To everyone's shock and surprise, yours truly was apparently persuasive enough to wrangle a few media credentials recently for a AAA game on a hot, sticky Saturday night in Round Rock, Texas. My baseball buddy (the female version, not the one that looks like Cheech) had a good laugh at this and was comparing me to the baseball writing equivalent of Hunter S. Thompson.
"They're going to be wondering, who the hell is this guy affiliated with?" she said with a snicker, glaring at my cut-off jean shorts and general casual appearance that bordered on "depraved homeless guy" entangled with a little "divorced dad who stopped giving a shit" vibe-the only thing missing was the cigarette holder and flask of vodka in the breast pocket.
I assured her that this wasn't the old-school baseball writing world of cigar-chomping old guys wearing Hawaiian shirts with an Olivetti typewriter tucked beneath their arm. No, my friend, these weren't newspaper and media hacks who didn't use nuance or subtext and who hadn't read anything remotely literary since the ink on a copy of The Old Man and the Sea was fresh. These were modern, good 'ol All American tech-savvy baseball promoters with hipster haircuts, toothy smiles and finely trimmed beards looking to climb the ladder in a billion-dollar industry by foisting fake opinions for clicks and sponsors.
"Wow, now you look even worse."
All the internal hype was for naught. (This was, alas, the minor leagues) I was asked, indeed, what outfit I was with, but the overall Press Box atmosphere seemed sort of relaxed and lethargic. A nice man, Leonard, answered a few questions, told us we couldn't go into the TV room and gave us some tickets for free tacos. There was a snack spread and we took a few bags of chips and soda and decided to go down and find a few empty seats on the first-base-line with the rest of the fans: we needed that feeling of symbiosis that had been missing since our weakened empire unequivocally turned divisive politically, went mentally unhinged and rehearsed a zombie apocalypse drill. I was also told that under no circumstances could someone media affiliated receive the Nolan Ryan bobblehead giveaway that night. Well, shit.
Isotopes win!!!Overall, it was a humid, syrupy, sweat-inducing pleasant time. The atmosphere was lively (the crowd sang "Deep In The Heart Of Texas" during the 7th inning stretch) and my new favorite player, Curtis Terry aka "Scary Terry" hit 2 massive dingers while my baseball buddy made a sugary mess eating a funnel cake. A major highlight was the hilarious stampede for dollar hot dogs when the "Hot Dog Batter" struck out in the bottom half of the 7th-a kindly older gentleman felt the need to wildly instruct everyone in our section of this fact while other fans returned triumphantly with ghastly amounts of their pink, mustard-laden prize ...I love minor league baseball.
Final: Isotopes 8 Express 6