Like the Bob Seger
song of the same name. In fact, if you “YouTube”
the song and play it while you’re reading this, you’ll have a blog post with
its own personalized soundtrack.
I think I’m a
genius! I mean, not entirely, because
I’m not doing it myself, but you know… I had the idea.
I thought I was way finished with the Golden Globes. But then, a
situation came up that reminded me that no matter how old I get, there are
parts of me that remain unalterably the same.
For example:
The “Acute Gullibility Factor.”
Which you’d think would improve with age.
“Fool me once, shame on you.
Fool me a few hundred times… I’m an idiot!
With me, however, it seems indisputably the case: No improvement. On the “up” side, at least my gullibility is
not getting worse. Although, come to
think of it, how could it? “Gullibility”
is like falling down a hole. There is no
falling half way.
So Anna and I are on the phone, hashing over the Golden Globes. First off, she is surprised that I watched
it, because I have demonstrated little interest in awards shows since they
stopped nominating me, the last time
being in 1997, for being a “Consulting Producer” on The Larry Sanders Show.
Anna then asked if I watched the whole thing. And, to her amazement, I replied, “Yes.” To which the only reasonable follow-up
question, and, being no dope Anna asked it, was…
“Why?”
Her question immediately shot me back to the mid-1950’s,
when our family regularly spent the “Passover Season” in pre-casino, Atlantic
City – eight days of matzah and merriment at Malamud and Meltzer’s renowned Breakers Hotel. (I recall two giant monogrammed “M’s”,
intertwined on the entryway carpet.)
I received a dollar a day to entertainment myself at the
Boardwalk’s arcades, a sufficient amount, since the arcade games were a nickel. Five cents was also the purchase price for little
brown paper bags of birdseed, which you could hold in your hand while the
Boardwalk’s ubiquitous gatherings of pigeons gobbled it up, pecking simultaneously
at your palm, as if birdseed was good, but birdseed mixed with a little “palm
skin” – Delicious!
When I tired of the “Shooting Gallery, I could hang out with
the world famous “Mr. Peanut” at the enormous Planters Emporium. I could
get my shoes polished by a guy who, from dawn till dusk, stood dead-eyed,
mechanically droning, “You can’t look near if your shoes are beat.” I could also wander down to the Steel Pier, and imagine an event
long-since curtailed – most probably by the ASPCA
–
Horses diving into the ocean off the end of the pier.
But my favorite activity, bar none, was watching guys try to
sell things.
Though I have no hucksteral tendencies myself, I am in
prostrating awe of the “Huckster Community.”
There must have been a dozen of them, interspersed among the Boardwalks’
booths, mesmerizing “Magicians of Merchandising” stationed behind tall counters
before a rapidly accumulating audience, with their sleeves rolled up and their machine-gun
patter, hawking products you don’t want, you don’t need, and you will never use
in your entire life.
Glass knives. Pens
that write underwater. Athlete’s foot
remedies (accompanied by graphic photographs of patients, their legs strapped
to hospital beds, keeping them from scratching their excruciatingly itching
feet into a lacerating pulp.)
And, of course, there was the Chop-o-matic.
“It slices. It dices.”
I could literally watch these guys for hours. The sun would go down, and I’d still be
standing there, buying nothing, but utterly entranced.
On one memorable occasion, one enterprising “Pitch Man”
brought out “Robby The Robot”, of TV and crap movie fame. I was nine, and I was in heaven. After a brief but captivating performance,
“Robby The Robot” departed the stage. I distinctly
remember the “Pitch Man” unfastening his wristwatch, and placing it on the
counter in front of him. He then pointed
dramatically at the wristwatch and announced,
“In exactly ten minutes, my friends, “Robby the Robot” will
return to the stage, where, for your entertainment, he will perform a little
dance.”
I remained there long after it was dark, the indefatigable
“Pitch Man” babbling away, hawking everything from “Shammy Cloths” to stain
remover.
“Robby The Robot” never returned to the stage.
The next thing I knew, I was surrounded by two very tall
Atlantic City police officers, who escorted me back to the Breakers Hotel, delivering me to my apoplectic mother. I did not understand the excitement.
“I thought you were lost!” my mother tearfully
exclaimed. To which I replied a line
that, in time, became part of “Pomerantz Family Lore”:
“‘Lost’ isn’t when you
don’t know where I am,” I explained. “‘Lost’
is when I don’t know where I am.”
Why did I remain watching that pitchman for over seven
hours?
I was waiting for “Robby The Robot” to come back.
Why did I watch the entire Golden Globes show?
I was waiting for hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler to come
back.
(A three-hour program – they returned to the stage maybe
three times.)
Yup, they’re still doin’ it.
And me?
I am still fallin’ for it.
1 comment:
Good story, there have to be some more stories of that annual trek.
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