water fall, etc), for me, it was kind of like that moment in the Wizard of Oz where everything goes from black and white to color.  It was a fairly technicolor rainbow. TV colors were a lot more muted in those days – probably to scale back the horrendous fashion. But being the candy fiend I was, this was like my dream movie.
    Shortly after it came out, I bought craploads of Wonka candy and joined the Willy Wonka Fan club. I used to be able to say that I was a proud card-carrying member, but I lost the card. 🙁

    I’ve made myself sick before on the original everlasting Gobstoppers and I can’t remember the last time I ever had one.

    In 1997, it was the 30th Anniversary (obviously – do the math) and the studio re-released prints to the theaters. Since my ultra cool movie theater job entailed getting in free, I went to a late late showing (completely obliterated) and don’t remember much of it. Of course, it wasn’t as grand as I remembered it to be – but it was still pretty cool.

    The major upside for me having watched the original back in the 80’s was that I was turned onto the books by Roald Dahl – who wrote the original “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”. There’s actually a sequel to the book that is called “Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator” – taking over of course from when they burst out of the roof of the chocolate factory. Of course I’m going to complain that the book was way better than the movie, but the film does some pretty decent justice to most of the candy rooms. Roald Dahl was an extremely inventive writer. While I would never put him up against Kurt Vonnegut, it was a very similar vein.  Dahl’s writings were definitely unique. I’m thinking that I’ve read everything he’s ever written, but I need to check on that. There’s still a Dahl book or two on my bookshelf – ghostly stories I think. Kind of like Alfred Hitchcock and Twilight Zone type stuff. Very dry British humor (or humour) which of course I’m pretty partial to.

    My copies are pretty worn out.

    Roald Dahl Charlie and the Chocolate Factory & Great Glass Elevator