Too Much Information

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“My parents died so I was put into juvies and foster homes and the prison system from an early age,” he/she told me.

“And every day there you get raped by everyone. I was constantly raped. I was raped every day from the age of about 7 to 18.” I had the tape recorder in her face. A bunch of other prostitutes were listening.  It was the meat packing district fifteen years ago and there always seemed to be a fire of rotting meat on the sidewalk. The smells from the fire hit everything and you had to breathe through your mouth. I was doing my job of interviewing people.

“You lose track of who you are. Man, women, whatever. I had no gender.

“Now I take hormones, I’ve had my breasts put in. I only need one more operation to get my dick cut off but it costs a lot of money and they make you do a lot of therapy before they do it.

(from the classic 2010 movie, "Ticked off trannies with knives")

“Meanwhile, Giuliani keeps pushing us further and further west.”

She stopped for a second and turned towards the street. A car was driving by slowly. “Yoo hoo!,” she said. The car kept going.

“He’s a regular,” she said. “Every Tuesday. Lives in Brooklyn with a wife and five kids but you know, sometimes a man needs something else.

“Let me ask you,” she said, “where am I going to get a job? I’m not going to be able to get a fancy camera like you have. I’m not going to be able to get a regular job like you have. What am I going to do? Who would hire me? You think I like doing this? But this is all I can do.

“I can’t walk outside during the day. People think I’m a freak. I can only go out at night. First the entire system abused me. I’ve got no parents. I never had a childhood. I’ve been abused every day of my life.

“And now all I can do is get these customers. I don’t even know if I want that operation. Guys like it there, you know what I’m saying? They live their secret lives at home with their wives but when they are with me the truth comes out. In a big way!” She laughed.

“So now what else is there for me to do? And we’re being pushed away. Further and further west. Eventually we’ll fall into the river. And Giuliani doesn’t care. There’s no support system for us. No place I can go to get my check in exchange for all the  abuse the system put me through. All the abuse I’m getting now.”

Another car slows down. She wiggles over there in her high heels. But then I think the car sees me, my camera guy, a photographer, my assistant, and occasionally we took another big guy with us just in case there was trouble which there sometimes was. The car sped off.

“You guys are causing me too much trouble tonight,” she said, “I need to make some  money. Go on another corner. We’re all here. Every night. There’s no shortage of people like us.”

We left that corner. Another transvestite offered to put on a mic while he gave a blowjob to his next customer. I forget what happened but that situation didn’t work out. We went to another corner and talked to another guy.

“I’m on all the lists,” he said. “I get calls from every talk show. They want a gay prostitute, that’s me. They want a transgender guy, that’s me. They want an abused kid who dresses like a girl,that’s me. I’ve been on over five talk shows.

“What? No, they don’t pay me. They say that’s not allowed. But who knows. Maybe someone will see me.”

He twirls around. He’s in a tight bright yellow leather coat. Red pants. Glasses. A beret.

“I can be a star,” he says. “Discovered.”  The corner was dead that night and he wasn’t getting  customers.

“I’m not a trannie,” he said. “Guys know what they get with me. I’m full man. No operation here, baby! No sir! Not like those trannies over there. But they trust me.”

We went across the street and watched while he waited for customers. But we waited a long time and eventually the night was over. The sun was starting to rise.

The buildings were warehouses for processing the meat that would then get shipped to restaurants all over the city. Guys with bloody smocks would occasionally walk around, not even paying attention to the prostitutes that worked the same blocks, corners, and buildings. Everyone did their job, servicing the rest of the richest city in the world.

15 years later, about a month ago, I’m at that exact same corner. I’m eating breakfast with a friend of mine in the café now at that corner, Pastis. I wondered if everyone who used to work this corner had been pushed into the river.

 

 

Everyone in the restaurant looked beautiful. Like movie stars.  How lucky they all are.  I wished I had a tape recorder at each one of their tables, recording the conversations. I’d get a transcription service to write them up. I’d match each transcription with a photo of the table. At night I’d read each transcription before going to sleep. What were they talking about, that good looking couple. Or those four pretty model-looking girls? Or that ugly guy that was sitting with the three beautiful girls. I want to know.

My friend and I sat down. He’s the CEO of a company that collects data about people while they surf the “world wide web”. All around us were CEOs and models. I wondered what percentage of the restaurant had sex the night before. It reminded me of a friend of mine who once made a book of photographs he took. It was called “Tenderness”. Couples would beep his pager when they were about to have sex then leave the door unlocked. He’d enter into the house and take photos  of them in the dark. He’d be as quiet as possible and then let himself out of the house. The photos were beautiful. And in the back of the book you’d see photographs of what the people looked like in their everyday lives. Completely different.

(from the book, "Tenderness" by Joe Gantz)

“We know pretty much everything about everyone ,” my friend, the CEO, said to me that day at Pastis. “We track all the cookies they get from every website they visit. We know where they’ve been, what they like, what they don’t like. We probably can guess their politics, we know what TV they like, what movies they like. Who they are married to and if they might be cheating. Maybe we can set up a service. Pay $1000 and find out if your husband will probably cheat on you in the future. We know that also.”

I sipped at my coffee. Still too hot. I was thinking about all of that data. What I would do with it. So much to learn about everyone. An infinite reality show. It’s amazing how things change every day.

I decided then, I wanted to live at least one more day.

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  • Andrew_Ferri

    I like this, best you’ve written in a while actually.  I enjoy your narratives as much, if not more than your advice columns.  Its what got me reading you in the first place. 

    • http://jamesaltucher.com James Altucher

      Thanks Andrew. I always have a tough time figuring out the right mix between the two. I like writing both but get tense about which ones to unveil each day.

      • j

        So here’s one to the ‘advice columns’ – I must confess that I use your blog as a regular inspiration.

  • Brad

    great read James….now off to my street corner called a cubicle. 

  • Anonymous

    I like these better than your lists, FYI.

    I always hate it when you’ve got a really great, gritty part of a city with real character and then it’s gentrified for the yups. When I was younger Spokane used to have some cool places I’d hang around sometimes just to check out the interesting happenings. Now its all sushi bars and boutiques. Ugh. Dread them now.

  • Luca Corinaldesi

    Great read Mr Altucher!

  • Bub

    But what we really want to know is what will happen to kodaks stock price today?

  • Dave

    When you google “Tenderness Joe Gantz” your blog is the first result.

    • http://jamesaltucher.com James Altucher

      Wow, that was fast. Google is on top of things!

      • Dave

        Yes, Google is impressive… or scary, depending on one’s point of view,  But on a positive note, that is awesome for your blog! 

  • Quietjim

    One of the people on that show was in the news yesterday. I didn’t remember her but she’s 52 and looking to retire in a couple of years. Sometimes out of the blue I wonder how Deliris(sp) is doing. I wonder if you worked on the one from Atlantic City. That was depressing beyond words. The one from the “Point” was pretty positive, all things considered. There was another one from the pimp pov that just sucked.

  • http://736hundred.tumblr.com/ 736hundred

    Don’t worry about what to publish.  Just do it.  I like that your blog is an unpredictable mix.  You don’t have to explain why you do what you do.
    ____

    I am burned out on reality. I want to know less about people. I think info gathering is a disservice to society, especially when it is used over and over again to profit from a one size fits all mentality.

    I have more behind these thoughts, but it would probably end up being a rant, so I going to drink my coffee and look at pretty pictures, before I decide how much to work today.

    Cheers.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=762643401 Angela Pause

    This made me think.

  • C. Martin

    Hi James – great read! I’m very interested to learn about the business your CEO friend runs. Would you (or any other readers) mind sharing the name of that company or similar companies? They’ll probably see me researching them huh.

    Thanks! Keep up the great work!

  • Seb Latapie

    This was a great story! Thoroughly enjoyed reading it this morning. Makes me wonder if I will ever live these types of experiences.

    • YinYangTwins

      “These type of experiences” come not as enlightment after years of Buddhist training on a mountaintop but as a culmination of years of heartache and countless musings to yourself as to whether life is even worth living any more.

      If you have a lived a life mostly free of hardship and true gut-wrenching, suicide-inducing heartache, then don’t seek after it like it’s a requirement to be accepted into the human race. Appreciate what you have and the significant leg-up you have in this world.

  • http://twitter.com/PurviRajani Purvi Rajani

    The thing that I like best about your blog is that it’s unpredictable. Your writing provokes anger, shock, sorrow as well as inspiration, sympathy, and often laughter. You constantly push me out of my comfort zone and make me think.

  • Detester

    Acute juxiposition of the raped minor and the cookie collecting CEO.

  • http://twitter.com/IndustryKeyword Offers considered

    Altucher –

    Did you see Bachman’s husband drive past?

    Talking of data, excellent social data story.

    http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/02/how-one-security-firm-tracked-anonymousand-paid-a-heavy-price.ars?comments=1

    • Crusader79

      I am going to miss Marcus, but I suspect this is not the last we’ll hear of him!

  • Ron

    Good story It really makes me appreciate what I have.  The thought of CEO’s exploiting the data they collect, all too real.

  • Ligia Adam

    now that’s talent in writing.
    Your articles and stories are usually nice to read, but this one in particular had something special. Keep’em coming. Cheers!

  • Marco_b_rossi

    James, I wish you publish your novel as soon as possible so that I can read it. I enjoyed your last book, still I feel that your greatest talent is at telling stories like this one.

  • http://www.preemptiveplacebo.com Preemptive Placebo

    Television programming gradually degenerated as our ability to track ratings increased.  The better we got at knowing which programs people watch, the worse the programming became. 

    Television has always been relatively passive.  We choose from the selection of programs pumped into the box.  Computer use on the other hand is proactive.  We seek. 

    Tracking what we seek is an insight into our thinking… into how we allocate our most valuable resource – our attention.   As we get better at tracking who seeks what, we get better at luring people in particular directions. 

    Right now much of the internet is dedicated to using titillating subject matter to lure people toward two things – things that diminishes us and things that make us buy. 

    James, your blog does not do that.  Your blog uses the titillating to lure us toward our better nature.

    I respect you for that.

  • http://Www.brookefarmer.com/ Brooke Farmer

    This story is kind of sad and beautiful. I would kill for your old interviewing prostitutes job.

  • http://twitter.com/ferrum26 ferrum26

    Beautiful in a hauntingly optimistic way. Kudos.

  • http://twitter.com/DailySuicide Jscott

    Reminds me of a little Locke…First chapter of Clue Train Manifesto:

    “Life is too short because we die. Alone with ourselves, we sometimes stop to wonder what’s important, really. Our kids, our friends, our lovers, our losses? Things change and change is often painful. People get “downsized,” move away, the old neighborhood isn’t what it used to be. Children get sick, get better, get bored, get on our nerves. They grow up hearing news of a world more frightening than anything in ancient fairy tales. The wicked witch won’t really push you into the oven, honey, but watch out for AK-47s at recess.”

    http://www.cluetrain.com/apocalypso.html 

  • http://www.dinosaurtrader.com dinosaurtrader

    You were probably interviewing the sex worker who got me to trade stocks.  That’s where I lived in the late 90s.

    Meanwhile, I think all that data on the WWW would be overkill.  Just imagine the diner as if it were the whole world.  The few people in it probably had their DNA in an infinite amount of stories. Worth living for in itself, a diner full of people.

    -DT

  • Clay

    Next time you have lunch with your friend please kick him in the balls. Repeatedly.

  • PC

    I really did not enjoy this post. Just too damn disturbing. Your candor is appreciated James but I personally prefer to head towards the light (I prefer those posts). I felt sick for the abused, betrayed and exploited. Your friend’s data collections made me feel paranoid (more exploitation). This post hurt like a punch in the throat.

  • Anonymous

    James,
    Would you rather dine with the trannies or the beautifuls? I teach at a university…academia is basically a caste system…your candid post reminds me of this. For some people, they will always be at one end of the social ladder.

    I guess that is how it happens? How the cookie crumbles?

    Thanks for getting me to think.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=732244537 Priscilla Paredes Wood

    Few writers have the ability to take me there with their narrative, you just did that. This is interesting becasue your narrative is not necessarily rich in detail (not a criticism) but it still finds its way to me, I guess is the way you illustrate your stories. Good job!

  • Anonymous

    This is too much.  My mind is having an indigestion. 

  • http://www.TheAcsMan.com/ TheAcsMan

    Wonderful post. I think your visual imagery hit new high, although now I have to beat images out of my head.

    During last visit back to NYC had dinner two consecutive nights in Meat Packing District. Unbelievable transformation, unlike those awaiting sexual reassignment surgery, the meat is now gone, but is more vibrant than ever.

    Good food, too.

  • http://twitter.com/ADVERTAGGdotcom AdvertAgg.com

    BITCOIN. Would you speculate on this currency? It seems very appealing in minds of entrepreneurs and people such as you and I because it’s issuing power is in the hands of the people who hold it, and it’s exchange is only transparent. It’s a peer to peer currency which is essentially founded on the same idea napster, and bittorrent were founded on. What do you think of it?

    If you miss this question on this post, be sure to add it to your askjames post next week. I asked you on twitter also. Find me @Advertaggdotcom. Thanks!!

  • http://dissertationtoday.com/research_proposal research proposal

    i am out of topic but i wanted to say – be happy in this new year!!!!

  • http://twitter.com/kamalravikant Kamal Ravikant

    Damn, James.  I love your writing.  The honesty, the insight, the truth.  The leap you make with the last sentence.  Damn.

  • http://twitter.com/EntreprenKorner EntrepreneursKorner

    Awesome writing. Keep it going. Check out: http://bit.ly/x9eS5c

    when you can

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