Beer, Peanuts, and everything else about the Stadium Experience. Except the game.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
A Bellboy on Tipping
O's -------- 7
Sold ------- only 58 cans of Corona
I'm sick of afternoon traffic up to Baltimore, so today I hit the road just after 3:00, and made it up to Charm City with enough time to stop in at Second Chance Architectural Salvage, a group of warehouses filled with old oak doors, stained glass windows, and dusty decorative ironwork.
One building is stuffed with antique furniture. In one room was an intricately carved dresser, labeled "From the Belvedere Hotel." Inside the top drawer of the dresser was a folder, and inside the folder was a typed, three page essay. The essay was sort of a summary memoir of a guy's recollections of working was a bellboy at the grand hotel in the teens and '20s, when ladies had a separate entrance and lobby, and hansom cabs delivered the glitterati to stay. In between name dropping guests Woodrow Wilson, Jack Dempsey, Mark Twain, Mary Pickford, and Rudy Valentino (who "had the handsomest face that I had ever seen on a man"), the anonymous essayist put in a good bit about the culture of tipping. Some of it still applies:
Tipping then was not as general as it is today. We had to take care of plenty of stiffs. In the language of the bellboy a "stiff" is one who does not tip. And, speaking of tipping, I can remember some my impressions of the tipping habits of the various people. Actors and actresses of the legitimate stage tipped generously enough, but were usually difficult and demanding. You earned what you received from a traveling salesman. The people of the sports world were best tippers. Catholic priests were high on my list. They were not only generous but easy to serve. This is no plug, as I am a Baptist myself.
The ones that I could not figure out were the Japanese of that time. Whenever a good-sized group of people would arrive the bellmen would expect some stiffs. These well-dressed little men would arrive with their baggage, some of which would be imitation leather or straw, and after you showed them to their rooms you would be paid by everyone, usually a quarter or a half-dollar -- a big tip in those days. I figured out that their government had briefed them before coming over to be generous and to leave a good impression on the American people. They sure made a good impression on me. This was, of course, long before there was any talk of war between us.
...
Firpo
The latino fans come out of the woodwork for these obscure club teams, and 'Luis Angel Firpo' (the club's full name) is about as off the path as they come. They're a Salvadoran soccer club named after an Argentinian boxer who became a hero after knocking Jack Dempsey out of the ring [see picture]. And then lost. In the 2nd round. By knockout. 63 years later, he's still got a soccer team named after him. To put this in an American context, this would be like the Detroit Pistons being named the Detroit George Chuvalo.
While we're on the subject of Canada, I'll mention that the book "100 Greatest Canadian Sports Moments" has listed at #17: "Big Ben [Johnson] Gallops to Gold in Seoul" and at #18: "Montreal Expos Win Division Title" (italics mine). Number 76 celebrates an Olympic gold in curling, and over half of the entries deal with ice-based events. This should tell you what you need to know about Canada's place in the sporting world.
* Proof of El Salvador's sizable population in the greater Washington, DC area can be found at these national team games, when they fill the stands all the way to the upper deck. One international match against the island nation of Anguilla drew about 22,000 people overall, almost all of whom -- let's estimate an even 20,000 -- were supporters of El Salvador. This is more than the entire nation of Anguilla, which possesses an estimated population of 14,436. Or to put it another way, Anguilla's population is equivalent to only about 50 times the number of ticketless Salvadorans who, late in that same game, overwhelmed a security guard and forced open a no-admission portal. So about 2% of the island of Anguilla, in the form of 300 gate-crashing Salvadorans, were represented as non-paying audience that suddenly crowded the main seating area aisle and made it impossible for a vendor to get through.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Benjamin Franklin
- Cardinals: 6
- Phillies: 14
- Sold: Innumerable beers, waters, and frozen lemonades.
I now have a pocketful of tips -- mostly in singles and fives, which accumulate day to day and make me look like either an poor man's ganster, or the most dedicated strip club patron in history -- one of which is a $100 bill. Normally I trade those in to pay back the room for beer sold, but my room manager rejected this one when it didn't pass his special marking pen test. Was I in the possession of a counterfeit bill? Not necessarily. The manager pointed out that it was probably made out of different paper and security features...since it was made in 1950. Upon closer inspection I saw that it did say "SERIES 1950," right below old Ben's oval portrait and the orderly cursive scrawled signature of "John W. Snyder," Secretary of the Treasury.
All the time I see dollar bills with www.wheresgeorge.com stamped on them, which allows one to track the bill's history as it travels from hand to hand and place to place, but there's no "where's Ben" site. Who knows how this bill survived almost 60 years in circulation, what mattress or shoebox it had lain under or in to preserve it? And what might it be worth?* Not too terribly much; a quick search on the net indicated that a dealer might value it at up to $125 in mint condition, but it was in weathered, rumpled shape when I got it, and it was further drenched by vendor's sweat by the end of the afternoon. So all things considered, it's not too hard to assign a probable collectible value to it: $100. If it's not fake.
Interesting differences between it and a more recent C-note: Treasurer and Treasury Secretary are different, as are the guarantees denoted on the front left side -- the current bill bears the familiar "THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE"; the old bill had added to it: "..., AND IS REDEEMABLE IN LAWFUL MONEY AT THE UNITED STATES TREASURY, OR AT ANY FEDERAL RESERVE BANK." I'd never fully considered that the 'Federal Reserve Notes' we tote around in our pocket are not actually 'lawful money.'
The security features mandated in the 1990's leave the newer bill less symmetrical than the 1950 version, and the off-center, oversize portrait of Ben Franklin on my 1996 bill (which now nests in my wallet next to his older papa version) makes him look more dour and disapproving that the quizzical, inquisitive Ben that mid-century Americans were toting around in their hip pockets. The old Ben looks lively and creative, the kind of guy who might fly a kite in a lightning storm to see what would happen. Our current Benjamin looks ready to rap your knuckles for writing left-handed.
One the reverse, side Philly's Independence Hall is there on both bills in a similar front elevation layout. One significant difference: the familiar "IN GOD WE TRUST" bookending the Hall's central tower. It's there on the 1996 bill, absent on the 1950 bill. US currency apparently didn't carry this motto until Congressional mandate in 1951. One can only determine that Americans have become more religious in the last half-century.
*Last year during Phillies playoff game, another vendor asked me to check out a dollar bill he'd gotten. It looked strange to him, he said, and it looked strange to me too. It was crisp and new-looking, almost perfectly preserved, and it turned out to be a blue-sealed Silver Certificate dollar bill. Collectible probably, and amazing to have been received amid the beery foam and soggy steps of a ballpark, and in such perfect shape. The vendor decided to keep it, then folded it in half -- creasing it down the middle -- and shoved it in his wallet.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Trading Up
Halladay is maybe the best pitcher in baseball right now, which means he'll be expensive, and the Phillies are in the running because (1) they're contenders, and nothing succeeds like success, and (2) they have the money to get him, and nothing makes money like a winning team. The money comes from the fans, and their ticket is just a starter for getting to the rest of the money in their pockets. Plenty of the nosebleeds I spend my time selling to go for as much as $16 per ass, which is only marginally more than the $13.50 a pair of beers will cost them (no wonder they don't want to tip). That doesn't count the $4 water, the $4.50 Frozen Lemonade, their $4.25 soda, their $5 foam finger, a $10 program, and their $15 Phillie Phantic doll. What a racket I'm a cog in!
Anyway, this money having been siphoned out of the fan's pocket, it will after divvying between contractor, subcontractor, maintenance, overhead, etc. end up in the Phillies coffers. The team is a well-lubed, clockwork machine for acquiring this money, and all the promotions and free bobblehead dolls and free T-shirts, and "Italian Heritage Nights" (tomorrow) and Turkey Hill ice cream adverts and buckets of beer being toted to the upper reaches are part of this magnificent machine of many parts. And since we sell loads and loads of beer (lots more than at anemic, over-regulated Camden, and desolate, forlorn Nationals Park), this is no small part of getting the Phillies their cash, enough to be in the running to sign a stud like Halladay, and perpetuate the cycle of success the teams appears to be on. Since I've never really vended for a team so successful, I've never felt part of a financial ecosystem that could entertain so high profile a trade.
So if the Phillies sign Halladay, credit the Phillies for wanting to win, but also your friendly vendor here for helping in his small way to make it possible.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Miller Lite
- Cubs: 10
- Philly: 5
- Sold: 9 cases beer/132 waters
Doesn't keep me from lobbying my commissary manager occasionally to grant it to me, though. There's a rule enumerated in the employee handbook that states that vendors can ask to fill in for absent vendors, and I'm always trying to have it applied. Manager's discretion has kept me from it, until today. Miller Lite it was, and this being a rare thing I wanted to make the most of it. Started early, ran around in the sun willy-nilly, throwing beer and water around as fast as I could, and got the proof I needed: given the right product, I can outsell anyone. Nine cases for me, eight for the next guy, with a couple of sevens right behind. Not a rout, but here's the clincher: while everyone else sold about two cases of water (and on a hot dry day), I sold almost six cases of that pricey flavored processed tap water. No doubt; I made the most of it, which is all I'm looking for on any given night. Back to the usual from here on, quite happily.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Snippets
- Cubs: 1
- Phillies: 4
- Sold: 5 cases of beer/12 bottles water
Other snippets of activity tonight:
________________________________________
Pregame:
[Passing the cordoned smoking section]
Me: AnybodyforacoldCoorsLight?
Smoker: I'll take one.
Me: Sure! Double your vices!
Smoker: Thanks for saying that. How much?
________________________________________
1st inning:
Fan: I'll take two. How much?
Me: 13.50. It's 6.75 a bottle.
Fan 2: How 'bout 10 for 10 dollars?
Me: Listen; I'll do the math, you do the drinking.
________________________________________
2nd inning:
Me: IcecoldCoorsLighthere!
Fella: I wanna Miller. Who drinks that stuff?
Me: The outliers, sir. I serve the independent thinkers, the mavericks! You keep doing as the herd does.
________________________________________
3rd inning:
Me: HeyHey -- Coors Light here! Rocky Mountain beer for high altitude seats!
Lady: Hey now, what are you trying to say?
Me: I'm saying that you paid almost as much for that seat as I'm charging for this beer.
________________________________________
4th inning:
Me: AnybodyneedacoldCoors?
Guy: That's not beer.
Me: It's the same swill you got in that bottle there. Just a different label.
________________________________________
5th inning:
Dude: How much is beer?
Me: 6.75.
Dude: How much is one of those waters?
Me: Only four.
Dude: Four bucks for water? Geez.
Me: Yup. You want one?
Dude: Yeah, I'll take one of those.
Me: Look at it this way. You just saved almost three bucks! And for four ounces more fluid, too!
________________________________________
6th inning:
Me: Ice cold Coors!
Mook: Send the Bud man!
Me: I will do no such thing -- he is my mortal enemy!
________________________________________
Bottom of the 7th:
[Finding a group of Cubs people who I'd sold two rounds of 6 to.]
They: Hey you made it! We were just calling down to you!
Me: I didn't even hear you -- I just knew you were here somewhere.
They: We were calling out 'seventy-eight, seventy-eight!' And here you are just seconds later!
Me: I have a sense about these things. How many?
They: Might as well go with 12 because it's last call.
Me: [counting out exactly 12 left in my case] I have exactly that many left. It must be synchronicity.
They: You rule, Beerman! How much?
Me: That's 81 bucks.
They: No problem. Let's see here....
Me: [to gawkers in row right behind] See that? My kind of customers!
They: Here's 91 dollars for your trouble. Thanks, Beerman!
Me: Nice. Very generous of you! You, uh, gonna be here tomorrow?
They: Naw, this is it.
Me: [Registering disappointment.]
Monday, July 20, 2009
Phanatic
- Cubs: 1
- Phillies: 10
- Sold: 7 cases Coors
Tonight Jack Nicholson was watching from behind home plate, the Phanatic taunted the erstwhile Joker:
Nicholson was apparently in town shooting the same James L. Brooks movie that I was part of at Nationals Park a couple of months ago. So I guess he was successful in lobbying Brooks for a part.
On an unrelated note, tonight marks the anniversary of the Apollo moon landing. Forty years ago tonight, human beings first touched boot to a non-earth planetary body, the first tremulous step outside the blue cocoon of earth to explore the vast reaches of the universe. Of all the accomplishments of the 20th century, the moon landing (or Gagarin's space walk) might be the one still considered the most significant 1,000 years from now. At least two of the 24 astronauts in the Apollo program went on to found spiritual centers after leaving the space program, and one of them, Edgar Mitchell, had a religious experience during his moonwalk during which he identified a profound connection to the universe. Buzz Aldrin, awed by the airless dusty lunar surface, was moved to describe it poetically as "magnificent desolation." But it's also notable that, of the two dozen Apollo astronauts, three of them (12.5%) -- Stuart Roosa, Alan Shepard, and Charlie Duke -- went on to own beer distributorships in post-NASA life. I do not think this is statistically insignificant.
*And the otherwise asexual Phanatic is in fact a 'he'; his official MLB profile lists 'Phyllis' as his Best Friend, and I'm assuming he's hetero. Speaking of which, by the way, tonight was the 5th annual Gay Pride Night back at Nationals park, which for an evening made the place just about the least hetero spot in professional sports. I remember it being quite a scene: the anthem is sung by the Gay Men's Choir, and the upper deck is packed with lots of dudes with goatees and tight-fitting T-shirts, and a smattering of similar looking women. The place is roiling with a peculiar energy (especially for the weekday nights on which it was scheduled), like a school bus full of excitable kids on a field trip. The last time I vended the upper deck during Gay Night was at RFK in 2007, and my main goal was to avoid too much misleading eye contact, though plenty was coming my way. It was no surprise that tips were particularly good. Plenty of the customers wanted to say their hellos, and -- after plenty of lopsided conversations and at least one indecent proposal (which made me the object of much mirth among the other vendors when I made the mistake of telling them) -- I was left wondering what cruel trick of biology prevents otherwise nubile young women from being so forward, or so randy to begin with.
The Nationals gay night is one of many in MLB, and apparently one of the better-attended, which figures for a gay-friendly town like DC. I'd figured that Philadelphia wouldn't have anything to do with it, but I was wrong, though instead of DC's lively, roiling upper deck, the Phillies' "Gay Community Night" this August 4 is to be a smaller affair, limited to eleven sections of the upper right field seats.
** Most notoriously, during a 1988 gametime skit the Phantic assaulted a doll wearing a 'Lasorda' Dodgers jersey in front of the Dodgers dugout, inciting manager Tommy Lasorda*** to attack the mascot. "There were a lot of kids there, and he's showing them violence," said Lasorda after punching the Phanatic in the face. "He didn't need to do that."
*** Last month Lasorda was sitting with junk bond financier Michael Milkin in the first row behind the Orioles dugout and I served them Lemonade. Lasorda appeared sauced and hadn't much to say, and I had to ask several times for payment, which a handler in the aisle seat eventually provided.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Sunday in the Park, with Owl
- Cubs: 11
- Nationals: 3
- Sold: 5 cases beer/7 cases water/24 nut, Crackerjack
The bird got plenty of attention, and looked pretty suspicious of the whole thing, and probably didn't care at all about the game either. I was with him on that point: the park was well-attended with people baking in the sun and willing to shell out four bucks for the treated tap water Coca-Cola mineralizes and calls 'Dasani.' Dumped almost twice as much of that as I did of the frothy stuff, and ended up with another pleasant surprise of an afternoon. It all kept me so busy I didn't look up to the scoreboard until late in the 6th and saw that it was another Nubs drubbing: 11-2.
Friday, July 17, 2009
RFK Flashback
- Cubs: 3
- Nationals: 1
- Sold: 135 beers/12 waters/12 nut/Crackerjack
So instead of a real entry, let this be a reprint of a golden oldie from Saturday, June 23, 2007, written for a previous, abortive attempt at this blog. I called this one Saturday Night Kibitzing, in which I stopped too much and smelled far too many roses along the way:
A weird night at the ballpark for me. Saturday night is usually the biggest night of any given week, apart from random midweek holidays or visits from big-name teams. The best practices method I use is to head upstairs for high volume sales, though the tips are weaker up there. Massive tiers of people are waiting to buy beer in that upper deck, in a straight aisle layout that promotes good sales. Tips are plenty weaker – replacing a full roll of quarters is pretty much expected from all the skinflints who don’t even give up the change by way of a tip – but it’s a good position-solidifier on the whole.
But I’ve been making great tip money working downstairs recently (up to $18 a case, before tipping out the stockroom people for reloading me and making change), and I got cold feet when I saw that the upper deck was looking open before the game. So I stuck downstairs. And that was my first mistake.
The tone was set early, when a group of guys sat down and immediately ordered six. A nice haul, but then the usher came down and nabbed them for sitting in the wrong seats. So I was left with only a single sale. The rest of the night was almost all singles and doubles, earning my money the hard way, without hitting a rich vein of the big groups. I was constantly being interrupted by conversational opportunities, which I’m all too welcome to indulge, and too accommodating to cut short. A guy down the third baseline chatted with me about the year he spent vending at Redskins games; another customer who I regularly see showed up, and we both chatted with Jackie, an everyday regular, the next row over. She rolled her eyes when she saw me serve him, which reminded me that he’s the sort of vocal heckler who probably doesn’t need beer to get him started. Then there was a thickly bearded guy who I served, who left me uneasy: obviously old enough to drink, but was he under 30? Hard to tell. In the rush to sell, I’d already taken the money and sent out the swill, so probably too late. And he did mention my name to his buddy, which made me queasy, wondering if he was one of the “secret shoppers” that sometimes lie in wait, hoping for a vendor to slip up and violate the alcohol policies. Some deliberations left me decided: too late, so I let it go.
Section 320 held a row of attractive stewardesses, who were part of a special contract to fly with
“They’re all nice,” said one stewardess.
Quite the professional; no dish from her. They all emphatically agreed that the ballplayers were nice guys.
“There’s one of the Cavaliers that’s a real jerk,” another one offered. “Lebron James. Absolutely.” They all agreed on this one too.
Now there’s some dish. “That’s so out of line with his public image!” I said with genuine surprise. “You folks gotta get together and write a sequel to Coffee, Tea, or Me – where you tell tales out of school about all the pampered athletes you see during their travel downtime.”
In the 300s right behind home plate, a couple of other regulars summoned me and revealed a baking tin with brownies in it. I sampled one and found it delicious. I offered compliments and ran along my way.
In the main aisle I ran into Eli, who used to vend before moving into a more theatrical role at the stadium: running in the Presidents’ race. “I’m
One of the stadium cameramen exhorted me to sing to the camera during a crowd-wide rendition of “You’ve Gotta Have Heart.” I didn’t know any of the words, but he kept me going, and I felt pretty dopey because my know-nothing version was fed into the big screen over the outfield. No beer sales while I’m singing to a camera.
I was sorely out of rhythm; I’d run out of light beer but still have plenty of the heavy, then reload by only a case at a time when I really prefer to reload doubles. My peanut and Crackerjack sales where rolling, but that also had me blowing time back in the restock room for a peanut-only reload. More time spent.
My last call was a weak effort. A good one has hands popping up everywhere, each wanting a couple, but nothing was happening for me. The seventh-inning stretch came and went without a sale, and then it was over.
Then there were all the little conversations that cropped up; a hundred little bonus quips and bons mots I offer just to entertain: the chatter than pleases the people (and me), and energizes me through the game. Many come up when I’m tossing the peanuts and Crackerjack around in the juggling routine. It all really works as good peanut promotion, and I can sell more of those than the other vendors.
Yet the cost is steep – the brief friendly exchanges add up to death by a thousand cuts. When all was said and done, I’d only sold six cases of beer. And then I recounted my ticket receipts, and realized that it was only five. Five cases of beer on a Saturday night – whether upstairs or down – is a pitiable effort. The top vendors were hitting 11, the good ones 9, and those who I usually beat by a case were at 8. And I was left behind. Only the old guys, who tote around a case and usually last until the 5th or so before tiring and checking out, were selling as little as I did. Even my tips were down; only average for downstairs.
Part of it is, I’ve got to remember that I’m primarily a beerman, not a peanut vendor, and the food is just a sideline. Juggling can came during the 8th and 9th innings as a sort of wind-down exercise; but the main course is dumping buckets of beer on the people. The main culprit was too much palavering, and not enough raw greedy hustle. This is where the question arises: what kind of vendor do I want to be? There was plenty of good cheer and entertainment to be had in those conversations, and the people left happy for it. But I sacrificed my sales for it, and plenty of pride. Five cases. Oh my. Pretty emasculating, really.
There was one unexpected and amusing thing that happened tonight which softens my feelings somewhat. A group of four kids were in a row down the third-base 100s, and they really enjoyed the juggling routine. When I came back during the 8th, they all descended on me, asking for signatures. Before I knew it, I was kneeling in the aisle, Sharpie in hand, signing programs, Nationals ball caps, and foam fingers.
“Beerman!” I wrote on one.
On another: “Beerman says: “Stay in School!”
I got creative on the cover of one of the programs, and drew a cartoon vendor. You can barely see it on the cover of the program the girl is holding in this picture:
I liked it so much I went home and reproduced it; it looked something like this:
-
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Back in the Saddle
- Cubs: 6
- Nationals: 2
- Sold: 129 beers, 24 waters, 13 nut/Crackerjack
Coming off of a very successful concert and three off-the-charts Red Sox games, there was among the vendors an energetic atmosphere that smelled of greed. I'm as prone to this as anyone, but I didn't get caught up in it this time around. Cubs are a good draw, but nothing like the inter-league Sox (or Yankees, either of which might not return to D.C. for a decade or more), and despite the enthusiasm, I never fooled myself into thinking this would be a 10-case night. And it wasn't. The crowd was somewhere in the mid-20,000s, drinking moderately, and I fell short of six. I took Bud instead of my customary Miller, and was turned down by one girl while I served her friends.
"I don't drink beer," she said. "It gives me gas!"
"All right," I told her. "Go and drink your glass of chablis."
Later on I passed her and she had what looked to be a cup of beer in her hand. I called her out on it. "What's all this? I thought beer gave you intestinal distress."
But I was wrong, it turned out. "It's called a Woodchuck," she said of the hard cider in her hand. "I don't drink your shit! Move on, asshole!"
Three more games of Cubs, and it's only going to get worse from there.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
USA Soccer
- Honduras: 0
- USA: 2
- Sold: 10 cases beer
The result tonight: USA Soccer beats Hoduras, 2-0, July 8, 2009 at RFK stadium. After the win, this costumed band celebrates a healthy nationalism in dress and song. Hats off while playing video, please.
Previous Episodes
- November 2009 (1)
- October 2009 (1)
- September 2009 (2)
- August 2009 (5)
- July 2009 (11)
- June 2009 (8)
- May 2009 (20)
- April 2009 (1)
- April 2007 (14)