Friday, March 6, 2026

Baby, it's You - Talking Story with Arlo

Rodeo
Talking Story with Arlo

Baby, it's You 

By Arlo Agogo

Put in the wide-open heart of Texas dust and neon dreams, there lived a woman named..... 

Honey Hot Sauce

Yeah, that was her real stage name—born plain old Honey Mae, but the rodeo promoters slapped "Hot Sauce" on her because she could burn up an arena faster than a jalapeño in July. She was the prettiest rootin'-tootin' cowgirl to ever straddle a wild bull and make it look like Sunday brunch.

Voluptuous curves that could stop traffic on I-20, a face like a sunrise over the Panhandle, and a voice that grabbed a microphone and turned 20,000 screaming fans into quiet believers.

But here's the cosmic joke: Honey Hot Sauce was so stunning, so electric, that every man who moseyed into her orbit got spooked. Cowboys with hats bigger than their egos, bull riders with scars and swagger—they'd tip their Stetsons, flash a grin, flex a bicep that could bench-press a calf, and then... vanish.

"Too pretty," they'd mutter to their buddies over warm beer. "She's gonna break my heart into a million pieces and mail 'em back C.O.D." So they rode off into the sunset before the first sunset even happened.

Heartache insurance, they called it. 

Honey said screw it. She bought herself a new RV that smelled like saddle leather and dreams deferred, hitched it to the rodeo circuit, and became the star.

Trick-riding under spotlights, roping steers like they owed her money, announcing the shows with a wink and a drawl that made grown men blush. 

She loved the road—the thump of hooves, the smell of popcorn and manure, the way the crowd roared when she flew around barrels on her paint horse, Starlight. Alone in her RV after the lights dimmed, she'd crank up old records, sip black coffee, and wonder if anyone out there had the guts to stick.

Enter Arlo.

Arlo was a beatnik straight out of a Donovan fever dream. Long blonde hair tied back with a leather cord, sunglasses smudged from too many daytime thought sessions, a duffel bag full of dog-eared notebooks and half-finished short stories. 

He drifted north and south like a tumbleweed with a liberal arts degree, picking up freelance gigs—blog posts about obscure jazz, ghostwriting travel pieces for websites no one read. He lived in a luxury 40ft RV with a backside he'd painted with constellations and quotes from "On the Road." for traffic behind him to read.

No schedule, no mortgage, no plan beyond the next cup of joe and the next open highway.

They met a year ago at a dusty fairgrounds outside Lubbock. Arlo had wandered in chasing a story about modern cowboys; Honey was headlining. She spotted him in the crowd—black cowboy hat (ironic on a beatnik), long hair spilling out, looking like he'd rather be reading poetry than watching bronc busting. 

They talked under the stars after the show. He quoted Keith Richards; she quoted Calf-Roping Times. Sparks flew like a shorted-out lasso. 

For a few weeks, they were inseparable—late-night drives, her teaching him to two-step (he was terrible, all elbows and apologies), him reading her his latest scribbles while she braided her hair. 

Then the old fear crept in. 

Arlo watched the crowds swarm her, the cameras flash, the cowboys circle like hopeful vultures. "She's too much," he thought. "Too pretty, too bright. I'll just get my beat-up heart burned." 

So he moseyed on down the road, leaving a note that said something poetic about "the highway calling" and "not wanting to dim her shine." Honey read it, laughed through tears, and cranked up her old record player. 

The Shirelles came on—"Baby It's You"—and she sat alone in her RV, singing along, voice cracking:

🎶 It's not the way you smile that touched my heart.
It's not the way you kiss that tears me apart.
Uh-oh, many, many, many nights go by,
I sit alone at home and I cry over you.
What can I do?
Don't want nobody, nobody...
'Cause baby, it's you
🎶

Baby, it's you. She cried knowing he didn't believe her—that he was the one. 

The laid-back poet who listened without judging, who loved her for the woman under the sequins and spotlight, not just the Rodeo Queen. But out of a million cowboys and drifters, what were the chances?

Arlo never forgot.

He chased the circuit in his own quiet way—showing up at shows when the wind blew him there, sitting in the cheap seats, watching her shine. He told himself it was research for a novel. 

Truth was, he was hooked. Then came Abilene. 

The National Finals. Big deal, bright lights, the Super Bowl of rodeo. Honey was in the thick of it—trick-riding, announcing, owning the arena. 

Arlo spun his world around 400 miles out, scalped a ticket for the Sunday finals, got himself "prettied up".

He sat ringside, black hat low, heart hammering like a bad bongo solo. There she was—microphone in hand, starlight prancing beneath her, hyping the crowd: 
"Y'all ready for the wildest ride of your life?" 

She scanned the stands... and froze. 

That hat. That hair. Arlo. She pointed right at him mid-announcement, mid-spin: "You! Black hat, long hair—trouble written all over ya. You better still be sittin' there when this show's over, 'cause I'm comin' to get you!"

The crowd whooped, thinking it was part of the show. Arlo just grinned, tipped his hat. The finals roared on—bulls bucked, riders flew, cheers shook the rafters. 

When the last steer was roped and the lights dimmed, Honey marched straight to him. No hesitation. She grabbed his hand, pulled him into the shadows behind the chutes.

They stood there at midnight, arm in arm, slow-dancing to the faint echo of a country band packing up. 

No words at first. Just breathing the same air.

Arlo finally spoke, voice low and beatnik-soft: "Darlin', I'm no cowboy. No big muscles, no bad scars. All I got is this heart and soul, and they're both pretty banged up from the road. You need somebody stronger, badder—"Honey cut him off with a laugh, pure and bright.

"Baby, it's you.

"He blinked. "What?" She pulled him closer. "Don't leave me alone. Come on home. You know I need your lovin'. You know I love you. Baby, it's you. Baby... it's you. 

"She sang it soft, right into his ear—the words she'd cried to alone in her RV. 

The words that said it didn't matter what the world whispered about her being "too much." It didn't matter if they said he'd never stay true (beatniks have a rep, after all). She knew. Any old way, she was gonna love him. Arlo's eyes went wide, then soft.

For once, the wanderer stopped wandering. 

He kissed her—slow, real, no poetry needed. They climbed into her RV that night (his RV would follow later). She drove, he navigated by stars. Somewhere between Abilene and the next horizon, they laughed about how ridiculous it all was—a Rodeo Queen and a beatnik poet.

Two misfits who finally fit.

Honey Hot Sauce still rules the arenas. Arlo still writes his stories—now with her as muse, co-pilot, and co-conspirator. They bicker over coffee (she likes it black; he likes it with existential dread), dance in truck stops, and remind each other daily: Baby, it's you. 

And in the quiet nights, when the road hums beneath them, one of them will hum those old lyrics. The other smiles. No more crying alone. 

Just two hearts, finally believing.

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Living in a Pizza Oven - A VW Dune Buggy's Run From the Sun - Talking Story with Arlo

Living in a Pizza Oven 

By Arlo Agogo

Life Under the Mojave Desert Sun: 
A Dune Buggy Odyssey in the Pizza Oven of June

Greetings, cosmic wanderers and desert rats! Buckle up for a wild ride through the Mojave Desert, where the sun reigns supreme, turning my trusty RV into a pizza oven and my dune buggy into a chariot for dawn-patrolling lunatics. 

I’m your narrator, a grizzled 58-year-old beatnik businessman, part-time philosopher, and full-time sun-dodger, living out here where the cacti whisper secrets and the horizon shimmers like a mirage of a cosmic casino. 

June has arrived, and with it, the Arizona sun—King Sol himself—has declared war on all things foolish enough to linger in his gaze. So grab a cold one, and let me spin you a tale of 4:00 a.m. wake-ups, dune buggy escapades, and the fine art of surviving a desert summer with a grin and a bit of cosmic comedy.

The Sun: Emperor of the Mojave, Tyrant of Thermometers

Out here in the Mojave, the sun doesn’t just rise—it ascends like a flaming overlord, ready to smite anything that dares defy its radiance.
 

By June, daytime temps are already kissing 110°F, and don’t be fooled by the midnight “cool-down” to a balmy 100°F. Mid-July and August? 

Oh, brother, that’s when the desert turns into Satan’s skillet, with daily highs of 120°F and often spikes to 125°F—temperatures that could cook a jackrabbit in its boots or turn a wandering beatnik into a pile of ash with a paisley bandana. 

How folks survived out here before air conditioning is beyond me. I picture them hiding in caves, fanning themselves with Joshua tree fronds, muttering, “Why didn’t we move to Seattle?”

My RV, bless its aluminum heart, is my fortress against this solar tyranny. But even with modern air conditioning cranked to arctic levels, the west-facing side of my rig absorbs the afternoon sun like a sponge soaking up lava. 

By 3:00 p.m., the walls are radiating heat, and my home feels like the inside of a calzone. I’ve got it parked north-south to minimize the damage, but that western sun is a sneaky devil, creeping through my blinds like a cosmic paparazzi. 

My electric bill? A cool hundred bucks extra a month, but worth every penny to keep from melting into a puddle of existential poetry.

The 4:00 a.m. Hustle: Coffee, Chores, and Dune Buggy Dreams

To beat the sun, you gotta outsmart it, and that means waking up at 4:00 a.m. when the desert is still cloaked in a fleeting, velvety coolness. I set my mental alarm clock—because who needs a real one when your brain’s wired to the rhythm of the cosmos?—and roll out of bed, my air-conditioned bedroom a chilly oasis. 

My AC unit, a modern marvel, blasts arctic gusts right at my face, keeping things a crisp 70°F even when the thermostat fibs and says 80°F. I sip my coffee, black as the night sky, and watch the stars fade while the desert hums with the quiet anticipation of dawn.

Chores come first: checking the RV’s water tanks (the sun evaporates everything, even your dreams), securing my dune buggy’s cover (more on that beast in a sec), and making sure my solar panels aren’t caked in dust. 

By 5:00 a.m., I’m itching to hit the trails. 

The Mojave surrounds me like an endless playground, a labyrinth of sandy washes and rocky ridges that beg to be explored. 

My dune buggy, a yellow contraption I call "Daisy" , is my ticket to freedom. It’s got knobby tires, a roll cage tougher than a biker’s attitude, and a motor that roars like a caffeinated coyote.

I fire it up, and off we go, tearing toward the Colorado River as the sky blushes pink and gold.

Sunrise Rides: Chasing the Cosmic Groove

There’s nothing like a sunrise ride in the Mojave. The trails along the river are my cathedral, where the first rays of light paint the cliffs in hues of fire and amber.

Lizards dart like tiny philosophers, pondering the meaning of life before scurrying under rocks. The air is crisp, the wind smells of sage, and for a fleeting hour, the desert feels like a secret only I’m in on.

I crank up some vintage Santana on my buggy’s speakers—because what’s a desert ride without a little “Oye Como Va” to set the vibe?—and weave through the trails, kicking up dust clouds that sparkle like cosmic glitter in the dawn.

But the clock’s ticking. By 10:00 a.m., the sun’s getting cocky, and by noon, it’s the undisputed king, ready to roast anything that lingers. I hightail it back to base, because out here, you don’t argue with the sun—you bow. 

The Arizona sun always wins, like a cosmic mob boss who demands respect. Ignore it, and you’ll be a dehydrated cautionary tale by sundown.

Dodging the Heat: Casinos, Shade, and Naps

Once I’m back, it’s time to outwit the heat. One of my favorite tricks is a jaunt to the Avi Casino, just down the road. Their parking structure, built from pure, sun-defying cement, is a shady oasis where my dune buggy can nap without turning into a solar-powered toaster. 

Inside, the food court is a glorious refuge of air-conditioned bliss. I grab a burger, maybe flirt with the idea of dropping a few coins in the slots—because who knows, maybe today’s the day Lady Luck winks at me.

Spoiler: she rarely does, but the AC and a cold soda are prize enough.

Back home, I park the "daisy" on the east side of my neighbor’s place, where the shade is as precious as gold. I cover it up tight, because the sun doesn’t just bake—it evaporates fuel like a vampire draining a gas tank and thins your oil until it’s basically salad dressing. 

The afternoon is for old-guy naps in my chilled bedroom, where I dream of interstellar road trips and quantum-entangled roadrunners. Or I tinker with my next project: maybe a blog about the Groovatrons, those funky, soul-hopping aliens from Funkadelia who inspire my desert musings. (Check my last post for that wild tale.)

Sunset: The Desert’s Grand Finale

As the sun dips below the mountains around 7:30 p.m., the Mojave puts on a show that could make a poet weep. The sky explodes in purples and oranges, shadows stretching across the peaks like cosmic brushstrokes. If there’s a breeze, the dust swirls just right, turning the horizon into a psychedelic painting.

Some mountains glow, others sulk in shadow, and the whole scene feels like the desert’s way of saying, 

“Yeah, I’m hot, but I’m also gorgeous.”

That’s when I sit outside, sipping something cool, maybe strumming my guitar or scribbling in my journal about the day’s adventures. The desert night is a different beast—alive with mystery, whispering of stars and stories yet to be told. 

My neighbors, those snowbirds who fled the heat, are missing out. They’ll be back when the temps drop, but for now, it’s just me, '68 VW Dune Buggy, and the Mojave’s endless groove.

The Moral of the Mojave

Living here means dancing with the sun, respecting its power, and finding joy in the little rebellions—early-morning rides, casino shade, and naps that feel like victories. 

The Mojave teaches you to move with the rhythm of the day, to laugh at the heat, and to find magic in the dust. 

So here’s to the desert, where the sun is king, the dune buggy is my steed, and every sunrise is a chance to chase the cosmic groove. 

Stay cool, and may your AC always blow cold.

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

Monday, March 2, 2026

Me, Mum, Grandma & Vin Scully -Talking Story with Arlo

Dodger Baseball
Talking Story with Arlo 
By Arlo Agogo

Me, Mum, Grandma & Vin Scully

How Tea, Transistor Radios, and Dodger Magic Made Me a Fan for Life

Picture it: the early 1960s in our modest Montebello, California home. 

I was a wide-eyed five-year-old, small enough that the world still felt enormous and full of wonder. The house carried the comforting scent of fresh-baked scones mingling with the warm California sun filtering through the windows. 

Our little family blended old British traditions with the new American life—tea served precisely at four o'clock, the Union Jack hanging proudly next to a poster of Sandy Koufax in grandma's room winding up for a pitch, and the Los Angeles Dodgers serving as the joyful rhythm of our afternoons.

This is the story of how I became a lifelong Dodger fan. 

It's rooted in steaming cups of Earl Grey, the tinny hum of a transistor radio, and the golden, storytelling voice of Vin Scully that made every game feel like a personal conversation.

My parents both worked long hours to support us, leaving Grandma alone for much of the day in her quiet room. She was often by herself, dealing with the aches of arthritis and the solitude that comes with age. 

That's where I stepped in. At just five years old, my
mum asked me. Arlo, love, would you make your prime job—taking care of Grandma love of the Dodgers?"  The one job my parents gave me with genuine pride and trust—was taking care of Grandma love of the Dodgers. 

It wasn't seen as a burden; it was my special responsibility, my way of contributing to the family. I spent countless hours hanging out with her, helping in small ways that felt big to a little boy: fetching her a glass of water, straightening her quilt, or simply sitting beside her bed chatting about whatever came to mind.

But the real highlight of our days was Dodger baseball. 

I always made sure she could hear the game clearly. That little transistor radio was our lifeline to Chavez Ravine. I'd keep a ready supply of 9-volt batteries on hand, tucked away in a small tin by her nightstand.

If the sound ever started to fade or crackle, I'd quickly pop in a fresh one—no interruptions allowed when the Dodgers were on the air. The ritual was sacred: I'd carefully carry the radio to her bedside, adjust the antenna just so, and tune it to the right station. 

Then, when Vin Scully's warm, welcoming voice filled the room with his signature opening—

"It's time for Dodger baseball!"—Grandma's face would light up. 

The pain in her hands seemed to ease for a while, replaced by that spark of excitement. We'd share proper British tea during those games—mine loaded with extra milk to make it just right for a child, hers with a splash of strength to keep her going. 

I'd dip graham crackers into our cups, careful not to let crumbs scatter on her quilt, and help her take small bites. We'd laugh softly at the silliness of it all, two companions in a cozy world of our own while the game played out in the background. 

Those afternoons were pure comfort and connection. With Mum and Dad at work, I had Grandma to myself for hours. 

We'd talk about little things—the weather, stories from her younger days in England, or whatever funny thing had happened that morning. 

She was still mobile but I'd help adjust her pillows when she needed to shift, or read aloud from the newspaper if her eyes were tired. 

All the while, the radio provided a gentle soundtrack. Baseball on the radio was different from other sports. Football and basketball demanded your full, intense focus—every snap or shot pulling you in with urgency. 

But baseball was entertainment in the truest sense: a relaxing break from the daily grind of work and responsibility. It was a background sport, something you could enjoy while going about other things. 

You listened casually, following the score, catching key moments, but mostly you let it flow around you like a familiar melody. And with Vin Scully calling the action, that melody was always soothing, positive, and rich with insight.

For modern-day children in their twenties and thirties, Vin Scully might be just a name from history books, old highlight videos, or grandparents' stories. But to those of us who grew up with him, he was the unmistakable voice of the Dodgers for 67 incredible years—from 1950 in Brooklyn all the way through his retirement in 2016 after the team had long settled in Los Angeles. 

He started at just 22 years old, quickly becoming the lead broadcaster and holding the record for the longest tenure with any single team in professional sports history. His distinctive tenor voice, lyrical descriptions, and genuine warmth made him far more than an announcer—he was a teacher, a companion, and a beacon of positivity. 

Scully described plays with the elegance of poetry.

Always knowledgeable yet humble, turning ordinary moments into vivid, memorable tales. Hearing his voice meant something good was about to unfold on the broadcast—comfort, joy, and a sense that the world was right for a few hours.

When the games ran long into the evening and Grandma began to drift off, lulled by the steady rhythm of innings and Scully's calm narration, I'd tiptoe back into her room in the early night. The final out had been recorded, the broadcast wrapping up with post-game chatter. 

The radio would still be murmuring faintly. I'd gently reach over, turn the dial to silence so she could sleep peacefully, and set the little set back on her bed stand, ready for tomorrow. 

Sometimes I'd linger a moment, listening to the quiet, already anticipating the next day's ritual. Every morning started the same: I'd dash outside to grab the LA Times from the stoop, flip straight to the sports section, and squint at the tiny print to find the game time. I'd rush back to report proudly, 

"Game's at one today, Grandma!" Then, come that hour, I'd repeat the setup—radio by the pillow, fresh battery if needed—and we'd settle in again. Together we lived through those magical seasons: Sandy Koufax pitching with wizard-like precision, Maury Wills stealing bases like a whisper in the wind, Don Drysdale bearing down with intimidating heat. 

Scully wove it all into stories that made every double play, every home run, feel personal and profound. Looking back, those days were my first real lessons in love, patience, and the quiet strength of caregiving. Grandma's smile when the radio came alive, our shared giggles over tea-soaked crackers, the simple act of being there—

it all wrapped me in a warmth that has never faded.

Fast-forward through the decades, and I'm still that same Dodger fan at heart. Life has brought its share of changes—jobs, moves, the ordinary hustle—but the Dodgers remain my north star. Late at night, when the house is quiet, I'll pull up recent highlights on YouTube: 

Mookie Betts gliding into base with effortless grace, Freddie Freeman crushing one deep into the stands, the crowd roaring in unison. Instantly, 

I'm transported back to Grandma's bedside, to the scent of tea, the feel of graham crackers, and Vin Scully's voice filling the room like an old friend.

The Dodgers are more than a team to me; they're a lifelong thread of joy, positivity, and deep connection. They remind me that even in a fast-paced, often overwhelming world, there's always room for a gentle escape—a background melody of summer, a crackle of radio static, a voice that brings comfort and lifts the spirit.

So here I am, still cheering from afar, still grateful for those transistor-radio afternoons and the woman who made them magical. And whenever I think of Grandma and our shared time, I can almost hear that familiar, beloved voice once more, crackling through the years:

It’s time for Dodger baseball!

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo








Sunday, March 1, 2026

Dune Buggy Hitchin' a Ride - Talking Story with Arlo

Travel
Talking Story with Arlo

Dune Buggy Hitchin a Ride

By Arlo Agogo

Hey there, fellow wanderers and armchair adventurers—grab a cup of something strong (or weak, no judgments here at 70), because I'm about to spin you a yarn that's equal parts road dust, diesel purr, and pure, unadulterated freedom.

Picture this: me, Arlo, freshly minted 70-year-old beatnik, firing up the ol' 40-foot Fleetwood Providence RV like I am 21 all over again. Free to Roam, my choices.

Dune Buggy hitched.

Tires? Checked and shiny.

Engine? Tuned so sweet it hums like a contented cat.

Gas tank? Full to the brim, baby. 

Everything works—miracles do happen—and I'm itching to hit the blacktop harder than a VW bus at a Grateful Dead show.

Towed behind me, like a loyal sidekick who's seen more deserts than most humans have seen sunrises, rides my 1968 VW dune buggy. Her name is "Daisy". Motor rebuilt, fresh service, tires that grip sand like a hippie grips a cause. 

This little fiberglass beast is ready to tear up the plains around Lake Powell, leaving rooster tails of joy in its wake. 

The destination? 

Some glorious Lake Powell campground—think Wahweap or Bullfrog or Antelope Point, where the red rock meets the blue water and the vibes are eternally chill. It's about 400 miles from my current location Fort Mohave, Arizona, give or take a scenic detour or two. 

Straight shot? Roughly 10 hours. But who does straight shots anymore? Not this cat. I'm chopping it into three glorious, meandering days. Moseying, baby. No rush, no schedule, just the open road and the sweet freedom of not giving a single hoot where I end up tonight.

Why the slow roll? 

Because at 70, I've earned the right to wander without apology. Life's not a sprint to the grave; it's a leisurely stroll with frequent Starbucks pit stops for caffeine and accidental conversations with strangers who still believe in eye contact. 

My old crew? Bless 'em, they're still great friends, but most have claimed permanent residency on their own worlds. Phone calls these days are short, sweet, and to the point: "You alive?" "Yup." "Good enough." That's fine by me. I get it. We're all just riding out the innings in our own way.

Me? I've traded the couch for a diesel pusher palace on wheels. It's got everything: comfy bed, shower that actually works, fridge full of good food, and that gentle rumble that says, 

North in summer, south in winter—keep the temp at 72.

Wandering isn't aimless; it's purposeful purposelessness. 

No one’s gonna come looking for me if I miss dinner. (Though the phone still rings from those ride-or-die pals checking in—love ya for it.)

The real magic kicks in when I link up with my internet tribe: the vintage Volkswagen crew. We're talking dune buggies, old buses, Things, anything air-cooled and over 55 years young. These folks get it.

We met online in some dusty forum years ago, swapping rebuild tips and bad jokes, and now we're converging on Lake Powell like a rolling museum of cool. 

Picture it: a circle of chrome and fiberglass under the stars, stories flowing faster than the Colorado River used to. Someone's got a guitar, someone's got a cold brew, and everyone's got that same grin that says, 

"Man, we're still doing this."Comedy in the chaos? 

Oh yeah. Towing a dune buggy with a 40-footer is like hitching a skateboard to a freight train—hilarious physics at every stop sign. The buggy bounces like it's auditioning for a cartoon, and every time I hit a bump, I imagine it waving hello to the rearview mirror. 

Gas mileage? Let's just say the Providence drinks diesel like a beatnik drinks poetry—deep and slow. But who cares? The joy is in the journey, not the MPG.

And here's the exaggerated truth: at 70, life's not winding down—it's upgrading to premium wanderlust. No more chasing deadlines or impressing bosses. Just me, the road, and a buggy that still turns heads like it's 1968. 

Friends are living their own lives in their own way. Me? I'm out here swapping tales with VW weirdos, and proving that "old man" is just code for "experienced" adventurer with zero f's left to give.

Slow, silly, and supremely content.

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

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