Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Oh, My Stars!

Hola Ladies,

First and foremost, there is something I must get off my chest. I have a confession to make and although I am filled with shame and remorse at the moment, I am sure to ease my burden and lighten my soul by divulging the truth, no matter how it may tarnish my reputation as an honest and open Person of Faith. There are very few people in my life whom I do not welcome with open arms, and fewer whom I am too embarrassed to associate with in public. "Live and Let Live" has always been a motto I could proudly announce, regardless of the person in question, be it a Muslim, Transsexual, Right-Wing Republican, or Vegetarian. Still, even my dearest of friends have been hereto unaware of a skeleton I've kept hidden deep in the recesses of my family closet for years. Her name is Dottie.

Well, that was her name, when she was a sensible, God-fearing Christian like myself, but still, she is my baby sister. Now she goes by the name Rain Ra Yin and lives on the outskirts of a small village near Mt. Shasta in a yurt. Dottie and I were once very close siblings and we even sang in the Gospel choir together every Sunday at the 8 am service, twice on Christmas and Easter; she a contralto, me a soprano. Those were the days well before she met and fell in love with Louie, a lazy jazz musician who played sax in a Yoko Ono cover band in the seventies. I didn't care for Louie and his overwhelming patchouli odor nor his experimental "music". But Dottie fell head over heels, which, to this day, remains a mystery to me. Pretty soon, Dottie dropped out of the church choir, started taking Kundalini yoga classes, moved into a commune with Louie, and stopped shaving her legs. Although disgusted with her self-initiated exodus from Organized Religion (and Society Itself!), I earnestly tried to keep in touch with my baby sister. But the commune didn't even have running water, let alone a pay phone. Over the years, I heard through the grapevine of Dottie's eventual escape from the commune, her tumultuous break-up with Louie, and her dabbling in various and sundry so-called "spiritual movements" such as est, The Forum, The Program, Dianetics, and Star Trek. Never once did she try to contact me. In a few years, she had sold all her worldly possessions, bought a Volkswagen Vanagon with a hippie named Fran, and moved out of Texas.

I feared I would never see my baby sister again. The shame and guilt were too much to bear, so I soon "forgot" that I even had a baby sister, lost soul that she was. Then I got a phone call out of the blue while trimming my Wisteria about two years ago. You guessed it! It was Dottie, er, Rain, reaching out to touch someone. She told me all about her trials and tribulations over the 33 years we'd been apart, her run-ins with the law, addictions to pills and booze, and the difficult and emotional process of her Past Life Regression. She even asked my forgiveness for deserting me, her own flesh and blood, even though I suspect it was prompted by her Sponsor nudging her through her "Amends" (Step 9 of the 12 Step Recovery in AA). We talked, and laughed and cried and reminisced for over twenty minutes that day. Every once in a while I get a postcard in the mail, hoping against hope that it's from Dottie, telling me that she found Jesus, moved out of California or got a job. But, the postcards mostly come from my cousin Becky and her husband Ray as they drive around our great country in their Airstream, trying to cross every state line before Ray dies, bless his soul. Then, suddenly, again, I got a Christmas card in an envelope with no return address. You guessed it, again! It was from Dottie. It was a lovely foil-embossed card depicting Santy Claus and his big red bag on a rooftop, as he was fixing to plunge down a chimney. And nestled amongst the bright paper packages and toys in his bag was none other than the smiling face of Baby Jesus. So cute! Inside was scribbled a single, simple message: "To the future. Your baby sister, Dot".

I nearly fell out of my chair, when suddenly a piece of folded paper fell out of the card itself. It was a gift certificate good for One Astrological Reading from Phyllis Browne, Astrologer to the Stars. Literally! Miss Browne has given astrology readings and psychic advice to all of Hollywood's biggest names, including Faye Dunaway, Vanessa Redgrave, Marlon Brando and Nipsey Russell. However, after the Stock Market Crash of 1987, Miss Browne moved back to Texas and is still giving readings in her apartment in the town of Poe, just a 45-minute drive from my house. As a Believer in the Almighty and a Righteous Christian, I am wont to dismiss tomfoolery such as Astrology, Ouija boards and Global Warming as hogwash, but I have resolved to be more open-minded in 2009 and try to step foot outside of my comfort-zone once in a while. Whatever future Miss Phyllis Browne might predict for me, surely I would be safe in God's hands.

While attending a festival in New Orleans called Southern Decadence, my grandson Jeremy paid ten dollars to have his fortune told by a ninety-year-old black woman, claiming to be a Voodoo Priestess, in the parking lot of a laundromat. She "saw" into the future by rattling a cup filled with real human teeth and then dumping them out onto one of those place mat menus from a Chinese restaurant. Depending upon how they landed (root up, crown down) and where on the place mat (Chicken Chow Mein, Schezuan Shrimp), their configurations revealed either fortuity or doom for the aspirant. Jeremy said he never really deciphered her ominous $10 prophecy because apparently most of the teeth in the cup were her own, and her gummy speech was too hard to understand.

The day of my appointment with Miss Browne was dark and stormy outside and the drive out to Poe took over and hour on my Cushman Scooter. When I arrived at her doorstep, I looked like I was rode hard and put away wet, literally! I knocked hard on the door two or three times, until finally I heard a raspy woman's voice ask "Who is it?". Some psychic she was! I was nearly 20 minutes late for my appointment so who else could it be? She let me in and seemed more than perturbed about my tardiness, even when I tried to explain the dangers of riding a two-wheeler on wet asphalt.

Her apartment was dark as a cave. Every window was covered in heavy velvet curtains, and the only two table lamps she did have turned on were obscured by purple gypsy scarves. It was so shadowy inside that I nearly tripped over 2 of her 11 cats, which had tangled themselves around my shins. At her dining room table, I gave her my birth date (December 25, 1945) and the time and place of my birth, which she entered into a program on her PC. It printed out a strange circular chart with criss-cross lines, which looked like the dream catcher I have hanging in the bay window of my kitchen. This was my birth chart, which indicated the position of the stars and planets in the Heavens at the exact moment I first took breath on God's Green Earth, and apparently mapped out my personality and my future. She studied the chart for a good while, mostly frowning, and her heavily penciled eyebrows danced around like an Indian at a pow-wow. She looked me in the face grimly and sympathetically. There I sat, waiting in dread. What did she see? Lost love? An untimely death? Financial ruin? "Well," she said at last, "I'm sure glad this ain't my chart." What was that supposed to mean! Then she went on to tell me (in grave detail) my each and every character flaw, deficiency, and ugly personality disorder which I have been unknowingly smearing upon my friends, family and the general public since birth.

I became dizzy, recounting all the times I had come across to others as insulting and rude, all the while thinking I was being helpful and neighborly. Soon, her words were like the buzzing bees and I had lost all sense of where I was. I began to examine the strange room and even more unusual, the strange woman demeaning my character through a nicotine-stained smile. Then I noticed something familiar in her eyes, her nose, her chin...her Adam's Apple. The resemblance to my childhood classmate Phillip Brown was remarkable. And suddenly I realized that it was Phillip, trying his best to sound and look like a real woman! After high school, Phil must have changed his name to Phyllis, moved to Hollywood, and started life over as Phyllis Browne, Astrologer to the Stars. Ha. As much as I yearned to, I dared not mention to him that I had caught on. My grandson Jeremy told me that trying to "pass" for a woman was crucial to a transsexual's self-esteem and final transformation into a woman. It would have devastated Phil so I kept my mouth shut.

A little while later, Phyllis took my gift certificate, gave me my printout and a ballpoint pen with her name and phone number printed on the side, then tenderly escorted me to the door. I could still see a glint of pity in her eye as she waved to me from the threshold. I got on my scooter and started my trek home, thinking about how in the future I will try to choose my words more carefully when talking to a loved one, and tell more white lies instead of bluntly speaking the truth. That's what Jesus would do, I'm certain of it.

Still, while there were two women sitting around the dim dining room table that night, and even with my virtual laundry list of God-given character flaws, it wasn't me who was wearing a cheap blond wig, tacky costume jewelry and a wispy polyester house dress from the Salvation Army.

My advice: if you feel like you're in need of a peek into your future, save yourself a trip to Poe and give a jingle to Juanita Ramirez to do one of her famous toasted tortilla readings in exchange for a cup of coffee.

It being the holiday season, there was no Bingo game this week. Winner's names from next week will be listed at the bottom of my next entry. Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah and a Blessed New Year!

Til next time "ladies", eyes down.

"Bingo" Betty Sanchez

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Sister, Can You Spare A Dime?

Hola Ladies,

Pa-rum-pum-pum-pum!

Yes, it's time again once again for our Semi-Annual Christmas-Hanukkah Festival "Fun-raiser!" Bingo Marathon and Craft Fair Benefit. The "Basura Ladies", our sister non-profit organization led by Heba Weiss, Ruthie Cohn, and Yours Truly, has raised over $326 to help charities over the past 17 years since its inception. This year, we have chosen as our "neediest in need" the Sisters Of Merciless Suffering Convent & Halfway House, located off FM 34789, at the end of Beaverdale Drive (behind the abandoned Blockbuster). Seems that the Sisters are having trouble with their possums again, and without some speedy assistance, they will lose the farm, literally!

As you are aware, the Sisters have their hands full, what with growing their own food, maintaining their aqueduct, and managing the Heathen's Halfway House for Wayward Souls. The Mother Superior, Sister Rosemary Maryrose (who is just about at wit's end), "told" us about the problems with her possum last week, using a combination of mime, sign language, and charcoal sketches (each of the Sisters at the convent has taken a vow of silence), and we are 90% certain that their farm is indeed in danger. You may recall last spring when the possums had burrowed under the Sister's bushes and snatched practically every cherry from their trees. Well this time, it's their cabbage patch that's in harm's way, and I for one can't bear the thought of a summer picnic without a 2-quart mason jar of the Sister's Pickled Cole Slaw in my twig basket. Immediate repairs are needed to the chicken-wire fence surrounding their half-acre garden. Our own Roberta Richmann, sole-proprietor of 'Odd One-Woman Jobs' and dear friend of mine, has graciously offered to provide most of the muscle to make said repairs, providing we supply her with some new chicken-wire and a couple of rugged volunteers. Do we have any takers?

So as not to step on anyone in particular secular toes, we are holding the Christmas-Hanukkah Festival "Fun-raiser!" at the Allah Are Welcome Unitarian Church on FM 567930, on the outskirts of Squirrel Hill. If you haven't been to the "church" yet, you simply must come by to appreciate its architecture alone, a marvel of arches and impossible flying buttresses which somehow hold aloft the gold-tone pyramidal roof. Lordy, it's a sight!

Festivities start on the first night of Hanukkah, promptly at sunset on December 21. Heba Weiss will open the "Fun-raiser!" with the lighting of the menorah and opening of the first 3 doors of the Christmas Advent Calendar. Yours Truly will commence the 8-day Bingo Marathon with a round of Christmas Bingo, so be sure to arrive at the facility with a $1-$10 priced unisex present, wrapped and hidden in a plain brown paper bag. And remember to holler out "Merry Christmas!" and not "Bingo!" if you win a game, or else you will forfeit your prize.

After Bingo, or when you get up to stretch your legs between games, take a gander at the Craft Fair tables, which will be in the downstairs basement/study hall/Rapture shelter. For the past 2 months, Maude Hancock has been feverishly working away in the arts and crafts room at the Pleasant Journeys Convalescent Home to create a whole new batch of her famous Pillow Dolls. Each Pillow Doll is hand-did from old nylons and pieces of her late husband Larry's shirts, God rest his soul. All of her Pillow Dolls are one-of-a-kind-unique and twenty-five cents of every doll sold will go directly to the fund. Buy a bunch for Christmas and/or Hanukkah presents for your grandkids (and pick up one for yourself as well...so precious and cozy!) Among the other gifts and crafts for sale will be Paula Picket's poker chip jewelry, Arby Cullom's real wood-burned signs, and Inez Lopez and the Needling Neighbors' crocheted bingo bags (leftover from our Bingo Bag Fundraiser of 2006--for sale at a reduced price).

In addition to Bingo, the Crafts Fair, and the Widow's League Bake Sale we will also have a Silent Auction. The Architects of Moses Men's Lodge will have on display several of the men's overstuffed baskets to bid on. Also up for auction is an authentic reproduction of an amazingly lifelike vinyl doll from Reborn-baby.com, and two front-row tickets to a musical, starring Crockett High School's drama teacher Charleton Monroe, in his one-man show of "The Women". And for all you fashionistas (aka Kiki Goldstein), my grandson Jeremy, styling genie and proud owner of the "Hello, Gorgeous! Hair Salon", is donating a full root perm and 10 French tips to the Silent Auction, so get there early and check your bid often.

Ti's the season for snowflakes and giving, and if we all pull together this season, God willing, perhaps we can give the Sisters a steaming cup of much-needed redemption. Here's wishing all my Jewish friends a Happy Hanukkah, my Christian brothers and sisters a Merry Christmas, and to all you Non-Believers, salvation from the long, dark and frosty winter nights.

Here are the names of last week's Bingo winners:

$5 prizes go to: Lucy Rains, Phyllis Rodgers
$10 prizes go to: Kitty Chesnutt, Emily Ames
$20 prizes go to: Suzy Homestead, Jesse Rudnik
And the $25 grand prize goes to, who else, Kiki Goldstein

Til next time "ladies", eyes down.

"Bingo" Betty Sanchez

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Thanks Be!

Hola Ladies!

Yes, I realize that it has been an age since I've posted to my blog. Many of you are well aware of my personal computer woes so I will not bore you with yet another play-by-play recount of what has now become known in the bingo circle as Betty's Burning Issue. Suffice to say that I am now typing from a brand new used laptop and the stench of burning plastic is nearly erased from the spare bedroom in my ranch style. I figure one more bottle of Febreze Papaya Nights might just save my lace curtains, which my very own great grandmother Beatrice (I am her namesake) crocheted herself in her eighties, with arthritis and one cataract eye, mind you. However, I just thank the Lord Above that my Precious Paws American Idol Plush collection was securely sealed in its glass display case when my Dell burst into flames on that fateful night. That would have been a true tragedy!

With the holidays quickly approaching, I am sure many of you are feeling the cool winter breezes from the North as well as the tension building in your neck and sciatica from the thought of spending yet another Thanksgiving with your extended family, dysfunctions and all. You are not alone. Let me remind you that we all have our Lindsay Lohans and John Wayne Gacy's in our family trees, those nuts you'd rather not have pass through the threshold of your double-wide on a day that is meant to be about graciousness. You must remember, however, that each family tree also has the beautiful flowers and sweet fruits we cherish so: the Clay Aikens, the Barry Manilows and Liberaces that grace our homes and fill our gatherings with cheer and a song or two around the piano or karaoke machine. My very own songbird and nephew Reese and his college friend Calvin are flying all the way from Maine to share the holiday with me, my grandson Jeremy, and Myrtle Bush (no relation, whose own children have apparently forgot how they got to set foot on God's Green Earth in the first place). Oh how I do look forward to hearing all about Reese's tales from the beautiful New England coast, where he and his college friend Calvin own the cutest bed & breakfast, "The Come On Inn", in Ogunquit. Reese is the featured pianist at The Stony End, a restaurant and bar just across the street from their B&B. Every night except Mondays Reese entertains the patrons who gather around his grand piano to sing classics like "Moon River", "Papa Can You Hear Me", and "I Am What I Am". This Thanksgiving I'm hoping that he won't mind leading us in a tribute to one of my all time favorite singers, Helen Reddy, on my Casio Tone Bank keyboard. I am woman, hear me roar! I can't wait!

As for the ubiquitous (a word from my Daily Word World desk calendar, which, sadly, did not survive the inferno) holiday feast, Jeremy, a culinary master as well as styling genie, will once again perform his magic in my kitchen. Last year for Christmas, Jeremy deep fat fried twelve Cornish hens, one for each of the days of Christmas (from the song) which we served to the homeless at the Jesus Give Me Shelter shelter across from the bus depot on I-90. And let me tell you those poor souls ate them up faster than you can say "unemployment". This year for Thanksgiving Jeremy is preparing Chicken Fried Pheasant in a beer batter, served with garlic truffle aioli (whatever that is). I am in charge of desserts, naturally, and in addition to my World Famous Pearly Gates Ambrosia, a Kirkland's pumpkin pie from Costco, and my World Famous Butterscotch Needle-In-A-Haystacks, I am preparing my classic recipe Don't Monkey Around Bread. You may have tried standard Monkey Bread brought to a pot luck dinner or a slice from the Widow's League at some unfortunate soul's funeral, but my Don't Monkey Around Bread is out of this world, literally. The recipe was "given" to me in a dream by none other than the late Julia Child (before her revelation as a WWII spy). The recipe is complicated and somewhat time-consuming, but well worth it for special occasions and special persons, like my dear nephew Reese and his friend from college, Calvin. I will post the recipe below the winners circle at the bottom of this entry, so you to may share it with your family members this Thanksgiving (or at least the ones you still talk to).

So I bid you a lovely holiday next week and ask you to remember all whom you are grateful for in your life. It is too easy to get bogged down in the mire (also a Daily Word World entry), messes and shenanigans of our misguided relatives and forget the gems we take for granted. This Thanksgiving, give an extra-long hug and a quick wink to your favorite nephew, niece, aunt or uncle. Just don't be too obvious about it, for you don't want to hurt the other people's feelings who bothered to show up and eat your food and drink your entire bottle of Baileys Irish Cream even though they arrived empty-handed.

Til next time, ladies, Eyes Down.

Miss "Bingo" Betty Sanchez

Here are the names of last week's winners:

$5 prizes go to: Barbara Faber, Jesse Gillespie
$10 prizes go to: Esther Ortiz, Carol Crowe
$20 prizes go to: Amy Higginbothom, Jerri Terry
And the $25 grand prize goes to: Kiki Goldstein (again!)

Don't Monkey Around Bread

Ingredients:
4 cans refrigerated biscuits, opened
1 cup brown sugar, packed
1 1/2 sticks butter (3/4 cup)
1/2 cup white sugar
2 tablespoons cinnamon
1/4 cup whole red candied cherries
1/4 cup whole green candied cherries
1/4 cup dried pineapple
1/4 cup currants
1/4 cup golden raisins

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F and grease with lard or Crisco a 9-10 inch tube or Bundt pan. Combine all the fruit in a small bowl. Mix white sugar and cinnamon in a medium sized Ziploc. Cut the biscuits into quarters and place six to eight biscuit pieces in the sugar cinnamon mix. Shake like crazy. Arrange pieces in the bottom of the greased pan. Sprinkle mixed fruit on top and continue with another layer of biscuits and fruit, until all the biscuit pieces and fruit are in the pan. In a small saucepan, melt the butter with the brown sugar over medium heat. Boil for 1 minute. Pour over the layered biscuits. Bake for 35 minutes. Let cool in pan for 10 minutes, then flip it out onto a decorative plate. Drizzle with Bourbon Street Icing and serve.

Bourbon Street Icing

Ingredients:
1/2 pound cream cheese
1/2 pound butter
1 pound powdered sugar
2 tablespoons of good quality bourbon

Directions:
Beat butter and cream cheese together in a large bowl with a mixer and slowly add powdered sugar. Mix for exactly 12 minutes (do not mix less than that). At 11 minutes, add the liquor.


Monday, March 03, 2008

La La Land

Hola Ladies! Well I have just returned from my travels with my dear grandson Jeremy in glamorous Los Angeles, California, and I am exhausted! Actually, I stayed in West Hollywood, not L.A., as I was repeatedly corrected by Jeremy's college friend Leonard, in a firm but friendly manner. It seems that WeHo (yes, ladies, you read right!) as they boys call it, is its very own city nestled cozily in the sprawling, noisy metropolis you might know as the "City of Angels". Many of you are well aware of my fondness for angels from my Precious Moments Rainbow Carousel Angel menagerie, so I was sure to keep my eyes peeled for angels on my trip. Well, I must admit Los Angeles may have heavenly weather but angels are few and far between in these here parts. Except, of course, for my grandson Jeremy's college friend Leonard's downstairs neighbor Ruby "Tuesday" Weld. "Miss" Ruby Weld is what is known in WeHo as a female impersonator, or as the boys say, a bitchy drag queen (pardon my French). Miss Ruby may not be a real queen, let alone a real woman, but I'm sure the Good Lord has an entire cabaret built just for "her" in his Kingdom of Heaven. Lordy, that Miss Ruby is a talented performer, a hoot-and-a-half, and quite the angel in my book!

Now before any of you ladies climb on top of your high horse or line up to cast stones, I would like for you to try, for just one teensy moment, to pry apart that steel trap you call your "mind" to recall the words to the lovely song from your childhood "Jesus Loves The Little Children". Some of you may still sing this song to your grandbabies as you rock them to sleep after a long day of thankless babysitting while your very own son-in-law is out drinking his liver to swiss cheese and cheating on your daughter with some floozy waitress (I will spare the shame by not naming names, but you know who you are). Lest ye forget that Jesus loves all the children of the world, Red, Yellow, Black & White...That song didn't say anything about excluding the children with alternative lifestyles or sexual orientations different from yours and mine. The Good Lord may have made Adam and Eve, but it was Adam and Steve who spruced up the ratty neighborhood known as Shady Acres, turning that shanty town into downright paradise and raising property values for every home east of the Wal-Mart.

Anyways, Miss Ruby puts on a great show at a local Mexican bar & grill twice a week, except on Easter, Memorial Day and most of the Jewish holidays (she says her White Party outfits are meant for bigger audiences than can fit into the basement of The Hole Enchilada, where she performs). Jeremy and his college friend Leonard took me to see Ruby call bingo last Wednesday, which is Drag Queen Bingo Night. We got there early and caught the tail end of Carry-A-Tuna Karaoke Night, which was frequented by mostly large, handsome women (or womyn, as they prefer to be called). I met a very nice and very pretty one named Barb who bought me a Bloody Mary made with Clamato called a Bloody Martina (named for that sweet yet terse tennis champion, Martina Navratilova). It sure was tasty, and when I had finished every drop except for the large gerkin garnish, she offered to buy me another. I had to decline, however, because I'm a one-drink-woman ever since I went through the Change Of Life.

Ruby took to the stage later than expected (almost 2 more hours) so the boys and Barb taught me how to throw darts and shoot a pool game called Blackball while we waited for the show to start. Drag queens are notoriously late, Leonard said, so I dared to order another Bloody Martina to kill some time. Another drink and another Blackball later, Miss Ruby finally appeared on stage. I could see straight away that it was worth the wait. She was a vision in tangerine taffeta! And with heels so high she looked ten feet tall (which Leonard said was just about right)! She opened with a musical number medley from Mama Mia! that just about brought down the house, but quickly commenced with the evenings festivities of your and my favorite Great American Pastime known as Bingo! Lucky I brought my crocheted bingo bag with me because these kids were using lipsticks instead of daubers, which made a mess of the Xeroxed bingo sheets we pros call flimsies. Well, call it divine intervention if you will, but no sooner had I spread out my 22 cards when I got to holler out BINGO! It was in the pattern of Large Picture Frame but she called it The Judy Garland, and I won a DVD of Auntie Mame (with Rosalind Russell, not the Lucy I love, durn it!), a can of AquaNet and a bottle of something called lube, which Jeremy quickly snatched from my bag. When I collected my winnings, Miss Ruby just had to go and make a big deal about me being a 3-Time Bingo Calling Champion from Texas and had me stand up and take a bow. Everyone in the bar was so nice, and I got a standing ovation. Then Miss Ruby took me by surprise and asked me to join her on stage to call the next game, a pattern they called Pearl Necklace (which looks a lot like Small Picture Frame, if you ask me.) Well I'm not sure if it was the vodka talking or excitement from the crowd cheering me on but I had no choice but to say "yes, ma'am!".



Well, ladies, I called the quickest and most accurate game in my career as a bingo caller and the kids just loved me! Miss Ruby was really working the crowd, telling jokes (which can't be repeated here, but ask me the next time you see my pretty little head under the dryer at the Hello, Gorgeous! Hair Salon and I'll tell you the ones I remember). She really wowed 'em with her "Total Eclipse of the Heart" number when she brought out a flashlight and made an eclipse on a silicone implant she had stuffed in her bra. Ruby let me play the part of the moon, and I felt like a true movie star on Oscar night or the Golden Globes. Before long, the whole crowd was shouting for an encore, and not just for Ruby, but me too. Now I know what it must feel like to be Julia Roberts or Meryl Streep! Fame is intoxicating! And so were those Bloody Martinas because just then the room started spinning like a mirror ball, and I spent an hour in the "Ladies" with a repeat performance of Martina at the US Open (if you get my drift). Still, I left The Hole Enchilada with my head held high (and my shoes in my hand) with the heartwarming cheers of the precious guys and gals of WeHo fading into the background.

And now, for my new friends in West Hollywood, here are the winners (as best I can remember) of the Wednesday Drag Queen Bingo Night from last week:

"The Judy Garland": Miss Bingo Betty Sanchez, myself!
"The Pearl Necklace": Donna Smith
"The Trojan" David ??
"Around The Rim": Ruben ??
"Sixty-Nine": Jeff ??
"Nails Like Butta": Cara ??
"The Top": Steve, or Seth, or something that starts in an 'S' ??
"The Bottom": someone Polish, I think


Til next time, ladies, eyes down.

Miss "Bingo" Betty Sanchez