June Bug:
Making tapes before the days of Karaoke and the puking pact at the Pavilion in Myrtle
Beach.
Jim Hart was my shadow in 1984,
my second year in the Corps. We were stationed at MCAS New River, in Jacksonville,
North Carolina. Much like I used to depend
on Dave Miesbach in high school, Jim depended on me. I
can’t remember who tabbed him with the nickname, ‘June Bug’,
it may have even been himself. He was a short 5’4”, and his elongated head made
you think of the creatures that battled Sigourney Weaver in the movie, Alien. It’s
not always a bad thing, but you could tell that he was going to be one of those
guys who fell in love with and married his first lay.
Jim was a great influence on me
because he talked me out of doing a lot of stupid shit. I think his favorite
past time was entering every ‘Iron Man’ competition he could find, just to
prove he wasn’t a scrawny little shit.
June Bug
and I used to drive south to Myrtle Beach
on occasion when we had a 72 or a 96-hour pass. It was only a couple hours drive
from Jacksonville, and they had an
Air Force base there where we enlisted Marines could eat for free. They might
have had billeting for us as well if we’d looked into it, but we never thought
that far ahead. We’d usually wind up following something home or sleeping under
the vinyl cover stretched across the bed of my pickup.
The first time June Bug did NOT talk me out of something stupid was because he
wanted to see me do it, and no harm could come to anybody or anything, except
maybe your eardrums. We came across a mini recording booth where a man was
attempting to reel people in to sing songs and pay him to make cassette copies.
I couldn’t decide if the booth looked more like a military hearing test booth,
or a portable commode. For all I know it could have been modified from the
remnants of each.
The area where the Pavilion is
located is on the outskirts of town, which is sort of a carnival like
atmosphere in Myrtle Beach. I’ve
always wanted to be a singer, and that time of my life was no different. At the
age of 20, I fancied myself to be extremely talented in the vocal area. I was
drunk enough to sing in front of June Bug, and I wanted him to hear it live, so
with the permission of the proprietor, I invited him into the booth. I spent a
few minutes over-exaggerating the balls I had, attempting to do a song from
somebody as super-human as Billy Joel. The owner of the booth handed me a lyric
sheet for ‘Keeping the Faith’, and I studied it for a few moments before I gave
him the ‘go’ sign. Not only did this tone-deaf drunk slur the words, I sang
them wrong as well. I had a ‘Mondogreen’ (misheard
lyric) before there was such a thing. Listening to the tape upon completion was
an embarrassment that took me years to recover from. It took me until the 21st
century and a deployment to Spain
before I could actually get on a stage and sing karaoke in front of a live
audience. Today, my favorite tune to perform is Clarence Carter’s “Strokin’”. I can’t believe I kept that first tape. Probably
so I can play it for June Bug the next time I see him.
Remember when wine coolers were
just beginning to get popular? For me, it was about 1984. June Bug and I had a favorite. We wouldn’t buy anything but Matilda
Bay. They were purple and tasted
something like a grape soda. The dry version actually wasn’t too bad. The
advertising was supposed to convince you they were from Australia
or some shit like that, but the actors had awful accents. I think they were
actually a Miller product.
We were in Myrtle
Beach again, when we came up with this brilliant idea.
It sounded like ‘fun’ to get really drunk and intentionally puke on one of the
rides. After discussing it, our goal became to get as drunk as possible before
choosing a ride to ‘throw groceries’ on. About ten drinks in, a pact began to
take shape, and we decided if we were going to actually heave, we wanted other
people to see it, so we could create a sympathy-puke environment. We also
decided on a ride that might work. I think the Myrtle
Beach version of this ride was called the ‘Gravitron’, but it isn’t the same as other Gravitrons where the seat elevates instead of the floor
dropping. There are many names for this ride across the amusement park nation,
so I’ll just describe it to you. Riders stand with their backs against a wall. About
twenty to thirty can ride at once in a circle formation with everyone facing
the center. When the ride begins, the unit begins to move slowly, rotating its
riders. As the speed increases, it becomes more difficult to move because the
centrifugal force of the spin pushes your arms and head against the wall. I’ve
heard that you experience a force greater than 4 G’s. It takes a strong neck to
pull your head off of the wall. When you reach top speed, the floor drops out
from under you, but you don’t fall because gravity can’t overcome the
centrifugal force that holds you against the wall.
June Bug
and I finally got to the point where we could drink no more. This was the other
event, I wish June Bug would have talked me out of. Both
of us wanted to back out on our pact, but our Marine Corps pride was just too
much. As we staggered to the ride, Jim and I decided that we should be opposite
of each other on the ride, so we could keep an eye on each other. We knew what
would happen soon, we just didn’t know who was going to yark
first.
In a counter clock-wise motion,
we began to move. I began to think to myself, when the urge comes, how am I
going to keep my head off the wall so I can avoid destroying my shirt? Just
before we hit top speed it happened. Jim got a green hue on his face, and I
knew it was just a matter of seconds. By the contortion on his face, he knew it
too. I watched as he tried to pull his head off the wall, when his cheeks got
puffy and he launched the evening’s snacks out in front of him. I certainly
didn’t expect what happened next, and neither did he. That blob of purple crap
and funnel cakes reversed directions, because it was violently thrown back at
his face and neck, which just made him yark again,
and again. It was like someone was throwing buckets of it in his face! It got
so bad he turned his head to the left, and continued selling Buicks, blowing
the crap into his neighbor’s ear. He attempted again