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Location: Perkasie, PA
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Sleep Partner?

 
 
I'm listening to conservative talk radio like I usually do during the day while I am driving and I hear a Select Comfort commercial. You know, the one they call "The Sleep Number Bed"

Then I hear Bill Bennett, God bless'em, reading the script thrust upon him. I don't think this was his language, but he says "You can have one level of firmness, and your sleeping partner can have another." Sleeping Partner? What the heck is that? (tongue in cheek). I could be wrong, but I guess that's the conservatives way of saying guy or gal-pal.
 
Boy ...we've really come far from Ricky and Lucy having separate beds havent we?
 
If that very technology and radio ad were done in the 50's or 60's, the term used would be "wife" or "spouse". But now we are way past the prudish era. We are way past the sexual revolution. Now it is just out there...with no excuse. The post...post sexual revolution. The FWB era. You know, FWB...Friends With Benefits....and I don't think those benefits are referring to medical, dental, and tuition reinmbursement either.
 
I do remember when the term "partner" was being used. That referred to someone (implied) that you were living with or dating or shacking up with on occasion. Everybody knew it. Yeah, intimacy was probably part of it...but there was also some implied committment somehow, someway.
 
God forbid that you have just a plain old mattress. You need Select Comfort so your "Sleeping Partner" can have a good night sleep too.
 
God forbid your "sleeping partner" comes over and sees that their "35 sleep number" side of the bed is now a 42. Things could really get hairy now. Forget about trying to hide the toothbrush, comb the blonde hair out of the brunettes brush, and quickly hide that stray garment. Whatever happened to the good ole' days of non-committment and how easy it was to keep things organized. Now the philanderer has to remember what partner has what number.
 
I can just picture the partner saying "When I left on Sunday morning, my side of the bed was a 35. Now it's a 42. Who was here? Who was sleeping on my side of the bed?! Who is he/she?!
 
You: Uhhh..there was a slow leak in the bed.
 
Them: A leak that went UP?!
 
NOW...you have to remember the sleep number of your Saturday "sleep partner" and make sure that your Wednesday night "sleep partner" doesnt see their number.

Geesh...technology makes things so difficult these days.
 
Reason #5,472 for celibacy in 2009!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Thanks Billy Mays

 Hi...Billy Mays here!

Yeah..I am shocked. Billy Mays dead. Someone so "alive" and with so much enthsiasm, and so young. Anyone who tries to be him will fail miserably, but I do believe a big hole is now there and is waiting to be filled. Someone has to reinvent that role.
After watching Pitchmen for the past couple months, I saw a different side of him..one that I really liked. I especially liked it when his Dad was on and his son. Neither one was like him though.
He really was the last of a dying breed if you think about it. The younger generation, younger than 40, that is, just thought he was irritating, and I understand.

You probably "got" him, like I did.

That Jersey Shore pitchman/barker was part of our lives.

Billy Mays' "thing" was familiar to us. Anyone from New York or Philly or anywhere in between "got it".

He was a sales type from another era and region.

We could picture him saying "Step right up...see the wolf boy, the bearded lady, and the human rubber band. Real...alive...right before your very eyes!"

 He's not that different than the televangelist who speaks of the miraculous and amazing as if they were everyday occurences.

Yeah, he was an act...even Billy Mays couldnt wake up and be "Billy Mays".

All he needed to hear was "3-2-1...ACTION" and he became the man you either loved or hated. There wasnt alot of room for a gray area. Not a bad strategy for life. No gray areas.
How about being enthusiastic about something?
 
My Dad used to say "Nothing happens till someone gets enthusiastic"
 
Not a bad motto...for anyone. The politician, the preacher, the shoe repair guy, the school teacher, the retired machinist, the parent, sales person, the house wife, the husband, the home schooler, the newly single, the recent graduate...and the list goes on.

I will personally say rest in peace Billy Mays. I did like you. I hope you had Peace and are walking on streets of gold now. I am sure God did not have to introduce you.

He served a purpose here....and did it with an enthusiam we all should respect.

I did not know him personally, but would have loved to have lunch with him, had a cigar with him and picked his brain.

 Admit it or not, there is a hole left in the media world. From being an Atlantic City Boardwalk pitchman to being the icon of enthusiasm, you had an admirable career.
 
What do I get out of this? What can I extract for my life?
 
-He didnt work for his company. He was his company.
 
-He was the CEO of a very successful company called Billy Mays.
 
I am going to put a card above the door that I walk out of every morning that says "3-2-1...ACTION"
 
Maybe I can squeeze one more drop of life out of my life with that reminder.
 
Thanks Billy Mays. I got you.
 

 

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The Iconic Spanish Cedar Cigar Box

 

I ask questions about everything. One time I had it in my head that I was going to build my own custom cigar humidor and I was going to go to my local big box home store and get some cedar wood. A friend told me “NO! ... don’t use American Cedar in a humidor…you must use Spanish cedar” Of course, I had to question that and did some research on the topic.

Here’s what I discovered. Spanish cedar is not really cedar as we know it here in America. It is actually a deciduous tree which means that it has that leaves fall off once a year. It does not have needles like the cedars we know. It has a fragrance similar to our cedar, but much milder. It actually is a very beautiful wood. The grain is magnificent. I once seen a guitar made from Spanish cedar and thought it was the most beautiful guitar I have ever seen…and smelled.

Now if you use American cedar, you will impart a very unfavorable aroma to your cigars. American Cedar is great for your cedar closets and keeping moths out of your wool and silk garments, but not great for your cigars.

It is grown and harvested in Central and South America, the home of my personal favorite cigars. It is beautiful in color ranging from pinkish to orange to reddish brown. Take an old cigar box, sand it with a fine grit paper, and rub Linseed oil into the finish, and you could have something pretty enough to be a gift. A stack of various sized Spanish cedar cigar boxes on your desk or a shelf is a attractive accessory no office should be without.

Every boy should have a cigar box or two on his dresser or nightstand holding everything from baseball cards, jack knives, marbles, plastic army men, and of course, his iPod. All boys remember seeing a cigar box somewhere in their home. Dad may have emptied his pockets into it every night. It may have collected receipts, scratched-off lottery tickets, bottle caps, or nuts and bolts in the workshop. Believe me, it was there…somewhere.

Need a unique gift wrapping solution? Go to your local cigar store and most of them sell their empty cigar boxes for a dollar or two. It’s cheaper than wrapping paper or a gift bag and so much prettier. Your recipient may end up liking the box more than the gift and they will probably hang on to that Spanish cedar box for the rest of their life.

Discover the beauty of the iconic cigar box. Every cigar box is a work of art, courtesy of the Creator who put that beautiful grain, color and fragrance into the Spanish cedar.

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Evangelical Christians are the soul of the Republican Party

 

Evangelical Christians are the soul of the Republican Party

Certain foods are no good without their main ingredient. Italian food is blah without garlic. In my mind, certain foods without sugar or substitute make no sense. I’ve always thought “What’s the point with decaf?” Without caffeine, coffee has no appeal to me.

Without Christians, the Republican Party is dead. Evangelical Christians are the soul of the party. Just like a body without a soul is nothing but a corpse, the GOP is just another lifeless political organization without evangelical Christians. You may remember my Jeff Foxworthy type rant in my blog about eight months ago; “You just might be an evangelical if…” I won’t rehash the whole thing, but you can re-read it here at: www.happyhour.blogtownhall.com/2008/10/14/you_just_might_be_an_evangelical_if.thtml

I have seen way too may people in the Republican Party try to distance themselves from the party saying that the party has been “hijacked by the right wingers” and that the party needs to be more moderate, more centrist.

The flight of Arlen Specter, is used by Democrats as an example. The example of Colin Powell is another.

My contention is that the Christians are the soul of the party. They take the saying of Jesus seriously when He said “You are the salt of the earth…” Salt enhances the flavor of whatever it is added to. Without it, some food is no longer attractive.

The party is as seriously divided as the two main parties are. The GOP needs to recognize that without the evangelicals, the party is not conservative. The distinctives of the party are provided by evangelicals. (Exclude the wacko’s,the over-the-top televangelists, and extremist nuts that exist in every organization). All of the “talking points” of the GOP are truly Christian concepts and products of a Christian worldview, ie: sanctity of life, good stewardship of money and natural resources, fairness, care for the poor, and helping people be all they can be.

Dear GOP…please understand that your evangelical Christians add something to the party that you should be proud of. They are your strongest supporters, have more gusto than mere ideologues, and are willing to die for what they believe in and have been dying for that cause for two thousand years. Don’t ask them to die for the party. They won’t do it. Just let them be the believers that God had called them to be and they will fight and vote for the right thing. It’s not about getting the right person or wrong person in the White House. To an evangelical Christian, it’s about doing what is pleasing in God’s sight as stated in the Jewish scriptures, Micah 6:8; He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.

Dear Christian, keep being salty and don’t lose hope. You’re doing the right thing.

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It's cigar o'clock

 

In the same way that pipes bring back memories to me, cigars just take me away to another time too. Here we go with a another distinctively and unapologetically male rant and walk down memory lane.

So many people are fond of pipes and pipe tobacco. It reminds them of their dads, uncles, neighbors, professors and I wrote about it in a previous blog. (http://happyhour.blogtownhall.com/2008/11/15/masculinity_disappeared_with_the_pipe.thtml )

My readers really liked and responded to that particular piece even though it was written slightly tongue-in-cheek.

I like cigars and this is not satire. There’s not a lot anyone can do to get me to stop liking cigars. I know all the dangers, read all the literature, and still like cigars. I don't inhale, never have, and don't do it enough for even the life insurance salesman to give me a higher rate, so relax Max.

Cigars are unique. They each have their own personalities and we choose them based upon our own personalities or moods.

There is a cigar culture. It’s a more sophisticated culture than the cigarette culture, if there is such a thing.

Here are a few thoughts on cigars.

You can’t hurry a cigar. You choose your cigar knowing that you must have the time set aside to enjoy it. Once you light it, you can’t hurry it or it ruins the experience. You cannot put it out and finish it later. Actually, you only do that once…. And you clearly remember that experience. It’s like touching the stove or putting your hand in a snow blower. You do it only once and learn. A re-lit cigar is fairly nasty and does not give you anywhere near the experience that you originally set out to have. So, if you don’t have that 20 to 90 minutes set aside, you don’t do it. No such thing as an impulsive cigar smoker. Cigar and Impulsive don't fit in the same sentence. 

You can’t hurry it, you have to plan. It forces you to think ahead ... or a least think. There’s no such thing as a cigar break. All your co-workers run outside for a quick smoke break to get their nicotine fix…but not you. You have self control. You don’t smoke a cigar for the nicotine. There are more efficient ways to get nicotine if that’s your thing. A cigar is planned and thought of as a reward for your hard work at the end of the day.

It’s similar to a pipe with all the fussing and gadgets. The cutters: should you cut it or just nip the end or like the three stooges did, just bite the end off. Is it properly humidified at 70% and kept at 70 degrees. Affectionately known as “70-70” to aficionados.

What wrapper are you going to have? The Cameroon, the Maduro, or the mild Connecticut? Each has their own distinct aroma. Does it have long or short filler? Is it machine made or hand rolled? I love the sign for See-Gars, a classic Nicaraguan cigar whose motto was “lovingly rolled on the thighs of Nicaraguan virgins” Oh my…how could you possibly not fall in love with that cigar? The mental picture of that young Nicaraguan as she sacrificed for you is just overwhelming….OK, now…snap out of it! Let me finish my article!

How you light it is important too. You either use a wooden kitchen match or butane lighter. Never … ever … use a Zippo. The Zippo would impart a petroleum-like smell to the cigar thus ruining the experience. If you’re gonna do it, do it right.

Now, the purists will tell you all about the humidification, the richness of the smoke, and the actual aroma of the cigar before it is lit. They will talk about aged tobacco, the island or country it was grown on, and the length and ring size. The length is exactly that. The ring size is actually the diameter of the cigar. See, I told you there was some intelligence involved here. Cigars make you smarter in math. Cigars are measured in 64ths of an inch. Sooo…a cigar with a ring gauge of 28 is about the thickness of a “Sharpie” marker. A cigar with a ring gauge of 55 is little smaller than a diameter of a quarter. My preference is a 5x54 which means I like a cigar that is 5 inches long and has the diameter of a nickel, maybe a little bigger. That is good for about an hour if you smoke it correctly. One puff about every two minutes is good. Never inhale, and never hold the smoke for too long. You will gag, get high or sick, or have to lick the ground to get the taste out after, or all of the aforementioned. Again, you only do that once, maybe twice.

Bigger cigars burn cooler than thinner cigars. You would think it’s the opposite, but it’s not. Cooler is better. I know it sounds counter-intuitive, but there is nothing worse than a burnt cigar flavor. What you really smell in a cigar is the oils that occur naturally in the tobacco leaf as they are being combusted.

Try to keep an ash of about an inch on the cigar. For some reason that’s the ideal length to keep the ember at the proper temperature.

Many guys will carry a cigar all day and occasionally take it out and smell it and then put it back in its cellophane wrapper or tube case. I enjoy that. I love the smell of a good cigar even before it is lit. That’s part of the experience for me. I enjoy that experience maybe once a week, when I have time, and always outside on the back step.

It’s a time I look forward to. I watch the smoke rise and disappear. I think about the day I had. I think about my life. I ponder possibilities and dream a little. I’m in no hurry and when I am done, I feel like I just got out of a Jacuzzi, had a 90 minute massage, the best therapy session, and a thousand compliments from my closest friends. I know many men feel the same way but would never admit it…or say it in those terms. If you can have that experience with a friend or two and maybe enjoy a favorite adult beverage, then it is absolute bliss.

I said all that to say this. Cigars are so much more than the experience for me. Yeah, I like the fussing, the routine, and the outcome. What I really get out of it is the memories it stimulates for me.

My grandfather smoked a cigar. I loved my grandfather…cigar and all. It reminds me of him. People I liked as a kid smoked cigars. Every Italian guy I knew smoked a cigar. There were some who I thought had one surgically attached to their mouths because they were never without one…ever. At six o’clock every night you would smell the aroma of cigars wafting through the neighborhood which only meant that all the working class men were done eating dinner and were outside having their cigars. You could stick your head out my front door and look to the left or the right and see the Dads with their cigars on the front stoops. Some had newspapers with them. Some were indulging their kids in Red light-Green light or Simon Says. Some watched as their kids performed the latest pop tune or skipped rope or listened as their son told them about their day at school. It forced the tired, weary, calloused-hand dads to slow down for a moment and be an audience to the ones who loved him more than anything else on earth. Dads up and down the block chuckled at impressions, dances, magic tricks, and silly songs from kids who were not allowed to perform those things twenty minutes earlier at the dinner table. He loosened his laces, sat there in his work pants, a t-shirt or muscle shirt and his hair slicked back. He sat there on that stoop with a cigar in one hand and with the other hand felt a little boys bicep when the boy said, “Hey Dad, feel my muscle”. Every Dad had the same response. “Wow, you’re strong”. A few of the Dads would then say, “How about this?” as they flexed their own biceps and their little kids swung on them like a monkey with a big grin. Yes, it was six o’clock. I didn’t know it from a clock or watch. I just knew because it smelled like six o’clock on my block. The beautiful smell of six o’clock, Dads, grandfathers, and neighbors. We didn’t know what a ring size was. We didn’t know short from long filler. We didn’t care what wrapper it was. We didn’t care what vintage or what island it was from. It was the smell of an era long gone.

Now I’m a father. A man nearly a half century old. My Dad is a grandfather now four times. I live in a world now where few friends still have both of their parents. I have both of mine, thank the Lord. The memories I have of my grandfather are “aromatic” memories. The sights, sounds, and yes...the smells. Only few sights and sounds take me down that memory lane. But it’s the smells that bring me there in a split second.

I’m sure my Dad doesn’t remember this, but I remember sitting out back with him one night in Florida where they have lived for 25 years. Mom had gone to bed a couple hours earlier. I said to Dad, “Let’s go outside and have a cigar”. He poured some Crown or Chivas on the rocks for both of us. We sat out back with cigars in one hand and glasses in the other. The lights were out. It was pitch black so the Florida bugs wouldn’t eat us alive. I do remember they were Bauza Cigars from Mikes Cigars. They were a 5x50 Robusto. Both were lit. All I could sense of Dad was what I could see and smell. I could smell the aroma of the cigar. I would see it glow brighter as he puffed on it periodically. I could hear the jingle of the ice in the glass as it tipped up every now and then. We didn’t even speak much. I have no memory of the conversation at all, but I do remember the smell, the sound, and the sight. I’ll never get that out of my head. As a matter of fact, I tell that story to one friend and he starts to tear up saying to me he wishes he had that kind of relationship with his Dad and I never once mentioned anything about relationship. It just happens with a cigar. Sometimes just sitting with someone and having a cigar is all you need. You don’t even have to talk.

The other weekend I had the kids. It was about 9 PM. We were all watching TV. I thought I would go sit on the back step and have a small cigar. My daughter was dozing off and I told my son I’ll be out back. I went out back with a cigar and an iced tea. I sat there quietly and enjoyed my cigar. When I was near done, I turned around and there was my son in the doorway just standing there quietly. I asked how long he had been standing there. He replied “The whole time”. I asked if everything was OK. He said “Yeah, I was just watching you”. All he saw was a Dad at the end of his day…relaxing…looking at the stars, thinking about his successes, failures, his future, and how he could make a better life.

I said “You tired?” He said “Yep”. I got up and we both went in.

I’m probably the only person that can romanticize a cigar, but don’t we all do that with something?

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You've heard of Interview with a vampire? This is "Interview with a Barber"

Interview with a Barber

By George Bruno
 
 
You’ve heard of Anne Rice’s Interview with a Vampire?

Well, this is my “Interview with a Barber”

I trust my barber, Nic Prosseda. He keeps me looking good, and when you are in sales, in the public eye, or in a position where being well-groomed is crucial, it may actually help improve your bottom line, especially in this economy.


Who is Nic Prosseda?

Nic opened up his Modern Male Barbershop a few months ago. It was the site of John’s traditional barbershop in Sellersville. Nic says it’s an honor to be working at the site that had been a barbershop for over a hundred years. Generation after generation of men has gone in and out of that door. Nic carries on the tradition of classic barbering with his modern twist. I am happy to take my ten year old son there for the best haircut he has ever gotten.

Nic is from South Philly, a father of two and communicated a passion for our nations youth. He is involved in a prison ministry that helps incarcerated young men find their way to a more goal-directed life and be productive members of society.

Professionally, Nic is classically trained in traditional scissor and clipper techniques. He takes pride in not being a “national chain assembly line haircut factory”.

He has had a pair of scissors in his hand since he was thirteen years old. He did a five year apprenticeship under the skillful tutelage of two Pennsylvania licensed hair stylists. Just that alone is pretty rare. He had over 2,200 hours of training, is a published barber, and is known internationally for innovative and classic styles and techniques. When I asked why in the world it would take that long, he shared with me what he had learned. Things like concepts of style, facial shapes and bone structure, skin and hair types, complexions, sanitary and sterilization techniques, and of course, customer service.

I interviewed Nic about what he does.

Geo: Why are you different than the average barber or as you say, “haircut factory”?

Nic: I am bringing back the classic scissoring technique that all old school barbers did. It was the way your father and grandfather got their hair cut. I slow things down a little. I talk to everyone before the scissors even touch them. It’s a personal one-on-one relationship. I get to know them a little and help them express themselves through their hair style. I use a sterile straight razor to do all the clean lines and make my guys look great. The effective use of a straight razor is a lost art and nothing cleans up the edges of the hair like a razor. It cuts below the skin when used properly with a warm lather. No electric clippers can do what I do with the razor.

Geo: I didn’t know you can still use straight razors.

Nic: I use disposable razors that I also sterilize in that classic blue liquid called Barbicide that you see in all the old time barbershops. They are always sharp and safe. They are actually good for the skin because they exfoliate and remove dead skin cells with every stroke and that stimulates healthy new skin growth. I also use a badger brush to apply a warm lather to the back of the neck and ear area. The badger bristles actually lift the hair and makes it stand up making it easier to trim.

Geo: When you say that every visit starts with a consult, what do you mean?

Nic: I always ask when was the last time they got their haircut, so I can determine how fast their hair grows. That tells me what I need to do. I also ask them what they do for a living.

Geo: Why is that important?

Nic: If the guy is a lawyer and presenting cases in court all day he needs to look a certain way. If he is a bridge inspector and wearing a hardhat all day, then I take a different approach. The scalp acts differently when it is covered all day and exposed to hair-damaging environmental factors such as exhaust, dirt, sweat, etc.

Geo: What other things do you ask?

Nic: I ask how often they go out, do they use product such as gels, pomades, conditioners, sprays, etc.

Geo: I like products. What can a product do?

Nic: Some products are for hair health, some change a look from a work look to a night life look. For instance, I had one guy who washed his hair with soap.

Geo: You mean a bar of soap? Like Dial or Irish Spring?

Nic: Yes, exactly. He washed his hair with a bar of soap for years and it dried out his hair and scalp and then he would use a dandruff shampoo to treat the dryness. The he would go back to the soap. I showed him how to choose a shampoo for his particular scalp and hair and to use a conditioner.

Geo: Did he take your advice?

Nic: Yes. But at first he thought that was too much fussing. It was something that only women did. It wasn’t long after he saw the results that he became a true believer in using a quality shampoo and a conditioner made for his hair and scalp type.

Geo: Was this an older guy?

Nic: No. It was a guy about 35 who had dry hair for most of his adult life and only used a drying gel to control his hair. He looks like a completely different person now and his hair is one of his most attractive qualities. It’s never too late to learn some new tricks.

Geo: You sound like a believer in product.

Nic: Absolutely. A good product can show off your haircut, change the look, tweak the style, simplify the morning routine, and make hair shinier, healthier, and improve scalp health. Remember, hair grows from the scalp. Healthy hair can only come from a healthy scalp.

Geo: What about spouses, girlfriends, and family?

Nic: It’s funny that you mention that. I made the observation that if a guy doesn’t come back, one of the reasons is that his wife or girlfriend didn’t like the haircut.

Geo: Wow, I can’t believe that.

Nic: It’s true. When a guy gets a haircut, the first person to see the finished product is the significant other or family member. They either give it the thumbs up or thumbs down. They will say things like “I like it…that barber did a good job” or things like “I don’t like it… don’t go back there”. I know it sounds funny, but that leaves a lasting impression on a guy and he’ll consider what they say. There’s a greater probability of him coming back if everyone else likes his hair. It kind of reinforces and rewards his choice of barber.

Geo: OK. Now that I think about it, I like it when the people closest to me like how I look. I can see how that would be a big factor for repeat business.

Nic: Repeat business is the heart and soul of my work. It’s kind of like an insurance policy for future income. When I look at the lifetime value of a customer, each and every man is important to me. So it is important to give 100% to every man or boy that walks through my door. I make men feel good about who they are.

Geo: I love bringing my boys to the barbershop. They just don’t get the same experience in a women’s salon.

Nic: Yeah, the father and son barbering experience is very unique. There’s nothing like a Dad who gets his haircut while his son watches and then 20 minutes later, the boy is in the same chair. The boy sees the same sights as the big guys do, listens to the same conversations, and even participates in some of the conversations. There are always all ages in the shop. There could be a 75 year old grandfather in the chair one minute and a 10 year old the next minute. I really enjoy when Dads and their boys come in. It truly is a bonding experience. Most people think father-son bonding is limited to hobbies, sports, fishing, etc, but getting their haircut together is something that is memorable. The boy always seems to walk taller and act more mature after he gets his haircut by a barber.

Geo: Even though my Dad is a barber, I would love for my Dad, my son, and me to come in and get our haircuts and a shave some Saturday morning. I think it would be cool to have three generations of men in a row. What about Moms? I have a female friend who is hair stylist herself, but takes her son to a barber so he can be exposed to the barber experience and culture.

Nic: I would encourage Moms to bring their boys in and expose them to the same experience. I think it helps to round out his boyhood with a distinctively male experience.

Geo: That is true. With gender lines blurred in so many areas and the multitude of unisex stylists and shops, it’s nice to see a culture that is distinctively male.

Geo: What are the biggest complaints that men have about barbers?

Nic: Probably that they don’t get the haircut that they ask for. That’s why I talk to everyone before I start cutting.

Geo: I know one of the biggest complaints I have had is that I am itching for the rest of the day from the hair pieces down my neck and back. I can’t wait to take a shower and throw my clothes in the laundry. Do you do anything different than other barbers or haircut factories?

Nic: Yes. I’m glad you mentioned that. I wrap the neck with a barber’s tissue and then put a towel around the neck and then the cape. When I am done, I use a barbers vacuum around the neck and all through the hair. That means a guy can get his haircut first thing in the morning and not be tortured by itching the rest of his day. I believe I am the only one in the area that does that.

Geo: I have gone into a salon and they ask me what number clipper comb I want. You have never asked me that.

Nic: I have guys that come in and say they want a #2 on the sides and a #5 on the top. I know what they mean but I don’t talk that language. A skilled and caring haircutter doesn’t ask that. I use a combination of scissors and clippers which customizes the cut to the man. I really am an artist. As a sculptor, I am putting a shape on a shape. No two skulls are the same. No two hair types are the same. You cannot do the same haircut on every man. That is what a custom haircut is. You have to take into consideration, skull shape, size, hair color, hair lines, textures, cowlicks, and how the hair has been trained to lay on that mans head.

Geo: I get my haircut differently now than I did when I was 25. I have a theory that men need different cuts for the different stages in their lives. Would you agree?

Nic: Yes. For instance, the 16 year old guy wants a haircut that doesn’t look like he just got his hair cut. The 26 year old guy is a young professional, new in his career. I try to give him a haircut that has two looks. One look for the 9-5 look and one look for evenings and weekends, such as a more tousled look that is in fashion right now. The 46 year old guy generally likes a conservative cut that reflects his age and life experience. But then again it all depends what he does for a living. That is why I do the consult first. An architect is going to have a different look than a music producer or tattoo artist. The 56+ year old guy generally wants his hair off his ears and tapered in the back. His cut is characterized by “no fuss, no muss”. He gets out of the showers, combs his hair and doesn’t want to mess with it or think about it for the rest of the day.

Geo: I thought I died and went to heaven when you put the hot steamed towel on me at the end of the haircut. Other than just feeling good, is it actually good for you and do you do that to everyone?

Nic: Yes, everyone gets the hot steamed towel. It is different than the dry hot towel. It relaxes you; it opens pores, helps the skin breathe a little, and helps get all loose hair off the neck and side of the head. Everybody loves the hot steamed towel.

Geo: I know I like it when you trim all the hair from the neck up without me asking.

Nic: Yes. As a man gets older, he has more hair in his ears. That gets trimmed. Most men’s eyebrows can get pretty out of control too. I take care of that. I even occasionally trim a nose hair or two. It’s all part of having a well-groomed look.

Geo: Thanks for sharing with me today. You certainly opened my eyes to the advantages of coming to your shop and being a member of the Stay Sharp Club.

One more question: Is there anyone who you’d love to be their barber?

Nic: That’s a good question. Yes. I would love to be Donald Trump’s barber.

Geo: Wow. I never thought you’d say “The Donald”. Why him? What would you do with his hair?

Nic: I like Donald Trump. He’s a good businessman and an inspiration to all business people like me. First of all, I would color his hair properly, get rid of the confusing hair, and make it look so good that he’d never go back to the comb-over.

Geo: That’s quite a challenge.

Nic: He has an open invitation. I’d welcome him here any day.

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The ten most dangerous conservatives that liberals have to keep an eye on. Part 1

 

#10

William John Bennett (born July 3, 1943) is an American conservative pundit, politician, and political theorist. He served as United States Secretary of Education from 1985 to 1988. He also held the post of Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (or "Drug Czar") under George H. W. Bush.

Bennett was born in Brooklyn but later moved to Washington, D.C., where he attended Gonzaga College High School. He graduated from Williams College and went on to get a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin in Political Philosophy. He also has a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

From 1976 to 1981 he was the executive director of the National Humanities Center, a private research facility in North Carolina. In 1981 President Ronald Reagan appointed him to head the National Endowment for the Humanities, where he served until Reagan appointed him Secretary of Education in 1985. It was in 1986 that Bennett switched from the Democratic to the Republican Party. Bennett resigned from this post in 1988, and later that year was appointed to the post of Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy by President George H. W. Bush.

He is host of the daily radio show called Bennett’s Morning in America. I cannot listen to anything else after checking him out for about a week. He raises the bar of conversation, political interchange, and son-of-gun…..he makes sense.

He is not perfect and he’ll be the first to admit it.

I just finished his America: The Last Best Hope, Volume 1. This is probably the best “in a nutshell” version of American history WITHOUT the revisionist perspective. I’ll give you an example. Rather than hammering America for slavery and talking about reparations, he says…and I paraphrase…we have seem to forgotten that America blazed the trail for ENDING slavery in the world. Slavery had gone on for thousand of years. It was NOT invented by America as liberals would have you believe. It was tried here on this soil and IT DIDN’T WORK. In the light of thousands of years of world history, slavery had its debut and demise here in less than a century. Bondage and freedom cannot co-exist.

I can’t wait to dive into Volume 2 and also the American Patriots Almanac.

On a daily basis, he hammers away at the irrational logic of the current administration and the creeping and creepy socialism that is being thrust on us much faster than we ever thought.

He does make it pretty clear that he is a conservative FIRST, and a republican second. Yes, there is a difference. The next election will be a culturally conservative election that will be powered by conservative media and web 2.0. My prediction is that the 2012 election will be cultural and not political. Bill Bennett is one of those leading that charge.

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Why I go to a barbershop and not a national salon chain

 

Why I go to a barbershop … and not a national salon chain.

I know the beauty industry. Mom was a cosmetologist. Dad was a barber...and still is. The bar for haircuts was raised pretty high in my house as I grew up and after I left for college.  I couldn’t stand the fact that I had to get my haircut by someone other than my barber father. I remember going months without a haircut and driving home from college to upstate New York six hours knowing that I would get a good haircut from Dad. For a short time, I worked in the esthetics industry and had access to some of the best stylists in the country...but still...no one gave a haircut like Dad.

I remember hanging out at the barbershop on Saturdays when I was a kid. The smells were only the smells a barbershop could have...and not those a woman's salon could have. I used to practically gag at the smells in a salon. Perms, straighteners, dyes, bleaches. Yuck.

The barbershop would have the occasional cigar smoker, which I really didn’t mind too much because all the Italian guys I knew smoked cigars and it was a familiar smell to me. The smell of cigars made me feel safe as a kid because real men smoked cigars and nobody messed with real men.

There was the smell of the hot Barabasol lather from the hot lather machine, the steamy hot towels, that blue liquid that disinfected combs and blades, and of course the French Pinaud aftershave in the tall skinny bottle on the shelf in front of the mirror. The smell of talcum powder as the barber brushed the hair clippings off your forehead, neck, and face. You knew to close your eyes and keep your mouth shut.

There were the sounds that you could only hear from a barbershop and not a salon. The sound of the lather machine, the sound of slip-slap slip-slap as the barber sharpened up the straight razor on the leather strap that hung off the arm of each barber chair. The sound of the barber chair hydraulics as he pumped up the height of the chair. The sound of the broom as a barber swept up the hair in between each customer. The sound of the bell that jingled every time a customer came through the door.

Then sight of men lined up in chairs reading newspapers, National Geographic, and LIFE magazine. The black and white photos on the walls of people like Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Perry Como, Jerry Vale, and others of that genre of music. Some of them even had autographs of the singers on them.

They didn’t need an OPEN sign on the door, because when the barber pole outside the shop was lit up and spinning, you knew it was open. There may have been a black and white TV with rabbit ears on. It could have been a sports game or an old movie. There was talking back and forth between all the men and the barbers. The guy in the chair had to rely on the mirror to see who was talking because if he turned his head, he might lose an ear. Blades were flying all over the place in those days. God forbid you get nicked. Then the barber would put this thing called a steptic pencil on the cut which stopped the bleeding, but not without stinging like hell first. And it was never the barbers fault….even if it really was his fault. It was because you moved. Period. End of story. You never argue with a guy who has a super sharp razor to your throat.

The barbers pretty much gave the same haircut to everyone in those days unless it was a crew cut or a flat-top. The lines were perfect. You smelled good. You felt good. You itched like hell for the rest of the day, but you didn’t mind. He always applied a little greasy stuff, VO5, or spray in your hair. These were the days before gel or mouse.

You paid and the barber pressed down two buttons on the old cash register and the drawer opened with a ring of the bell. You never saw the price of the haircut on the register. He just went through the motions of opening the register. If there wasn’t enough change in the drawer, he always pulled a wad out of this pocket. The thickest wad of dough I had ever seen. He peeled off a few bills and then you gave one or two back to him as a tip. You both knew what the protocol was, but you went through the motions anyways. He thanked you. And you always came back a month later.

I remember riding my bike to the shop at 6pm on a Saturday when the shop closed. My Dad would then ride the bike and I would be sitting on the handlebars as we drove back home. He couldn’t wait to sit down and relax after being on his feet all day long.

My folks are in Florida now. Mom only cuts Dads hair now. Dad still cuts all the neighbors hair in the garage. They line up in lawn chairs, shoot the breeze, drink homemade wine and leave my Dad more money than he ever made when he was working in a barbershop. The chair is there, the mirror is there, the strap is there, the shelf with various products is there. And most importantly, Dad is there. 73 years old and still cutting hair. He listens to woes, stories about lay-offs, grown children that never became doctors or lawyers, cancer, mistresses, and then somehow makes them feel better about their sins, struggles, and dreams… no matter how old they are. The barber is a pretty special guy.

You can take a New York barber and stick him in a garage in Florida and you still feel like you’re in a barbershop. That only leads me to believe that it has more to do with the barber, than the shop. It’s the barber that creates that experience. No man, other my doctor, can come that close to me. Other than God, there is no counselor, no priest, or magistrate that hears the things my barber hears. There’s no other man that I can take my own boys to and say “…clean him up a little”, and then thank him and give him money. Barbers do one really cool thing for me...for a moment, I get a glimpse of what my boys will look like as men. He makes them look like little men. He parts their hair perfectly. He uses a combination of scissors and clippers, not just clippers like at the salons. The barber understands #2 on the sides and a 4 on the top…but he doesn’t like that. That’s what a male customer says after he’s gone to a chain salon for years. The barber sympathizes with you, but doesn’t judge you. It gives him an idea of what you want. The good barber knows what looks best on you. He knows what cut looks good with the shape of your face, by how you dress, and the work you do. The good barber takes mental notes on all those things. Trust the barber. Just let him do his thing on you. It will look good.

The barber is a pretty special guy.  I can’t get to Florida to Dad’s garage as much as I’d like, but you can bet that when I need a haircut, I don’t go to a "haircut factory"…I go to a barbershop.

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The least scumbagiest of the scumbags

I love watching TV.
I was a big fan of The Soprano's.
Huge fan of Brotherhood.
Really enjoy Dexter.
True Blood was different and fun.
And most recently is The Wire.
 
Normally, I am a Travel Channel, Food, HGTV, Sci-Fi, History, and National Geographic channel guy.
 
But I end up getting hooked on the former shows.
 
Now when I step back and look at those shows, I noticed something.
 
There's not one truly righteous character in those shows. They're all monsters, mobsters, thieves, con men, serial killers, manipulators, freaks, druggies, alcoholics, and shady characters. Everyone is the take or taking somebody, everyone is in someone's back pocket (kind of like our judicial system), Everyone has got something on someone.
Nevertheless, I enjoy the shows.
But the observation is that all the characters are bad people. Even the ones I like...are bad people. People I wouldnt want my kids associating with.
So what I do in my mind is rationalize which one is the best...or the least bad. The lesser evil.
 
I was watching The Wire today. Second season. And my "favorite" charactor, McNulty, is getting served divorce papers by his estranged wife. I felt really bad for him.....but in the past episodes he was the biggest skirt chaser, briber, scumbag, and one of the most dishonest cops in the cast of characters....and he was the nicest one in the bunch.
 
In The Soprano's, I really liked Vito. Vito ended up dying a really humiliating terrible death. I felt bad for his character. But for several seasons, Vito had probably whacked more people than anyone else.
 
There seems to be a new formula in TV and movie entertainment. There used to be a clear "good guy" and "bad guy" and a good versus evil concept in all scripts. The template has been trashed and the new one is bad vs. bad....or the bad vs. the least bad...the lesser of two evils.
I just made this observation today: Even the heroes are bad guys.
It's not good vs. bad....it's bad vs. really bad.
It's not that the lines are blurred.
It's that the roles are totally flip-flopped. Good is bad. Bad is good.
I find myself rootin' for the bad guy...or at least the least scumbagiest of the scumbags.
Have you noticed that too?
 
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Being "The First" anything is a great strategy

In our businesses, the books we write, the accomplishments we have, the goals we make...it's good to be "the first".
We have been hearing alot about "The first" African-American president.
In the presidential race, there was a possibility of having "the first" woman president.
We celebrated "the first" man on the moon.
"Firsts" always get celebrated
A great marketing strategy is to be "the first" in anything in your industry, ministry, or area of expertise.
It doesnt even have to be good...it just has to be first.
 
Being "the first" anything attracts the attention of the media.
"The first" anything does well on the web.
Having "the first" anything will drive traffic to your website
 
Being "the first" may bring you fame, but not fortune. It all depends on what you are looking for or can benefit from. Converting that "first" to cash is a whole other skill set, but it can be done.
 
In 2009, I have lots of ideas for "firsts" in my career.
What can you be "the first" in?
 
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The Conservative that liberals loved

Barry Goldwater: the conservative that liberals loved. Why?...probably because he spoke about true conservatism that rang true in the hearts of the American people. He wasnt in anyones back pocket and no one hijacked his party, his ideology, and his practice.
Oh...that America would raise up a crop of young people like Barry Goldwater.
 
Listen up conservative talk radio peeps...before there was Reagan...there was Goldwater.
 
 
 
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The "old" war on terrorism and the "old" solution

The war on terrorism is not new and the solution is not new. Barry Goldwater spoke of the conscience of a conservative. By his definition, even todays liberals that love America are conservative.
 
 
 
 
 
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The Conscience of a Conservative: Part 1

Just in case you have forgotten what a conservative is. Here is a little refresher. Enjoy part one. More to come.
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How do you do church?

Seth Godin in his latest blog shows the power of smart copywriting at http://sethgodin.typepad.com/ "Free taste test...Are we better than Starbucks? It's turns traditional advertising copy on its ear.

Turning tradition on its ear. 

Hmmm...can this be applied to church growth?
The reality is that when people come to our churches, they are comparing it to something...another church, a concert, a theater, a cafe...something.
 People will get a certain vibe when they walk in, they will get a certain vibe during the service and sermon, they will get a certain vibe as they leave. Are we in charge of that vibe? Do we take full responsibility for that vibe?

As I travel and speak on Peak Vocal Skills, I tell people that they need to take full responsibility for their message, for people understanding their message, for people knowing their name, etc. How people perceive you is your responsibility. The vibe they get when in your presence is your responsibility. When people forget your name, it is not their fault, it is yours. Take responsibility for it all. That could include making your message simpler, creating interactive sessions, providing take-away items, being relevant, and being the speaker they keep talking about.

Is it possible to switch up the church paradigm without diluting the message of Christ?

What if you created a church that was a TOTAL game changer?

Like the old houses at the Jersey shore. It would be way too much work to rehab it, so they just tear it down and build a new one. The common name for those houses are "tear-downs". That's how the realtors relate to them when you call to inquire about them. In the real estate world, that refers to a property where the actual real estate is worth more than the structure on that property. Yeah, the architecture is cool and sentimental. Yeah, they dont make'em like that anymore, Yeah, it is a memorial to yesteryear...BUT...is it practical? Will it accomodate your family? Is it safe? Is it up to modern day codes? Rhetorical questions.

Is your church a "tear-down"? Would it be easier to just plow it down and start from scratch? Not literally tear it down...but tear down how you do church...and re-build it? Yeah, the current church is a sentimental memorial? Yeah, Grandpa was a deacon there. Yeah, I was raised there. Yeah, the liturgy is the same liturgy that great grandma loved, etc, etc.
Yes, there is beauty in tradition...but could something really good happen if you started changing the game?
Just a thought.
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Gov. Rendell....Somethings' wrong in Pennsylvania

 
I've thought about it, now I'm writing about it.
 
I get a ticket if I don't wear my seat belt...because the state believes that I would be safer if I had my seatbelt on.
 
But...if I ride my motorcycle or scooter, I don't need to have a helmet on. That choice is left up to me.
 
Am I missing something here?
 
Now let me get something straight. I do wear my seat belt and so do my passengers. I don't put the car in drive if everyone is not buckled up...especially my kids.
 
So if I get a ticket...when I look in the section where all the portions are itemized....I see things like administrative costs, the actual fine itself, and I see an item called "CAT Fund" which is short for Catastrophic Fund. It helps those who are in accidents who suffer catastophic medical injury....mainly traumatic brain injury...aka TBI.
Most of the TBI's that come into emergency rooms are from motorcycle accidents.
Is it coming clear now?
The rest of us are paying for someone elses carelessness and poor choice.
This is a form of socialism that already exists in our culture.
Taxes are a form of it as well, but I dont have too much of a problem with paying taxes because I like nice safe paved roads, street lights, parks, lakes, national security, public schools, and law enforcement
 
I am not being insensitive to those who have TBI's or their families who bear the burden of caring for a TBI patient, but wouldnt a helmet have prevented or at least minimized the injury? (I dont want to hear a word from the helmet law freaks either. I am a motorcyclist for over thirty years and wearing a helmet is just common sense.)
 
Wear your seat belts when you drive.
When riding a cycle or scooter, wear your helmet.
You don't have to manifest the absolute foolishness of Pennsylvania's stupid DMV laws here.
 
 
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