Read My Fair Lazy: One Reality Television Addict's Attempt to Discover if Not Being a Dumb Ass Is the New Black, or a Culture-Up Manifesto Online

Authors: Jen Lancaster

Tags: #Authors; American, #General, #21st Century, #Personal Memoirs, #Popular Culture, #Humor, #Jeanne, #Jack, #Literary, #Biography & Autobiography, #Social Science, #Biography, #United States, #Women

My Fair Lazy: One Reality Television Addict's Attempt to Discover if Not Being a Dumb Ass Is the New Black, or a Culture-Up Manifesto (27 page)

“Yeah,” he continues. “Apparently up in Montauk someone stole a couple of lobster pots. Also? A drunk guy hit a parked car and didn’t leave his insurance information, a kayak was stolen, and a woman went to a bakery to return a pie, but I guess she’d eaten part of it. They wouldn’t give her money back, so she threw the pie at the counter.”

I snort. “Maybe the police should talk to the pie lady about the lobster pots. Sounds like she’s a real recidivist. See? HA! You and your vocabulary words can bite me, Fletcher!”

Fletch closes the paper and looks thoughtful. “I wonder how many people were killed just now in Chicago while I read that article.”

After breakfast, we spend the day on Georgica Beach, enjoying cloudless china blue skies. Fletch finally stopped being a pill at dinner last night, which is why he’s settled into the chair next to me and not, you know, drowned.

One of us does not have the good sense to apply sunscreen to combat the blazing Hamptons sun. Surprisingly, it’s not me. Fletch sunburns himself into a state best described as “radioactive,” so after a few hours on the soft white sand, we grab our cooler full of cheese rinds and grape stems and head back to the inn. Before we get in the car, I’m pretty sure I see my literary idol, Jay McInerney, cooling down after a run on the beach. I don’t chase after him. . . . whether it’s out of a newfound respect for boundaries or because it’s hard to get a foothold in flip-flops, I’m not sure.

As soon as we return to the room, we switch the television to FOX News while we get ready. Town meetings have gone on all week and a lot of these meetings have quickly headed south. Seems like after every break, Fox returns with new footage of old guys yelling at senators about nationalizing health care. If I weren’t such a fan of reality TV, I’d find these shout-y encounters uncomfortable no matter how I leaned politically.
231

Lots of broadcasters speculate whether the elderly are “plants” specifically sent to the town meetings to angry up the other constituents. “That old guy seems genuinely upset,” I say, gesturing toward the screen as Fletch emerges from the bathroom draped in a towel toga. “Is our side deliberately trying to mess stuff up?”

He runs the white terry cloth over his hair. “Are you asking me if this is part of the vast right-wing conspiracy? I doubt it. The emotion seems pretty authentic.”

I sigh, eyes never leaving the screen. “I hope so. I hate to think people would deliberately gum up the works; it’s disrespectful.”

Fletch shrugs and continues to get ready. But as a nod to our world-view, he dresses in a gray athletic T-shirt with a silk screen of Ronald Reagan with the words “Old-School Conservative” on it. When he wears this shirt at home, he gets a ton of dirty looks, but up here, I imagine the crowd’s a little more equally mixed. Seriously, all this plaid is like catnip for Republicans.

Once we’re both showered and groomed, we head out to the rental car. And I don’t even need to ask Fletch to put the top down; he’s finally fully into the swing of this weekend. We drive from East Hampton down the length of the Montauk Highway to the lighthouse. The topography isn’t as rocky and dramatic as parts of New England, but it overcompensates with all the giant bushes of blooming flowers. Plus, there’s not a speck of garbage anywhere. In an effort to humor me, Fletch stops at every hilly, scenic lookout, too.
232

The salt air’s made us ravenous, so we pull into a little roadside crab shack about halfway between Montauk and East Hampton for a late lunch. We feast on the tempura-battered puffer fish appetizer. According to Wikipedia
233
puffer fish, also known as blowfish or fugu, is the second-most poisonous vertebrate in the world. The fish’s skin and internal organs are totally toxic, and improper preparation can cause death by suffocation because the neurotoxins can paralyze the diaphragm.

What Wikipedia fails to mention is exactly how delectable puffer fish tastes with the restaurant’s homemade tartar sauce—any risk incurred is totally worth it.

We follow up with enormous plates of creamy lobster salad, resplendent with chunks of meat as big as my thumb. Everything’s beyond fresh—the bed of lush green lettuce appears to have been picked this morning, probably right after they hauled in the lobster pots. The salad’s so huge I only make my way through about a third of it. I feel like I’ve officially satisfied any lobster craving I might have for the year with this meal.

There’s nothing gourmet or exotic about my salad. There are no bacon lardons or Hawaiian gindai or yuzu jelly; there’s just mayo and celery and salt and pepper, served with a plastic package of saltines. But despite the simplicity of the presentation and preparation, it’s
perfect
.

After we went to Moto, we saw Anthony Bourdain feature it on
No Reservations
. He was just as impressed with Chef Cantu’s food as we were. Yet in the next segment, he was writhing in ecstasy at some grotty old smoked fish served in a paper bag (and eaten in a car) out by the Ship and Sanitary Canal on Chicago’s south side. I figured if Bourdain could appreciate the essence of whatever he was having, despite the circumstances of where it was served or the simplicity of ingredients, then who was I to feel any differently?

That’s why we ended up here, sitting right next to the highway, at a rickety outdoor picnic table, drinking from a paper cup. Yet I couldn’t be more enthralled with the whole meal if it had come with linen napkins, a tuxedo-clad maître d’, and rows of silverware lining each side of my Wedgwood plate.

When we finally push our bloated bellies away from the table, we’re presented with a three-figure check for our casual lunch. Thus I learn my most important lesson to date—when ordering lobster, always ask market price first.

After we finish exploring the farthermost tip of the island, we return to East Hampton to stroll through the picturesque downtown. I’d like to get a paperback to satisfy my tub-based reading needs, and Fletch wants some footwear. We run his errand first, which prompts my teasing him in the
“You know how I know you’re gay? You bought deck shoes at Coach!”
variety for a solid twenty minutes.

About halfway down the main drag, we run across the most adorable independent bookseller. The shop is all wooden and warm with big display windows, and it looks like the kind of place where I’d get lost for hours. I’m delighted to see how crowded the store is, too. The staff rushes around with a sense of urgency, moving shelves here and there, making room for all the shoppers, and the whole scene feels chaotically comfortable. I finally select a book
234
and head to the cashier.

“I’m sorry,” a harried young girl behind the counter tells me. “The registers are closed for the next fifteen minutes.”

“Oh . . . okay,” I say, before realizing it’s kind of weird to have a packed store that isn’t taking advantage of the captive customers. “Wait, is something going on?”

“Yes!” the girl gushes. “Howard Dean’s going to be here in five minutes to discuss his book on health-care reform!”

I can feel my eyes bulge out of my head, and I turn to look at Fletch, standing in the middle of the Howard Dean crowd, thumbing through a gun magazine, his Ronald Reagan shirt drawing icy glares from all of those around him. He might as well have been erecting a cross in a public classroom or taking a leak on the
Roe versus Wade
case brief.

“Drop the magazine, we have to go!” I hiss.

“What, why?” he asks.

“Because we’re accidentally committing a hate crime!” I swat the magazine out of his hands and drag him out of the store by the wrist. “Move, move, move!” I hustle him out onto the sidewalk like I’m Jack Bauer, and I’m trying to keep his dumb ass from getting exploded. Once out, I pull him across the street and duck into the expensive candy store.

Fletch is confused but fairly pliant. “You really need a chocolate fix that badly?”

I peer on the happenings across the street through a window almost obscured by cartoon lollipops and stacks of multicolored sweets. I don’t see anything, so I turn back to talk to him. “No, Howard Dean’s about to give a talk about his book on health-care reform in there.”

Fletch laughs so heartily that his head tilts back. “Ha! What are the odds? Why’d we have to leave? I bet that’d be
fun
.”

“Yeah, and that’s exactly why I yanked you out of there. I didn’t want to be disrespectful at someone else’s book signing. Terrible karma. Plus, even if you kept your mouth shut, with everything happening in the news, no one was going to believe you were there at that specific moment in that exact shirt because I can’t take my Kindle in the tub.”
235

He picks up a paint bucket full of candy and looks at it quizzically. “Eh, I’m sure no one noticed.”

“And I’m sure I saw pitchforks, lighted torches, and angry villagers. We had to go; it was the right thing to do.”

What I fail to mention is, I was afraid my dinner host was in the crowd, and I don’t want to get kicked out of Authors Night before it even happens.

“Hey, look around,” Fletch instructs.

“What am I looking for?” I glance up from my Kindle.
236

“Tell me what you
don’t
see.”

“Um, I don’t know. Monkeys? An office park? Martha Stewart flying a melting cake? What are you getting at?” What I do see is a mass expanse of shoreline ringed by mansions. Today we’re camped on Main Beach, specifically because I wanted to be near a snack bar and none of the other East Hampton beaches have them. I mean, yes, I appreciate miles of stunning vistas and loads of privacy, but is any of it really worth it if I can’t enjoy the scenery with a Diet Coke and an ice-cream sandwich?

“No one’s on the phone. And no one has tattoos. Remember when we went to Oak Street Beach last year? It was like
Miami Ink
meets an iPhone commercial. But here? Everyone seems to be talking to the people they’re with. It’s like, families are actually being
families
together. Only a couple of people are attached to their electronic devices, and the few who aren’t chatting are reading. It’s almost”—he raises one eyebrow at me—“surreal.”

There’s an extended family camped out in front of us, maybe fifteen of them in all, with at least two sets of parents, a ton of children, and possibly a nanny sprinkled in. The whole time we’ve been here, they’ve been engaged in a group project. Two of the dads and most of the kids have been working on digging a crater in the beach. They’re trying to dig deep enough to hit water. They even brought real shovels, the kind I used to threaten hipsters with at my old house.

“This place is like taking a trip back to 1950,” I say.

“It is,” he agrees. “I like it.”

We watch Project Hole until the family hits water about seven feet down. There’s a mass amount of celebrating, but once everyone’s congratulated one another, they all work together to fill in the crater. Then women collect some of the children and start hauling their gear back to their cars.

The family isn’t loud and they’re certainly polite, but they all work together so seamlessly that we can’t help but pay attention. And this is why we both hear a dad detail weekend plans to one of the little boys.

“Hey, sport, I need your help bringing the rest of the chairs to the car. We’re finished at the beach for today. When we get back to the house, you guys are going to jump into the pool to rinse all the sand off, then you’ll get dressed because we’re going to your dad’s polo match. Tonight, we’ve got a private room at the restaurant for dinner, and tomorrow we’ll hit the beach early. We’re going to leave by two because we’ve chartered a boat, and we’re going to go fishing and tubing. And then, once we’re done, your dad and I are going to try to convince the moms to stay out here another couple of days.”

And then the little boy in the SPF sun shirt says something that dissipates all the goodwill I’d built up toward them.

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