Seattle Fans Turn Out to Remember Tuba Man

(Editor’s note: This is a long one folks.  Not quite Ironman, but pretty lengthy.)

I didn’t know why I was going.  I had no idea what to expect.  And I wanted to go alone.  

These three concepts never work in concert together in my head as drivers to get me somewhere.  But for some reason, I was compelled, almost obsessively so, to make sure I attended the Tuba Man’s memorial Wednesday night.

It was luck that I even heard about it.  I was headed to a networking event Tuesday night when a colleague convinced me it would be a waste of time.  So I headed home.  And in the 4 minutes I listened to KJR between the grocery store and home, I heard about the event.   I immediately knew I had to go.  It wasn’t even a question.

5:45pm – Before the event

It’s dark, rainy, windy, nasty.  I park near FX McCrory’s and walk down the long road that runs west of the stadiums.  Some days this is where you’d find Tuba, sitting on the ground against the fence.  The space honestly seems empty.  It’s so empty that it needs something just to fill the void.  There’s talk of a Tuba statue, and I hope that gets done.  But nonetheless, it’s the first of many times I’ll get choked up.

I’m not alone.  There’s a trickle of people, most walking by themselves, in the direction of the Qwest Events Center.  Off in the distance you can hear the sounds of the Blue Thunder marching band, marking the entrance of the building.  I walk through the covered walkway at Qwest, past where Three Finger Jack will be playing tunes come April.  I realize that these people are actually part of my gameday experience.  Hell, they are part of my city experience.

I pass the Blue Thunder and somberly walk into the Center.  It’s not an intimate place at all.  Immediately I get to a table where there is a Seahawks 12th man flag that everyone is signing.  I don’t know what to say, so I recoil.  But then I get back in line – I have to write something.  I lamely manage “Play On” and sign my name.  Who knows where that flag will end up, but at least I tried to pay some respects for posterity.

The Seattle Symphony is on stage and playing in the background.  The freaking Symphony.  I look around the room and do a rough count, estimating about 1800 chairs in 3 sections that go about 30 rows deep.  Few people are sitting yet, and I look to see if I know anyone.  The room is filled with people I know, but have never really met.  Rick the Peanut guy.  A guy who looks like the Zamboni guy.  The other peanut guy from Safeco – you know who I’m talking about.  The trumpet playing guy.  Fans in T-Bird and Hawks jerseys – guys I know I’ve high-fived or stood behind in a beer line.  

If there is a kooky Seattle fan, he or she is here.  A mix of men and women, old and young, poor and rich, white and black.  Guys who just left corner offices and guys who stumbled in off the street.  Some wear suits, some wear funny hats like the ones Tuba wore, and some wear both.  Fathers are there with their five year olds, because, they know it is something their kids need to see.  People run into each other and I overhear season ticket holders call out to one another and shake hands. It’s like a giant Irish wake, but no one here is related.  

6:30 The Event

I stand in the back corner because I’m already choking up and I don’t need to be sitting in front of three guys wearing Walter Jones jerseys when I lose it.  I can’t figure out why this is so emotional for me, but I look around and see that everyone is biting a lip, holding back a tear or just letting it flow.  We are all affected.  

The brain is an incredible machine.  When we are emotionally hurt, it is able to throw cerebral power and diffuse the pain by throwing logic at you.  You can minimize the pain from the wound by figuring out how to fix the wound.  Think about your most painful moments and how the brain comes to your rescue, “She’s not the right girl anyway,” “Even though we’ll be 1000 miles away, I’m sure we’ll stay in touch,” “There are way better jobs than that one anyway,” “I made the money once, I can make it again…..”  When pain comes, the brain steps in and develops a logical plan for coping.

But this event, this is just senseless.  A guy everyone loved was brutally beaten by 5 thugs for no reason.  The brain can’t cope.  There’s no logical process, no stream of consciousness that even begins to make sense.  A helpless guy who was a positive part of your gameday experience was killed for no reason.  You feel pain for him, his family, and yourself.  It’s just pain without the brain’s safety shield.  It just hurts.  No fixing, no logic, just hurt.

I look around and try to gauge the crowd.  I estimate about 1200-1500 people.  Wow.

The MC: The service itself begins as a thin guy in a suit starts talking and your already confused brain is trying to place the voice.  It’s so out of context, you’re almost driven mad by the fact that the man saying, “Thank you all for coming, we all loved Tuba” is the same guy who rallies a crowd with, “At Quarterback, #8, Matt Hasselbeck!” 

The other MC: Next up is Maynard, from Robin and Maynard Fame.  He is obviously shaken, but is also the guy who made it all happen.  His days with Tuba go back to KXRX and KZOK, where he would have him on air as a guest.  Another proof point as to how ingrained Tuba had become.

Chuck Armstrong: Mariners’ President Chuck Armstrong is introduced and quips, “That’s the first time I’ve gotten applause in months.”  He explains how his 27 year old son, who now lives in the Bay Area, never knew a baseball game without Tuba.  He reads a letter from his son for the event.  It’s poignant and brings tears to many.

Art Thiel: Seattle PI Sportswriter Art Thiel is next.  Thiel is another main force behind the event.  He says two things that stick with me.  One helps explain the emotions we all feel.  “Sports stadiums are like secular churches.”  He is right.  We have irrational and illogical devotion and love for these teams, for no other reason than it brings us comfort.  And Tuba was a positive part of that experience.  As a real friend of Tuba, he has insight to the man, saying, “Tuba was one of the few people who could both say funny things, and say things funny.” It’s a dramatic moment.  More tears.

John Tangeman(sp?): So if this event hasn’t had enough of a mixed bag of people yet, here comes the Stage Manager of the Seattle Ballet, Opera and McCaw Hall.  As it turns out, the same guy we all passed on our way into the Kingdome, Qwest and Safeco, is the same guy who’d sit outside McCaw and play for patrons of the ballet and opera.  John uncovers a whole new side of Tuba, explaining how he’d often give him extra tickets to a show, as long as he’d take off his hat.  And that he’d look up and see Tuba on the edge of his seat throughout the show.  John also reminisces how Tuba would play all night while he was in the ticket office writing his report.  Then when he would leave, Tuba would ask in his deep baritone, “John, would you like to be part of it tonight?”  He didn’t say, can you spare a buck.  It was, “Would you like to be part of it?”  And so he’d throw some cash into the case.

Richard Peterson was next.  A mentally disabled street musician who was Tuba’s nemesis, his conversation with Maynard was touching.

Ken Schramm: Because the night couldn’t get much more eclectic, KOMO Radio’s fiery liberal is up next.  He tells how he tried to broker a peace accord between Tuba and Peterson.  The issue, for those who don’t know the story, is that Peterson would have his trumpet, and on game days try to play music where Tuba was playing.  This would infuriate Tuba, who would move locations, only to have Peterson pop up again.  It was a street musician version of Coyote and Roadrunner.  So Schramm goes to Tuba and says, “Why don’t you guys just work together.”  And Tuba responds in his slow low voice, “Because tubas and trumpets do not make good music together…(pause)….perhaps a piccolo.”  And Schramm replies, “A tuba and a piccolo?”  And Tuba shakes his head and slowly says, no, “A trumpet and a piccolo.”  The crowd loves the story.  Laughter and tears.

Kelsey McMichael: If you haven’t cried yet, well this one is the proverbial straw.  Kelsey is Ed’s brother, and tells how Ed became Tuba.  That he had played for the Seattle Youth Symphony, the Bellevue Philharmonic for 10 years, and then the Cascade Symphony, but didn’t get paid, and thus was encouraged to try the streets where the money was better.  Kelsey has since moved to Florida and the family could never figure out, until now, why Ed couldn’t leave.  Now he knows it was because, “People here really liked him.”  He also reminds everyone Tuba’s favorite expression, the simple “Thumbs Up” sign.  He was always happy and would always give people the “thumbs up.”  So Kelsey gives the whole crowd a “Thumbs Up” and the most fitting form of confusion sets in.  We all give Kelsey a standing ovation with our thumbs up high.  But we also want to applaud.  So we’re all bawling with our stupid thumbs in the air.  And we want to clap and raise our thumbs at the same time and just can’t figure out what the f$#% to do.   One hand is wiping our eyes, one hand is in the air, and we’re trying to slap both of them together without punching ourselves in the nose.  Nothing could have been more appropriate for the situation.

Conclusion: They play a great video produced by Robin’s husband, and we get another mixture of laughter and tears.  Mr. Seahawks PA guy comes out to close the ceremony, and we have a long moment of silence.  But about halfway through the moment, as if on queue, you hear a train in the distance, blowing its own horn, almost in tribute.  The moment was not lost on anyone.

Post Event

And just like that, it is over.  The tuba ensemble plays a sad song and we are ushered into the night.  Men and women are wiping their eyes, and we all feel that twinge again as we walk by Tuba’s spot on the street, the spot that seems even more empty now.  

I get into my car and know I have to write all this down, because there is no way to explain it in short form.  I still don’t know what compelled me to go, and still can’t explain why it has had such effect.  

It honestly just breaks my heart.  A senseless death.  And my brain has given up trying to protect me from the hurt. 

Memorial for Tuba Man Tonight at Qwest Events Center

Maynard, the second part of the famed “Robin and Maynard Show” has been working overtime to put together a Memorial service tonight for the Tuba Man, Ed McMichael.

From the web site RobinAndMaynard.com:

Please join Robin & Maynard, Art Thiel, Ken Schram, and many more friends of Ed McMichael as we celebrate the life of Seattle’s Legendary “Tuba Man.” Here’s the info: 6:30pm (doors open at 5:30) Wednesday November 12th at Qwest Field Events Center.

Last night, I heard an KJR’s Gas Man interview Maynard, and he said the Seahawks, Mariners, Opera and Ballet all pitched in to make the event happen.  And Gas Man summed it up when he said anytime an event includes a “Large Tuba Ensemble” you know it’s worth attending.  

 

Why I Joined the “I Hate the Oklahoma City Thunder” Facebook Group

If you read this blog, you know this space is all for positive thoughts.  Warm, happy musings and expressions (well, most of the time.)

So, why would I join a hate group, which is what “I Hate the Oklahoma City Thunder” Facebook Group essentially is.  I mean, it’s in the title for crimminy’s sake.  I certainly don’t hate all the players on the Thunder.  I even like some of them.  I have simply chosen to ignore the NBA until the wounds heal.

But, there’s a challenge here.  The Facebook group, “1,000,000 Ok City Thunder Fans” has about 1,300 fans.  The “I Hate the Oklahoma City Thunder” has about 360.  It would be great if more people were in the group that hated the Thunder, not for personal reasons, but for what it represents – a team ripped from a solid fan base.

So join the group.  Why not?

Follow Conversations About Anything, with Monitter

Ok, so here’s a little Web site that could probably get addicting if you got good at it and could figure out what it’s most useful for.

Monitter goes out and collects Twitter “tweets” from around the Twitter-sphere and brings them to you.  You choose 3 topics that interest you, and Monitter brings you a steady stream of all the tweets in some time period that include those terms.  (If you don’t know what Twitter is, please go directly to Wikipedia or Google “Twitter” and read up on it.) You can also target by geographic area, so you only receive tweets from people who live close to you.

What’s the purpose?  I have no idea.  But it’s free, and you can use it find random information about stuff you may be interested in.  And if you figure out a “killer app” for it, let me know.



President-Elect Obama’s Online Ad Budget

ClickZ has a report that details President-Elect Obama’s online ad buy.  The article has more insights about the $8 million online media plan, but here is a condensed list of who received a little change:

  • Google: $3.5 million
  • Yahoo: $673,000
  • Centro, a local media buying firm for local TV and newspaper site buys: $630,000
  • Ad networks:  $600,000 (including AOL’s Advertising.com, Collective Media, Undertone Networks, Burst Media, Quigo, DrivePM, Pulse360, Specific Media, and online video networks Broadband Enterprises and Tremor Media)
  • Facebook: $467,000 ($370,000 in September) 
  • Time Warner (most likely CNN.com): $337,000
  • Microsoft (MSN Search): $250,000
  • Politico: $146,000 
  • BET.com: $138,000
  • The Weather Channel Interactive (geo-targeting): $108,000 
  • Cox, which offers digital local media: $100,000
  • WashingtonPost.com: $100,000.
  • Community Connect, publisher of BlackPlanet.com: $61,000
  • Microsoft-owned in-game ad network Massive: $44,465 
  • NBA.com: $21,000 (all in September)
  • MySpace: $11,500:

 

 

Remembering The Tuba Man

To answer a question many Seattle fans have asked lately, “Yes, apparently it can get worse.”

Losing a lot of games is one thing.  But the inexplicable murder of a Seattle sports icon is just downright nauseating.

He was’t an athlete, owner or executive.  He never threw a picth or wrote a scathing article.  But chances are high that if you attended a Seattle sporting event, you passed Edward McMichael – though you only knew him as, “The Tuba Man.”

He was a harmless street musician who sat outside stadiums and played a rusty tuba.  You didn’t know he was a classically trained musician.  Sometimes you threw him a quarter, sometimes you didn’t, but you always noticed him.   But unlike some of the unsavory characters walking around that area, he was not someone you ever feared.  Instead, the people you usually do fear, packs of street thugs wandering aimlessly through the night, proved why you should stay frightened.

According to reports, 5 people described as “gang members” attacked the Tuba Man for no reason at about midnight on Oct 25..  They beat him mercilessly, and he died about a week later.  Speculation is that they did it to take whatever change he had in his tuba case. 

It’s senseless.  Horrific.  It makes me sick.  No one took the Tuba Man to another town, and he wasn’t arrested and sent to Walla Walla.  Stupid little punks beat him to death.  They’ve caught two of them, but three are still at large. 

There’s talk on some comment boards about erecting a statue of a Tuba in front of one of the stadiums.  I think it’s a fabulous idea.  I’ll donate.  

I never formally met the Tuba Man.  But it makes me sad that one more piece of Seattle history and tradition has suddenly disappeared.

Added Notes:

The PI reports that Ian Newhall and his wife, Ailisa, set up a Web site Tuesday to announce a brass memorial for McMichael.  It will be held outside McCaw Hall at 11 a.m. Saturday. The repertoire: Taps, Tequila and the University of Washington Fight Song.  

There is also a Memorial fund to help cover teh costs of the funeral.  If you want to help, you can visit any Bank of America branch, Box said, or send donations to:

Edward the Tuba Man McMichael Memorial Fund 
P.O. Box 4985 
Federal Way 98063

Bonanzle on KING 5 TV

Frequent readers of this column may remember Bonanzle, a fun young company that you should check out if you are selling or buying things this holiday season.  

Most small companies believe they need huge expensive PR firms to get on local TV, but this story proves that an entusiastic customer base can bejust as  valuable for generating new PR opportunites

Check out this Bonanzle company profile produced by KING 5 this week.

 

Insult to Injury

I’m not telling anyone anything they don’t already know about Seattle Sports 2008.

  • One of worst teams in the NBA….
  • ….which then gets stolen by Oklahoma City guys. 
  • 2nd worst team in baseball……
  • ….featuring the worst trade in Major League Baseball in the last 10 years (The Seattle farm system for a guy who only wants to picth 80 pitches a game, for 3 months a season.)
  • A 1-7 WSU football team.
  • An 0-7 UW football team.
  • A 2-5 Seahawks team…..
  • ….where the first 7 receivers on the Seattle depth chart were on the injured list at the same time.
  • ….where An All-Pro QB has a back injury that affects his leg strength

You might think, “Well, that certainly couldn’t get worse.”  And a little insult gets thrown on for flavor.

1) The GM who the Mariners couldn’t get along with, wins teh World Series with the Phillies, thanks in part to a 45 year old pitcher that the Mariners didn’t think could compete as well as guys like, well, it’s just too depressing to name names.

2) This weekend the Huskies, Cougars and Seahawks are getting 83 and a half points.  EIGTHY-THREE AND A HALF.  Huskies are getting 46 1/2, Cougars 30, and Hawks 7.  

Let the pain end….

 

Conversations from years past

I was down Tucson this weekend, where old storytelling and reminiscing eventually led to amazement about everthing that has changed in the last 8-10 years.  In fact, it lead a few folks to put this list together, and I’m sure it’s incomplete.  

But on October 26 2000, if someone had shown you a newspaper for October 26, 2008, would you believe any of this could really happen?

  • US engaged in year 6 of a land war in Afghanistan
  • US engaged in year 6 of a land war in Iraq
  • Tampa Bay in the World Series
  • UW and WSU combined 1-14 record
  • The Sonics play in Oklahoma City
  • The US government pays $750+ Billion to US financial institutions – with Bear Stearns, AIG and WaMu basically out of business 
  • Gas at $3.09 a gallon – and that’s 30% CHEAPER than it was 6 months ago
  • 45 year old Jamie Moyer pitches game 4 of the World Series, while Freddy Garcia, Ryan Andersen and the rest of the “untouchable” Mariners minor league pitchers are out of baseball.
  • An unknown African American Illinois state senator is going to be elected President
  • The US President, Senate and House are all about to be a Democratic supermajority

 

Comparing the World Series to the US Presidential Election

I’m sad to say, I have no allegiance to either team in the World Series this year.  Which really kind of stinks, since I am desperate for something to root for.  (BTW, thank you Arizona Wildcats for pulling together a respectable football season and keeping me from sports harakare.)

So here I am, trying to decide who to support.  I mean, it’s 7 stupid games.  It shouldn’t be that hard to pick a team.  And through my logical analysis and emotional introspection I’ve used to try to pick a team, it suddenly dawned on me that this World Series is a microcosm of the US Presidential election.

Let’s look at the Phillies.  They have been a part of Major League Baseball forever, but yet have never quite been a team that everyone likes – or hates.  They aren’t the Cubs, Yankees or Red Sox, even though they’ve been around just as long.  They have produced some great players (Mike Schmidt, Larry Bowa, Tug McGraw), but also have some “not so special moments” (like Pete Rose crushing Ray Fosse in an All-Star game.)  And even when doing well, they’ve managed to annoy the press (Steve Carlton).  Basically, they’ve been around forever, and have gone through both good and bad years.  A few years ago, it looked like they had the big prize won, but then suffered an unexpected defeat to a team who ultimatley proved to not be worth supporting (Blue Jays).  Now they have a new squad with new people (Howard, Utley, Rollins, Hamill) but are still perceived as that “old” franchise with the ornery fans.

Now let’s examine the Rays.  On paper, this franchise is way too young to garner baseball’s greatest prize.  I mean, it’s quite an achievement for them to even make it to the final two, but can someone show me anything they’ve accomplished before 2008?  I know they had a lot of draft picks and a few experienced advisors, but until this year, these guys were simply idealists with a dream, and where heaven only lived on a whiteboard.  They have no real history, save for a few veterans who have never achieved any similar level of success anywhere else.  And yet, now Tampa Bay has die-hard, almost obsessive, fans who will shave their head and other body parts to support their team.  Every young fan – plus old fans who love a fairy tale story about achieving greatness in record time – has become a loud, proud Rays fan.

Now let’s look at how they got here.  While the Phillies breezed through their National League Primary, I mean Playoff, the Rays had to go to the late innings of Game 7, going toe to toe with an experienced, veteran, old school franchise that simply wouldn’t go away, even though it was apparent that they wouldn’t win.  In fact, the Rays had a chance to knock the Red Sox out in Game 5 – up 7-0 in the 7th – but then inexplicably the Red Sox had one huge run, and managed to make life complicated for everyone involved, until finally succumbing. 

So what do you think?  Who do you vote/root for this World Series….