Porter, IN 46304
It seems like up north there’s always wireless. In southern Indiana you can drive down back roads without ever finding a signal (but if you do, you can bank on it being unsecured). But along US 20 in Porter, Indiana, even in the middle of industrial expanses, the modems at the Blue Beacon Truckwash and Travel America pierce through railroad cars and patches of forest to bring civilization to that which is not tame.
Multi-million dollar operations line the grungy highway. The roadway is there to serve giants: it doesn’t convey families turning off every 50 meters into neighborhoods where every inch of ground is touched by a lawn mower wheel or child’s bare foot. It conducts semis bearing rolls of steel, making their way from Lake County mills to processing plants. The local operations pickle the steel, cut it to length, stamp it or reroll it, and send it to other enterprises who form it into another shape that the end user will still never see. The environment is wooded and wild not of its own will, but because we chose to lace power lines and smatter factories throughout, and while these structures require area they don’t actually touch every inch of it.Along this stretch of road is Leroy’s Hot Stuff. I approached on a damp September night, the way lit only by my headlights, a single sodium vapor light, and the yellow marquee advertising Karaoke night on Thursdays (My friend Lindsey: “Yes! What luck!”). We had wondered what “hot stuff” Leroy had to offer us—hoping that we didn’t need to tip it. But the “Mexican Restaurant” sign on the door explained it; the hottest thing Leroy could possibly put before us would be salsa picante. The place wasn’t packed, but it certainly was full—it took a little while for song requesters around the DJ to make enough room for us to weave through the crate paper streaming from the front door lintel. Inside we saw two areas: the first full of tables, a spore of a dining space that, on Thursdays, consists of DJ, stage, and participants of varying passivity. On the other side of a half wall stood a pool table and the bar.
On this particular night Leroy’s was just a Karaoke bar, but it refuses to be pigeonholed as such. Earlier in the day it was full of eager customers looking for Mexican takeout. Before that, tired 3rd shifters and drowsy 1st shifters lined the place, trying to decline Lou Dog’s offers to buy rounds of 151 and wondering why a Mexican restaurant serves the “all-American breakfast”. Call it the NAFTA scramble.
Barack Obama, on a recent visit to the area, snubbed Leroy’s and chose to hold his campaign event at Schoops. But come on, Barack, it’s not that bad. Yeah, Leroy’s is known to be a biker bar, but mostly just because they sponsor all the poker runs! They’re just connected to the community, they just want to help people, is that such a crime? Leroy’s is the sort of place to exchange fight stories rather than make them. You could bring your kids and everyone would have a good time, but, well, I suppose the discretion neurons of the head(s) of household might start firing as the night went on…
They had Dos Equis Ambar on tap, a pitcher cost me $6, and I don’t think it was on special. “$6?!?! I’ve paid Ticketmaster service charges that cost more than $6,” Lindsey rejoiced/mourned.
The people doing the Karaoke had mad skill. It wasn’t so much raw talent as obvious training. Why did everybody, rednecks and all, know how to count off a song in 6:8, or how to exaggerate a triplet? This is the apparent dissonance of Northwest Indiana, a zone where Chicago local news reaches deep into farmland, where you spend Friday night at DC’s Country Junction and check out the Art Institute of Chicago on Saturday morning. Porter County has the highest per-capita income in Indiana aside from those which house the northside Indianapolis suburbs, thanks largely to years of boom economy factory wages. Money from big industry and Chicago bedroom community residents have meant tax revenues to build and promote successful schools with killer music programs. I’m betting that we had a number of former Drifters and Sandpipers, Chesterton High School showchoir kids, in the house that night. Music is big, and not just “Before He Cheats” (although one patron put Carrie Underwood to shame). And for some reason I can’t figure out, in Northwest Indiana it’s cool to be smart in school and maybe carrying a flute on Friday nights is just as cool as carrying a pigskin.
We spied refuge with a perfect view of the karaoke mic at the half-wall partition. Lindsey and I zigzagged over to put down the pitcher, never suspecting that we would have wandered into a danger zone. A living cowboy bobble head in front turned around to glare at us. His angry eyes peered out from the slit between an oversized brim and his brick of a mustache. We could see like no skin on this guy. Flannel shirt and Wrangler jeans conspired to leave just his hands and the aforementioned slit exposed to the elements. I had begun to get nervous when the thin middle-aged woman in high-waisted jeans and a leopard-print shirt next to us leaned in for the save. “He bought the pool table for the night, and you’re blocking his view of the game. Wanna take my spot so he can see?” We figured the right answer was yes. He had hardly turned back toward the stage when another unsuspecting victim wandered into the territory. “Hey, buddy, is that your girlfriend?” the cowboy gestured toward Lindsey. “Um,” the victim quivered, “naw, but she sure is pretty!” “Well you better snuggle up anyway! You’re blocking my view of the table!” My friend looked to me for intervention, only to find me cowardly staring straight ahead as to not make eye contact with her. The cowboy leaned in close to me. “You shoot pool?” “Uh, not well.” “We’ve got the table for the whole night, so after these guys are done, come on over…but we don’t play for nothin’.” I coolly responded by mumbling until he turned back around.
1 comment:
You are cool because you are busy and still have a blog. You are an entertaining writer.
-Chris Funk
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