After the theme music and the applause died down, Pennie Layne announced, âThe women on todayâs show are gorgeous, but they say men shy away from asking them out because of their physiques. Letâs meet them.â
The things you do for relatives.
Iâd made my pile in the tech stock market of the â90s, parleying my initial investment into multiple millions over the course of six years. The parallels to the Great South Seas Bubble of the 1600s started to bother me in 1998; and recalling what Castenada had said, I quietly cashed out and shifted to a diversified portfolio that produced revenue from sources so varied that it would require a total collapse of the global economy to bankrupt me. The dotcom boomâs going bust didnât affect my position at all. Taking another lesson from history, I turned some of my assets into cash and bought low, taking a position in New York City real estate. As a result, I was now sitting pretty and would never need to work again.
After taking the time to establish myself as a legal resident of a state with no income tax, I settled in Manhattan in a townhouse that had once been the permanent mission to the U.N. of an African nation that had gone broke fighting a war and been forced to move to more modest quarters. Five floors plus a rooftop conservatory and a full basement (and prize of prizes, its own off-street parking) gave me all the room I needed. A quiet restaurant two blocks away that hasnât been âdiscoveredâ by the gastronomic press and ruined for its regulars kept me fed well and a reasonably happy camper. I had time to watch the market for the odd opportunity, surf the Web, and read a variety of newspapers, books and magazines. A simple life, maybe; but apart from the absence of a permanent female companion who wasnât after my money, I was content.
My peaceful existence was interrupted one early summer evening by a phone call from my Uncle John and Aunt Dorothy in Kansas. Cutting to the chase, they were finally going to take the Great Vacation in the Big City that they had always talked about, now that Cousin Jack was married and able to take care of their spread as well as his own next door; and where should they stay in the Big Apple, and what should they see, and could I possibly get tickets to
The Pennie Layne Show
?
Gah.
The Pennie Layne Show
was a smudged carbon copy of
Maury
,
Montel
, and the other voyeuristic crap that had replaced game shows on daytime TV. With the Beatlesâ song as her theme music, Pennie Layne specialized in find-the-babydaddy DNA testing, makeovers of various kinds, Can You Spot The Transsexual games, sending out of control teens off to military high school, the giving of ultimatums to a lover/wife/husband, and the-ugly-ducklings-that-now-are-swans-and-smell-ME sort of TV that has the same morbid fascination for some that a really spectacular highway accident has for motorists. She was immensely popular among the kind of people who thought âcultureâ was Masterpiece Theater.
b
Iâd sooner have spent an afternoon listening to a politician running for office than attending a Pennie Layne taping; but they were my relatives and they werenât hinting that relatives ought to stay with family in the big city, so I made the call and got the tickets. I made sure theirs were down front where the cameras could easily find them for their friends back home. I also made sure mine was on the crossing aisle about halfway towards the back so I could stretch out. (I might have to endure this function for the sake of family, but I refused to be uncomfortable in the process.)
When show day arrived, I rendezvoused with Aunt Dot and Uncle John in Times Square. When they said they liked Mexican, I took them to lunch in a little place nearby where the food is good and the beer is better. We got caught up on whoâs doing what in the family and the whatever-became-ofs of folks Iâd met when Iâd spent summers on the farm with them. Soon enough it was time to get to the studio for the taping.
In the studio, Pennie Layne was introducing the women that were the subject of todayâs show. By âphysique,â she meant they were bodybuilders. They came strutting out onto the stage, mostly dressed in bikinis and high heels, with catsuits or skintight trousers with form-fitting blouses varying the fashions. Taken as a group, they were intimidating.
Two or three looked as if they could bench-press Arnold Schwartzenegger 100 times before breakfast. One black woman put me in mind of Grace Jones in her prime, had Grace gone for bulk instead of speed and snap in her bodybuilding. The forbidding looks on a couple of them would give a Marine DI pause, considering they looked as if they could tie a rifle into a knot and use it as a scarf. Their muscle definition would do for anatomy textbook illustrations.
What got me was the hostility they radiated. Not the chip on the shoulder kind men sometimes get from aggressively lesbian females, though sexual orientation wasnât relevant here. This was more the âAre you looking at ME?â challenge Iâd have expected from morose laborers in a blue collar bar after one too many. It was an âI dare you to prove youâre more of a man than I am a womanâ look. I settled back to watch the show, letting the flashcard weâd each been given on walking in with âHot to Trotâ printed on one side and âToo Buff to Boffâ on the other, lie unused on my lap.
As it unfolded, the hook Pennie Layne wanted to hang the show on was obvious: that ordinary guys were so intimidated by the physical strength and the size of these women, they were afraid to come near them. She went from gal to gal, collecting stories that ran the gamut from âOh, pity me,â to âProve youâre good enough to go out with me or stop wasting my time.â I listened to them talk when the cameras were off during breaks in the taping. There was only one that to me seemed worth a guyâs romantic attentions.
She was about 5â7â or 8â with pale blonde hair moussed into a high flattop crew cut. Her pale skin and invisible eyebrows marked her as a genuine blonde, likely of Scandinavian extraction. Her fine-boned figure suited the B/C cup size of her breasts. They appeared larger than that because of her pectoral development, enough to pop them forward without making them look like they were on a platter beneath the paper-thin smooth leather halter that showed the outline of her nipples. She had clearly worked to bring her waist down; six-pack abs looked good on her above a skimpy barbarian-leather bikini bottom that showed off her small, tight buttocks. The skintight, thigh-high boots concealed exquisitely shaped legs. She looked like a tigress at rest, not the female Charles Atlases some of the other women resembled. I wondered what her story was.
The lights came back up to taping intensity. Pennie began interviewing the blonde Iâd been eyeing.
âThis is Birgitte,â Pennie said, walking over to her. (I idly wondered if Pennie Layne realized that this woman made Pennieâs figure, which normally contrasted favorably with the overweight guests she typically had on the show, look like a heifer in a cornfield.) âShe works as a dominatrix, but says she wants a real man that will treat her like a real woman and not a bitch-goddess. Isnât that right, dear?â