Chongqing Punk

Reunited — Ep. 15

2 min · I går
episode Reunited — Ep. 15 cover

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Episode transcript: “It’s not an art project,” said Song An, referencing the scene she had been making at Echo Bay. “It’s just what I felt like doing.” She and Linda had both been forcibly escorted from the club. Now they were at an outdoor barbecue joint, with the rest of the rambunctious drunks. “That can be art,” said Linda. “Art can be whatever you feel.” Song An was shoveling morsels of beef into her mouth. When they were ordering, Song An insisted she was a vegetarian, but when the dishes started coming in, she tucked right into Linda’s carefully curated selection. Classic Song An. Linda’s reaction was to say nothing and eat all of Song An’s vegetables. Classic Linda. The number of the bottles on the table was how they kept track of how many beers they had had, and it was a lot. Song An did at least have a satisfying reaction to all the Weather Aboveground business. “That’s bullshit and they’re all bullshit!” she held up a bottle to the next table, “It’s bullshit, right?!” The guys next door lifted their beers in a return salute, “Bullshit!” Linda had to forcibly restrain Song An from travelling straight to Moldova to kick some ass. The guys probably would have went with her. “I don’t think that’s where they are, for real. That’s just where their IP address is.” “Well then, I’ll kick the shit out of their IP address,” offered Song An. Linda didn’t need Song An to do anything. It was just nice to have someone actually angry on her behalf. “You don’t use it, do you?” asked Linda. “Fuck the weather. You wanna go see a band? They’re playing a derelict factory up in Bei Bei. I’m trying to poach their drummer,” said Song An. “You have a band? That’s awesome,” said Linda. “I am the band,” said Song An. A Didi dropped them off in the middle of a dark stretch of highway. Linda was now carrying gobs of cash these days, and paid the man an exorbitant fare, both for going off app and way out of the city. Who knows how they were going to get home. Linda and Song An clambered over the safety rail and walked concrete pathway that narrowed as it went further into the trees. Linda tried not to think about wild dogs. Song An was unbothered, but also not too sure of the way. She chattered on about assholes and plans and bands she’d seen as they walked this way and doubled back. Neither of them had a map app, and Linda was actually starting to feel scared, especially after she pissed out most of the drunk by the side of the path. “There’s no one out here. Are you sure this is a thing?” she asked. “Got somewhere to be?” asked Song An. “Yes!” said Linda. “Home sleeping.”

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16 episoder

episode The Abandoned Factory — Ep. 16 cover

The Abandoned Factory — Ep. 16

Episode transcript: It was so late it was early, a time Linda hadn’t been out for a long time. She and Song An were wandering somewhere in a wooded area off a highway in Bei Bei, and Linda was starting to reassess the night’s choices. But, there it was. A clearing up ahead with a derelict old factory. Industrial, but not industrial, noises wafted out from inside. “Ugh, come on,” said Song An. “We’re late.” Linda followed Song An inside. A small stage was made out of discarded junk in the corner of a cavernous nothing. It held two guys with a keyboard and what in an academic setting might be called assorted percussion, but in an empty factory in the middle of the night was realistically a box of random shit. There was an overloaded plug strip to the side of the stage, and its electricity end snaked off out of the room. The percussionist-singer screamed into a mic and … noises happened. It was amazing. There were six other audience members, all guys, keeping their distance from one another. No one was dancing, except Song An, who didn’t need a beat to get her groove on. No one was filming this, either, Linda noticed. At the concert’s end, without ever having addressed the audience, the two guys simply started packing up their gear. “Who was that?” Linda asked. “Greg and the Dinosnaxx,” said Song An, a little too loudly, in the aftermath of all that noise. “They’re from around. The one guy is a teacher at the music college.” “Cool,” said Linda. “Yeah, I thought you’d be impressed by that shit,” said Song An. Everyone, including Greg and the Dinosnaxx, trundled out into the daylight Gary or Dinosnaxx had a van, and they said it was cool if everyone crammed in. “We’re headed back to the city.” Linda crammed in, next to an old, broken looking amp. Three of the six other guys started smoking, without rolling down the windows. Linda looked at Song An. “Thank you for bringing me. I’m having a wonderful time,” she said. Song An sneered. “Of course you are. Be cool.”

I går2 min
episode Reunited — Ep. 15 cover

Reunited — Ep. 15

Episode transcript: “It’s not an art project,” said Song An, referencing the scene she had been making at Echo Bay. “It’s just what I felt like doing.” She and Linda had both been forcibly escorted from the club. Now they were at an outdoor barbecue joint, with the rest of the rambunctious drunks. “That can be art,” said Linda. “Art can be whatever you feel.” Song An was shoveling morsels of beef into her mouth. When they were ordering, Song An insisted she was a vegetarian, but when the dishes started coming in, she tucked right into Linda’s carefully curated selection. Classic Song An. Linda’s reaction was to say nothing and eat all of Song An’s vegetables. Classic Linda. The number of the bottles on the table was how they kept track of how many beers they had had, and it was a lot. Song An did at least have a satisfying reaction to all the Weather Aboveground business. “That’s bullshit and they’re all bullshit!” she held up a bottle to the next table, “It’s bullshit, right?!” The guys next door lifted their beers in a return salute, “Bullshit!” Linda had to forcibly restrain Song An from travelling straight to Moldova to kick some ass. The guys probably would have went with her. “I don’t think that’s where they are, for real. That’s just where their IP address is.” “Well then, I’ll kick the shit out of their IP address,” offered Song An. Linda didn’t need Song An to do anything. It was just nice to have someone actually angry on her behalf. “You don’t use it, do you?” asked Linda. “Fuck the weather. You wanna go see a band? They’re playing a derelict factory up in Bei Bei. I’m trying to poach their drummer,” said Song An. “You have a band? That’s awesome,” said Linda. “I am the band,” said Song An. A Didi dropped them off in the middle of a dark stretch of highway. Linda was now carrying gobs of cash these days, and paid the man an exorbitant fare, both for going off app and way out of the city. Who knows how they were going to get home. Linda and Song An clambered over the safety rail and walked concrete pathway that narrowed as it went further into the trees. Linda tried not to think about wild dogs. Song An was unbothered, but also not too sure of the way. She chattered on about assholes and plans and bands she’d seen as they walked this way and doubled back. Neither of them had a map app, and Linda was actually starting to feel scared, especially after she pissed out most of the drunk by the side of the path. “There’s no one out here. Are you sure this is a thing?” she asked. “Got somewhere to be?” asked Song An. “Yes!” said Linda. “Home sleeping.”

I går2 min
episode Linda the Punk — Episode 14 cover

Linda the Punk — Episode 14

TRANSCRIPT Linda hadn’t always been a respectable business owner. In her misspent youth she’d been a dissatisfied hellion, railing against the squares. Nuts Club, 12 years ago, Punk Fest. Subs was playing. SUBS, from Beijing. Beijing sucked too, but Subs was awesome. They were Linda’s favorite band. She wanted to be Kang Mao when she grew up. And she didn’t want to grow up. As two broke kids, Linda and Song An couldn’t afford the tickets. And they were already known at the club. Once Song An stole a bottle of gin from behind the bar. She got kicked out, but somehow managed to hold onto the gin. She and Linda split it over barbecue and got into a spectacular fight. Linda flipped the table and Song An started throwing beer bottles until the boss threatened to call the police. And then they were a team again, running from the assholes. “We could wear disguises,” said Linda, brainstorming ways to get into the show. “No way,” said Song An. “Never hide who you are. Or why bother being anyone at all.” In the end, Linda didn’t remember how they got in — snuck in through the backdoor, or something — but it was the loudest, grimiest, most intense show she’d ever seen. She got Kong Mao to sign her arm after the show and she didn’t wash it off for weeks. Song An tried to tattoo it on with a pen and a needle, “Like they do in prison, or on TV.” Linda withstood the pain for about five pinpricks. That surviving greenish dot looked like a gross birthmark, but Linda knew what it meant. They tried to start a band themselves one summer. Practice involved screaming lyrics at each other while banging on instruments they inherited from friends who had moved on to university or whatever. It was incredible, but they kept getting chased out of their practice space for being too awful. So instead they stole a rusty dumpster from a construction site and made it into a swimming pool for some relief from the hot, hot heat of the summer in Chongqing. It was a wet mess and, frankly, a tetanus risk, but damn if it wasn’t a good party until it fell apart. Linda eventually succumbed to pressure to be respectable. Brian came along and believed in her pizza dreams and Song An faded into the background. At least from Linda’s perspective. Song An could never fade, and don’t let her hear you implying that she could.

10. maj 20262 min
episode Enter Song An — Episode 13 cover

Enter Song An — Episode 13

Transcript: “Why don’t you go out with the boys,” Brian suggested. “You’re always happier after a little Squatty time.” “Eww. Don’t call it that,” said Linda. “Take a Squat. Work the glutes. Get that ass to grass!” said Brian, demonstrating perfect deep squat form. Linda smiled. “There we go,” said Brian. “I know you’re mad, but ‘mad all the time is a distraction perpetuated by the attention sucker.’” “You’ve been watching Western Toilet!” said Linda. Brian shrugged. “He’s funny.” So Linda got it together and messaged Squatty. He immediately messaged back a location pin and said to meet them there in one hour. It was a quiet street that looked nearly deserted, but down a small alleyway, there was a door that opened into a crowded dance club. In the corner of the room, a tiny young woman wearing giant earphones and homemade jewelry was staring intently into a couple of computer screens, and the people on the dancefloor pulsed along to the beat. How come Linda didn’t know about these places? She’d lived in this city all of her life. She used to be cool. But the boys were living in a whole different world.   Linda drinks. “Your honorarium!” they would say. The DJ played weird stuff and Linda started having fun. She danced with the boys and associated friends and some straight-up strangers. Wendy showed up in an outfit she had designed and sewed herself from vintage fabrics. The music was loud and conversation was impossible. You could just yell things into the party and everyone cheered back. It was that kind of night. “I’m obsessed with a conspiracy that I made up in my own head!” Linda shouted. “Right on!” Wendy shouted back. And for a moment, Linda felt free. Maybe everyone else was right. Instead of getting all worked up about things outside of her control, she should have just gone dancing. She used to love to dance. At 2:30 am, the DJ put on a remix of the Weather Aboveground jingle, “It’s the conversation we’re all having,” chopped and screwed into sonic scrambled eggs. “Throw your vote up on the wall!” the DJ intoned. Everyone projected their watches at the club walls. Cloudy icons filled the room. “This is you!” said Adrian. “The protest vote! You made this happen!” Linda felt sick, “This isn’t me. I’m not protesting; I don’t vote. They’re … stealing your data.” “Oh, yeah. Your thing with your aunt,” Adrian said. “But I mean … who doesn’t have your data. And if I get up to 40,000 Weather Points, I get this sick customizable avatar.” “Well, I wouldn’t want to deprive you of your avatar,” said Linda, with a sarcasm that Adrian missed. A sudden commotion drew the attention of everyone in the room. “Oww, you fucking bitch. You did that on purpose,” A guy was yelling at a woman about Linda’s age. “She shocked me. She has some kind of thing and she shocked me!” “Too right, I shocked you,” said the woman. She had artfully messy hair and impish, wild eyes, and she was wearing rubber slippers.  “Your complacency is killing you.” She shuffled her feet on the floor and thrust her finger at the guy again, menacingly. He jumped back. “Song An?” called Linda. The troublemaker looked over. “Oh, hey Fuck-face! Long time, no see.”

4. maj 20263 min
episode Lawyer Time — Episode 12 cover

Lawyer Time — Episode 12

Transcript: “You went to Dan-druff?” asked Brian. “That guy! You know he interviewed with us three times.” After sitting on it for a few days, Linda told Brian about her brush with potential cybercrime. He was of the impression that setting her money on fire would have been as effective as paying Stinky Dan for retribution against the “Moldovan hackers.” “Whoever is running these accounts is probably not even in Moldova. You want me to bring it to work? I could do some digging,” offered Brian. “Though I agree with Dan-druff that making a blocklist and getting on with your life is probably the best course of action.” “But, like, they made a macabre puppet of my Aunt Rose,” said Linda. She’d had a few days to think of exactly what bothered her about this. “I know. And that’s shitty,” said Brian. “But it’s happening all over the internet. Maybe you should sue Bleater. Be some kind of landmark case.” Linda knew he was kidding, but this new direction felt like something to do. The world was changed by people taking action, after all. So armed with the list of IP addresses Stinky Dan had compiled, Linda went to see her old college pal Nessa, who had helped her with some of the paperwork for setting up the pizza place. “Linda, it’s family law,” said Nessa when Linda showed up at her office. Nessa was sat at her desk piled high in files and papers, an untouched takeaway container from a lunch that should have been eaten hours ago sitting precariously close to the edge. “I practice family law.” She was dressed in a rumpled nice-ish suit, and her long hair was hastily pulled back with … was that a pencil? Did anyone do that outside of movies about busy lawyers. “You’re the only lawyer I know,” said Linda. “I know,” said Nessa, with a sigh. “I’m the only lawyer everyone knows. Let me poke around, see what I can find that might point you in the right direction. Is there internet law? Get out of here; I’ll let you know if I find anything.” “Just one more question. Would you be able to represent me if I was associated with a cybercrime?” “Jesus Christ, Linda!” “OK. I’m going. Do you want these?” Linda asked, waving the printout of numbers she had brought. “No,” said Nessa. “Put them on … this pile.” Things moved slowly in real life. In an action movie, Linda felt they’d be in some kind of chase scene, shaking down bad guys and getting some answers. In this world, Nessa got back to Linda to say she wasn’t really sure there was anything actionable to prosecute. “I can write you a stern email,” she told her. “But there’s really not much to do here that would be worth the cost of the court filing fees. Unless you want to pioneer a class action suit.” “How would we do that?” asked Linda. “Oh, God! I was kidding!” said Nessa. “I don’t have the resources for that?” Linda was disappointed. She accepted her sternly worded email as a consolation prize, but she didn’t actually have any place to send it. Squatty offered to print it in the next issue of the zine, and that was kind of that. It was very unsatisfying. The weather, meanwhile, continued to be cloudy and cold. After having perfect conditions every day, people were starting to notice and grumble. But to Linda, it felt like a return to normalcy. People should experience some discomfort, she thought. It was good for resilliancy and moral fiber, or something. Anyway, Linda poured all of that dissatisfied energy into working with Squatty and the boys on the zines. She wasn’t sure that her writing was any good, but it was words. Squatty was very encouraging. “Self-expression is the thing!” he said. “It’s what life is made of.”

4. maj 20263 min