U.S. Army

John Wise in Basic Training Ft. Knox, Kentucky March 1985

March 26, 1985, was my first day of basic training for the U.S. Army. I was just eight days away from my 22nd birthday and was feeling old compared to the other guys around me, who were mostly 18 to 20 years old, but looking back at these photos; I feel like I looked like I was about 15 years old. Raging inside was an angry 12-year-old who believed he was in an old man’s body. I signed up for this gig because I was bored while attending DeVry Technical Institute. I thought I wanted a degree in Computer Information Systems, but I hated accounting. But more than that, I was bored.

John Wise in Basic Training at Ft. Knox, Kentucky 1985

One morning while doing homework with MTV playing in the background, an ad came on with a jingle about Being All That You Can Be with promises of jobs in Japan, Korea, and Germany. That song echoed in my head later as I sat in a classroom waiting for a professor who was habitually late, except today, we also were missing his assistants, so nothing was going on. Replaying the ad in mind, I picked up on the “Guaranteed career opportunity in Germany.” I asked a friend to watch my stuff and ran to the payphone to call the local recruiting office. By that afternoon, I’d signed up to join the U.S. Army.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

Basic training was a love-hate relationship for me. Somehow, I was made class leader, which was horrible as I had never been chosen for anything as a first pick. It might have had something to do with coming in as in E-3 or Private First Class due to my college credit, or maybe it was because I was an egghead, I wasn’t sure.

Getting fit was rigorous as I could barely run, could hardly do ten pushups, and situps weren’t a strong suit either. While I wasn’t fat, I wasn’t very physically active. That changed. After nine weeks at Ft. Knox, Kentucky, I could do 54 pushups in 2 minutes and 70 situps in the same time and was able to run 2 miles in under 16 minutes. At this point in my military career, I had no regrets about what I signed up for. To this day, I believe that every American should be required to complete basic training.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

Around June 1st, I boarded a bus north to Indianapolis, Indiana, where the second leg of my training would begin at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. My memory is foggy about how long this training session lasted, but I believe it was eight weeks.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

Like in basic training, I was made class leader on arrival, but the high point of my time here was leading flag detail. Here, I was at the Army’s financial, clerical, and information technology training center, and I was leading ten other soldiers to raise and lower the U.S. Flag at an American military facility; I was astonished. For this detail, I was the NCOIC (Non-Commissioned Officer In Charge), two halyard pullers were upfront, and eight flag handlers were between us.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

Out of basic training, we were allowed some amount of normalcy. Sunglasses and contact lenses returned along with civilian clothing. Our classmates included women whom we had only seen from a distance while in Kentucky. Maybe the confidence of being first and out front went to my head because this is when things fell apart.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

This was my locker, and somehow, I thought this was my private space in a place I should have understood private space didn’t exist. Then, one day, after an early morning fire drill that was accompanied by an inspection, I was brought in front of my commanding officer for breaking the rules. I had been stashing contraband food items in my locker.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

I was crushed. I was being relieved of my class leadership position, but at least I wasn’t losing the rank that I had just recently earned. The saving grace through this ordeal was that my commander, Captain Rivera, took a minute to talk to a rather dispirited Specialist Wise. He voiced that he understood how this affected me so negatively, but these kinds of setbacks are part of life and that when they happen, it is upon us to “turn and face the music,” especially for actions we’ve brought upon ourselves.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

His words resonated with me, and I got on with it. Soon, I was dancing in the barracks, almost breathing easy that I no longer had to be the focus of anger from other soldiers who didn’t enjoy being told what to do by a person they felt was their equal, not their superior.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

Every free minute to be me was cherished. All I could focus on was that I was going to be in Germany before the end of summer. The training was easy, and even the regimented life was a welcome relief from the purposeless wandering around trying to figure out when life was going to give me what I wanted when I was “back on the block.”

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

For the first time in my life, I was fitting in, to some small degree, but I later realized that this was because of the conditioning of the military working so hard on removing our differences. I was seriously enjoying this moment, though it came at the cost of drinking with everyone, hanging out, going to the movies, baseball games at Victory Field, and more drinking.

John Wise at Ft. Benjamin Harris, Indiana for AIT summer 1985

All the while, I held on to my interest in photography, and with the extra money that I was saving, not having any expenses, I was able to expand the equipment I had access to…until I reached Germany. With graduation arriving so quickly after I first arrived at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, I was soon about to be underway once more. But first, I needed to head to Buffalo, New York, for a family reunion on my mother’s side.

Everything I hated about being in Germany is right here in this photo, but that story will have to find its way into another blog post chronicling my rocky relationship with the U.S. Army during the Cold War.

John Wise and Bernard W. Rogers Supreme Allied Commander Europe at Rhein Main Airbase in Frankfurt, Germany early 1987

And then, only two years, seven months, and 21 days later, I was out of my contract with the military.

I went from this moment in the forest outside Rhein-Main Airbase with the largest gathering of generals in a single location since immediately after World War II, including General Colin Powell (not pictured) and Bernard W. Rogers, Supreme Allied Commander Europe (the guy with four stars on his shoulder), to landing at Ft. Bliss in El Paso, Texas, where I orchestrated my departure from ridiculous servitude. How I did that is embedded in a story about Los Angeles performance artist Johanna Went, which you can read by clicking here.

[This post was written in April 2021]

Last Hurrah

7th Street and Broadway in Los Angeles, California

This photo at 7th Street and Broadway in downtown Los Angeles, California, was taken right around March 1, 1985. I can date it due to the marquee at the State Theater advertising Missing In Action 2 – The Beginning with Chuck Norris, which had just been released. At this time I would have been living in Phoenix, Arizona, and so I’m surprised by the date. The only thing I can figure out is that I made a quick trip back to California to say bye to family before leaving for Army basic training that started on March 26 of that year, or maybe I just had to get another concert in.

My photography of the downtown area started back around 1976 or ’77 when, at 13 or 14, I started jumping on the bus to venture the 25 miles down here. I wish some of those photos still existed.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

This is the city in which I grew up, Los Angeles, California. The event I was attending here was the L.A. Street Scene, held on October 8 – 9, 1983.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

Entertainment and food were distributed seemingly everywhere as the festival covered many blocks from Spring Street, Main Street, and Los Angeles Street.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

There have been times in my life that I nearly have to scratch my head and wonder, were my early years as diverse as I want to remember? Then I look back at these photos I took on my Ricoh KR-5 and get a glimpse of just how different my reality was from the TV images that linger in my memories.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

In my world, punk was already on the way out as New Wave started to dominate the music scene along with Metal.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

As I’d wander the streets of L.A. during this fest or even back before I could drive in the mid-’70s, I would witness all types of characters. Unfortunately, some of the images of homeless people, prostitutes, and mildly deranged people ranting about some conspiracy or other that I shot when I was 13 to 15 years old were all thrown away by my mother while I was away in Germany as she felt they were all trash. I miss that part of my history. Back then, I’d ride the RTD (Rapid Transit District) busses through El Monte Station and connect to lines that would deliver me to Alameda and the 101 Freeway.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

Nearly naked men on stage doing the Chippendales gig didn’t seem all too peculiar to me. I’d seen performance art of things I would have never shared with “normal” people who already thought L.A. was filled with nut jobs. To me, this city was eclectic and alive, and the funkier it got, the more real it was to me.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

Every ethnicity was active in this city. I had tried living in Phoenix, Arizona, from late 1980 to mid-1981, but that city was highly segregated and bland as shit. The culture shock of moving somewhere that appeared to only be populated by white people rattled my senses; it was boring. Years later, I would return as I learned that where diversity is alive, the economy is brilliant, and competition will strangle you, but with a little ambition in somewhere like Phoenix, it was easy to get ahead and carve out your own space.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

Those days of being oblivious to just how elegant life was when the melting pot was in full swing are sorely missed. Today, here in 2021, rage and racism are once again making themselves known. Of course, the same hostility probably existed back then, too, but I was immersed in a universe that blocked out the old stupid ways of my parents and their parents. What was important in middle America had no bearing on what California was doing; we were living our dreams.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

Sometimes, those dreams looked peculiar.

Los Angeles Street Scene 1983 in California

And if it was your dream to channel Eddie Munster, then you did it because, hey, we live in L.A. Operative word: live!

Johanna Went

Peggy, Johanna Went, and Mark Wheaton in Los Angeles, California

It’s 1982, I believe, and this is backstage at a performance of Johanna Went and Mark Wheaton. Johanna is in the middle, and her friend Peggy (last name currently unknown) is on the left. I may be mistaken but I think Peggy helped design the costumes, but I’m writing this nearly 40 years after I watched these performances. Mark was on hand for the soundtrack, which I must say must have fit perfectly because, in the mayhem of what was going on with Johanna, it all felt like it was the same part of the buzzsaw that was tearing through the senses of the audience.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Speaking of the audience, I don’t think everyone in attendance understood what they were getting into when they signed up for this show. I say this because I witnessed many angry people storm out after hurtling invectives at the stage as though anything was going to penetrate the chaos that was unfolding up there.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

I have no idea who opened for Johanna that night. I have vague memories of seeing Fishbone, but the punk intensity that would destroy anything that preceded Johanna was too much for memories of what else was experienced. You left one of these shows with your eyeballs packed with visceral carnage and a head full of self-doubt that begged you to question if you saw what you think you did.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Where Johanna began, and the costumes ended as the entire piece was being interwoven in Mark’s accompanying soundscape was anybody’s guess; the blur, once unfolding, only picked up speed. You were either in the vortex, or you were hurled outside before real damage hammered at your well-being.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Just then, things take a surreal turn, and you wonder if the animal parts that are showing up are real. You hope like hell they are not. And what’s under and in the packaging? Do you really want to know?

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Hold on because things are unfolding rapidly and are about to go bonkers.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

There are goodies up in that box, but what spills out won’t be known in this reading as somehow what followed wasn’t captured. Even I had to pause from time to time to simply watch with my own eyes instead of through the lens.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

And before you know it cocks are on stage. All manner of dildos would make an appearance. But what’s this all for, you may ask?

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

There were stories that were built into what I saw, or at least so I thought. I always took something away from watching these dives into madness as reflections and snippets out of pop culture were mercilessly thrown into a food processor and ground up to show the vulgarity of what we were being spoonfed in the “normal” world.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Have you had enough dick yet?

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Maybe you’d be satisfied if, in this performance copulation, you are jizzed on to bring you into an intimate partnership. Just like real sex, it is over all too soon, but the experience will linger long after that.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

I can’t figure out where this photo fits among the shows I went to, but it must have been a distinctly different performance than the two featured above and below. I also tend to believe that it was at the next performance where I was backstage with Johanna, Mark, and Peggy, and I showed this image to Johanna and requested to photograph that evening’s show.

There’s a bigger story to this image, though; it is the one that facilitated me leaving the U.S. Military, which was still years away from when I photographed these shows. In 1986 I desperately wanted out of the Army. I thoroughly disliked what I was witness to and simply wanted an exit. But once you signed that contract, you had obligations. Well, I felt differently. By a calculated fluke, I was able to get myself reassigned from my unit in Frankfurt, Germany, to go anywhere; I didn’t care because I only needed to get to work with people who had no preconceived notions about me. I landed in Texas and started to work at Ft. Bliss in El Paso right around the Christmas holidays. Assigned to a desk, I promptly found a special place for this particular image. It didn’t take long for the outrage to grow, and people asked why this photo was on my desk. I was requested to remove it, but I declined, citing religious reasons – which stopped that conversation in an instant. It brought other people around, though, higher-ranking people.

I don’t believe I was at my desk more than 2 or 3 hours before I was asked to collect my stuff and report to the 1st Sergeant’s office. I was asked again in front of this highest-ranking enlisted man and several commissioned officers why I insisted on having this “disgusting” image on my desk. I explained that it had religious significance, and just like the Christmas decorations celebrating Christ were allowed, I thought my religious preferences would also be honored in accordance with federal and military law with me then referencing the particular regulation. That ended that, and I was placed under temporary arrest and escorted to my room in the barracks.

Shenanigans ensued as the coterie of men rifled everything I owned, looking for evidence to show that I was a madman. With four military policemen standing around me, I listened to grown men wonder out loud if I was gay because I owned books such as Ecce Homo by Friedrich Nietzsche or magazines such as Fangoria that appeared demonic and satan worshiping to them (it seemed they missed the filmmaking aspect of those). Then they stumbled upon Queer by William Burroughs, and I think at that time they rested assured that I was indeed gay. With evidence in hand, I was marched back to the 1st Sergeant’s office and asked to explain. Nietzsche’s work was translated into Behold the Man, the title is in Latin. The magazines are about filmmaking; I like horror films. As for Burroughs, he was the gay child of the wealthy Burroughs family who invented the cash register and built the computers I worked on in Germany. This man of French letters was a literary genius who kicked off the Beat Generation.

So what about the photo? I’ve already told you. The next question was the one I wanted. What do you want? I want the fuck out of the Army, I’ve had enough of the bullshit posturing, and I’ve seen things I don’t fully understand, but I don’t condone. I should have been warned on entering the military that it isn’t the place for curious people, especially as an enlisted person. How can we do that, was thrown at me. Easy, I told them I failed my last physical training test (that was a lie – I hadn’t), and then I said, you have a PT test coming up. I’ll fail it, you give me a bar to reenlistment. I’ll petition the government to release me as I no longer have a path forward, and we’ll be done. They agreed. The rest of my time at Ft. Bliss was by no means easy as the 1st Sergeant did not like the way this was played and started a rumor that I had been caught in my room engaging in some kind of satanic ritual, sitting in a pool of blood on a pentagram surrounded by candles. That didn’t go over well with my fellow soldiers, who were making threats to kill me or at least hurt me severely.

Hmmm, revenge would be mine. Due to my status, I got every shit job that could be thrown at me. Because of my strange work hours, I started seeing a pattern in who was doing the late-night duty of watching our barracks. This was called CQ or Charge of Quarters. Why were all the soldiers assigned this crappy duty black? I wrote up a letter on their behalf and informed them how to ensure their state senator could become involved in an investigation of Top (nickname for 1st Sergeants). They sent it off, and just before I started my final processing out of the military, I got wind that this old piece of shit racist career military man was under investigation from the highest level of government. I basked in my knowledge that I was getting the last laugh and had to thank Johanna Went the entire time for helping me escape the insanity that exists off-stage. By the way, I believe that’s a cow heart she’s gripping in her maw.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Another show, but the blood should already be indicating that things will get messy.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Why’s all that plastic sheeting on the wall behind you, Johanna? What do you have in mind?

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Seriously? Are you sticking that oil dipstick into that man’s cock? And what’s up with all the sex doll’s faces?

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

A quick change, and now she’s emerging from solar sails ripped out of the future from space.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Looks like real blood to me, and that’s a sheep head on the mic. I never saw Mötley Crüe use animal heads on their mic stands, but then again, I never watched Mötley Crüe live.

Johanna Went performing in Los Angeles circa 1982

Ahh, multi-hued oatmeal goes well with blood and makes quite a colorful mess. Nice touch.

I was 18 to 20 years old when I was following Johanna around Los Angeles. Watching the antics of her and her audience and listening to Mark Wheaton’s discordant soundtrack that was so profoundly appropriate to these situations left a great imprint on me. Forty years later, I learned that I might have been resonating with her work as she, too, was from Buffalo, New York.

Los Angeles Industrial Decay 1982

Decay 1982 in Los Angeles, California

While on the one hand, I celebrated living in such a bizarre and open culture that was found in Los Angeles, there was also the dark side with decay and deviancy. Like all things in this city that I experienced in the mid-’70s to the mid-’80s, everything was on view. You could choose to remain in the suburbs, living a Leave It To Beaver existence, or you could crawl through the cesspool of real life that was distributed throughout the downtown area. I chose the visceral and real.

Decay 1982 in Los Angeles, California

The anger rising up out of the punk rock scene was the rebellion against a candy-coated alternate reality that didn’t reflect the sterile anonymity we teens and young adults were feeling. Music and art hinted at the decay we sensed, but at every step of the way, it felt like we were encouraged to shop our way out of the bleak scenes found in suburbia. When industrial music hit Los Angeles, it felt like the soundtrack to what a city might sound like as it dies.

Decay 1982 in Los Angeles, California

German band Einstürzende Neubauten with their album Kollaps and Power Electronics group Whitehouse with Birthdeath Experience (introduced to me by this incredible woman at Vinyl Fetish on Melrose Avenue) let me fully understand that there were musicians who were not just channeling their anger against police and politicians as punk was doing. Instead, they showed me that the entire fake morality of society was trying to camouflage the intellectual and cultural decay that was vacuuming all manner of characters from our population.

Decay 1982 in Los Angeles, California

In the ruins and back alleys of L.A. I could hear the echoes of people who thought they were building the future, but out on stage, we watched the Baby Boomers spiral without function.

Decay 1982 in Los Angeles, California

Over the debris, I crawled into the abandoned carcass of the industrial machine, wondering why, in a city of millions nestled into a country of hundreds of millions could someone feel alone? The best answer I could come up with then was that it was due to the dominant culture desiring a homogeneously bland populace that would take inspiration from TV shows such as Dallas, Eight Is Enough, and Little House On The Prairie. Only the empty shell would remain, and the bones.

Decay 1982 in Los Angeles, California

So, I took to scaling the walls following the stench emanating from this cultural slaughterhouse. Rotting bones from lives tossed away stared up at me. On the side of that railway car, I looked into death and wondered, “What do I have to do to escape this system from grinding me up and casting off my bones?”

One-Stop Market Sahuarita, AZ

One-Stop Market in Sahuarita, Arizona circa 1981

From the end of 1980 until some point in 1981, I lived in Arizona with my mother, Karen Goff, and my stepfather, Vincent Goff. During that time, Vince and I would pal around and go hiking, exploring random corners of Arizona and even some old mine shafts. He introduced me to his friend Jimmy, who raced a sprint car. Jimmy invited me to help on his pit crew, while other days Vince and I would head to the races or even a golf course. On one of those adventures looking for ghost towns and mines down south, we pulled into Sahuarita at the One-Stop Market, and I snapped this image. The building was torn down in 2013, and while many of the other photos taken at this time were thrown away by my mother while I was in Germany, a couple survived.