Fuck Asheville and Fuck Social Media (a paranoid screed about Tedx, Jen Saylor and marketing)
If you happen to belong to Facebook or twitter like I do, you’ve probably heard every bottom feeding member of the social media plankton going on and on about Tedx Asheville, which happened tonight in town.
For those of you not familiar with the Tedx phenomenon, let me explain it to you. Imagine a group of maladjusted computer nerds attempting to place their enthusiasm for technology attempting to mingle with a bunch of idiotic hipsters and star fuckers while talking about saving the world (without actually doing anything about it). That is Tedx Asheville.
The entire thing has made me realize how much I hate what Asheville has become, social media and new moneyed cokeheads all over Western North Carolina.
Jason Bugg: Bad Ass
I’m not a tough guy. I’ve done things in past that might make people think that I’m some sort of tough dude, like getting in fights, working as a bouncer at a bar or two in Asheville and even talking smack to strangers, but I never considered myself the tough guy. I was the little yappy puppy that ran along with the gigantic and tough dog.
That is until Friday night.
Dillard’s Sucks.
I’ve never been a good dresser. My jeans have always fit me poorly due to my big waist and short legs, shirts hung weird over my slouched shoulders and proto-beer belly, so when I went into Dillard’s in the Asheville Mall when I was 18, I undoubtedly looked as if I didn’t belong in the department store’s standard look of faux elegance and upper middle class America’s delusion of being better than they actually were. Dillard’s isn’t a nice store so much as it is a collision of name brands and slightly above Sears quality clothing. But for me, and a lot of other people in Asheville, it was where you went when you wanted something nice- especially for someone older (or where someone older bought you a gift card when they were subtly trying to tell you that you looked like shit).
Elvis has left the building (and my current reading list)
I just finished Careless Love: The Unmaking of Elvis Presley by Peter Guralnick and I am utterly and completely heartbroken and destroyed by the life, the death, the spirit, the soul and the utter and complete hopelessness that was Elvis Aron Presley. I can’t put into words how heartbreaking the final years of this man’s life were. He was troubled by addiction, grief over the passing of his mother nearly 20 years earlier, and his self confidence and swagger destroyed by his divorce. I really just want to sit here and write a detailed synopsis of the book, but I don’t know if doing that really illustrates why this book and the last few years of the man’s life has really destroyed me in such a spectacular fashion.
I guess Elvis’ decent into addiction, his trouble with his weight and the shooting of television sets are enough for everyone else, but those things (in their own rather peculiar way) are so mundane by now. What struck me instead was how Elvis fucking Presley had no self confidence at the end. All of the accounts of the man’s life just recall him being utterly defeated by the world and himself. It seemed like for the last five years of his life, Elvis was aware of the inevitability of his death, and worried that people wouldn’t remember him as the devastatingly talented (and important) person that he was.
From Guralnick’s book (the conversation was said to have taken place around this time in 1977:
Over the next few nights he brought up things they had talked about often in the past, but now they took on a different tinge. He spoke to her about his mother, he talked about his pain, he spoke of his place in history. “How will they remember me?” he asked over and over again. “They’re not going to remember me. I’ve never done anything lasting. I’ve never done a classic film” But then his mood would change. His mission in life, he said was “to make people happy with music. And I’ll never stop until the day I die.
Those mood swings- often in the same conversation seemed to be the norm for Elvis in his final years. It seemed like to me- granted I wasn’t there and I only know Elvis from his music and from the 1,200 pages of Guralnick’s books- that Elvis had no sense of who he exactly was in those final years.
I remember reading an interview with George Harrison about his time on tour with The Beatles and he said that it felt like he was just part of the circus when The Beatles rolled into town. I’m sure that Harrison was referring to the spectacle of Beatlemania, but I think Elvis probably felt this also, only he was some sort of grotesque version of our collective past- the rebel as a cartoon character. It’s heartbreaking to think that Mr. White Jumpsuit was the same person who introduced the concept of having hips and shaking them to white people, but they are one and the same.
But that’s not what destroyed me about the book. I guess my own neurosis at times is seeing the neurosis of other people and worrying that I have the same problem. But I do wonder- do I have a true sense of myself? If Elvis fucking Presley wasn’t aware of his own self and what the world around him thought, then how am I, a foul mouthed wannabe writer in Jackson County, North Carolina ever going to have a true sense of who I am and what I’m here for?
I guess I define myself by my friends and family. I define who I am by the smiles on their faces and the warmth in their hearts. I may never do anything 1/1,000,000th as cool as “Hound Dog”, but sitting with my friend Miguel and making fun of Little League Baseball players does compare in some way.
But enough of my neurosis- it’s on to other things. Tonight I downloaded a bootleg of Elvis playing the Asheville Civic Center in 1975. By the sound of the music, he’s not the zombie playing to blue hairs that all written reports like to make him out to be in this time. Instead, he’s playing his hits for a crowd of people 35 years and a million times different from the quaint shithole that is today’s Asheville. The crowd is eating it up, and Elvis sounds like he’s having fun. Jerry Schiff (one of my new bass heroes) is playing his ass off. It sounds like a rocking affair that I wish I could have been alive to see- even if the crowd never really gave Elvis a standing ovation (according to every account that I’ve read).
I hope Elvis, a person that I wasn’t alive to have known, found his peace- either in his final moments or floating through the ether as he is now. I hope that the Elvis from the first half of that quote is long gone and the Elvis from the second half of the quote is looking down at people like me- who wasn’t there for the glory years, the comeback or the decline- is still finding awesomeness in his music.
I don’t usually do this, but I figured some people around here would appreciate it- here’s a download of Elvis’s Asheville show from July 23rd, 1975. It’s a great bootleg entitled “Gyrating Asheville”. Check out the track listing and information here.
Elvis Presley- Gyrating Asheville
Until later, be good.
The Facebook thing

It seems like everyone on the planet has a Facebook page, from idiots like Sarah Palin to awesome blogs like this one, and there seems to be no end in sight. For a lot of very practical reasons, the site is pretty darn useful. Bands don’t have to hang fliers anymore; I don’t have to remember birthdays or email addresses, and sometimes a cute girl that I knew in high school posts pictures of her in a bathing suit without her children in the picture. These are all completely awesome things, but there is a downside to Facebook. Sometimes Facebook makes me miss not being in touch with everyone.
I Serve at the pleasure of the (Dap) Kings
I sit here befuddled, flummoxed, tongue-tied and confused about what to write about quite possibly one of the best nights of music in my life. My fingers are having a hard time replicating the sheer sense of joy, lunacy and reckless abandon that I had on Wednesday night as I danced my ass off to Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings. I remember listing superlatives in my head and stringing together hyperboles about what I was witnessing, but they don’t seem to be back on instant recall like a lot of things that I note during inferior shows. Instead all I have is a smile on my face from singing and dancing for three solid hours.
Chad Nesbitt, Buncombe County GOP Leader
Today all of my hopes that the Buncombe County GOP would end up in the hands of a reasoned, old-school Republican (I think a few of those exist) were dashed when the party elected local political court jester Chad Nesbitt as their leader.
As someone who doesn’t like the GOP at all, I was quite happy. But as someone who wants a nice, rational dialogue when the time for elections come I was very disappointed. I was hoping that the Ron Paul wing of the party would come through instead of the “SAVE ME FROM SNAKES JESUS” wing of the party. But, I guess to all the Republicans out there I’d like to say that I’m sorry and that being in Jackson County I can probably find some anti-venom for you once Nesbitt and his snake handling cronies take power.
Chad and his sort-of political group, The Carolina Stompers, have been a source of eye-rolling idiocy, side splitting laughter, did-he-really-just-say-that reactions and what-the-fuck-is-he-trying-to-type?-did-he-make-it-past-fourth-grade level grammatical gaffs in recent years. If you still don’t know who Chad is, here’s a relatively okay piece from the Mountain Xpress that highlights what a tool Nesbitt really is.
But the real magic of Nesbitt has never been captured in an article. Instead, you have to look at the man and the people that he associates with. With that being said, The Bugg Blog is proud to present The Very Best of Chad Nesbitt and the Carolina Stompers.
Blocking out the bad
Sunday after work I came home in a terrible mood; nothing I’d done all day seemed to work out for me, work was awful and reminding me again why I want out of there and the aforementioned job kept me inside on what was a gorgeous day that was hard-earned after what has felt like three straight months of sub-freezing temperatures.
I came home, gave my wife (whom I hadn’t seen since late Friday night) a big long hug and sat down on the couch.
Suddenly, everything got better.
My Wife, My Nerd
Valentine’s Day this year was pretty dull and uneventful- just the way I like it. We spent the afternoon at our house, cooking Pad Thai and Jessie asking me constantly if the unrelenting hangover I was suffering from was easing. Yep, it was a Sunday all right.
But Monday was a different story.
After a nice lunch (12 Bones Barbecue!) Jessie and I decided to hang around Asheville a bit more. It’s rare when we get to escape Sylva and enjoy Asheville on a weekday. It’s one of the few times in the city where if you ignore all of the new shops and progress, it really feels like the city we both love. Everything was pleasant until I saw something that I wasn’t prepared for: I saw my wife and a friend that I’d introduced her to have a pretty dramatic falling out.
Saturday the 28th!

Here’s the latest flier for the show my band is playing with Everything Falls Apart and Hoss. Do me and yourselves a favor by stopping by, saying hello and maybe sweating off some of that turkey.






