Showing posts with label The Golf Channel at the Pond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Golf Channel at the Pond. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Golf Channel at The Pond: a recap


I’m happy to oblige the several people who weren’t there and were eager to hear a jiffy recap about what happened Friday when Golf Channel came to The Pond to film us telling stories about native son Arnold Palmer.

Friends wanted to know if it was fun. Did it go well? Did anyone say anything memorable?

Yes, it was lots of fun, it seemed to go well and I said something memorable about two minutes after I walked through the door.

First of all, I’d underestimated how big a deal this was going to be. I thought this would be a little filler segment they’d throw together in time for Palmer’s 84th birthday on Sept. 10.

Wrong. This will be a ballyhooed special set to air in March. It is expected to be a definitive Palmer profile.

To get it right, the network sent a real A-Team to town.

And by real “A-Team” I’m talking about three accomplished broadcast professionals, not Mr. T., Howling Mad Murdoch or any other paramilitary types resourceful enough to assemble things like cabbage cannons from rusty farm implements. 

And, sorry, boys, but that would have been much more cool and would have completely changed the character of today’s post.

It turns out I had the logistics all wrong, too. I thought my most likely contribution would be Palmer stories I told during on-camera interviews Saturday at the Palmer Marriott.

That was perfect. I’d planned to get in early Friday, get a good night’s sleep, write down some notes and be fresh and ready for my interview.

Well, that was canceled.

Instead, it was all set for Friday at The Pond.

I didn’t learn this until Friday when I stumbled into The Pond.

This was unfortunate because Thursday I had one of my best buddies from college visit for golf and sudsy revelry. We really whooped it up that night and Friday dawned with the predictable hangover.

No problem. I wobbled through the day content in the knowledge I had no obligations to appear presentable or thoughtful.

So I was surprised when I walked into the bar and stranger asked, “You Chris?”

I told him I was “a” Chris. This seemed good enough for him because he immediately began unbuttoning my shirt.

He was Alan the sound man. In short order I was introduced to Mason the producer and a camera man whose name I lost in the whirlwind.

The three were the rare tricky mix of cheerful and competent. I’ve known many cheerful incompetents and an equal number of competent sourpusses, but few who combine elements of both positives.

Mason told me I was going to emcee a sort of bar round-table where we swapped Palmer stories.

It took Alan less than a minute to cheerfully and competently put a live mic on me, just slightly less time that it took me to protest that I hadn’t shaved, wasn’t wearing my lucky shirt and would need a quick nap before I was ready.

Too late. The train was leaving the station.

I was thrilled to see a stool open right next to Dick. He’s Dave’s Dad and the great, beloved man who built the family bar in 1954. He’s 87. I say that not so I can say, gee, he’s still sharp as a tack, spry, etc. I say it so you’ll challenge the conventional wisdom next time you hear anyone say that only the good die young.

Mason wanted me to interview Dick first. It was all happening so fast.

“Are you nervous?” Dick asked.

I am, I said.

“Do you want a shot of whiskey?”

No, I said. I think that would be unprofessional. Why? Are you having one?

“Yes, I am.”

I told him I’d have a double.

It was nerve-racking. And then it got worse when I confided to Dick what I now recall as my most memorable line.

“You know,” I said, “my whole goal here today is to be witty and insightful enough that the Golf Channel crew will out of gratitude splurge for me to take my wife to a fancy dinner at the country club.”

The three cheerful competents all heckled from across the bar that wasn’t in their budget.

The live mic had broadcast my whispers into the crews’ ear pieces clear across the bar.

What’s great is there seemed to be many more memorable lines. The crew and Palmer assistant Cori Britt all seemed pleased that it had gone well.

I was pleased that no one razzed me too harshly about my role. In fact, most were very encouraging, again reminding me that The Pond is a gold mine of good-hearted people.

The recognition made me feel so good it almost healed my hangover.

As for other memorable lines, we’ll just have to wait see what makes the final cut.

Either way, who really cares? We had a great night, met some nice people and can now all look forward to the show’s March premier.

Memorable lines?

Frankly, my dears, I don’t give a damn.

Now, that’s a memorable line. I wish I’d have thought about using it Friday. 



Related . . .


Thursday, August 15, 2013

The Golf Channel doing Palmer interviews at The Pond


Friday night at The Pond promises to be either one of the best or one of the worst nights in the bar’s 59-year history.

And one way or the other, a disproportionate share of the glory or the blame will likely fall on me.

That’s because on Friday at 5 p.m., producers from The Golf Channel will descend on my favorite bar to film locals yapping about Arnold Palmer.

And I had nothing to do with it. Honest.

Blame the Pond cheese sticks.

One of Palmer’s most trusted assistants has been hooked on them since he first started coming to The Pond about 20 years ago as a Saint Vincent College student. He now lives in Orlando where he helps Palmer oversee his globe-spanning empire.

Lavish business trips to exotic destinations in China or Europe are as routine to him as ordering Pond cheese sticks are to me.

He’s a very worldly, very refined and discriminating gent -- and I’m not laying it on extra thick just because I know he also loves this blog (thanks, Cori!). 

So when he asked me last week to share on-camera some of my Palmer stories for the show, he also said he wanted to include some Latrobe locals talking about Palmer -- and he wanted to have them do it right here at The Pond.

He asked me to line up some local characters to tell some great stories about Palmer.

Note: he didn’t say great true stories.

So now I have a vested interest in shining as positive a light as possible on both Palmer and The Pond.

Palmer, of course, should be a cinch. Everyone knows his accomplishments, his philanthropy and his friendships with both regal and democratic heads of state.

But The Golf Channel isn’t coming to The Pond to hear any of that.

That’s why tonight I’m hosting Pond auditions to get creative storytellers to tell tales that add depth and color to the Palmer legend.

And if all goes as planned, they will be legendary indeed.

First, I’ll be casting a glowing young woman who’ll say Palmer just appeared out of no where to deliver her healthy septuplets. “My water broke in traffic and I knew I’d never make it to the hospital so I pulled over and just tried to stay calm. I knew help was on the way. See, in Orlando pregnant mothers go to the Palmer hospital to deliver babies. Here in Latrobe, Arnold Palmer comes to pregnant mothers.” 

There will tear-jerker stories of Palmer rescuing cats from trees, saving blind grannies from burning buildings and thrilling tales of Palmer interrupting his Sunday morning round of golf to repair broken TVs moments before Steeler kickoffs.

I intend to cast a dead ringer look-alike to the Dos Equis “World’s Most Interesting Man” who can be filmed sitting in the corner and repeatedly mouthing in astonishment, “Wow!”

And don’t bother auditioning for the role of the eternally grateful woman Palmer bequeaths after hearing her pitiful story about her no-account husband who spends night after night in a local tavern dreaming up preposterous stories for his deadbeat blog.

The role’s perfect for my wife.

I’m not worried about The Pond shining. People love The Pond. It’s very authentic. Earlier this week WDVE 102.5 sportscaster Mike Prisuta raved on-air about his enjoyable Monday evening Pond visit. He gushed about the bar’s extensive and unique bobblehead collection that includes St. Francis of Assisi and the be-speckled Empire Carpet Man (sing it with me! “800-588-2300, Empire!”)

What does concern me is the bar being infiltrated by fame-seeking parents barging in with their tuba-toting prodigies.

That’s what happened in Mayberry once when Deputy Fife confused an ordinary shoe salesman for a big shot Hollywood talent scout. All the town rubes brought their tin-eared brats hoping they’d be discovered.

So, please, don’t anyone come to The Pond tomorrow at 5 with their children hoping a Golf Channel cameo will catapult them to international fame.

It’s just not going to happen.

Not a chance.

Not unless the kid shows up ready to play a mean ukelele folk song about the amazing adventures of the great Arnold Palmer!



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