Regulation Podcast - So... Alright Premiere: Tough Times on Mango Street
Episode Date: August 29, 2023Geoff's new podcast, So... Alright, is here! Geoff’s love of western folk music takes a bizarre turn, and leaves him to ponder just what makes a place like Mango Street so dangerous. Subscribe now! ...https://link.chtbl.com/soalright Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So, I was riding my bike and listening to music the other day.
It's the time I usually spend trying to come up with ideas for either F*** Face or for Anma, the other two podcasts.
And I was just listening to music and kind of zoning out.
And I have this giant playlist on Spotify where I just add new music constantly, and then it just runs on random and repeat.
And so I never know what's coming up, and then I just listen to it.
And if it's something new that I put in that I don't like, I just immediately dump it.
And otherwise, I'll just listen to it until I start to get sick of it, and then I'll rotate out.
So I added a bunch of new music recently.
out so i added added a bunch of new music recently and uh i've been kind of into like i don't know like pre towns van zandt kind of like vaguely western folk music i guess has been
kind of interesting to me and so there's this dude david mcwilliams that i'd heard a song
by and so i added a bunch of his stuff and the music he makes i i placed it in my head like mid-60s and i think that that's
ended up being where where it existed but uh i always just assumed he was like in my head he
was like some dude from el paso or amarillo anyway one of his songs came on and uh it's this like
really kind of dark almost like a mac the knife feeling sound song about uh i don't know this uh scary dirty town at night kind of
desolate and and uh rough i had only heard the song like once before and so i'm like half listening
and he just keeps referring about uh to this place mango street and how rough it is on mango street
and i just i couldn't get that out of my head after i keyed in on that. So when I got home, I thought, how bad can it be to live on Mango Street?
Mango Street sounds...
Honestly, it sounds pretty fucking joyous.
So I MLSed a bunch of Mango Streets.
I found one in Lake Jackson, Texas.
There's a house for sale.
I would not want to live on Mango Street in Lake Jackson, Texas.
So I moved on.
You can buy plots of land in Mango Street of E Lake Jackson, Texas. So I moved on. You can buy plots of land
in Mango Street of Eustis, Florida,
but it just looks like swamp.
I saw a place in Lantana, Florida
that's for sale
that was a lot of money for a little house
and I would not want to live there.
Anyway, then it gets worse.
I found Mango Street in Brea, California.
Jesus Christ.
And then there was one in...
There are a lot of Mango Streets in Florida.
Anyway, it turns out...
Oh, man.
The worst might be the Mango Street in Port Ritchie, Florida.
That was pretty scary.
Anyway, it turns out maybe Mango Street is a rough and tumble place to live after all.
So anyway, I was kind of laughing about that.
And I thought, I'm going to go back and listen to that song and pay attention to the lyrics and learn a little
bit more about Mango Street. By the way, I found out there's a book in all that searching. I found
out there is a... God, I have so many tabs open of Mango Street. I found out there... Oops,
I just closed a tab. Anyway, I found out through Google searching about Mango Streets, I found there's a book called The House on Mango Street, which was a 1984 novel by Mexican-American author Sandra Cisneros about a 12-year-old girl growing up in has been, I'd never heard of it. But apparently
it has been on the banned list for a lot of places. A lot of places have tried to ban the book
because of some challenging themes around, I don't know, domestic and sexual abuse and gender
and identity. And so now I want to read that book. If you've read that book,
go ahead and send me an email at eric at jeffsboss.com. That's my email address for this
podcast, eric at jeffsboss.com. I need to go ahead and make that real fast because that was
just a joke, but I think I'll do it. Anyway, if you've read the book, The House on Mingo Street,
let me know. I think I'll buy it and give it a shot, and maybe I'll talk about it later.
Read every book, just a tip in life, read every book they try to ban.
Every time, I promise you.
You won't regret it.
Anyway, so I go back to look at the lyrics, and I find the song is called...
Things run awry very quickly. I find out when I look it up,
the song is called Three O'Clock Flamingo Street. So every time I heard him say Mango Street,
he was actually saying Flamingo Street. And I was too embarrassed to look up Flamingo Streets
after that. I'd spent so much time. I probably spent, I don't know, maybe 40 minutes
looking up houses for sale on Mango streets around the country. And I just I couldn't devote any more
time to that. I gotta say, I thought Mango Street sounded like a lovely place to live.
It seems like it's a pretty challenging place to live based on my research.
If there's a place that sounds better than Mango Street,'s probably flamingo street and the idea that a flamingo
street is like a rough part of town i thought was pretty fucking funny and uh and then i was
looking at the lyrics and they're really quite poetic like it's just the first verse it's a
empty sound deserted town beneath the silvery feathered down of morning's waking breath
forgotten tunes and silver spoons
goes to deeply shadowed gloom and dies a silent death. That's some like cowboy poetry, right?
Like I thought that was pretty cool. And I say, man, I really enjoy this, this David McWilliams
dude. So I decided to look up David McWilliams and imagine my surprise. And I guess maybe the
name McWilliams should have clued me in. David McWilliams is not from El Paso and he's not from Amarillo and he's not a country and
Western singer at all. It turns out David McWilliams, who was born in 1945, is a singer,
songwriter and guitarist from Ireland, Northern Ireland. I don't know how I got it into my head that I was listening to like Western alternative folk from the 60s.
But goddamn, did it sound like country music to me?
And now I'm discombobulated like you wouldn't believe.
And so I read a bunch about him.
And yeah, he's like an Irish folk singer.
So not only was I not listening to a song about Mango Street,
a cowboy song about Mango Street, I also wasn't listening to a cowboy song about Flamingo Street. I was listening to an
Irish folk song about a place called Flamingo Street. I still think it's weird that in and
maybe if you're from Ireland and you can check in, send an email to Eric at Jeff's boss dot com
and let me know. Is Flamingo Street like a euphemism for the wrong side of the
tracks, like the tough part of town?
You know, like the Hell's Kitchen, if you will,
of a major
metropolitan area in Ireland?
Because it sounds
fucking darling. And are there even
I'm going to Google this. Are there flamingos?
Flamingos
in Ireland?
I bet there aren't. Why't I think oh well shit Dublin Zoo is home to a large flock of about a hundred Chilean flamingos huh well I guess uh I don't
know if they're indigenous or not but I don't know that I care that much uh you ever run into
a flamingo in the wild in Ireland? If you have, let me know.
Just send that email.
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It has to be mixed just right.
Start with a handful of great friends.
Now, add your favorite music.
And then, finally, add Bacardi rum.
Shake it together.
And there you have it.
The perfect summer mix.
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Anyway, in this, I started to Google the song, 3 O'Clock, Flamingo Street, to see if I could
find, because it still sounds like a,
and I've read the lyrics all the way through and I don't know why it does
now. I think it's cause the music has this sort of like haunting cinematic.
It feels like, I don't know how to describe it.
A lot of music in the sixties and seventies had this,
like it was designed like of film, but not for film.
If that makes any sense. Uh, just,
just very atmospheric in a way that
I associate with old movies. Maybe that's just me. Anyway, so I started to Google
Flamingo, the three o'clock Flamingo Street, to see if I could find anything out about the song
and why he wrote this song that that you know about this like like i
said this like dark place in a town where bad stuff happens people drink themselves to death
and it's there's a lot of like glitz and glamour and bright lights but if you look behind the
curtain and kind of in the alleyways and the cracks and the crevices it's all very dark and
you know malevolent and then i got thrown for another fucking loop because I found out that this other band the bachelors covered the song and uh I'd never heard of them and their song is totally totally
different it's the same song it just sounds totally different it's good I like it too I
don't like it nearly as much as the David McWilliams version but I encourage you to listen
to both um so I thought well that's fucking weird and i noticed that
the bachelor's version was recorded in 1967 and the mcwilliams version was recorded in 68
and so then i thought fuck did these guys write that song so then i start listening to other
bachelor songs and everything else they've done is like croony early beatles happy poppy love shit and i don't like any of it i do like the three o'clock
the version of three o'clock flamingo street uh they recorded which also is interesting because
it's very different from the rest of their music right like the rest of their music is all sappy
love songs and and heartbreaking shit and then this song is like like i said it's kind of like
the 60s version of Mack and the
Knife about which is like a rough part of town on a rough night, and just like sadness and despair.
And it's got a tonally incredibly different from everything else they've done. And it definitely
feels like a David McWilliams song to me, because I've heard his other music, and it all kind of
strikes the same chord, which is apparently not a country chord at all. It's a fucking Irish folk
chord. And I'm an idiot. And so I do a bunch of Googling, and I can't find the answer. I really
don't know. It's credited to David McWilliams most places. They shared tour managers, I guess.
They grew up in the same... I mean, they're both Irish. They were probably from the same fucking
town. They probably played tons of shows together. But I can't figure out which one of them wrote
the song. So if you know, I would love to know. It feels more like a David McWilliams song to me just
because, like I said, thematically, it seems to fit all of his other music, whereas The Bachelor's
other music is vastly different and not nearly as good as that one song. So I was reading up a
little bit about The Bachelors, and that is a whole other can of worms. I read one funny thing. They started as a harmonica band together called the Harmonichords in 1957. They were also known as the Harmonichords. I think the Harmonichords is quite clever.
is quite clever.
And I would love to know what a classically-styled instrumental
harmonica act was.
I bet it wasn't a hit with
the teens, though, I'll tell you that. Anyway,
so they changed their name to The Bachelors
at the suggestion of someone
named Dick Rowe, who did A&R at
Decca Records, who I guess is who
signed them, because
this is the funniest fucking thing.
He recommended the name because that's the
kind of boy a girl likes so uh as opposed bachelor as opposed to what um i guess married i would
assume all women would have would prefer a single dude to a married dude if they are single and
looking uh looking but anyway they changed their name to the bachelors because that's the kind of boy a girl likes girls love bachelors uh it's it's in wikipedia so you
know that's that's law anyway then i started to read up about that man because i like i said i
had never heard him before and they were quite big like they were number one on the charts in
ireland and in the uk they charted to like number 10 in the US, I think, maybe even number three on some
charts. So like they had a pretty big career. So I was trying to read up a little bit about them
because I'll be honest with you, the rest of their music was so uninteresting to me that I
didn't. They even had like a, I want to say they had like a TV show or something too that they
hosted. Anyway, so at some point, I got led. There was a controversy
section on Wikipedia. And so I started going down some more rabbit holes. And apparently,
this band, The Bachelors, fucking hate each other. And they have on their website, which by the way,
I recommend you go to The Bachelors website. It is the bachelors.co.uk.
Cause it is a slice of history in terms of web design.
It is,
it is something that,
uh,
ugly internet would have reviewed scathingly back in the day.
And now I find it to be incredibly charming and fucking confusing to
navigate.
But at some point I I ended up and I'll
be honest with you, I got I got bored with this pretty quickly, because I didn't find it to be
that interesting. But there is a whole page about this guy, john Stokes, who was one of the from
what I can tell, one of the founding members of the band, it was two brothers, con and deck.
And then they, they brought this dude in at the the beginning and it's just like this whole long
explanation of why they hate him and why they kicked him out of the band and how he's not a
very good singer and how he was a i guess a mean guy and it's like itemized bulleted it goes forever
and i i defy you to get through it and then there's like fucking pages to they suit each other
and there's like they have court documents you can see that say like the dude's not allowed to
perform under the name The Bachelors only they are but then he was doing it anyway and so there's
like they're they tried to get it stopped and they did stop and so it's this whole thing about how
like don't see his version of the
bachelors only see their version of the bachelors i don't know man bad blood in the irish 60s pop
scene apparently so you can die if you want to dive in if that sounds interesting to you dive in
and let me know the finer points of it because i couldn't keep it straight. All right.
So curiosity got the better of me after I recorded this, and I had to go and look up Flamingo Streets around the United States. I did an MLS search, vastly different results
from Mango Street. I didn't realize there could be such disparity
in America between living on Mango Street and living on Flamingo Street.
It is definitely the haves and the have-nots. Most of the houses on Flamingo Street are nice
or fancy. There are a ton of them, by the way. There's one in Atlantic Beach. There's Flamingo Street in Philadelphia.
There's actually a Flamingo Drive in Austin,
which I am choosing not to count.
But there's no shortage.
Michigan, Minnesota.
You know, there's some modest Flamingo Streets,
but Lake Placid, Florida, it's okay.
There's some so-so streets around the country, but then there's some bangers, just some absolute bangers.
Flamingo Street in New Orleans, it's mansion city.
It is insane.
I would love, I gotta figure out how to end up on Flamingo Street. I
want to live in Flamingo Street in New Orleans. I think it's probably too late in life for me to
turn that around, maybe in another life. Have you ever lived on a Mango Street or a Flamingo Street at any point in your
life? Have you lived on Mango or Flamingo Street in Ireland? Apparently in Ireland, Flamingo Street,
it's Ireland's Flamingo Street is America's Mango Street from what I gather, because there are no
tough times on Flamingo Street in America from what I can see. And I think it's probably mostly, if not only, hard times living on Mango Street.
At least in the U.S.
All right.