Citius, Altius, Delugious! - Humor Column
Citius, Altius, Delugious!
Well, the Olympic are over for at least another year or so (kind of lost
that quadrennial thing when they split up the summer and the winters
ones).
Actually, I just read that the Beijing Winter Olympics are starting in six months. I. Am. So. Confused.
30 meter Bag Lift - This one involves 100 pounds of plastic grocery bags and three flights of stairs. Also, to add a degree of difficulty, the participant must remove his or her house keys from his or her pants pocket and open the door without putting down the bags before the clock runs out. Good luck with that.
At any rate, I think I was one of only two people (based on the
Nielson ratings) who actually managed to watch all the coverage on NBC's
various "platforms."
Well, not entirely, there were some weird ones that were being
posted directly into people's brains via hoof and mouth vaccinations
that I decided to pass on (equestrian events are not my thing, see
below). But I got nearly all the rest!
Speaking of which, just what the Hokkaido Heck is a "platform?"
I always thought it was a raised level surface. Or the declared
policy of a political group. Apparently now it has something to do with
broadcasting. Kind of in the same way that news organizations no longer
talk about stories and news, they talk about
"content."
Anyway, the "content" now comes in "platforms." I hope they are not
as rickety as platform shoes. Used to fall off those all the time in
the 1970s.
Ah well, this modern media world gives me a heck-ache sometimes.
But I digress.
Following the Olympics on all the various "platforms" was a lonely
trek this year. At times I felt as if it was just me and Simone Biles.
She was on all the "platforms" all the time. Clearly NBC forgot there
were 11,090 other athletes in Tokyo. Which is
probably just as well. How many hundreds of other "platforms" would they
have needed to cover THEM.
From the puzzling (Horse Dancing) to the weird (triple jump) to the
cool (speed wall climbing) there seemed to be something for every
"platform" out there.
And, my gosh, there were such incredible feats of athletic
derring-do to behold. Some of these folks (not the horse dancing ones)
were just incredible athletic specimens.
100 Expletive Dash - You start driving at one end of
town and see how far you can get before an "expletive" pops out of your
mouth at the pedestrians or other drivers. Seems simple, no? I can
usually make it about two and a half blocks.
Of course, that got me thinking, what about an Olympics for the
average Joe or Jane? You know "a festivus for the rest of us" ala
Seinfeld. Or perhaps we should call it a,"competitus for the rest of
us."
During the games Bill Murray tweeted that we don't really
understand how hard these events are, so we need to have a "regular"
person compete - and fail horribly - in each event so we would have
"perspective." Or at least in the "speed" events instead
of a line show the world record "pace," we could have a line far, far,
far behind the contestants showing Billy-Bob Six Pack's "pace."
That would be fun.
Just like watching the Canadian Olympic Coverage when I was young.
It was the only live sports we got in those days, back in the 1960s.
There would be a race and an American and a Soviet would be dueling
right up to the end and then the coverage would
jump back to Bob MacKenzie who had just set a new "Canadian Record"
while finishing in 12th place. We never would find out who "won."
But I digress, again
I think we should go a step further. Let's just have a few
"regular" events. You know events that celebrate the quotidian (look it
up) of life here in Our Fair Salmon City.
Here are some possible additions if and when the Olympics ever come to Southern Southeast Alaska.
Artistic Rain Dancing - A combination of
gymnastics and fencing. Watching the gymnasts' moves is cool, but what
if they were doing the same "elements " out in "the elements,"
specifically a rain shower and each time a rain drop hit them
they lost a point? Can Simone Biles - she's everywhere!!! - make it from
the car to the grocery store without getting drenched? Let's find out!
30 meter Bag Lift - This one involves 100 pounds of plastic grocery bags and three flights of stairs. Also, to add a degree of difficulty, the participant must remove his or her house keys from his or her pants pocket and open the door without putting down the bags before the clock runs out. Good luck with that.
Underwater Marathon - Seriously, because of the
rainfall, we have some folks here who have been underwater their entire
lives. The Olympics loves painful endurance contests like race walking,
open water swimming and forcing people to sit through
rhythmic gymnastics. This is a no (waterlogged) brainer.
400 Ingredient Substitution - Yes, I get that cooking
events are not part of the Olympics, yet. But with cooking competition
shows veritably bursting out our television sets like carnivorous
souffles. it's only a matter of time. To Ketchikanize
any cooking competition all you have to do is give the contestants a
list of ingredients that are not available in Ketchikan. These days -
when local stores can be perpetually out of such "hard-to-find" exotic
ingredients as water, eggs and garlic - that list
would be just about anything you could easily find in any grocery store
not on Revillagigedo Island.
Samon Senso - Martial arts are big thing in the
Olympics: Judo, Karate, Taekwando. Next up, Samon Senso, which
very-very-very loosely translates into "salmon wars." No, this doesn't
involves rushing out in the open ocean and "corking" each
other's seine nets to see who gets the most fish. This is a more
time-honored Ketchikan form of martial combat. One on one. Mano a mano.
Greco-Roman (only blows to the head and shoulders count). With matching
frozen 11-pound salmon. May the freezer burn be
with you.
And if you absolutely must get your Olympic jollies by forcing an animal
to perform unnatural acts (see Horse Dancing above). Then we need to
show what true training skills are. The Halibut Hop.
Seriously, anyone can make a horse do a flying
change or a piaffe, but making a Halibut do the same movements? Nearly
Impossible! Especially considering the halibut has no legs or feet.
So, let's get on this Ketchikan!
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