Two Asian factory workers sit side-by-side at their
worktable, toiling away.
ASIAN FACTORY
WORKER NUMBER ONE: “Do you think
the people we are making these for know we’re eleven?”
ASIAN FACTORY
WORKER NUMBER TWO: “I doubt they
think about the employees manufacturing these products at all. Which is hardly historic. Do you think the American North in the 1850’s
had stores, advertising, ‘These shirts were made from cotton picked by people
who were actually paid something’?” They’d have gone out of business – ‘We can’t
compete with unpaid ‘pickers.’ The
purchasers, maybe, had momentary qualms,
but, you know, if you like a shirt, and you appreciate the low price because of
the unpaid ‘pickers’, you think, ‘Let Lincoln worry about the slaves. I can’t wait to wear this to the Abolitionist Fundraiser.’”
“You read too much.”
“Reading’s my life, outside of the factory. Depressing work, depressing reading. A fully integrated existence.”
“You ought to be grateful for this job. Remember where we came from. They don’t call it ‘subsistence farming’ for
nothing.”
“‘Subsistence’ was a good
year. Generally, it was plowing and
starving.”
“Today – overworked, living in cubicles – it’s
‘heaven.”
“Okay, so we are ‘Lucky Duck’ factory workers, making … what
is this? You know, half the stuff we manufacture, I
have no idea what it’s for.”
What do you mean – Pez
dispensers, shaped like Popeye?
“Okay, that one, I
‘get.’ And the ‘Action Figures’ they sell at fast food
restaurants – makes them forgot about what they’re eating. But it’s the just same ‘form’ with different painted
decorations. ‘I’m a Ninja!’ ‘I’m an astronaut.’ It’s exactly the same toy! Made from material we’re not supposed to use
but they don’t check so we do.”
“Well, this time
it’s different.”
“What, this
thing?”
“Yes. This time, it’s
meaningful.”
“Are you seeing what I’m
seeing – a rectangular piece of cloth, dyed blue? It’s not exactly the cure for botulism.”
“It’s a washcloth. People use them to dry off their faces. This is exciting. We are in ‘Bathroom Accessories.’”
“That’s ‘exciting’ to you?”
“It’s better than dolls that immediately break when you take
them out of the box. We’ll be around
fine towels, soaps and emollients.”
“Where’d you get that
word?”
“My sister sells cosmetics at the ‘Flea Market’.”
“What do you think these letters mean on this blue rectangle
– “L. A.”?
“’Lovely Accessories.’
I’m proud to make washcloths.
I’ll know, every time someone daubs their faces, I’ve made an important
contribution to personal hygiene.”
“I don’t
know. They look like washcloths. But
I’m not certain they are.”
THE FACTORY FOREMAN WALKS BY.
FACTORY FOREMAN: “Less talk.
More ‘rectangles’.”
“Excuse me. What are
we making, please?”
“Those are going to Los Angeles.”
“Oh. (TURNING TO
FACTORY WORKER NUMBER ONE) ‘L. A.’”
“They are promotional items for baseball games. The fans wave them over their heads to
encourage their players.”
“That’s what we’re making?
Something you wave over your head?”
“Are you sure they’re not washcloths?”
THE FACTORY FOREMAN SNORTS DERISIVELY.
“Like we’d ever
make anything useful. It’s a
‘Promotional Giveaway.’ When you are
done stitching them, they move down the ‘line’ and one of your co-workers stamps
‘Stubhub’ on them. And by the way, I
am docking you for this conversation.”
THE FACTORY FOREMAN HEADS AWAY.
“(DEJECTED) I thought
they were washcloths.”
“Sorry. They’re
landfill.”
“Well, at least they’ll get exercise, waving them over their
heads.”
“Always the optimist.’”
“Actually, I was thinking about going back to the country.”
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. DODGER STADIUM – SUNDAY OCTOBER 15, 2017.
In the bottom of the ninth inning, Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner breaks a 1-1 tie with a towering
homerun over the centerfield wall, bringing them a dramatic 4-1 playoff victory
over the Cubs.
Fifty-six thousand rabid, Dodgers fans (including this chronicler) roar like maniacs, wildly
waving their Dodger-Blue, Stubhub "Rally Towels: over their heads.
Hopefully, watching secretly over the Internet, an invigorated
Asian factory worker is thinking,
“Better than
washcloths. Wait’ll I tell them at work!”
Key To The Process: I read “Made in China” on the tag of the “Rally
Towel, and I was off to the races.
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