|
Chinook
by George Hosier II - November 20
Voice Over
Have you ever noticed how disappointing it is to see your
favorite radio personality for the first time? Back in
Pennsylvania I used to listen to a great morning show on my way to
work. There were two co-hosts, a man named Steve and a woman named
Melanie. They were witty, cosmopolitan, charming, riveting, and
they had the most amazing voices.
Steve was a rich baritone with a full, resonant timbre and a trace
of a dashing accent that might have originally been anything from
South African to Australian. He enunciated with excruciating
precision, yet had the vocal versatility to capture emotional
nuances in a way that would make a brilliant actor delivering a
Hamlet monologue sound like a robot in a bad Flash Gordon flick.
One day I made the mistake of turning the radio on when my wife
was in the car with me and was quite annoyed to notice a dreamy
expression creeping over her face when Steve started talking. Her
head kind of tilted to the side, her eyelids began to flutter, and
a faint exclamation of delighted surprise escaped from her smile.
As she turned toward me, I noticed her pupils were slightly
dilated. “Why don’t you ever talk to me like that?” she scolded.
I squawked out some sort of an indignant retort which only served
to reinforce her opinion of my desultory and unromantic voice. In
frustration I reached for the knob to turn off the radio, but my
hand froze in mid-reach, for just then Melanie laughed! I don’t
remember what Steve had said to make her laugh, but I will never
forget that tinkling trill that danced joyous from the speakers
and floated around the interior of the car on fairies’ wings.
Then the goddess spoke. Her voice was like sunshine on buttercups
in a breeze-kissed spring meadow. Its melody bubbled out of the
speakers, caressed my ears as it entered, then slid giggling down
to rest in a warm pool of comfort deep in my heart. I let out a
long ragged sigh like a desperate dehydrated man in a desert with
salt-cracked lips who has just discovered a gigantic pitcher of
ice cold lemonade sitting on top of a cactus.
My wife reached over and slapped me. “Watch where you’re driving!
You just about creamed that little old lady in the Toyota
Corolla…and for goodness sake, wipe that goofy grin off your face.
You’re giving me the creeps!”
Her voice sounded coarse and vulgar in my ears. “Have you ever
considered seeing an Ear-Nose-Throat doctor?” I inquired. “I read
somewhere that 15 percent of American housewives have polyps on
their vocal chords and don’t even know it.”
Surprisingly, my wife seemed to be open to the idea and promised
to schedule the appointment as soon as she got home.
“I’ll try to get it on the same day as your orthopedic
appointment.” She winked.
“My ortho appointment? I didn’t know I had an ortho appointment.
What’s it for?”
“For your cervical fracture.”
“But I don’t have a broken neck!”
She just looked at me then with a smile that made the hairs on the
back of my neck snap to attention with a crisp salute. That
panicked a flock of goose pimples that had been napping on my
spine and they began stampeding from the base of my skull to my
tailbone. I somehow lost interest in the topic and returned my
attention to the radio.
I became aware that Steve and Melanie were announcing that they
were broadcasting live from the Oak View Mall for a radio station
promotion and would sign autographs for any of their listening
audience who wanted to meet them. I tried not to act too excited,
but I knew that this was a once in a lifetime opportunity. I only
hoped I could talk my wife into going. I decided to try the
roundabout approach.
Summoning my most nonchalant voice, I enquired, “Hey. Did you ever
wonder what radio people look like?”
“I was going to ask you the same question.”
“Just out of curiosity, we could swing by the mall and take a peek
at Melanie. Oh…uh…and Steve…too…of course. Melanie and Steve. It’d
be interesting to see if they look as good as they sound.”
“Why? What do you think Melanie looks like?” My wife was eying my
neck like a logger sizing up a Sitka Spruce.
“Oh…I…er…I have no idea…hard to tell from a voice, you know.”
Actually I had a very vivid idea of what Melanie looked like. She
obviously had the skin of Nicole Kidman, the cheekbones of
Michelle Pfeiffer, the eyes of Halle Berry, the smile of Julia
Roberts, the body of Catherine Zeta-Jones, the pout of Angelina
Jolie, the nose of Elisha Cuthbert, and the hair of Monica
Bellucci.
“Really?” My wife had a faraway look in her eye. “You must not
have much of an imagination, I didn’t have any trouble visualizing
Steve.”
“Is that a fact? So what do you think he looks like?”
“He has Matthew McConaughey’s smile, Patrick Dempsey’s hair, Viggo
Mortensen’s eyes, Tom Cruise’s jaw, Brad Pitt’s abs, Jude Law’s
chin...”
I cut her off. It was too humiliating to hear her talk like that.
“Wanna bet?”
“How much?”
“If you’re right, I’ll do dishes for a week.” I thought that was
quite generous of me.
“Very funny! We have a dishwasher. How about if I’m right, you
take elocution lessons.”
“It’s a deal, and if you’re wrong?”
“I’ll make that ENT appointment!”
I did a U-turn right there in the street and headed for the mall.
When we got inside, the line was so long that I couldn’t see
Melanie no matter how hard I craned my neck and stood on tiptoe.
My wife tugged at my sleeve. “Can you see him?”
“Who?”
“Steve, of course!”
I couldn’t see him, or Melanie either, but something seemed odd.
The people in line ahead of us were wide-eyed with anticipation,
clutching notepads and cameras. The women giggled excitedly to
each other over the makeup compacts that seemed to be universally
and busily deployed. The men were all coincidentally standing in
poses that bulged their unremarkable biceps and pecs, while at the
same time rendering their bulging stomachs unremarkable. One
fellow looked as if he might pass out before he made it to the
front of the line from the strain of sucking in his considerable
beer belly.
That wasn’t the oddest part, though. There seemed to be a steady
line of other folks approaching from the somewhere ahead of us,
and moving toward the exit. As they passed, I noticed that many of
them had notepads and cameras as well, but they were in a
completely different mood. Some hurried by, head down, as if
embarrassed to be seen by us. Others smirked at us knowingly. A
couple of girls were burying their faces in each other’s
shoulders, giggling a high embarrassed sound like you would expect
them to make if they had just dropped an ice cream cone on the
front of their blouse.
I was about to ask my wife what she made of that, but she was busy
with her makeup compact and some blemish cover. So instead, I
crossed my arms so that my fists were tucked behind my biceps and
sucked in my stomach. The line moved faster than I would have
guessed and soon we were close enough for me to identify the radio
station’s display. I clenched my fists a little tighter behind my
biceps and craned my neck some more. I could see a couple of radio
station employees sitting at a table handing out brochures, but
Steve and Melanie were nowhere in sight.
About three minutes later, I had gotten close enough to the radio
station booth to distinguish voices, and it was then that the
awful truth suddenly struck me, for lo, out of the throats of
those two employees came the unmistakable dulcet tones of Steve
and Melanie.
It was unbelievable. Melanie wasn’t even close to what I had
pictured. She had the skin of Tommy Lee Jones, the cheekbones of
Michael Jackson, the eyes of E.T., the smile of Yoda, the body of
Kirstie Alley, the pout of Gollum, the nose of Barbra Streisand,
and the hair of Sinead O’Conner. Steve wasn’t much better. He
sported Buster Keaton’s smile, Britney Spear’s hair, Steve
Buscemi’s eyes, Don Knotts’ jaw, Chris Farley’s abs, and Jay
Leno’s chin.
We didn’t even bother to get an autograph. We stepped out of line,
went straight to the Hallmark card shop and bought each other one
of those ridiculously mushy cards the size of a sheet of plywood
all covered in ribbons and lace and poetry and stuff. As
embarrassing as it was, a few good things came out of the whole
experience. My wife got a clean bill of health from the ENT
doctor, I no longer endanger little old ladies in Toyota Corollas
while listening to the morning show, and both of us have learned
to cherish the treasure we hold rather than some fictitious
fantasy created in our own minds.
|
|
Deltads |
|
|
Alaska Highway Travel Guide --
The
Alaska Milepost is your best and most complete guide for Alaska travel.
Buy it online and and be ready for your next trip. |
|
|
Silverfox Fox Roadhouse
-- Cabins for summer visitors and fall hunters.
Visit our website. |
|
|
Inexpensive and Effective Ads -- Advertise in this space for as
little as $30. Call 895-4919 for details, or
click for info. |
|
|
Products
and services from Delta area and Alaska advertisers |
|
|
Index of Chinook Articles
|
2008 |
2007 |
2006 |
| |
|
|
|
Breaking Up - May 7, 2008
Ingenuity - May 7, 2008
Zapped - Apr 10, 2008
Fandom - Mar 24, 2008
I Was There - Marc 24,
2008
Frosty Reception -
Feb 27, 2008
Elections - Feb 13,
2008
Winter Camping -
Jan 31, 2008
Cliches - Jan 14, 2008
|
One Tiny Baby -
Dec 26, 2007 Santa Pause - Dec
20, 2007
Chivalry - Dec 7, 2007
In Memoriam - Nov 15,
2007
The Question - Nov 1,
2007
Whippersnappers -
Oct 19, 2007
Fellowship of the Thing -
Oct 9, 2007
Green Thumb - Sep 24,
2007
Eccentrics - Sep 24, 2007
Alaskan Glossary -
Sep 24, 2007
Fun - Aug 6, 2007
Trouble Bruin - Aug 6,
2007
Hopeless Romantic -
Jul 12, 2007
Chimeras - Jul 4, 2007
Glorious Litter -
Jun 15, 2007
Aliens - May 28, 2007
The Torment of Spring
- May 15, 2007
Shock and Outrage - May
3, 2007
Dad's Tools - May 2, 2007
Moose Nose Stew - Mar 8, 2007
Clean Air - Mar 7, 2007
Shopping Day - Feb
22, 2007
Bachelor Pad - Jan
27, 2007
New Year's
Revolutions - Jan 8, 2007
|
Osama Bin Turkey -
Dec22, 2006 Thank Who - Nov 23,
2006
Voice Over - Nov 20,
2006
Get Rich Quick - Nov 3,
2006
Keep It Simple -
Oct 23, 2006
Summer Requiem -
Oct 3, 2006
Of Moose and Men -
Sep 18, 2006
Firewood - Aug 15, 2006
Road Hazards - Aug 7,
2006
Pan Fever - Jul 20, 2006
Duck Weather - Jul 7,
2006
Blood Brothers - Jun
9, 2006
Graduation Daze - May
19, 2006
Chupacabras - May 11,
2006
Roommates - Apr 30, 2006
New Life - Apr 17, 2006
Winter Skin - Mar25,
2006
Burro - Mar12, 2006
Hooding - Feb 21, 2006
|
|