When I was growing up in Toronto, we had a minor league
baseball team. I did not see my first Major League game till I was nineteen – Phillies versus the Mets at Shea Stadium in New York.
It turned out it was a 6-0 “Perfect Game” (no runs, no hits, no walks,
no errors), pitched by Phillies’ future
Hall of Famer Jim Bunning.
When it was over, I found myself standing in front of my
seat, hearing my voice bellowing an appreciative,
“Thank you!”
… in the direction of the field.
Not because I had witnessed the four-leaf clover rarity of a
“Perfect Game”, but because I had sat in a Major League stadium, enjoying every
magical second of a Major League ball game.
Since that first time, without exception – and I now have
dozens of Major League attendances under my belt – in New York, L.A., San
Francisco, Chicago, Anaheim, Washington D.C., Toronto, and San Diego – I have never
failed to bellow an appreciative “Thank you!”
at the end of every game, before making my way up the aisle to the exit.
(A Small Variation:
During the late nineties, when I consulted on the New York-based series Lateline, I attended {yet another} Phillies-Mets game with
the series’ two creators, {now two-term Senator) Al Franken and John Markus. On that night, the Mets organization handed out complimentary baseball caps to every
attendee.
As the game ended, I stood up and did what I do. Only this time – as I overheard later John
reporting to {now two-term Senator} Al – “Earl just said, ‘Thanks for the hats.’”)
And the thing was…
I meant it.
Moving on…
As a warm-up man – I was, on occasion, the guy who kept the studio
audience entertained during the filming of shows like Taxi and Cheers – my
approach was demonstrably different from my warm-up man – there were no warm-up
women at that time – contemporaries.
Some warm-up men revved up the audience with tried-and-true
material from their stand-up acts. Some
offered impressions of recognized celebrities.
One warm-up man dazzled the crowd with his ability to balance a
standing-up quarter on the tip of his nose.
Another contorted his face so that he looked exactly like a primate from
Planet of the Apes. Or one of its sequels.
I had no paralleling abilities. How then did I keep the audience involved?
“You may think you have come here to watch a show,” I would
begin, “but you’re wrong. Because it’s
better than that. Instead of just watching
a show, you will be watching us making
a show.
“Nobody but this audience will have the advantage of that
experience. You will see the show taking
shape before your very eyes. And you
will know all of our secrets.
“When you this episode is broadcast at home, only you will be able to say, ‘You hear that
line he just said? They had to shoot
that four times, because the actor kept flubbing his lines.’ And after the third try, he said ‘Dammit!’
“Or you’ll say, ‘Did you hear that joke? Well, that wasn’t the original joke. The original joke didn’t get a laugh, so the
writers got together on the stage, and they came up with another joke. And you know
what? It was funnier!’
“Tonight, you will go behind the curtain, and see the show
miraculously coming together. Nobody
else will have that opportunity. Only
you.
“Pretty exciting, isn’t
it.”
That’s all I had. And
it goes without saying – at least I hope
it does – that, as with all the baseball game “Thank you’s!” and that one “Thanks for the hat”…
I meant it.
And the audience generally picked up my enthusiasm. I sincerely loved being there, and somehow,
that made the audience love being there too.
I had one boss who thought I was faking. More than once he’d say, “Knock off that
‘shit-kicker’ routine.”
I couldn’t.
Because it was real.
Recently, for the first time, I started wondering where that
unusual reaction came from? And then it finally
hit me.
It came from my mother.
My mother was a spontaneous appreciator of little moments, moments
others obliviously took for granted.
An exquisitely-folded napkin. (“Look how they did that!”) The backyard garden smell of lilacs in the
spring. I can still see her face light
up when she proclaimed, “This watermelon is out of this world!”
(In addition, my paternal grandmother lit up with beatific
contentment in the presence of a really good lamb chop.)
Not long ago, we had dinner at this not fancy but
recognizably superior restaurant. I
don’t know what “squash blossoms” are, but my first taste had me doing a “Happy
Dance” in my mouth.
My immediate impulse was to rise up from my seat and shout
“Thank you!” to the chef. I did not do that, partly because my dining
companion was unlikely to have approved.
But also because my mind turned to another
worthy – and shamefully neglected – recipient of my gratitude.
For teaching me to notice and to appreciate...
Thank you!"
1 comment:
Appreciating every moment in life is a rare trait, but it allows you to live two lifetimes. Congratulations, and "Thank You", Earl.
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