Thursday, October 10, 2013

Day 135, Missoula Rabble, Adam


Adam is going away tomorrow to try to make it in the big city with the big dogs. He's moving to Los Angeles, a place he's never visited. "I have a huge security blanket here," he said. "It's a necessary evil for my career at this point. My soul belongs in Missoula." Adam has worked as an editor for television for years and he has some big ideas. One being a "Game of Thrones" type series on the Lewis and Clark expedition. He talks about it a lot if you've ever met him. It really is a great idea. "I'd love to pitch a multi-part series to HBO or Showtime about the Lewis and Clark expedition," he said. "This area is a pivotal moment of that entire journey. It happened basically yesterday." I asked him why he thinks it would be good for television. "It took them three years," he said. "People died, there was kidnapping, rape, love. Everything to make a good Hollywood feature."

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Day 134, Missoula Rabble, Zane and Kennett

Zane, left, and Kennett claimed to be brothers when I approached them. I didn't believe them. Zane explained. "He was raised in a white home and I was raised in a native home," he said. "We grew up from the same environment. The same home." Zane and Kennett, 18, were raised in and out of group homes most of their youth. They met when they were thirteen. "We adopted each other," Zane said. I asked Kennett what it was like growing up in group homes. "It's a tough life. You have to learn to do things you don't want to do," he said. "It's like having a normal parent, but I didn't know what that was like."

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Day 133, Missoula Rabble, Emma

Emma asks the question that so many of us do who live in Missoula and received our college degrees. "How can I make it work here?" She graduated with a degree in archaeology but doesn't think she will pursue a profession in that field. "I thought it was going to be some sort of Indiana Jones thing, but it isn't like that," she said. "In reality it's working for oil and pipeline companies." Her passion is traveling and other cultures. "[I like] learning how to go somewhere else, not imposing your ideas, and respecting the way people live," she said. "While traveling, you can see how good people really are."

Monday, October 7, 2013

Day 132, Missoula Rabble, Katharina

Katharina saves lives and empowers souls of women and children everyday. She is the domestic violence program manager at the YWCA. She helps women and their families leave abusive homes when they may not have the power or courage to do it on their own. "Everybody has a right to live a violence free life," she said. "Being able to be there for someone who is going through that process is a privelage." I asked her how she got into this field of work. "These are issues that happen everywhere, no matter where you go," she said. "Women's issues are important to me." I asked her what she has learned the most from the women and families she has worked with over the years. "Sometimes it may take [a woman] years to leave, maybe they never will," she said. "They're the expert in their life. I'll support them when they're ready to leave."

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Day 131, Missoula Rabble, Luke


Missoula Rabble, Luke just got back from Germany where he spent a year working as a nanny, or au pair. "I spent my twenty-forth birthday with a bunch of eight-year-olds singing happy birthday to me in German," Luke said. He said he spent it hiking with the Boy Scout troop of one of the boys he watched because he didn't know anyone that well yet. I asked Luke what he learned after being a nanny for two boys for a year. "I realized how much of a parent I'm not," he said. "I have a hard enough time taking care of myself. I don't think I could have a dog right now." He told me being a nanny made him reevaluate his immediate future goals as a twenty-something in his generation. "It's a reevaluation of the life that you've been living," he said. "It's like running a race that never ends."

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Day 130, Missoula Rabble, Gary


Missoula Rabble, I spent 8 years in band and 7 years in marching band so I have a tendency to geek out at the Homecoming Parade every year since I graduated. Today I chased down my high school band instructor, Gary, while he led the Sentinel High School marching band in the parade this morning. He's been teaching music to kids for 39 years. "It's fun making music with kids," he said. "It gives them a chance to express themselves." Gary is an amazing instructor, teacher, and person. He's one of the few reasons I enjoyed high school. I always felt like he genuinely cared about his students. I asked him about that. "I try to bring humanity," he said. "Not every kid gets the same things as other kids. I'm sensitive to that." I asked Gary what's in it for him. "For the most part they just need loving attention and nurturing," he said. "I get more than what the kids get out of it, that's for sure."

Friday, October 4, 2013

Day 129, Missoula Rabble, Dominic and Odette


Missoula Rabble, I saw Dominic and his daughter, Odette, walking hand in hand through one of the grass medians on Pine St. I found it cutely strange. I approached them. Odette immediately informed me she was here to be a flower girl tomorrow. I asked Dominic what they were doing at the moment. "I wanted to show her what a boulevard is," he said. They were slowly making their way to a friend's home for a rehearsal dinner for a wedding they are attending this weekend. I asked them both what they most like about Missoula. "I think Missoula is the best city in the country and I think The Kettlehouse is the best brewery in the country," Dominic said. Odette's thoughts? "I like the merry-go-round because it goes in circles."

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Day 128, Missoula Rabble, Sean


Missoula Rabble, Sean is a self-titled "baristo" at The Break Espresso and a self-titled "mugician" outside of work. "I coined the term," he said. He told me a mugician is a mixture between a musician and a magician. I asked him what it means to be a mugician. "It's using music as a tool to do everything in life like traveling and touching people's lives," he said. "That's where the magic happens."

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Day 127, Missoula Rabble, Nate


Missoula Rabble, Nate has music in the blood. "I wouldn't know what it wasn't like to have musicians around," he said. "In some ways that's how you succeed in my family. By how well you play music. In some ways." Nate grew up with a singing father, a music teacher mother, and three younger musically talented sisters. "My sisters and I learned to sing harmony together," he said. I asked him what it was like growing up with three sisters. "I had no physical recourse," he said. "It was really easy for them to terrorize me. We got along well, though." Nate's playing tonight at the Top Hat with his band Cash For Junkers. I asked him which instrument he played. "The electric guitar really lights me up right now. People know me as a mandolin player," he said. "If it has strings on it, I can figure it out."

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Day 126, Missoula Rabble, Kia


Missoula Rabble, Kia says her vision for the Zootown Arts Community Center is somewhat of an expression of her "artistic ADHD." "I go through phases," she said. "I'm all over the place." Kia is the executive director of the ZACC and a versatile artist. She was the lead singer of Sasshole, received a degree in creative writing, and she creates visual and media art including the piece she stands in front of in the photograph. I asked her what she wants to see happen with the ZACC. "I would like to see it become a place where you can be inspired on all these different [artistic] levels," she said. "One of my favorite parts of my job is seeing people realize they have the ability they can create," she said.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Day 125, Missoula Rabble, Madison


Missoula Rabble, Madison wants to be a public defender once she graduates from law school. "Those are my people," she told me. I asked her what she meant. Madison is a recovering addict. She currently works at a public defender's office and says she empathizes for her clients. "I can identify with their experiences," he said. "I don't think I'd want to I it weren't for my own experience."

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Day 124, Missoula Rabble, Ben


Missoula Rabble, As we come to the end of our west coast tour and the sun starts to set as we drive back to Missoula, Ben agreed to do the rabble today. Ben Prez is an important person in my life. He knows more about music and sports than anyone I know. He's a talented musician, a competitive runner, and he's a white boy who can jump. Ben's interest in basketball begin in the Michael Jordan era and he has been playing since his dad bought him a basketball hoop for his first communion present back in the second grade. "We had a dirt court in the country where we lived," Ben said. He practiced with his dad. "He wouldn't take it easy on me either," he said. Ben played in high school and continues to play pickup games wherever he is as long as there are courts and people who want to play. "You can walk onto any court in the country and if you're competent as a player you have an instant connection with strangers," he said. "That's something I want for the rest of my life."

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Day 120, Missoula Rabble, Casey and Zach


Missoula Rabble, I'm on a little road trip to the west coast and we met up with old Missoulians Casey, left, and Zach. They met 2 years ago in Missoula. "I spotted him when I was working at Bernice's," Zach said. Their first date was at the Disco Blood Bath. They stayed out until 4am and Casey walked Zach to work at 5:30am. "I made him a peppermint tea for his walk home and hoped he'd wait up for me when I got off," Zach said. Casey did and they've been together since. The two were separated for 9 months when Zach moved to Portland to study cosmetology before Casey decided to join him this year. "I got to figure out whether we wanted to be together," Casey said. "I got to figure out what we mean to each other." 

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Day 119, Missoula Rabble, Lynsey


Missoula Rabble, Lynsey and I go way back. We were rival high school newspaper editors back in the day. Now we are having lunch at the same table and we re definitely on the same page. This girl is no joke. She isn't shy and if she thinks a certain way about something you're going to hear about it. She's the definition of a strong, independent woman. "I've never known how to tone it down," she said. "I was born that way." Lynsey is the Director of Development, Outreach, and Communications at Blue Mountain Clinic. Her frank and earnest attitude can be perceived as somewhat intimidating, but it comes from a desire to unify and help others who may not have a voice like hers. "I'm not here to win fucking homecoming queen. In fact, I was never asked to prom," she said. I'm here to make it okay for women to be outspoken and assertive. It's okay to live a life of authenticity."

Monday, September 23, 2013

Day 118, Missoula Rabble, Rose


Missoula Rabble, Rose, 22, was walking to the bus station when I stopped her. She is without a vehicle of her own currently and she's due to have a little boy in about a month and a half. I asked her what she's scared of most. "I hear its going to be a cold winter," she said. "I feel comfortable with the public transportation we have here, though. The bus system is great. I'm just getting all my ducks in a row."

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Day 117, Missoula Rabble, Max


Missoula Rabble, Max's dad was a criminal investigator and now he wants to be one, too. He's a student in sociology. I asked him what it was like growing up with his dad's profession. "He never really talked about all the really heavy shit," he said. I asked Max what kind of investigating he'd like to do most. "Arson would be cool," he said. "I'm learning about it right now. There's not a lot of evidence left. It takes a great mind to do it."

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Day 116, Missoula Rabble, Michael


Missoula Rabble, Michael thought he'd be a film photographer for the rest of his life. "I used to stay with film, but then I bought a digital camera," he said. Michael is the owner of The Dark Room, the only local camera and printing service in town. He bought it seven yeas ago after having worked there for several years already. Michael loves his job. "It's not really work in a way," he said. Business isn't hurting and he doesn't plan on retiring anytime soon. "I don't plan to retire until I'm 75," he said. My family tends to live into the 90s and 100s. I don't want to be retired for 30 years."