Killing Batteries

Leif Pettersen’s battery-powered rise to the zenith of travel writing rapture
Fri
26
Sep '08

Never a dull moment in NYC

So as a few of you may have noticed, last week I went straight from being cloistered in my condo like a masturbating food critic to a balls-out invasion of NYC.

Oh man, it was crazy. The parties, the half-naked flirting celebrities, people throwing money at me, it was completely out of control. I walked out of the airport, got into a taxi, the driver asked what I do and I said “I’m a freelance writer from Minnesota that blogs about travel and travel writing with a perpetual sub-text about what a cute, literary genius I am.” He shrieked, slammed on the brakes, hit a giant red panic button on the dash and the next thing I knew both back doors opened, Tyra Banks got in one side, Donald Trump got in the other and a Vanity Fair photographer flopped onto the hood and started snapping pictures through the windshield.

In only 48 hours I had a 10-volume autobiography book deal, two TV shows in development (a reality show about LP authors and a sitcom about six unusually attractive freelance writers living in a prohibitively expensive NYC apartment that all date each other), a bidding war between three movie studios to option my “This is What’s Pissing Me Off Today” series, three model girlfriends, my own clothing line (“Vagabond”), a three story brownstone in the Upper West Side, and a record deal for my new straight up gangsta rap CD “Where’s the Hostel Motherf*cker?”

Alas, very little of that is true, but NYC is indeed a happening place. I can see why people in certain industries feel as if they have to live there or die. While there, I arguably did more successful networking in one day than I have in the past year. And I didn’t even go there for business. Well, not at first.

My oldest friend Ben lives in a coveted part of Brooklyn with his 7 and 1/2 months pregnant wife. In August, I realized somewhat in a panic, that if I didn’t visit them before the baby arrived, I wouldn’t be able to visit them again for 18 years. No I am not kidding. I’ve got more than a little cross-wiring in my head and one of the downsides is that the sound of a child crying makes me wanna rip off both my ears, sauté them in garlic and eat them. And teenagers are just thankless, back-talking pains in the ass, so I ain’t going anywhere near their house during that time neither. So I quickly secured super cheap standby tickets and got the hell ready.

A week before the trip it occurred to me that perhaps I could do a little networking while I was there. I emailed my agent who, after some gentle reminding, remembered who I was and within about 30 minutes she had lined up two meetings for me with very important people. I can’t name names here, because I have a long history of jinxing myself. Though my attempts to keep mum on my exciting opportunities have also failed to bring positive results, so I’m splitting the difference here (as they say in the film industry I learned last weekend) and am sort of talking about it, but being coy and annoyingly leaving out the juiciest details. I’ll let you know how that works out for me.

The first meeting was with an editor and creative specialist for a large book publisher, which went great, eventually. I sat down to have coffee with the guy and I immediately started off by disappointing him with my best pitch. The enthusiasm drained from his face like a flushing public school toilet. Fortunately, we recovered from that and spent two full hours brainstorming and riffing off one another and building on ideas until finally in the last 15 minutes I hatched a killer hook that I’ve now been dispatched to put into book proposal form. No promises of course, but it was an encouraging meeting. We parted ways, both of us practically jumping for joy at our achievement, or maybe it was just all the coffee.

Then I walked about 12 blocks to Times Square to have lunch with Wendy Perrin, of Condé Nast Traveler fame, who fed me sushi (of course) in Condé Nast’s famous Frank Gehry-designed lunchroom (of course). She then took me on a tour, including the anticlimactic production area, the heart of the magazine, which was completely deserted when we passed through at 1:45 on a Friday afternoon. Clearly working for Condé Nast is a demanding job.

After a short break I headed to a wine bar to meet yet another book editor, who I have a special fondness for since he nearly killed himself trying (and failing) to get his crusty old boss to buy my memoirs a few years ago. We had a slightly less productive brainstorming session, but the upshot was that he totally dug the idea that the first editor passed on that morning and he gave me a great prompt for a possible future book project of Bryson-esque proportions.

On the Brooklyn Promenade

Business accomplished, I spent most of the remainder of my trip drunk on wine. I staggered onto the subway and met Ben in midtown at a film party that was just ending. After making a generous meal of the leftover appetizers, we went out for drinks. By happy coincidence, our bartender was stinking drunk and plotting to quit her job within the week. What did this mean to us? Why free drinks all night long, of course! Who says partying in Manhattan is expensive? Apart from splitting a $14 cab ride home, sated with someone else’s appetizers and carrying my fifth free wine, thoughtfully poured into a to-go cup, I didn’t spend a dime all night!

The second night wasn’t as cheap. All three of our bartenders were discouragingly sober, not feeling particularly generous and in one case, barely able to make change without having a nervous breakdown. During this very expensive wine-a-thon, we rendezvoused with fellow LP author and honorary KB groupie Becky Ohlsen who it turns out I’m violently allergic to. We did as all LP authors do when they get together: talk about other authors. Since we’re all memorably nuts, this conversation took about five hours. Becky also made the, in retrospect, astute observation that most of the commenters on this blog are female, which I found vaguely perplexing seeing as how I manage to indulgently use the word ‘boobies’ in every other post.

Ben negligently waited until my final night in New York to take me to Lucali, the pizza place of the moment in Brooklyn. If he really loved me, he would have taken me there right off the bat, so I could return for lunch and dinner for the next three days, but he didn’t because he’s a cruel bastard. Ben – when I send your child the “Emergency Vehicle Sirens from Around the World Audio System (200 Watt – Dolby 5.1 – Collector’s Edition)” on his/her first birthday, you’ll know why asshole.

When informed that there was a 90 minute wait to get into Lucali at 6:30pm on a Sunday, I had a feeling that I was in for something special. And boy was I right. The pizza and calzone that we shared were heart-breakingly good. Even in Italy I’ve rarely enjoyed pizza of that caliber. Also, it’s a BYOB restaurant, so you can wash everything down with wine, without paying a 250% mark-up. The bonus was that we were served by the First Runner Up of the Brooklyn Teenaged Girl Accent Championships, who had further gotten into character by tanning herself into a new ethnicity and throwing in some eye-popping breast implants. Classic.

So, I’m back home now, agonizing over new business and wishing I had me a Lucali calzone with garlic and shallots. The good news is that I have several delectable opportunities now that, if I don’t fornicate them all up, may result in me becoming an enviable combination of Paul Theroux, Anthony Bourdain and Brad Pitt in the next few years. The bad news is that, as of this moment, I have absolutely no confirmed paying work in my future. None. Zilch. Nada. Diddly. Squat. And with the staggering six to nine month delays that occur between work and payment in freelance writing, even if I get work in a few weeks, I may not see a serious check again until I’m shopping for Ben’s unborn child’s first birthday present. Mark my words, the next nine months may make or break my career. It’d be extra exciting if it weren’t me.

Agonizing over travel insurance? Maybe I can help…

Sun
21
Sep '08

Musings while locked away from humanity during a LP productivity surge

Hello from New York City. I’m having a fantastically productive and enjoyable time trying to make the word a better place through literary genius and drinking excessive quantities of wine.

I’m about eight working hours away from being done with the Romania and Moldova guidebook project that I’ve been picking at since May. I just have to do some copying and pasting, some proofing and I gotta find someplace to stick in my signature word that I sneak into all my LP manuscripts (‘doo-doo’). A little over two weeks ago I decided enough was enough with my lollygagging, I wanted this LP job out of my life ASAP. I realized that the only way to do that was to crack the whip and sequester myself from all humanity. So I did.

For over two weeks I only left my building a handful of times that didn’t involve securing sustenance. I went to a wedding. Went to brunch and dinner once. That’s about it. I don’t know if this happens to everybody, but when I’m alone under these conditions with virtually no genuine face-to-face contact with humans for so long, I talk to inanimate objects, abuse sugar and caffeine (then wean off sugar and caffeine when my kidneys stop working) and my brain starts to do weird things as I lose connection with reality. I skip showers (Why? I didn’t sweat today.), my toothbrush goes untouched and my mind strays wildly. The following is a sampling of passing thoughts I’ve had during numerous profoundly lonely, coffee-enhanced moments:

•    I bet if I concentrate hard enough I can move the mouse with my mind. [Hrrrrrrugh!] Almost.

•    If I just cut the crap and blogged exclusively about Gossip Girl, I could earn a comfortable living on Adsense revenue alone.

•    “‘C’ is for cookie, that’s good enough for me…”

•    What kind of jail time am I looking at for taking paintball sniper shots at football tailgaters/Hummer drivers/RNC delegates?

•    Lauren Conrad gets a three-book deal with HarperCollins and I’ve just broken the world record for consuming frozen pizza. Et tu Buddha?

•    How effing badass would it be if I grew out my nose hair and braided it? We’re talking instant record deal.

•    If I Googled ‘Google’, would the universe implode?

•    What if cherry tomatoes were actually demon testicles? That’d be cool. [Hrowmph!] Take that demons!!!

•    It smells like hamburgers in here. No, it smells like charcoal. No, my pizza’s on fire.

•    Human nature can be distilled down to exactly three instincts: surviving, fornicating and eating chocolate truffles.

•    There simply aren’t enough opportunities in life to use the word ‘fornicate’.

•    How many times does something have to happen before it becomes clichéd? A hundred? Ten thousand? Does that mean poor spelling is clichéd? If so, the Cliché Police should be here any minute. I better put on some pants.

•    Why hasn’t anyone put one frozen pizza upside-down on top of another frozen pizza, called it a ‘Pizza Sandwich”? I’d buy that. Now I’m hungry.

•    I wonder if people still use, whatdoyoucallit, ‘cars’?

Wed
10
Sep '08

Lonely Planet Tuscany video, starring me

Way back in February, I taped a few destination pieces for Lonely Planet TV while I was their guest in San Francisco. The Tuscany video went online today. (If, like me, your blog reader doesn’t show the embedded video, click here.)

Agonizing over travel insurance? Maybe I can help…

Tue
2
Sep '08

Romania’s neo-Nazis slam unruly guidebook writer

There have been few moments in my life that I was more proud of myself than last week when I was denounced and attacked with unimaginative insults by Altermedia, Romania’s neo-Nazi online misinformation delivery vehicle. Having lost representation in Romania’s parliament due to their dwindling numbers (roughly 12), it seems the group has more time on their hands to identify and blame gypsies, Jews and insolent foreigners for the entirety of their failed, wretched lives.

The hilarious article is ironically entitled “When Freedom of Speech becomes dangerous!” (If, when you click this link you only see a message saying “Le Revedere”, try this link), a 5,744-word jabbering opus, written by the objective, ethical, and not at all sexually deprived Alexandra Zarnescu. Despite her conspicuous lack of research (a neo-Nazi specialty) and citing none of my offensive quotes, Alexandra nevertheless wrote this little nugget about me:

“It becomes utterly grave when hateful opinions of Romania coming from individuals who have the clear intent of manipulating the non-informed and of bending reality are publicly expressed without a shame, causing prejudice to our national dignity. Leif Pettersen is such a slimeball and a human piece of garbage who insults Romanian citizens in the well-known travel guide called Lonely Planet, in which he portrays himself (!) as the sole authority in the matter („the most complete online travel information source“), as well as on his personal blog, while roaring his inner rage motivated by his abused childhood and his abjections originating from his Freudian complexes and American ghetto upbringing. We are mocked by both means of propaganda simply because we are citizens of the “second poorest European country” (speaking of which, what country is nowadays the poorest in Europe: Moldavia, Ireland, Greece, Ukraine or Bulgaria?). And ironically, on June 1st 2008, this guy was praised on Antena 3 TV channel for the way he „advertises us“ in his guide!”

Oh man, that’s some sweet neo-Nazi hating discourse right there. Though, honestly, I’m a little hurt that some blogger chick named Shelly Roberts living in that hellhole Bucharest got way more slam-time than I did. I mean, she’s merely spreading alleged untruths on her cute blog, while I’m spewing it all over tens of thousands of travelers with my accursed guidebook and web site, which, during her 17 seconds of research, Alexandra has confused as one in the same – the same mistake made by the equally research-deficient Hotnews and Mediafax in May.

Where the hell are my props, Alexandra? If you’re going to lavishly defame me, the least you can do is give me three paragraphs! You didn’t even mention my facial tics or my addiction to donkey porn! I should sue your hack journalist ass for criminal under-representation!! Maybe next time you’ll give me my due credit if I use more typos and muse about the oxygen-starved womb where you incubated for 7 and 1/2 months before starting your bitter life of baffling hatred and tediously long, libelous essays.