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Scott Nankivel - Fargo: Behind the Glitz and Glamour

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Fargo: Behind the Glitz and GlamourScott Nankivel
BUY IT. READ IT. PISS YOURSELF.- Anson Mount (Star of AMCs Hell on Wheels)
FARGO - where a day seems like a week, a week like a year and a bullet to the brain like a blessing. A place where people hope their weeknight bowling leagues will improve a little each year, enjoy living in the midst of rainbow sherbet and the chance at a Bingo every weekend.
Unbelievable as it sounds, at age twenty-three, Fargo native Scott Nankivel decides he wants more. As the dreamer packs up his Dodge Dart and heads down Main Street for Los Angeles, he reflects on the youth he spent in small-town America. He shares stories about his gaseous, bingo-obsessed mother, who tried to cure his latent bedwetting with electric shock; the local prostitute, whose services could be secured with a shiny quarter; and the Lutheran ministers son who decided to become a woman.Nankivel offers an amusing and heartfelt glimpse into the zany characters who shaped him into the man he is today.
He revels in the memories of Fargo and its people and ultimately realizes theyve permeated his heart forever. If the Coen brothers put the town on the map, he plans to take it back off.
Published January 8th 2013 by iUniverse

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FARGO

Picture 1

Behind the Glitz and Glamour

Scott Nankivel

iUniverse, Inc.

Bloomington

Fargo

Behind the Glitz and Glamour

Copyright 2012 by Scott Nankivel

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

iUniverse books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:

iUniverse

1663 Liberty Drive

Bloomington, IN 47403

www.iuniverse.com

1-800-Authors (1-800-288-4677)

Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

Certain stock imagery Thinkstock.

ISBN: 978-1-4759-6225-3 (hc)

ISBN: 978-1-4759-6223-9 (sc)

ISBN: 978-1-4759-6224-6 (eb)

iUniverse rev. date: 11/12/2012

Contents

Dedicated to

my perfectly dysfunctional family

Special thanks to

Allan Rust

Anson Mount

Jon Morris

Erin Granahan

Jeff Carlson

Erika Zuelke

Kelly Requa

My apologies to

The city of Fargo

Home
Cock-a-Doodle-Doo!

Fargowhere a day seems like a week, a week like a year, and a bullet to the head like a blessing. When I speak of Fargo, I technically speak of West Fargo, the smallest of the three sectionsNorth Fargo and South Fargo being the other two. The last time I looked, the population was twelve thousand. It will either grow or be swallowed by weeds; neither would surprise me.

The city sits on the eastern border of North Dakotaso far east, in fact, there was apparently no room for an East Fargo. Our state is bordered by Minnesota, South Dakota, Montana, and the country of Canada. For those of you not familiar with North Dakotas terrain, its how do I put this delicately? it has none. Its a huge football field full of wheat, with nothing taller than a cow to obstruct the horizon. If you suddenly drive off the road in a blizzard, youll never know it. Thats why we have fences around our fields: not to keep the cattle in, but to keep the cars out. Otherwise, who knows where youd end up? Oh my God, were in Canada!

North Dakota has been nicknamed the Prairie State, and all one has to do is look out a window to realize that its not an excessively imaginative title. But then, were not overly imaginative people. The stark prairie terrain, as it washes over the edge of the North Dakota horizon, lends a feeling of infinite bland. Some say you can stand on the western border and wave to a friend on the eastern border. But the ones who say that are usually loaded on strawberry Boones Farm. Aside from the definitive laws of physics, I guess the only obstacle that might block your view of the eastern border is Salem Sue, the worlds largest statue of a Holstein cow.

Just outside of New Salem, it stands thirty-eight feet tall, fifty feet long, constructed entirely out of fiberglass and hollowmuch like its entertainment value. It was built in Wisconsin for the New Salem Lions Club, and then transported in three parts. A professional artist was hired to direct the assembling. (Note: Its money well spent to have professional direction when putting three pieces of a cow together. A rank amateur might have made the embarrassing mistake of putting the head where the ass is supposed to be.) A website honoring the statue claims: Salem Sue is known worldwide. Interesting. I defy you to travel anywhere outside of the tri-state area, much less the country, and find anyone whos heard of Salem Sue. Of course, Ive never been to Zimbabwe. Maybe shes the talk of the town over there.

Despite possessing a glob of fiberglass in the shape of a cow, tourism has never been a strong point for us. State government recently suggested that the word North in our states name is whats killing the tourist trade. But when all youve got to offer vacationers is a large cow statue, maybe the word North isnt your biggest problem. Adding insult to injury, in 1927 the folks in South Dakota chiseled away at a mountain until four presidents faces were perfectly dimensioned in stone, right down to the pores in their skin. Washington, Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt, and Lincoln all look down from their rocky mountaintop, reminding everyone that even the impossible is possible. After all that hard work, its a real shame that Mount Rushmore doesnt have the worldwide popularity of Salem Sue.

The portrait of Fargo is similar to that of other older, medium-sized Midwestern towns: a main street, an elementary school and a high school, a library, and various businesses sprinkled throughout the remainder of the city. The city is bordered by the Red River on the east and the Sheyenne River on the westeach a branch of the mighty Mississippi, and each making flood disasters a way of life for the people of Fargo.

Traffic flow is meager enough to be managed with stop signs rather than stoplights. Because of one stubborn farmer, an odd few acres along Twelfth Street are still functioning as a grain field. Hes holding out for the big bucks, and nobodys happy about it; after all, Fargo is a city on the make. Every entrepreneur in town has his eye on the plot of land. At one time Erv Raymond wanted to build a new bowling alley there; the Catholics believe another church should go up and are kneeling at attention with shovels in hand; and the Lutherans would like to build as well, but theyre Lutherans, so theyre about nine thousand bake sales short of an opening bid. Despite the haystacks, Twelfth Street has become one of the hot spots. There is a row of new houses, a strip mall, and a Live Bait & Liquor store. Its a bewildering phenomenon to me that in order to own a store in the Midwest, it seems youre required to hand paint a sign that reads: Live Bait & [ fill in the blank ]. Night Crawlers & Beer. Minnows & Marshmallows. The second part doesnt matter. Theyre convinced that anything will sell better if advertised next to something that will help you catch fish. Leeches & Bibles.

Today I will be moving away from my hometown of twenty-three years, headed to Los Angeles, the land of hopes, dreams, and loose women with huge jugs. The truth behind my leaving is simple: I want more than what Fargo has to offer. Im a dreamer, an artist; the passion to become the next big movie star is bursting from my pores. The television and movies were what honed my dreams from being an artist of some type to becoming an actor, and finally to the laser-sharp aspiration of being in People magazine.

Because of Fargos modest disposition, I spent most of my childhood keeping my dreams to myself for fear of well, for fear of people saying, Keep your dreams to yourself. The people of Fargoin my eyes, anywayhave always seemed to believe less is more; Ive always thought more will never be enough. Every week my mother was satisfied with simply reading People magazine, but not me, no sir. The only thing that would satisfy me was my face on the cover. And not a body shot, mind you. I envisioned nothing less than bottom of my chin to the top of my hair covering the entire page. Comparatively, Fargonians have very, very, very subtle aspirations. Theyre content being content. They live in everydayness. They dont want to rock the boat; they want only to sit in it and troll around the lake on weekends. They want only to attend their afternoon card parties, with whist on Saturdays and pinochle on Sundays. They want for their weeknight bowling league to improve just a little each year, and maybe one day take that first place trophy, but only if its in Gods great plan. They have wants, yes, but no demands. They want their rainbow sherbet, but if lime sherbet is brought to the table, no one is going to jump up on a chair and yell, I demand my rainbow sherbet. Ive earned it. Ive ordered it! I want it! They sit there politely and profess the virtues of lime sherbet.

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