John Mayer acting 32

Published on November 22, 2009 by Zac in Celebrity, Music, Personal

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John Mayer acting 32

I do not own a John Mayer album.  I can’t say that I was tapping my toes when my brother introduced his music to me during a car ride through the New Mexico desert a few years back.  I do remember his Volkswagen commercial where he just shreds his guitar while using the car’s audio system as an amplifier.  Really, my only exposure to the more human side of John was a fairly popular Youtube clip of him on a VH1 show doing an off the cuff parody of Chocolate Rain.

The day of Michael Jackson’s death, Mayer’s words were the celebrity quote that most accurately conveyed my own feelings at the time:

“Dazes in the studio.  A major strand of our cultural DNA has left us.  RIP MJ.  I think we’ll mourn his loss as well as the loss of ourselves as children listening to Thriller on the record player.”

Then, I saw his musical tribute at Michael Jackson’s funeral.  It was a type of synthesis of his unbelievable guitar talent, and the very human connection that John felt with Michael’s music and life.  It had such an impact on me, that I made it the theme song to this web site, as odd and as self-aggrandizing as that is.  Strangely enough, I’m not sure if I have thought about John Mayer or heard any of his music since then.

It is somewhat poetic and appropriate then, that a recent video interview of John with CNN would catch my attention and paint a nice picture of what it means to be human.

The full transcript of the interview is even better and I gleefully recommend reading it.

Many of the articles on this site deal with the human side of two groups of people who often times aren’t considered as such: criminals and celebrities.  I am convinced that both groups of people are judged far too harshly by many, due to the blindingly bright nature of one side of his/her personhood.

If you view John Mayer as a skirt chasing, limelight loving, lucky SOB;  you’re only half right, if that.  The theme of the interview (and apparently, this new album) is that John is taking ownership of who he actually is, and not who he is trying to be or pretending to be.  This is tremendously important for anybody who is looking to know oneself, even if for the sake of trying to change.

XXX _JOHN MAYER GAP 1669.JPG

Although John’s comments on age are intentionally hilarious and exaggerated, they ring true to me now as I am on the cusp of my thirties.  I’m taking inventory of where I have been, and I’m trying to examine the events that most helped to contribute to my current state.  I now believe that just a few core beliefs help to guide nearly everything that I do, and in a way, life isn’t as complicated as I sometimes make it.

As Polonius said to Laertes in Hamlet: “This above all: to thine own self, be true.”  Before John Mayer was a celebrity, he was… John Mayer.  Writing songs about love and heartbreak were natural, well received, and most of all… real.  It sounds as if he is trying to keep a hold of that which made his music magical, namely his unapologetic honesty.  He may not be politically correct, but he doesn’t seem to be bitter or resentful of much outside of himself either.

I’m a fan of honest conversations and blunt confrontations, in a spirit of love.  I want my life to be characterized by more of this.  I want it to be one of those core values that everything else flows out of.  Thanks for reminding me of that today, John.

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Human Nature

Published on July 07, 2009 by Zac in Celebrity

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John Mayer has a lot of soul, in my opinion, and he showed it today without saying a word.  I don’t own any of his albums, and I don’t know who he is dating.  I just felt something real from this tribute at Michael Jackson’s memorial service today.

I really want my website to be a place where we can talk about what it means to be human.  For this season, this will be my theme song.

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Losing a piece of our childhood

Published on June 26, 2009 by Zac in Celebrity

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Losing a piece of our childhood

Michael Jackson smiling

“Dazes in the studio.  A major strand of our cultural DNA has left us.  RIP MJ.  I think we’ll mourn his loss as well as the loss of ourselves as children listening to Thriller on the record player.”  John Mayer

I have so many memories of my adolescence that were colored by Michael Jackson’s music.  Of all the people in my Jr. High, I was probably the biggest Michael Jackson fan of them all.  Ryan Rivetto and Ben Thompson can surely testify to this, as I exposed them constantly to his music with explanations as to why they should share in my joy and passion of the music, lyrics, and accompanying videos.  As I’m writing this, MTV is playing Michael’s Dirty Diana song, which was the only one that Ryan could tolerate (mostly because he could imagine Pearl Jam covering it).

My personal favorite song was Smooth Criminal.  You may remember the video where he is hearing the white gangster (not gangsa) suit, breaking pool balls, and doing “the lean”.  I’ve embedded the video below if you want to see what I’m talking about:

When Alien Ant Farm covered this song during my college years, I about peed my pants.  It was a ridiculous (in a good way) amalgamation of the music of my childhood and the music of my young adulthood.

Today, the day after, has been easier for me to deal with this emotionally than it was last night.  The more I’ve thought about it, and wondered why it was affecting me so much, I think that Jon Mayer’s words above shed some light on things.  Michael Jackson’s missing childhood has been discussed and pointed to as the cause of much of his erratic behavior over the last 20 years.  It was as if at some point, he got locked into a state of arrested development.  He spent his time with younger children, sometimes crossing sexual lines with them as he showed his affection and love.  Macaulay Culkin was one his best friends, nearly 20 years his junior.  His home was a type of amusement park with toys that would put all other man caves to shame (in many senses of the word).  He wanted to go back to that part of innocence of playing and loving.  He sang for world peace.  He wanted to Heal the World.  Michael wanted to return to that time of his childhood.

I won’t try to speak for other fans, but his death left me feeling the same way.  I think back to dancing in my bedroom with my sister (poor girl had few options for entertainment back then).  I remember sitting in my bed, just letting the lyrics of his songs pour into my mind and heart, filling me with dreams of doing something huge, achieving my dreams, making a difference, and having true love.  In a strange way, his love for children greatly impacted my life and my own love for children.  I’ve noticed that the first thing most people will use to describe me to others is my love for my children.

It’s so freeing to go back to those times in my mind.  It’s easy to be intoxicated by memories and dwell on the good, the beautiful, and the hopeful.  I’m sure that there were times of stress and pain, but I’ve pushed a lot of them out of my mind.  I see a lot of times in my life where I have made decisions that reflected my desire to go back to a world that doesn’t exist like my mind tries to tell me it did.  I know that Matt Van Tassel wishes that Jon and Kate’s drama would go away soon, and he may just get his wish with all of the media coverage of this death.  With apologies to Matt, I see a lot of Jon’s behavior being a result of this same kind of thinking.  Wanting to relive his twenties or live them for the first time, I’m not sure.  Just my opinion based on what I have viewed through the lens of my own experience.

So Michael, I am so very sad about the things in your life that did not reflect your principles of love, peace, and beauty.  Your music impacted my life and helped me to become who I was, who I am now, and who I will be.  Though some parts of your life were tragic, I celebrate you and thank you for living it in a way that allowed me to share it, albeit from a great distance.  Rest in peace.

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