Aww Hell Nah

Underappreciated: Vans Authentics, circa Southern California



The Vans shoe company started in Anaheim, California, in 1966. Their first pair of shoes was what would eventually be named the “Authentics,” a sturdy low top that would be adopted by generations of skaters, including Tony Alva and Stacy Peralta. And so they became a California icon—a gum-soled, low profile, no funny business shoe, one that made its way onto the feet of Sean Penn in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and then, just a decade or so later and about an hour’s drive from where the Van Doren Rubber Company first started, onto my feet, too.

For all the years I spent in Southern California, a pair of Authetics did just fine. The waffled soles treaded the tile floors of the chi-chi South Coast Plaza mall in Orange County sufficiently; there was provided more than enough arch support for pressing on the gas pedal of my 1996 Volvo 850—so much so, in fact, that hitting 85 miles per hour on Pacific Coast Highway was nothing short of mindless, even pleasant; and the walk to the complimentary barbecue grill right by the swimming pool of my apartment complex—with the help of the low-cut ankle support and the double-tied bow of my shoelaces—was brisk and effortless. Because shoes, like all clothing, serve a utilitarian purpose. But when the weather is consistently above 75 degrees and when winter is less a season than a few annoyingly intermittent drizzles on the umbrella you don’t own (because hell, I’m always in my car anyways, right?); when you’re Bermuda shorts deep in a cultural hub that is so totally-cool-all-the-time-dude that you can turn right on a red light (the entry for pedestrian has yet to be completed in the state’s regional dictionary), the only true sartorial utility is making sure you’re not so naked you get arrested. That is, unless you’re at that private-ish beach spot off of Cliff Drive in Laguna Beach after 10.

And then it was New York, and it was winter, and the snow settled on the park down the street from my apartment in Brooklyn like a deceivingly well-laundered down comforter, all shiny and white. It had some advantages to a comforter (you could mold it into the shape of a person, albeit a rotund one, with arms and all), but it had some disadvantages too (it’s not like you’d ever want to wrap it around you for a comfortable sleep). And then after meeting some friends in south end of the park, after walking knee-deep in snow, I was invited inside an igloo, which, by the looks of the thing, could only have been built by the disenfranchised hands of New England youth. You know, the sort of kids that grew up with snow. The construction was massive—with myself included, it comfortably housed seven people, one bottle of rum, and one bottle of what looked like vodka. But then I looked down at my shoes, at my Authentics, and though I could see them I couldn’t feel them. Because the snow, that by then must have reached almost to the bottom of my chin, settled into the cotton canvas, on through the socks, and through at least a few layers of my feet’s epidermis. Frigidness set in, and I could tell that this was an Into the Wild sort of frigidness. It was frostbite. I could hear the faint voice of my feet whispering, Where is the barbecue grill? Where is the swimming pool? Where is the Talbots and the Pacific Sunwear and the Paul Frank store? Fucked if I know, man. I can’t even find the In & Out.

Underappreciated: “Don’t Dream It’s Over”

minutia, really.

Don't Dream It's Over

Somewhere in the middle of the film Adventureland, what I consider a sleeper hit of 2009 (it even made its way onto a New Yorker list of best movies of the year), there’s a scene where the two main characters, Em and James (played by Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg, respectively), sit on a bench and watch a fireworks show. At that moment the movie, set in the 80s, hits a uniquely perfect note:

Hey now, hey now. Don’t dream it’s over.

It was Crowded House.

My last year of college I roomed with a guitar player who I would, over the ensuing months of school, come to hate with a virulent passion, the sort of tangible hatred reserved for radical fundamentalist racists, domestic abusers, and 7 year-olds that spread the word to kindergarten classmates of Santa’s not really existing. One day I lay in the bed of my room, next to his (we shared a wall), and I could hear a low rumbling bass—a sort of familiar sound, sort of swing-ish sort of not. I soon found myself humming the chorus.

Hey now, hey now. Don’t dream it’s over.

Playing along to songs in our respective rooms was nothing unusual, but they were usually songs recorded after the mid-nineties—Get Up Kids songs, Black Keys songs—so why my roommate chose to play guitar to a song by a New Zealand pop-rock outfit with a penchant for falsetto and frosted tips was beyond me.

Since its release in 1986, “Don’t Dream It’s Over” has been played in the background of television series like One Tree Hill and Miami Vice, and was even covered in 2002 by also-since-forgotten Sixpence None The Richer (though I still haven’t been able to forget about “Kiss Me”). But even at its most popular, the best it ever did on the Billboard Hot 100 chart was second place, and Paul Hester, the founding drummer of the band, reportedly hanged himself from a tree in 2005. In other words, the band went the way of the 80s.

And so the 80s came and went, and there I was in my college apartment, laying next to the rumblings of its low bass notes, letting them fill me with resentment for New Zealand, for trench coats, for the bearded turncoat living next to me who would eventually owe me 300 dollars for the trailer he took from the band we were once in. And then, years after that, I would find myself watching a film starring an actress made famous by a tweenage-popular Vampire franchise, humming the words hey now hey now—all three minutes and fifty five seconds of the thing—and downloading it to my iTunes. Because songs can transcend musical trends, they can transcend decades, they can transcend former roommates that still owe you a ton of cash. And because sometimes there’s freedom within trying to catch the deluge in a paper cup. If you know what I mean.

Crowded House – Don’t Dream It’s Over



Underappreciated is a new column by Mark Mikin