Beyond Tiki, Bilge, and Test / Beyond Tiki
What's wrong with Jimmy Buffett?
T
Thomas
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 1:37 PM
I've never thought Jimmy B. is "tiki," and I think that discussion is a bit silly. At the same time, I'm not personally familiar with the psuedo-tiki, "drunken frat boy" scene that so many associate with Buffett. I'm sure it exists, but I don't encounter it. I suspect most "drunken frat boys" nowadays aren't listening to musicians who are a few months away from the age of 60, but I could be wrong. One sort of "compartmentalized" piece of my social life involves getting together with Buffett enthusiasts and having a good time once in a while. There is a rather remarkable phenomenon called Parrot Head Clubs. I scoffed at this at first, thinking nothing could be lamer than adults being in some sort of "fan club" for some aging rock star (I had no interest in his work at that time). But it so happens the LA, NV, and AZ clubs stage an annual event at one of the resorts around here. I went and was amazed at what I found. Singer-songwriters in the "tropical music" niche genre, performing original material. A highly festive, colorful atmosphere, with many of the participants being quite a bit older than I would have expected. A very mellow "vibe" (I know that's a goofy word, but hey). A "vending" scene that could, incidentally, be of potential interest to some TC'ers. And get this: raffles, silent auctions, etc., all for raising money for charity (Breast Cancer Research). The event raised many thousands of dollars for this and other causes. It might be of passing interest to some that, to quote the official website, http://www.phip.com , "During the Calendar Year 2004 Local Chapters of Parrot Heads In Paradise, Inc. Contributed Over $2.2 Million and 404,690 Volunteer Hours to Various Local and National Charities." I'm just passing this on in case it is news of interest to someone. You can dislike JB's music and still acknowlege that this is a pretty interesting, shall we say, "sociological phenomenon." I'm not aware that other recording artists have inspired this kind of thing, in which people get together and combine festivity with charity fundraising. I find it pretty impressive. |
R
Riptide
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 2:45 PM
Hello Everybody, My name is Riptide and I like Jimmy Buffett. Whoo, I feel so much better now. It's like a giant weight has been lifted off my shoulders. One thing to think about: I'm sure that there are a lot of people out there in TCland that are able to make a living off of their creations because people other than us here buy their wares. Oh yeah, just for the record: I hate vegetables. |
TW
Trader Woody
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 3:28 PM
Me too. Trader Woody |
T
Thomas
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 3:44 PM
Ah yes, the Cheeseburger hats. Well, I didn't say I found every aspect of the scene to be "impressive." Speaking for myself, as goofy as I sometimes get, I cannot imagine a scenario in which I would knowingly don a cheeseburger hat. I mean, hey, they look like fine folks, havin' a good time, but dear me... BTW, I think JB has done some fine songwriting over the years, but that Cheeseburger song ... heaven help us. [ Edited by: tropicalguy on 2005-06-11 02:12 ] |
T
Thomas
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 3:48 PM
[ Edited by: tropicalguy on 2005-06-11 02:13 ] |
A
alohabros
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 3:54 PM
all this talk of Jimmy Buffet and I don't believe I ever heard any other tune by this character except for the Magarita song which seems like it came out years ago... his son is named Kenny Chesney, who I believe sings country western songs to disabled alligators in the Everglades... I could be wrong. |
M
mrsmiley
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 4:17 PM
yawn! Ps- the worst margarita I ever had was with the JAB at Maragaritaville in Key West! |
R
Riptide
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 4:44 PM
I don't know what scares me more: That people actually think that wearing anything patterned after a food product is a good idea; or that Trader Woody actually has this picture. Nice job, Trader Woody! By the way, one dude + four ladies = ??? |
F
FLOUNDERart
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 5:05 PM
Hello everybody, my name is Flounder and I too like Jimmy Buffet. |
D
dangergirl299
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 5:57 PM
thank goodness! I was just thinking "you know, I don't know everyone's opinion on Jimmy Buffet! I wish someone started up this new debate" and voila! I shouldn't wish so much... |
HV
Hurricane Vic
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 6:11 PM
To answer the original question, nothing. |
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FLOUNDERart
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 6:17 PM
Hi. [ Edited by: FLOUNDERart on 2005-06-13 11:00 ] |
I
ikitnrev
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Fri, Jun 10, 2005 10:04 PM
Last evening I thought of one of the differences between Buffet style tiki and the more vintage-style tiki - I'm not sure if this has been discussed here before. I associate the Buffet-style tiki with outdoor thatched bars, with an open view to some body of water, where one can watch the sunset. These tend to be located in warmer climates, on the beach, and thus have a 'Spring Break' or a 'I'm on vacation' or a 'I'm rich and retired' vibe to it all. On the other hand, what I will call the vintage-style tiki bars tend to be rooms with no windows, with a self-contained tiki decor within. Thus the Kahiki, the Mai Kai, D.C.'s former Honolulu, the Tiki Ti, the Omni Hut, and many others would fit within this category. Rather than a 'Spring Break' feel, there is more of the feeling of a local restaurant where you can go and treat yourself to some cocktails and perhaps a meal at the end of a work week, and do that on a regular basis without spending big dollars on a formal vacation. These are the places you could visit year-round, even if it was snowing outside, and have no idea of what the weather or sun conditions were outside. There are some tiki places that straddle the two - the Emeryville Trader Vics comes to mind. The indoor decor is great, but there are many windows that you can look out and see all the yachts outside, which during the daytime gives more of a Buffet-like vibe to the place. Perhaps the vibe is a bit different at night. I'm curious - has Buffet ever written a song that takes place entirely within the walls of a more vintage-like tiki bar? Vern |
T
Thomas
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 2:40 AM
** |
T
tikifish
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 6:29 AM
You're right about the windows. Take the Jardin Tiki in Montreal for example. It just doesn't seem... right, despite the amazing decor. Why? GIANT WINDOWS overlooking the busy street its on. Way too much light! |
P
pablus
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 8:51 AM
Have you guys been reading the Hukilau thread? Now Flounder will be there for sure. |
T
TikiGoon
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 10:08 AM
Guess I will take what I can get... I grew up in St. Petersburg Flordia from 1967 -1976. My folks used to take Mai Tai or Margaritta = Mai Tai Believe me when I am able, I take in all the Tiki I can. I have never gone on the road to see Jimmy, but I have been to the Hukilau and added hours or even days to vacation road trips to stop at Trader Vics Chicago, Trader Vic’s Atlanta, the Mai Kai, and WaiTiki Orlando. I understand and appreciate the view held my many TC members, but don’t hate me ‘cause I love Tiki and Buffett. |
T
Thomas
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 11:06 AM
** |
D
dangergirl299
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 2:05 PM
Man, my parents of all people are becoming Jimmy Buffet fans - they mentioned just last night that when they go to New Orleans next week, they are going to check out the jimmy buffet (restaurant? shop?) I don't know - I tried to block it out. On a side note, I wonder how many of us would accept an all expenses paid trip out to the Big Island with the catch being the only music you listen to in the condo is Jimmy BUffet CDs? I know I have, on more than one occasion. How many times can you listen to "Let's Get Drunk and Screw" while drinking mai tais with your parents before it WARPS your brain?? Ah well, at least I don't listen to the Backstreet Boys... |
K
Kanekila
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 3:09 PM
Hey TG -- Nobody here hates you (or, if they're true to the spirit of this place, they shouldn't). I know a gourmet cook who admits to the guilty pleasure of sometimes craving a Big Mac! Oh, if his gourmet friends only knew... tsk tsk... But as I said in an earlier post, it all depends on my mood. Sometimes I WANT brain candy, whoopin' and hollerin' and calypso mixed with country. And then sometimes, I don't. :) |
H
Hakalugi
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 4:05 PM
Let's clarify this analogy: Tiki = Gourmet Food |
R
RevBambooBen
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 6:52 PM
I've heard that he has a collection of hawaiiana and poly pop that would put most others to shame. Hmmmm. p.s. Angus Young plays rock but likes classical. Hmmmmm. |
T
Thomas
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 7:05 PM
I heard he bit the head off a parrot onstage once. |
T
TikiGoon
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Sat, Jun 11, 2005 8:48 PM
Yea, but it turned out to be one of those carved ones from Ebay and he chipped his tooth. |
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Biotron2000
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Mon, Jun 13, 2005 11:28 PM
Wow! 3 years plus and it gets resurrected. I had no idea when I posted this topic what I was starting... |
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Elvis-from-Hell
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Tue, Jun 14, 2005 8:31 PM
Jimmy Buffet is the anti-christ. |
T
tikipedia
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Tue, Jun 14, 2005 8:47 PM
If we want to get high-brow about the Buffett vs. Tiki issue, I would say Jimmy Buffett is a more plebian experience as opposed to a patrician Tiki experience. Anybody can 'whip up' a pitcher of margaritas, but it takes care and expertise to make a decent mai tai. But Buffett is also more of a Caribbean/Mexico experience, and Tiki is Polynesia/Southeast Asia one. The tropical similarities are strictly superficial. BTW, we went to Jimmy Buffett's restaurant at Montego Bay airport in Jamaica. It had to be the slowest service in the world. Thank God the plane was leaving in only two hours! On the flip side, we loaded up on Appleton Rum at the Duty Free shop for only $6.00 USD per bottle. Yum! |
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MTKahuna
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Tue, Jun 14, 2005 9:18 PM
Oiy... |
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Turbogod
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 12:09 PM
Buffett fans hurt in gas grill explosion Three fans tailgating outside the Tweeter Center's Jimmy Buffett concert dumped gasoline on a grill, causing an explosion that sent them to the hospital, a fire official said. |
PJ
purple jade
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 12:19 PM
The Tweeter Center... |
GT
Geeky Tiki
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 1:55 PM
I ran this by my best Tiki buddy and he came up with: Buffet fans had fun in high school, Tiki fans didn't. But then he thinks Tiki is similar to Goth in terms of emotional dedication to a lifestyle and relationship to our "uniforms." I don't know. Are our Aloha Shirts and liking Exotica on a par with wearing all black and liking The Cure? I had fun in high school but I don't really like Buffet. Still, I guess I can kind of see what he means. Being hoity toity about Tiki isn't very Tiki, but then it would get all diluted if it was anything goes, so.....I don't know. |
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dangergirl299
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 2:18 PM
Personally, I'd rather hang out with a bunch of drunk, friendly, beer-bellied parrotheads than folks who regularly lie, cheat and look down on everyone else, but that could be just me. I try to avoid making fun of the way others dress/music they listen to/drinks they drink/weird objects they spend a whole month's salary on etc. because they could easily say the same about US! Although I AM fascinated by anyone who orders more than one bottle of white zin in a nice restaurant. Well, I guess we are all elitists/purists about something. |
T
Tiki-bot
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 2:18 PM
I don't think there's anything wrong with being "hoity toity" about tiki. Just because someone sets their own standard for what is tiki doesn't mean they are actively disparaging someone's collection who doesn't meet their standards. One of the biggest mistakes people (and by "people" I mean "Americans") make is to think that simply discussing something entails automatically adopting opposing viewpoints. There will always be a "my stuff is better than your stuff" attitude here, but it's gotten so out of control these days. Why is is necessary to become defensive or adversarial about it when you should just be content with your own standards? |
GT
Geeky Tiki
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 2:39 PM
I hear ya Tiki-bot, I was thinking more about how many people need to make a production out of their loathing of something that somehow fails to reach their standard of inclusion. If something isn't Tiki to someone, that's cool. Save me the hate part, though. With this Buffet thing, I can't say I've heard enough Buffet to really work up to full blown hatred or feeling threatened, Tiki-wise. I'm stuck at apathy. Discerning, yes, derisive, no. |
K
Kono
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 3:52 PM
Ouch! :o I think that this may apply to other common points of polarity that we find in everyday life. PC users had fun in high school, Mac users didn't. Dog lovers had fun in high school, cat lovers didn't etc etc.
Ouch!! :o
Well said.
Good point (but I edited out the "Americans" part because I think that the disposition to automatically form up into opposing camps is not a distinctly American trait).
I agree completely! Whether you listen to John Cage or Christina Aguilera don't mean a rat's ass to me. And I won't think any more or less of you for it. Now...the clothes you wear, the car you drive...sure, I may hate you for that! :wink: |
D
dangergirl299
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 5:27 PM
I had fun in high school in a supernerd, overachieving sort of way, but not in a underage kegger/drop out of high school pregnant sort of way. Does that count? Is it wrong to stay up until 3 am each night to do like 3 times the amount of work required on a project to achieve an A, for no particular reason? If so, than I don't want to be right. |
T
Tiki-bot
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 6:08 PM
Or don't listen to John Cage, depending on which piece you are talking about. :) |
B
Biotron2000
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Thu, Jun 23, 2005 6:12 PM
So why is it that they make Fords in Canada, Chevrolets in Mexico, but they make Hondas and Toyotas in the U.S.? :wink: :wink: |
A
alohabros
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Fri, Jun 24, 2005 12:40 PM
invite all parrotheads and Tikiphiles into one large arena. Get them really drunk and then give them knives... see what happens |
CM
Captain Morgan
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Fri, Jun 24, 2005 2:35 PM
"invite all parrotheads and Tikiphiles into one large arena. Get them really drunk and then give them knives... see what happens" I think technically, the last group standing would be the losers. Because the two things the groups have in common is their pursuit of being laid back, and being drunk. |
A
alohabros
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Fri, Jun 24, 2005 6:23 PM
yeah, but... any day above ground is a good one! |
TV
Traitor Vic
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Fri, Jun 24, 2005 11:05 PM
Bummer! I saw the title of this thread (after not paying any attention to it at all for a few years) and thought, perhaps, that it had been announced that Jimmy Buffet had been diagnosed with some sort of horrible (not terminal, but probably voice threatening or disfiguring)affliction. Talk about a Buzzkill... |
F
floratina
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Wed, Jun 29, 2005 3:42 PM
When we were in the Doo Dah Parade in November, they positioned us in the line of march so that we were right behind a Parrothead unit. They had this huge flatbed truck with a thatched-hut tiki bar on the back of it. One of the guys was saying to Pup that we should all have a beer (or somesuch) until he saw the parrot swinging on a noose from the back of Pup's MaiTaiCycle. "Hey...you guys don't like us..." |
N
naugatiki
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Sun, Jul 3, 2005 12:22 PM
In my town there's a hybrid bar "Jimmy-Tiki" bar that until a few months ago had 3 paintings of tiki mugs on it's windows and when you step inside depending on which way you turn your head you either see a few stray mugs and thatch, a parrot, and a few Bacardi mirrors and posters. The proof of the pudding was when I ordered a mai tai and it came back to me in a bright red hue and the unmistakable scent of grenadine. I went back this week and some classic rock cover band was playing and it looks like the Jimmy Buffet side has launched a successful coup against the tiki. |
RD
Rum Demon
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Sun, Jul 3, 2005 4:37 PM
Having just this week sold my beloved sailboat and given up the salty ways of my youth for warm and cozy lubberly homesteading, I can finally bid farewell to the parrotheads. Having lived aboard for several years, I was constantly bombarded with JB from the Parrothead bar at my marina. Not so much JB music, but "Margaritaville". They apparently had only one CD, a live JB concert and it was rare they played any song but Margaritaville. So I'd be sanding teak in the hot sun for hours on end, and like clockwork, once every 20 minutes or so, they had to play THAT SONG. I'd blast my own music, but inevitably my CD would end and I'd laugh aloud at the distant strains of JB and his adoring fans singing along from some concert of years past. My friends were always amazed when they'd come down and see that I wasn't exaggerating. To top it off, the only thing the damn place ever served?: Cheeseburgers, and not even good ones. Maybe I'm bitter because I was usually working or reading or trying to watch TV or getting ready to go sailing while these yahoos were perfectly content to get drunk on $4 bottles of Corona and eat greasy cheeseburgers and TALK about sailing while listening to the same damn CD over and over. Partly as a result, I'm more than content to build a little tiki bar in the darkest room in the basement, sit in it all day drinking Mai Tais, and listen to Martin Denny's greatest hits over and over and over and over... to each his own, ...and over and over...again. |
HK
Haole Kat
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Sun, Jul 3, 2005 5:27 PM
not a thing. |
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sonofabeach
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Thu, Jul 14, 2005 11:23 AM
I was in a tiki bar in California where several old men talked about carving a tiki from an old piece of palm. Don Ho played on in the background. [ Edited by: sonofabeach 2005-07-15 08:09 ] |
MP
mrs. pineapple
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Thu, Jul 14, 2005 11:37 AM
ahhhhhh, SoaB, we've missed your profound, intellectual and grammatically challenged musings. BTW - it's Don HO. Maybe Don HOE is the guy sniffing his finger after each butt pick. |