About six weeks ago, I wrote here the tale of my friend Peter Carlisle, when he made a visit to Los Angeles, and we got to spend a few days together while his wife Judy stayed in Kentucky with their daughter and son-in-law's first baby. (Peter had been there, but after a while everyone knew he would just be in the way...) Peter, you'll recall, is the former mayor of Honolulu and had been the city's long-time Chief Prosecutor. And he is also a piece of work to spend time with -- a joy, a whirlwind, unique, exhausting, smart, funny, infuriating and a thoroughly wonderful guy. Even though we don't agree politically. Though much more than I do with most Republicans, since he is a New Jersey Republican. As I mentioned previously, if he ran in the Deep South would be chased out of town as a damn liberal. But he's not, remotely. However he fits in just fine in Hawaii -- even if the concept of a New Jersey Republican being mayor of Honolulu is one you might have a hard time wrapping your mind around. Shaka brah. Fuggedaboudit. My article was very positive -- I think... -- but also scathing in showing what an outgoing, fun, maddening, annoying, good-natured, and periodically bewildering person Peter was. And it is not only to his credit, but speaks highly to who he is that he joyfully linked to it on his Facebook page, warts and all. Peter is a rare politician who take as good as he gets. Fun, too, were the comments I got from people who knew Peter, some who wrote me directly, some who posted online. One long-time work associate explained that she would have written to me earlier, but was too busy laughing, and called the piece "epic" and spot-in, adding some of her own stories. Others said things like how you actually nailed Peter to a T. But my favorite comments came from Peter's dear wife herself, the ever-patient dynamo Judy Carlisle (known among many as "St. Jude"...), who wrote to me -- "You described him beautifully. Now everyone knows what my life with him is like!!" (And yes, I asked for permission to quote her. And yes, she replied back with enthusiastic permission, adding that "everyone that knows him well will probably understand. At the very least I may get a little sympathy." But far and away my favorite comment of Judy's in her note was, "As you can imagine I have many stories about the absent minded Peter. I always wonder how he even gets dressed in the morning.") Keep in mind, this is the former mayor and long-time Chief Prosecutor of a major American city. But make no mistake, he's an extremely bright, highly-focused guy. It's just that that focus sometimes makes him oblivious to random, basic things in life. Like what floor his hotel room is on. And the room number. And where the car is parked. And...well, you get the idea. Especially if you had read the article. Anyway, in that May article I mentioned having written an earlier story about Peter in the Huffington Post five years ago when he was running for re-election as Mayor, largely telling about our time together in grad school at UCLA and on a road trip we took up the Pacific Coast to Canada and back after graduation, as well as some early visits together. It actually got picked by the local Hawaii press, who were amused by what their civic leader was really like in his Early Days. Since Peter is still talking to me, I figure he gave it his approval. Something I was uncertain about because I hadn't told him beforehand and, like my recent piece, I felt it was very positive yet overflowing with its own warts. But the day after it appeared, I got a phone call from him in the Mayor's office, laughing. I thought that since I already gave you the follow-up and referenced the original, it was only proper to bring the thing back. So, here it is, from June 27, 2012. Back, for perspective's sack, when another political figure who was born in Hawaii, later to move to my beloved Chicago was in the White House. The Big Kahuna of HonoluluOne of the problems with growing up is that eventually you reach the point in life where the clods you grew up with are now in charge. When you’re a kid, you don’t think twice about who the pilot is flying the airplane. But one day, you realize that the child who used to always forget his phone number is now performing neurosurgery on someone. Or you know that the chef at your favorite restaurant used to eat mud. But none of that compares to my own sobering moment when I realized that a pal from my earlier days was now the mayor of the City of Honolulu. Fortunately, I didn’t know Peter Carlisle as a child. Just the thought of that gives me chills – a really loud eight-year-old with a bushy moustache. We became friends in graduate school at UCLA. He was in law school, though still – how shall I put it? – unformed as a mature adult. I was getting my Masters degree in screenwriting. And now the people of Honolulu elected Peter the mayor? Yes, I know they’d elected him City Prosecutor four times. But it’s one thing to be City Prosecutor, where the only thing people care about is “did you convict the bad guys?” – and Peter and his staff did, which is why he kept getting re-elected. And it’s something else entirely to be in charge of everything…and represent your city. I’m sure that the people of Honolulu are happy with Peter Carlisle as a fine representative of their city. But they didn’t see him go to the Pizza Palace seven nights in a row to watch the movie The Producers, over and over and over (and over) again on the big screen TV, rather than study. Or they didn’t see him watching the “Three Blind Mice” scene in Monty Python’s And Now for Something Completely Different, and losing all self-control, actually hyperventilating with so much apoplectic laughter that he literally nearly passed out. The voters may see an effective former City Prosecutor. But this is who I see. Here’s how difficult it is for me. One particularly violent criminal, after getting convicted, called Peter “the most evil man in Hawaii.” Or something like that. I don’t remember exactly, though, because I was too busy convulsed in hysterics. What everyone in Honolulu saw was the intensity of the high-profile trial. All I could see was the camping trip Peter and I took up the Pacific Coast Highway after grad school, which didn’t mesh with Evil Genius, unless you count how annoying he got when he didn’t get his way, or tried repeatedly sing the wrong lyrics to “Marian the Librarian.” Hey, I didn’t like to let him drive, that’s why it’s hard for me to see him in charge of a city. One of the problems with growing up is that eventually you reach the point in life where the clods you grew up with are now in charge. When you’re a kid, you don’t think twice about who the pilot is flying the airplane. But one day, you realize that the child who used to always forget his phone number is now performing neurosurgery on someone. Or you know that the chef at your favorite restaurant used to eat mud. But none of that compares to my own sobering moment when I realized that a pal from my earlier days was now the mayor of the City of Honolulu. Fortunately, I didn’t know Peter Carlisle as a child. Just the thought of that gives me chills – a really loud eight-year-old with a bushy moustache. We became friends in graduate school at UCLA. He was in law school, though still – how shall I put it? – unformed as a mature adult. I was getting my Masters degree in screenwriting. And now the people of Honolulu elected Peter the mayor? Yes, I know they’d elected him City Prosecutor four times. But it’s one thing to be City Prosecutor, where the only thing people care about is “did you convict the bad guys?” – and Peter and his staff did, which is why he kept getting re-elected. And it’s something else entirely to be in charge of everything…and represent your city. I’m sure that the people of Honolulu are happy with Peter Carlisle as a fine representative of their city. But they didn’t see him go to the Pizza Palace seven nights in a row to watch the movie The Producers, over and over and over (and over) again on the big screen TV, rather than study. Or they didn’t see him watching the “Three Blind Mice” scene in Monty Python’s And Now for Something Completely Different, and losing all self-control, actually hyperventilating with so much apoplectic laughter that he literally nearly passed out. The voters may see an effective former City Prosecutor. But this is who I see. Here’s how difficult it is for me. One particularly violent criminal, after getting convicted, called Peter “the most evil man in Hawaii.” Or something like that. I don’t remember exactly, though, because I was too busy convulsed in hysterics. What everyone in Honolulu saw was the intensity of the high-profile trial. All I could see was the camping trip Peter and I took up the Pacific Coast Highway after grad school, which didn’t mesh with Evil Genius, unless you count how annoying he got when he didn’t get his way, or tried repeatedly sing the wrong lyrics to “Marian the Librarian.” Hey, I didn’t like to let him drive, that’s why it’s hard for me to see him in charge of a city. Yes, that little dot in the back, off the Oregon coast, is the current Mayor of Honolulu. Trust me, it’s the best way to see him. Small and at a distance.)
There is one telling memory of that trip. It came at the U.S. border, as we were re-entering the country from Canada. Two just-graduated students, without a haircut in a while, beards a few days old, a little grungy, camping gear in the trunk, returning from Vancouver. Needless-to-say, the Customs Guard thought he had easy pickings. However, though most college students would be panicked, Peter and I were actually amused. What we knew was that, between us, Peter Carlisle was so squeaky clean that, when the trip was over, he was heading to Honolulu to begin work for the City Prosecutor’s office. And I, to this day, have never taken any drugs in my life, including not a puff of marijuana. The guard however was ripping apart the trunk, getting frustrated at his failure to find anything. Suddenly, his eyes lit up – “Hey, Mike, I think I got something!!!”, he excitedly shouted to his partner and victoriously held up an object. “What’s this?!,” he snarked, certain he’d found a roach clip. Peter and I took a close, bemused look. “That a tweezer,” I said.” The officer slammed the trunk and stormed off. Peter and I calmly drove off, laughing. Me to Hollywood, Peter to somehow eventually become Mayor of Honolulu. Yes, I know citizens want their mayor to be lily pure. But they also want them to show some semblance of a life. When Bill Clinton insisted he never inhaled, people ridiculed him in disbelief. Imagine if Peter Carlisle claimed he upset a Customs Officer who couldn’t even find a marijuana seed after a college camping trip to Canada. There’s laid back, and there’s comatose. It gets worse. A few years ago, Peter had a law enforcement conference in Orange County, but flew first to Los Angeles to visit. I met him at the airport, he paid the $5 parking, and I handed him the receipt. Except that he wouldn’t take it. He said he didn’t want people asking why he was charging the people of Honolulu for a personal visit. I told him that was idiotic – he was actually there for a conference. I actually had to park. He said, no, if he’d flown directly to Orange County, the conference would have picked him up for free. He wouldn’t take it. Totally refused. It was a receipt for five dollars. It gets worse. Rather than put in a charge for a hotel room, he came over and stayed on the couch. A year later, this lifelong cheapskate was running for Mayor of Honolulu. Yes, yes, I know that that sounds noble and honest and clean. But I think it’s ludicrous. I wanted to say to him, geez, guy, get a life. But I didn’t mean for it be as Mayor of Honolulu. To be clear, Peter Carlisle is the very opposite of a milquetoast, and that’s the problem. The world sees this public figure, but I see the college loon underneath. I see the guy who went to a University of Hawaii football game on his wedding night – in a tuxedo, with his wife in her bridal gown. I see the guy who called me at 3 in the morning, just because he knew it was three hours earlier in Hawaii and he could annoy me. I see the guy who invited me to the first trial he ever handled and…well, let’s just say he regrets it. And so, because I see the Peter Carlisle I knew as a college student, it’s a struggle to get past the reality that that guy is now Mayor of Honolulu. I comfort myself with the knowledge of two things. One, that Peter Carlisle married far above himself, and so the wonderful, no nonsense Judy is around to make sure he’s responsible. And two, I don’t live in Honolulu. I’m sure that Peter Carlisle is a wonderful mayor. But I just don’t want to be around to see how he does it. And I want to see his birth certificate.
2 Comments
John Carlisle
7/13/2017 08:27:32 am
Thanks for sharing your story, Bob. I won't tell you about Peter as a child. We shared a bed room together, but not for long. I moved out. :)
Reply
Robert Elisberg
7/13/2017 11:59:17 pm
John, thanks for your note and admitting that publicly...
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorRobert J. Elisberg is a political commentator, screenwriter, novelist, tech writer and also some other things that I just tend to keep forgetting. Feedspot Badge of Honor
Categories
All
|
© Copyright Robert J. Elisberg 2024
|