It's not every day that one gets the chance to hear a former writer for DAVID LETTERMAN wax poetic about weird wax (the vinyl kind) he's scavenged at garage sales and eBay. STEVE YOUNG delivered his spiel about Industrial Musicals to the bemused audience, who trilled with each telling of such album discoveries as Go Fly a Kite. Back in the '50s, '60s, and '70s, large corporations like General Electric blew big bucks on albums meant to inform their employees about the company and its product. Hence, "hits" like Ford-ify Your Future and Diesel Dazzle. Young became entranced by these records, and started collecting them. "They were pretty cool in a pathetic sort of way," he admitted sheepishly.
As with any good show-and-tell presentation, Young had sound samples cued up from these corporate show tunes, some of which were penned and performed by actual famous people. VALERIE HARPER may be horrified to learn that her Go Fly a Kite contribution has been exposed to the world. One record, Young noted wryly, was written by the same people who composed Fiddler on the Roof, BOCK AND HARNICK. The crowd favorite seemed to be a ditty from the record for the 1969 American Standard Bathroom Show, which featured a blowsy female vocalist singing, "My bathroom is a private kind of place."
Mr. Young's lecture was followed by DORETTA LAU, a young Canadian who gave a speech about the plight of Canadian immigrantsor the "secretly Canadian," as she put it. While she admitted that Canadian immigrants' struggles pale in comparison to Mexican immigrants', they still face many INS problems. Up to that point, her lecture was simultaneously ridiculous and straightforward, but it delved into DAVID LYNCH territory when "Betty"an illegal Canadian immigrantcame onstage. "Betty" wore an Incredible Hulk mask and spoke through a vocoder to "protect her identity." I guess you could call her Lau's "visual aid."
More nuttiness ensued. Before the third lecture, on the World's Greatest Female Ping-Pong Player, ANGELICA ROZEANU, Trampoline Hall host MISHA GLOUBERMAN asked ERIC MORSE to come on down. Morsewhom I know from Seattlehas an online magazine called Trampoline House, and sometimes holds events under the same name. Apparently this caused some confusion with fans of the lecture series. So, the two decided to clear up the dispute like meni.e., without the help of lawyersand Morse promised in front of the crowd to call his live events something less trampolinesque, and they shook hands.
After JESSE COHEN finally took the stage to talk about Angelica Rozeanu, whose story he chose for its Forrest Gump-like qualities, he was shocked and awed by a guest in the crowd. Throughout the lecture, Cohen referred to numerous e-mails from MARTY REISMAN, a former table tennis champion. At the oration's end, Reisman announced himself, and everyone cheered. Dressed in a gray suit with a hat that matched, Reisman looked like an Italian mobster, and talked like one too. He had the crowd wrapped around his pinkie (which I swear had a ring on it) as he relayed how rubberized paddles ruined Ping-Pong, then began hawking his own wares (he wrote a book once, The Money Player). But alas, there are always only three lecturers at Trampoline Hall eventsand you can't be an expert on the subjectso Marty will have to come back sometime to talk about something else. I'll be there, pen and paper in hand.
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