Bear took
Michelle Rodriguez to the Nevada Desert, home of red cliffs, slot canyons, and
desert heat. I spent some time driving in and out of Nevada and, later,
spending the day in Las Vegas—a city I once swore to never visit. I had to
choose between Phoenix and Vegas. I chose Vegas. I spent a couple hours
wandering The Strip, out of place, hungry, unsure of what to do and where to
go. My flight didn’t leave until 10:50pm. The Strip smelt of mildew and
sunscreen. I decided to leave The Strip after several hours of aimlessly
wandering in casinos, sitting in sports books, and walking in the 115 degree
heat in a black Flyers t-shirt and jeans. Visiting nature spots when I leave
the comforts of home brings me more joy than tourist areas. Before I left
Nevada, I drove to see the red rocks on the outskirts of Vegas. Anyway, I wrote about the highlights of the episode. I don't review the episodes.
-Bear and
Michelle Rodriguez, star of LOST and
some car movies, skydived down to the desert. Bear pushed her out, because he
disliked Ana Lucia. No, he didn’t. I mean, he pushed her out of the plane, but
not because he can’t separate Michelle Rodriguez from a character she played
nine years ago. Bear thought something bad happened to Michelle, but nothing
bad happened. Well, she landed badly. Actually, NBC editing made it seem she
landed badly. Bear ran across the desert and found a happy, jokey Michelle
Rodriguez.
-The soft
profile stuff began as soon as they started hiking the red cliffs. Bear seems
to approach scary situations like dentists or doctors. Dentists and doctors
will distract the patient by talking to them about the patient’s lives,
occupation, while he or she and the nurses or dental assistants prepare the
knockout stuff and surgical equipment. Bear may not be a budding Entertainment
Weekly writer. He may talk to celebrities about their lives to distract them
from him preparing rope, which they’ll use to repel down a steep cliffside.
-Surprise,
surprise: Bear and Michelle repelled down a cliffside. Bear switched things
around. He went first. Michelle watched him with an expression of trepidation.
Michelle shared more of her life after she successfully repelled. She talked
about her first acting job in Girlfight, why it appealed to her, and then her
and Bear began traversing the slot canyons.
-They made it
through the slot canyons. At camp, Bear cooked mouse stew. Michelle Rodriguez
contributed her urine for the broth. Bear put a hammock bed for her. They
chatted more, while he cooked, about losing loved ones. Bear said, “There’s no
manual for that.” Bear told her about four fellow climbers who died during his
Everest climb. Michelle wondered what life’s all about. I’d tell her to read
Anton Chekhov. The comedy came during dinner. Bear said the mouse stew was the
worst thing he ate, worse than raw goat testicles and camel intestinal fluid. I
watched Bear eat all sorts of bugs, animal organs, and animals over the last
eight years. Mouse stew, Bear? Yeah, I guess so.
-The next day
they needed to reach the extraction point. They ascended a steep rock with a
300-foot incline. They climbed through wind. The climb tests upper body
strength. I would not complete the ascent. Bear and Michelle did, because
they’re badasses. Michelle reflected on the catharsis natures brings to a
person. She said it’s nice to get away from people, and that she needs to get
out more. Indeed, Michelle. Bear thought he saw a different side of Michelle
that most people don’t see. I’d agree. People see essentially nothing of the
‘real’ person they see interviewed by late night hosts. William Gass wrote, in
a review of Leon Edel’s 4th volume of his Henry James biography,
“Henry James could not fail to see here another instance of a parallel he had drawn several times already, and was to draw again, to draw out even to infinity in The Sacred Fount: the ultimate worthlessness of the social exchanges he regularly participated in, the weak and unreal interest of people in one another, the guarded, protective nature of their social speech, and the greed of the novelist for the same material—the need in that role to reach through and beyond all tea-talk to the selves it hid, to whatever real life moved like the mole was believed …”
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