Glenn, though still young, was already nearly bald. What hair he he had was stringy and blond and hung down all around his head. H looked like a tonsured monk who'd let himself go to seed. He also had a scraggly little beard, and he wasn't a guy who was into diet and exercise. His vehicle for personal transportation was an old rusty hearse.
Maybe none of this would have mattered if Glenn hadn't recently been to see Easy Rider. The route back to his home state led through the American South, and Glenn was sure that he and his wife going to meet the fate of Captain America and Billy in some southern backwater town. He became convinced that the only charm that would ward off that fate was a George Wallace bumper sticker for his hearse, so he went to Wallace headquarters in Austin to get one. They took one look at him and told him to leave. They refused to give him a bumper sticker.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYw3kxupS-NqHtDttNU7q5G_BL1NEci_pBpEr3WVTAQ1pgfswvOijL0Rg-RtklTQJWQMFcOByhoqecmLgpW9hAm-ABv3NFUHVcwn9Jad7z3oJRX39aXZmDQHY2qI7aRa-IeNoI/s1600/wallace.jpg)
That's not the end of this story, but I've gone on longer than I intended. Stay tuned.
9 comments:
Are you sure this isn't the prelude to how Charlie Daniels wrote "Uneasy Rider"?
I don't think it is, but I'd gladly share in the royalties.
Great story! Can't wait to hear about the drive through Alabama.
Sorry to say that's not included.
Why didn't he just shave and get a haircut? It grows back. Still, it's nice to know I know a certified, long-time straight guy. Sort of a Tommy Smothers.
I did the "straight-looking friend" bit for my buddies in those days too, though my friends said I was closer to Bud Abbott than Tommy Smothers.
I was the guy with the long hair back then. Now, not so much.
What part of the sixties?
Well, let's see. I'm thinking 1967.
Post a Comment