Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Robin Williams and Monkey Box
Isn't the news shocking about Robin Williams? I was so sorry to hear it. Many comedians, I suspect, have dark undercurrents that propel their skills and talents, and Williams certainly had a manic, almost desperate intensity that, in retrospect, perhaps hinted at such undercurrents. But still.
Here was a guy who, at first, seemed like a mere goofy comedian playing a space alien in rainbow suspenders. Then he turned around and made "Good Morning Vietnam" and "Dead Poets Society" and "The Fisher King" and "Good Will Hunting," and we were all blown away by his depth. When I say "we," I mean the world in general.
You just never know what's going on in a person's head, how deep their discontent can be -- even a person who is so successful, who has so much.
Just last week at my mom's house I was marveling that my brother still has his "Mork from Ork" sleeping bag, vintage late '70s. It's rolled up in the top of one of our closets. We certainly never anticipated, when we bought it, that it would outlast Mork himself.
On other topics:
I took both of these photos yesterday, and the Gods were not on my side. I've been wanting to shoot the fireworks store (top) for a while, but then when I finally got around to it, that grotty white pickup truck was parked out front. I took photos anyway, because the Zen of photography is that you just have to work with what's there. I passed the shop again later, and the truck was still there, so I was denied a better opportunity. Looks like it broke down. I bet the shop owners are miffed.
As for the flame car, my lens was fogged because I quickly took the camera from an air conditioned car to a humid, rainy roadside. Hence the whitish blur in the center.
Oh well.
Finally, have you ever heard of a place in Florida called Monkey Box? I hadn't, despite the fact that I grew up here, until I saw WFLA's weather map on television. This map shows tiny, tiny settlements all over Central and West Florida that are really no more than wide places in the road: Sturkey, Harrisburg, Antioch. One of these settlements is called Monkey Box.
According to its one-line entry in Wikipedia, it's "an unincorporated community in Glades County." But actually, from what I can gather, Monkey Box isn't a town. It appears (on Google Maps) to be an area of marshy wilderness on the western edge of Lake Okeechobee. An article on a fishing website seems to bear that out.
Apparently no monkeys (or people, for that matter) live in Monkey Box. It seems the only residents are bass and perch, with occasional fishermen passing through.
Florida. Places like Lloyd. Places like Monkey Box.
ReplyDeleteRobbin Williams' death has thrown me for a loop. It's thrown the whole world for a loop. A world without Robbin? No. Not possible.
Yet. Here we are.
Love Monkey Box! How quirky. Florida is different than every other state.
ReplyDeleteYour pics are awesome. I love the broken down pick up truck. A photobomber!
Robin Williams. Sad. I could handle watching him in anything. His eyes were so sad but meanwhile he would be cracking jokes and shifting characters. He was totally nuts. I hope he rests well now.
I could NOT handle watching him in anything.
ReplyDeleteMORK!!
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Monkey Box, the "Monkey Cage" gas station in Callahan has been demolished.
I love the name Monkey Box.
ReplyDeleteLike most of the world, I feel a profound loss with Williams passing. I suspect you are right about the dark side of such great talent.
So sad...And you learn something new every day...I'd not been aware of Monkey Box, but it doesn't surprise me, either.
ReplyDeleteGlad you made it back across the pond.
love the photos. my grandgirl and I saw an old roadster with flames on it just the other day. Monkey Box reminds me of some of the smaller towns in Texas, like Dime Box.
ReplyDeleteI love the names of towns - it's always so entertaining to imagine what they're like.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, so sad about Robin Williams...