In the latest episode of This American Life, titled Fiasco!, we delve into the chaotic realm of notable mishaps that transcend ordinary errors to become unforgettable fiascos. Hosted by Ira Glass, this episode combines fascinating narratives from various storytellers, shedding light on what turns a simple mistake into a grand spectacle of human blunders.
Prologue: A Small Town's Peter Pan Production
Host Jack Hitt recounts a particularly ambitious yet disastrous small-town production of Peter Pan. The story starts with a nameless college town in Appalachia, where a local woman, without clear directing credentials, convinces the theater department to let her direct the beloved story. More than just a mediocre performance, this production serves as a case study in how high ambitions can lead to spectacular failures.
- Key Takeaway: Grand aspirations can often lead to chaotic failures, especially when many involved are stepping outside their comfort zones and skills.
Act One: The Production Unravels
As the show begins, the excitement from the audience quickly turns to horror as the production experiences a series of blunders:
- Flawed flying apparatuses send the actors spiraling rather unpredictably.
- A cast member unexpectedly crashes into a wardrobe, eliciting gasps rather than laughter.
- An actor playing Captain Hook suffers a wardrobe malfunction when his fake hook flies into the audience, leading to uproarious reactions.
These blunders set the stage for an unraveling spectacle, demonstrating how quickly a collective effort can descend into chaos.
- Insight: An audience’s empathy can wane when performances deteriorate to the level of a fiasco, leading to unintentional comedy.
Act Two: Rookie Police Mishap
The episode then shifts gears to a mishap from a rookie cop's perspective:
- A quiet night suddenly escalates when the police are called to investigate an animal disturbance, leading to a series of unfortunate accidents involving a squirrel and a barrage of slapstick humor.
- The rookie cop inadvertently injures the homeowner with a falling flashlight, creating a cascade of mistakes that culminate in their own shambolic attempt to handle the squirrel.
This tale emphasizes the unpredictable nature of human error in high-stress situations.
- Key Insight: Fiascos often result from a combination of inexperienced decision-making and unforeseen complications that spiral out of control.
Act Three: Comedian's Charity Fiasco
Next, comedian Mike Birbiglia shares a particularly cringe-worthy experience during a charity event:
- Despite his best intentions, Mike’s performance is overshadowed by heartfelt emotional speeches that he struggles to follow. In a desperate bid to connect, he veers into inappropriate territory with cancer-related jokes to no success.
- His realization of the severity of this faux pas leads to an exit laden with embarrassment.
Here, Birbiglia’s story illustrates how different elements of performance can create an unexpected atmosphere that can flip a show into chaos.
- Takeaway: The collision of serious themes with comedic endeavors can lead to disastrous outcomes when the timing and context are misaligned.
Act Four: The Interview Fiasco
Concluding the episode, journalist Margy Rochlin recounts her first major assignment interviewing Moon Zappa:
- What begins as a traditional interview soon spirals into chaos when nervous laughter leads to physical comedy, including a Heimlich maneuver prompted by her choking on coffee.
- Surprisingly, this humorous breakdown fosters a deeper connection between the journalist and her subjects, turning an embarrassing moment into a bonding experience.
Margy’s interview story points to the serendipitous nature of fiascos, sometimes leading to unexpected human connections.
- Final Insight: Fiascos can act as a bridge to forge relationships under pressure, even though they defy conventional social norms.
Final Thoughts
This episode of This American Life demonstrates how human ambition, anxiety, and errors often lead to unexpected outcomes that can entertain or horrify. Key Lessons:
- Ambition vs. Ability: Aiming high can sometimes result in spectacular fails.
- Audience Dynamics: Engagement with a performance can shift dramatically, impacting overall reception.
- Fiascos as Community Experiences: They can forge connections even in embarrassing situations.
By sharing these stories, the podcast invites us to ponder not only the nature of fiascos but their philosophical implications on performance, expectation, and human interaction. The exploration of what leads to these memorable moments encourages us to embrace imperfections in life and performance.
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What could be more American than the person who sees something they've never done before, dreams they could do it, goes after that dream? Well, let's begin today with a woman who dreams of directing a play in the small town where she lives, a college town somewhere below the Mason-Dixon line in the hills of Appalachia, a town which will remain for our purposes today, unnamed. I don't think she had ever directed.
and she claimed to have acted. And it was never really quite clear just what her credentials were. But she had managed to convince the local theater department of this college that she should direct a production of Peter Pan.
When he was in the 10th grade in 1973, Jack hit saw her production. And like everybody else in town, he heard about it for weeks, forehand. Slowly but surely, you know, you began to hear, you know, sort of rumors about this production. For example, I know that they had spent a lot of money
renting these flying apparatuses out of New York. And apparently there's only one company in a handful of these apparatuses and so to get them was a major coup. This is a story not just of a mediocre play or a terrible play. When it comes like that to it, it's not even a story about a play. This is a story about a fiasco and about what makes a fiasco.
And one ingredient of many Theascos is that great, massive, heart-wrenching chaos and failure are more likely to occur when great ambition is coming to play. When plans are big, expectations great, hopes at their highest. And what you have to understand is that everybody in this sort of community understood that there were.
There was certainly a sort of air of everyone sort of reaching beyond their own grasp. Every actor was sort of in a role that was just a little too big for them. Every aspect of the set and the crew and rumors had sort of cooked around. There was this huge crew, there were lots of things being
But this in fact is one of the criteria for greatness, is that everyone is just about to reach just beyond their grasp, because that is when greatness can occur. That's right, that's right. And maybe greatness could have occurred.
Well today on our program what happens when greatness does not occur. What happens in fact when fumble leads to error leads to mishap and before you know it you have left the realm of ordinary mistake and chaos and you have entered into the more ethereal specialized realm.
of Fiasco. Today's show, Fiasco's A Philosophical Inquiry. Perhaps the first ever, as far as we know, into what makes a Fiasco, what takes our ordinary lives the extra distance into Fiasco. From WB-EZ Chicago, it's This American Life, I'm Ira Glass. There is much, much more to learn about Fiasco's in this hour. Stay with us.
This American life today shows a rerun, a really fun show that we thought would be fun to run this holiday week. And we begin our show with this true fable of Peter Pan and act one. Opening night.
opening night comes and you know well almost everybody in the area and the you know 10 mile radius of this theater knows somebody in this production so the place is pretty much packed and I don't know if you remember the opening moment of Peter Pan but it's the three little kids sleeping in their bed
And Peter Pan comes flying in the window. And in this particular production, there's a big bed with all the three kids in it. And off to the left, I remember, is a big huge wardrobe and there's a large window there and a little bureau. And Peter Pan comes in and has a little speech where he says,
You know, anybody can fly with just a little magic dust one can fly. And Peter Pan sprinkles this magic dust in the air. And sure enough, the kids sort of suddenly just lurch into the air. And it becomes clear right away that the people that they've hired to run these flying apparatuses really aren't quite clear on how they actually work.
So instead of the kids sailing gracefully to and fro, they sort of hang in the air like puppets, just sort of dang in there, sort of getting jerked up and inch or two or back and forth. And then sometimes they're just stationary, just hanging there like a spider.
And then several of them start to sort of circumscribe these circles in the air, where it's clear that the people running the machines have just sort of set them off on these kind of oval courses that spiral farther and farther out. And if you're sitting in the audience, there was clearly a sense of fear on the faces of these people.
of the actors. The actors actually, you could sense their lack of confidence, shall we say, in the people running the machines in the back. And the audience reaction to this point is just, are they laughing? No one is laughing. Everyone, this is one of the great things about audiences, especially in a live theater production, is that they're very forgiving.
They want the show to work. And so everyone is sort of gripping their chair a little tightly. We feel for them. They're up there, they're embarrassing themselves for us. We identify with them. We are become them. And so the audience, I think, was very forgiving and very understanding of this moment. But there was one moment in this first opening scene that kind of put the audience on notice.
And that's when, as the kids are sort of jerking up and down and swinging back and forth and sort of going around in these ovals, at one point, the littlest one.
And the little boy is sort of being flung around a little too, a little too hard. Well, he has the least mass to resist whatever the machinery is doing to him. Right. Okay, so and. And so he's flying around this circle and and the audience sort of sees this coming and there's a real sense of pain and and gripping of the chair and white knuckleness as the kid suddenly does a just a
enormous splat into the wardrobe. I mean, and it's clear that he's hurt, you know, and he comes off of it sort of, you know, a little dazed, and then of course he's jerked up in the air a little bit, and often a little too high, so that he's suddenly sort of in the workings.
He sort of left the stage itself. He's now up there with the lights, you know, and then all of a sudden he just sort of suddenly he would just plumb it back down to the stage and be caught up just before he hit the floor.
It was hard to watch because, as you can tell, it's an incredibly funny moment. But like I said, the audience was still in this very forgiving mode. And no one said a word. We just all sat there sort of holding our breath. And there's that weird tension of being in the audience thinking, oh, oh my goodness, they have gotten off to a very bad start. Oh, this is not good. And we feel for them.
May I just interrupt for just a moment, just to say now at this point, because after all, we are not just joined here together in the radio, you and I today, to laugh at the foibles of the unfortunate. No, no, we're here to enumerate the qualities of a fiasco. At this point, we are not yet.
in the territory of fiasco. No, no, because you know, like I say, audiences are forgiving and they, you know, one or one or two mistakes, even big ones like this. They're going to let that ride. They say are. We did. We did. We were very good. And so we are not yet at fiasco. We were at a sort of normal level of mishap. Right.
What happens immediately after this? They disappeared in Never Never Land. And if you remember, the stage goes dark, and then when the lights come up, there's Captain Hook, and he's giving his first opening soliloquy about how evil he is, and what a menace he is, and how he harms people and hates children, and it's all that good stuff.
And so Captain Hook is out there and he looks great. He's got one of those big old fat hats and this great hook and these wild looking boots and everything. And people are feeling more confident. Something's happening. It's a good sign. It's a good sign and he's in charge. This guy is, he's got a bad mustache and he is certainly evil. Yes. And the audience is totally in his pocket. He's speaking away and gesturing wildly and going on and on about how bad he is. And then at a certain point,
As he gestures his hook and the entire black casing up to his elbow flings off of his hand and flies into the audience and punches an old lady in the gut. And now he is bad.
He had like the worst ad lib I've ever heard. I mean, what do you say at that point? Because, of course, his hand is now nakedly exposed to the audience. And a tough moment for any actor. Very, very hard. The premise of your character is that you have a hook. Your name is Captain Hook. Literally, all that's going to happen for the rest of the show is people are going to refer to you by that hook. Your entire motivation as a character is the fact that you're
is that your arm was eaten off by an alligator and then you have to have the entire plot. And you have a hook. Stems from that fact. Right. Right. And now suddenly you have no hook. In fact, you have five fingers on a hand. As if a miracle by the Lord. Captain Hook said, you know, they just don't make those hooks like they used to. That was actually the ad lib. I will never forget.
Then the lights come up, and we are in Never Never Land. In Act 2? Yeah, this is like Act 2. And Captain Hook might have stood in front of this set, but you didn't really see it, because he spoke from shadow. And now the lights come up, and it's supposed to be a very dramatic moment. The rumors of all this crew and the painting and everything that was going on and all this construction
all work towards this one moment. Because when the lights came up, here was Never Never Land, this sort of psychedelic set. There were paper mache mushrooms everywhere of different sizes. It was absolutely wonderful and surreal. Wow. And there's nobody there. And then from the upper rafters of stage right, suddenly the kids in Peter Pan appear. Flying. Flying. They're flying.
And they're landing. They're landing occurs rather rapidly at an angle of about 45 degrees to the stage. They come down basically like, I don't know, lead sinkers on a line and crash to the floor. And then are sort of just dragged across the floor like mops and wipe out all of the mushrooms.
And so now, have we arrived at a turning point in our fiasco? Yeah, it's clear now that the audience is giving way. Something has been lost. Some sense of decorum, that little bit of forgiveness that the audience has for the actors. And empathy. And empathy. It's beginning to dissipate. Well, there was a split in the audience. The younger people who were the least forgiving, they started to go first.
Okay, so the high school students, you know, a couple of college students maybe, they started to laugh out loud. And I'll be honest, I might have been one of those first people to laugh. I was in the 10th grade. Right. It was hard to not laugh at this. You know, but then whatever restraint that, you know, the audience had, it just evaporated at this point because there were a number of things that happened in quick succession that just made it impossible to hold any sense of decorum.
For example, Tinkerbell appears for the first time around this moment. Tinkerbell is essentially a light bulb on an extension cord. And what? Yeah, and this was the director's idea of being raw, being very modern. Tinkerbell was just going to be
you know, this literal light bulb dangling from an extension cord. Whereas in other productions where they do is that someone will shine a light. Shine a light or they'll just a beam of focused light and then that pinprick of light is supposed to be Tinkerbell. That's right. Or something like that or nothing at all. And people just address the invisible, you know, sprite, right?
Well, that did not happen in this case this bulb comes just dangling down and sort of hangs around This naked white bulb just hangs around and people are talking to it
And I think Tinker Bell, Tinker Bell must have had an appearance in the first act, but it was somewhere in here that people just started laughing at this. Then another thing that happened was later on in this scene, if you remember, Wendy gets trapped on an island.
And she spots a kite that's floating by, flying by, and she's supposed to grab it and attach it to her back and fly off, right? Well, of course the kite is attached to the flying apparatus line.
And it gets closer and closer to her. She's standing on this little paper mache hill. But the flying apparatus people can't quite get it close enough to her to reach. So she has to step out into the waters that she's just told us is filled with crocodiles to grab it. She finally gets the kite. And when she yanks on it, it pops off the flying apparatus. And the hook goes zinging up into the lights and catches.
So now there is this big loop of wire hanging in front of the stage, and there's Wendy holding the kite, and she ad-libbed as best she could, as I remember. She sort of said, on second thought, maybe I can swim. And with that, she walked off the stage sort of motioning her arms like you would do the swim, the dance, in 1965.
So she does that. At this point, I mean, the actors are just falling apart. They are so frightened of the audience. There are just belly laughs rolling up to the stage from the audience. People are howling with laughter at every mistake. And now any small mistake just takes on these...
You know, it's just any instigation for laughter is just enough for this audience. And now the old people have given it up. Everyone has quit being nice. Now there's just this kind of frightening roar that comes from the audience every time there's a mistake. Well, what happened? At some point, the audience turned and realized, oh, wait, I realize what's going on here. This is a fiasco. Yeah, this is a fiasco. And what's really interesting about a fiasco is that once it starts to tumble down, the audience wants to push it further.
Oh, they get hungry for more if you ask. Oh, yeah. If the play proceeded perfectly, they would be disappointed. Oh, it would have been a grave disappointment had there not been just one more mistake after another, one more embarrassment after another. Now, the reason they're there is to chronicle these embarrassments. This is why I have remembered this display for 25 years.
Towards Act 3, the director had decided that she wanted to break down the fourth wall.
You know, this was cutting edge theaters far, she was concerned. I just want to explain, when we say breaking down the fourth wall, what we mean is the wall between the actors and the audience, usually it's impermeable, but then there came a point in the late 60s, early 70s where a lot of theaters, basically the actors would come out into the audience. That's right, and interact with the audience and break down that wall. So the idea being that you would get more in touch with the dramatic sense and the reality of what was happening.
Anyway, so in this particular scene, what was going to happen was that the Indians were going to throw rope ladders down from the balcony and climb down these rope ladders into the audience and and you know move among the audience and Frightness right anyway, I knew about this scene because my friend David who I went to high school with was in it and so when David was climbing over the top of this balcony to climb down the rope he lost his footing and
and fell to the floor from the balcony, a distance of about 15 to 20 feet. A good fall. That's horrible. He landed on both of his feet and sprained both of his ankles and of course curled into a fetal position and began to cry. He was really, really hurt.
Now, to appreciate the horrible moment that I'm now describing, also understand that it's a Friday night. We are in a college town and there is a volunteer fire and ambulance department. And in order to summon the rescuers from wherever they are, an alarm is sounded that can be heard for five miles. That alarm is located right over this theater. So the alarm goes off. Okay?
This is an air raid siren. It is so loud, you can put your fingers in your ear and it's still hurting your ears. We're right under it. It can be heard for five miles. And then of course, three minutes later, busting through the door of the theater, are these 15 firemen.
who are in boots, hats. They got hoses, they don't know what it is. All they know is that they've been sent out of alcohol. And to sort of add to the chaos, the director, of course, has sort of flogged the actors that the show must go on. No matter what.
So while all of this is happening, and several people are attending to David, and other people have just now decided that since the firemen are here, he's gonna be fine. They can start laughing. And now the audience has just completely lost control. People are standing up in their seats and shouting for more. They want blood. I mean, at this point, people are actually injured in their production, and they want more.
Somehow that's how this entire play ended. What's interesting about this as a fiasco, I feel like the thing that makes me understand about fiasco is that the fiasco itself is an altered state that is all the normal rules are off. You have left the normal rules of how the audience is going to interact with the actors. Right. I've never seen a production like this, and I've never seen an audience collapse like this.
See, but when you think about what people go to theater for, what kind of release people want. I mean, people want an experience that will take them out of ourselves. We all want an experience that will take us out of ourselves and into another place and another reality. And it sounds like this production
Even though it was a fiasco, in fact, because it was a fiasco, was more successful than that than any conventional play could be. Well, see, I would disagree with this. See, I think the old theater critics, the ancients would say that the reason you go to the theater and to see a great production is to be, I think the word they used to use is transported.
the idea being that you would be lifted away from your animal nature and into these higher, more spiritual realms or being, get in touch with these greater, tragic emotions, right? But of course, what happened here was the exact opposite. We got transported directly in touch with our animal being. Our base ourselves. Right. But you know, that's almost as rare, if not more so, than a great production.
Jackhead is a contributing writer for the New York Times magazine in Harper's. Jack says, by the way, the people ask him about this Peter Pan story still all these years after we first broadcast it. And the thing they ask him is, really? Is that story true? These days he just tells him to go into YouTube and search for Peter Pan and fiasco.
And if you try that yourself, the Peter Pan fiasco is that you're going to see, and there are more than one happen after we first broadcast this story back in the 90s, suggesting that the Oscars are not an exception when it comes to productions of the show, but maybe kind of a trend. Back to Squirrel Cop.
Well, human error is often at the heart of a fiasco. But what happens when you combine human error with what we'll call in this case, animal error? We have this story from a police officer in a suburban community on the East Coast. There was nothing, nothing going on. Saturday night in this village, really quiet, super cold. And this call came over for unknown animal in a house. And it was on my post. It was about five minutes away.
So, myself and another car were assigned the call, and we show up there, and luckily for me, it was another guy who was pretty new. So, we walk up to the door with all our stuff on, you know, the nylon coat, the vest, the belt, the whole nine yards, and the door opens, and the guy who is behind the door, he's about 30. I was 23 at the time.
He's about 30. He looks like a broker, a lawyer. He's just really well put together. Nice guy wearing glasses. He's wearing these silk pajamas with a monogram, got my attention. Wow. And he's going, uh, listen, really sorry to bother you. Normally I'd handle this sort of stuff on my own, but, uh, my wife really insists that I call. And so we ask him what the problem is. He says, well,
We were having kind of a romantic evening down in the living room, and we heard this scratching upstairs, so I ran upstairs to see what it was. It turns out it's coming from the attic. There's something up there, and it's just running around, knocking a few small things over. I can't tell what it is. It could be a squirrel or raccoon. I really don't know.
So the other cop that I was with said, well, we really don't handle that. It's not so much a police function. But we do have numbers of these private contractors who'll come in, and they'll put a humane trap down, and they'll remove the animal for you. And it's really not such a big deal, but it's really not our thing.
so right as he was in the middle of of saying that and get us off the hook the guy swings the door back and there's his wife who was just beautiful she was beautiful she was probably about twenty six or twenty seven
But just really beautiful, like perfect skin, long blonde hair, great teeth, brilliant blue eyes, a really nice smile, just like beautiful and friendly. You know, if she had said, you know, eat this broken glass, I just would have said, okay, broken glass, it is, that's fine.
But she seemed really nice. So I was going to be like Galahad. So I just threw my arm back into this guy's chest, into my partner's chest. And I said, Mark, we can handle this. It'll be OK.
And she just was just, you know, thank you so much. And she was really sweet and I was like struck dead. So we walk inside and she goes, I'm gonna throw a pot of coffee on. And we go upstairs, we follow the man of the house upstairs and we're underneath one of those trap doors that goes into the attic with the staircase that folds out. And we do hear,
An animal upstairs scratching away, just kind of scuttling around the floor, and there's definitely something up there, and it's making pretty good speed up, going from one end of the roof to the other. So I reached up, and I took the trapdoor down, and we unfolded the ladder. And I have this big, heavy flashlight, you know, like your cop flashlight, 4D cells, the metal case, the whole thing. I shine it up through the hole in there, and it's pretty black. I can see the rafters, but really, nothing else around there.
And I start up the ladder. Now the guy who owned the house is standing almost directly underneath me just to the side of the ladder, looking straight up at me. And my partner is at the base of the ladder right behind me. So just before I stuck my head through this like black hole, I just kind of pause like I crunched my body up underneath because I'm realizing, gee, you know, I don't know where this thing is. The second we pulled down the trap door, all noise upstairs just ceased. So I was kind of nervous and
I was like, well, you know, I look like an idiot just crouched up here on the top of the ladder. So I took the flashlight and I just popped my head up, turned the light on again. And about six inches from the front of my face was this squirrel at eye level with me.
kind of reared back on its legs. And I swear, from where I was standing, it looked like Godzilla. It just scared the heck out of me. I thought it's a squirrel. It's going to be hiding somewhere. It's going to be terrified of me. It was six inches away from me. And it really startled me. So I kind of went, ah, jump back.
And the flashlight slips out of my hands. It's heavy. And it falls directly onto the nose of the guy who's looking straight up at me. And I don't think it broke it, but it did some damage. And his nose, his hands up to his face, blood just started pouring out between his hands. This is the homeowner. This is the homeowner. I lose my balance and fall backwards directly onto my partner. And I just, I pancake him. We're both on our backs. He's on his back. I'm on his stomach, on my back.
Scuttling around like a like a beetle trying to get up and it's really narrow hallway. It's a mess. The squirrel, while we're floundering around in the hallway, jumps down the stairs, blank, blank, blank, lands on me and takes off down the stairs. How undignified. It was terrible. It was terrible. So we're wondering, gee, where is the squirrel? And right at that second,
The woman who lived there, you hear her scream. So my partner goes, well, you know, we found the squirrel. It's wherever she is. Yeah. So we go running downstairs and the squirrel had come into the
living room where they had been having their romantic evening. They had a fire going. They had pillows arranged around one corner of the couch next to the fire, and they had champagne flutes out. Nice house. Really nice. I mean, it just smelled brand new. New carpeting, new rugs, new paint. They hadn't been there for that long. So the squirrel, when it bolted down the staircase, took off into the living room and ran underneath a couch for cover.
So we run downstairs. This guy is bleeding all over the place on his carpets. His wife looks and says, you know, what have you done? What have you done to my husband? I start going, Oh, it was an accident. And then I just stop in mid sentence. What's the point? We've only been there about two minutes. So the squirrel is underneath the couch and.
My partner's going, you know, let's get out of here. This is just, you know, it's not going well. So I am not, you know, I'm not beaten yet. I always have another idea. So so the squirrel is under this couch, which is in the middle of the room. So I have this bright idea. Why don't we move the furniture away from one of the corners and we'll put the couch in the corner and the squirrel will probably move along with the couch because it's the only cover you're available to it.
And once we get into the corner, we'll only have two open sides of the couch to worry about. So we did that. That is so tactical. Yes. Yeah, I was very proud of myself at that instant. But, you know...
I asked her for a box, and she says, sure, we've got boxes. We just moved in. We have nothing but boxes. She runs out to the garage, and she comes back with a box. And the box is long enough, and it fits across the entire short side of the couch, where the armrest would be. So I start sweeping underneath the couch with my nightstick, trying to move the squirrel toward the box, figuring we'll capture it and just get rid of it. And we'll be out of here, and there'll be no more mayhem.
So it's actually working very well and the squirrel is moving down along. You can hear it. It's chittering and I'm trying not to hurt it. You know, if you'll kind of, I'm nervous about the thing it might bite me. I don't want to hurt it, really. You know, it's just an animal. Right.
So I'm moving it along and everything's going very well. And then with about eight inches to go, I took one more swipe and the thing just bolted out from underneath the couch. It was lined with like tassels. I couldn't really see into the couch. It bolted out from underneath the couch and ran directly into the fireplace, which is about three feet away. It was the fireplace was directly ahead of it and it ran into the fire and caught on fire and ran directly back out and directly back under the catch.
Is it on fire? It was on fire? Yeah, the tail, the bushy fur, the whole bit. I mean, it wasn't like flaming or anything, but there was smoking and there was a little bit of fire coming off the tail. So it runs back under the couch and the couch catches on fire in seconds. I mean, in seconds, it must have had dust under there or something else, but it caught on fire immediately.
And my partner and I just don't even talk. We just grab the couch, heave it upside down. And now there's plenty of oxygen now for the fire to really get going. And it starts up and we're patting it out. And it's sort of getting away from us. So we grab the only thing that's really available. And those are these really nice silk pillows. And we have one in each hand, both of us. And we're just windmilling away at this fire on the couch. And we put it out. But it's smoking.
terribly and uh... it that it was just it was a disaster i'd uh... catches upside down if the bottom of his burnt the house is filled with smoke from the couch the squirrel when it went to the couch in its death rose just latched on the bottom of the couch it's like this smoking piece of gristle underneath the couch latched on there with its clause and were pounding smearing it all over the place and
The smoke alarms are firing away. The guy is standing with handkerchiefs and paper towels up around his nose, which is still bleeding. His pajamas are a mess. They're covered with blood in front of them. And we finally get the fire out. And we're both completely red sweating because we're dressed for like zero degree weather. And it's hot there by the fire. We're mortified. The house is full of smoke. The wife just looks around and just starts to cry.
What have you done? What have you done to my house? You could see her just like clicking things off on her fingers, okay, the dead squirrel ruins the lows, need a new couch. The walls are covered with soot, the fire alarms are going off, my husband's disfigured, and then she really kind of just lost it.
He was just looking at us and shaking his head like he couldn't believe that these two idiots showed up and did this to his house over nothing really. And he just goes, you know, you really haven't done anything wrong. I can't point to any one thing that you did that I have a reason to get angry about. You really haven't done anything wrong. I mean, we did call you.
But I'm just, I just, I can't thank you for this. They call for a squirrel and they end up with like $3,000, $4,000 worth of damage and a broken nose. And this is all within about five minutes. Could that have happened to you now, 13 years later?
There's always a new mistake to be made. I don't think I would make that particular mistake. I mean, you make plenty of mistakes. You make plenty of mistakes. That's just part of that job. You just try not to make the same one twice. But there's such a variety that if you're going to make hundreds, you're going to make thousands of mistakes. You're going to make thousands of mistakes until you really get a handle on what you're doing. And with police work, they afford you plenty of space to make mistakes. But there's things that
just either they aren't your responsibility. If you get involved in things that aren't your responsibility, or that you're really not equipped to handle, or that you don't have a specific plan, a plan that's thought through to a conclusion, you probably should reevaluate what you're doing. Yeah, now that you mentioned that, yeah, that's right. You walk into the house thinking, okay, we'll get the squirrel. Like, how were you going to get the squirrel?
What was the best case scenario? That's a great question. I guess I was thinking that I would go up there in the attic and find this cowering squirrel and somehow kind of lure it into some kind of a trap and then walk out with it and be like a hero. But as it turned out, the squirrel, it was a puric victory for the squirrel, but the squirrel definitely won. The squirrel really kicked our ass. That is not what you want to be saying at the end of the day.
No, no. I mean, it took me a long time to even tell people about it. You know, I was so new. I didn't want to know what a bonehead I was when I first came onto the job. I interviewed E who asked not to be named on the radio. I'd been on the force for 18 years when he spoke with me.
Coming up, what it's like to be invited to a big charity event that you then ruin. That's in a minute. Chicago Public Radio, when our program continues.
It's a American life, mirror glass. Each week on a program, of course, we choose the theme and bring you different kinds of stories on that theme. Today's show, fiasco. This is our own inquiry into the nature of what makes a fiasco. When you have left the world of mishap, stumble, human error, and you enter into the much more rarefied realm of fiasco, we have arrived at act three of our program, act three. Tragedy minus comedy equals time, specifically a long, long time between laughs.
So Mike Mabiglia is a comedian. He's been on our show lots of times. And years ago, years ago, he told this story about this one gig that he did relatively early in his career. He says it was the worst show he's ever done in his life.
It happened this year I was asked to perform at a charity golf tournament in New Jersey. So I woke up for this charity golf event and I have a, I realized recently that I'm not like a good adult yet. Like I think if you're a good adult, you like plan your outfit according to what will occur when you leave the house. But I don't have that part of my brain. I'm just like, one outfit forever, you know.
So I went and I played golf and I brought my brother Joe. And Joe is kind of like a bad entourage member. He's never like, you demand Mike. He's always like, I don't know what dad would think about this. And do you think they have any more shrimp? You know that kind of thing. But we showed up to play golf and they paired us up with these two other people. And it was a celebrity tournament that people were like, who do you think our celebrity is going to be?
And Joe and I were like, yeah, who do you think our celebrity is going to be? And then I'm like, oh no. I think it might be me.
And then I'm apologizing to these people. I'm like, I'm really sorry. I'm your celebrity. If you think this is disappointing for you, you can't imagine how I feel. So I'm apologizing the whole day. And then at the end of the day, sure enough, my pants are all wrinkled. And I have to be at this perform at this semi-formal banquet. And I'm like, what about one outfit forever? I thought that was a good plan.
Here's what I do. As damage control, I go to the locker room to iron my own pants. Yeah, it's a pretty good plan. And I find an iron, but I couldn't find a board. So I take off my pants, I'm just ironing them on a bench in the locker room in my underwear, which is a dead giveaway that these are my only pants.
So I'm ironing my pants and I put them on and I go up to the event. And this is where the trouble really begins. It's important for me before I tell you this part of the story to remind you that you're on my side.
I said to the woman in charge, I go, what's the format of the show? And she goes, well, there's two speakers, and then you, and then a raffle. And I was like, well, that's exciting, because I've never opened for a raffle. And I'm trying to stay optimistic, and I'm sitting in the back of the room with my brother Joe. And the first speaker comes on the stage, and he's an 11-year-old boy who survived leukemia.
I know. He's not funny at all. He focuses primarily on the leukemia and everyone is crying. Literally everyone is crying. I'm even crying in the back of the room for two reasons.
One, the kid, and two, for me. Because I have to perform comedy. And it gets worse, because Joe leans over and he goes, this ain't looking so good, Mike. I said, I concur.
The second speaker was Hall of Fame quarterback Phil Sims. And yeah, he's got one fan here. But he's a broadcaster, and he gives an amazing, inspiring speech. And he even sprinkles in a few jokes about golf. They were similar to jokes I thought of about golf that day. It was like watching the last drops of my joke canteen drip out onto a desert of cancer.
He gets a standing ovation, which he should have. Clearly the show is over. Surely there can't be anyone more famous than Hall of Fame quarterback Phil Sims. But wait. There was.
It was Mike Berbiglia who had no business being at this event. I know there are some entertainers who might have risen to the challenge, and I would love to be one of those entertainers, but I am not.
As a matter of fact, I have a habit in my life of making awkward situations even more awkward. Like, I've said this before, but a few years ago I was moving a new bed into my apartment and this woman who lived in the building opened the front door for me with her key and she goes, I'm not worried because a rapist wouldn't have a bed like that. That's how she started the conversation. Now, what I should have said
was nothing. What I did say was you'd be surprised, and there's nothing you can say after that. You're just like, see you around the building, you know, that kind of thing.
I've thought about this a lot, and I think there's something wrong with my brain where I don't have an on deck circle for ideas. It's just batter up, you know? And a lot of the ideas are bad, and they're at the playground. I don't know about this one, Mike. And I just turn into this drunk little league dad. I'm like, you go take some cuts, son.
As a comedian, when people laugh, it's very exciting. It's a very neat thing. And when they don't, it feels like you're performing jazz. Because they're kind of bobbing their head and looking to the side. And sometimes that's okay. I'm like, I like jazz. But then I get worried, because sometimes jazz sucks.
What if I'm the Kenny G of comedy? What if I think I sound like this? And in fact, I sound like this.
So I'm on stage at the charity golf tournament, and I'm just canny-gene it up, you know? I'm just, for 10 minutes, just, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
And I don't want to fail. I mean, that's a really important point in this story is that I want, these are good people, and I want to succeed for them, but I just can't, you know? And so I think to myself, why don't I cater my material to this specific event? And everyone has been talking about cancer. I know.
I'm in the future also. I had that thought on stage for about one second and then better up!
I said to the audience, a true story. I said it went to the doctor and they told me there was something in my bladder. And whenever they tell you that, it's never anything good. You know, like we found something in your bladder and it's seasoned tickets to the Yankees. That was the response I was hoping for.
At that point, I just threw in the towel. I mean, I was just devastated. I thanked the audience and apologized simultaneously, which I've never done. I was like, thank you, sorry for ruining your van. And I just kind of walked off. And I was so upset. And I walked over to Joe. And I go, Joe, we are leaving now.
And that's when Joe said, and I quote, Mike, I can't. They're just about to start the raffle. And because everybody laughed, my odds are amazing.
And that is the worst show I have ever done in my entire life. Yeah. Mike Brabiglia, in addition to touring and having specials on Netflix, he also has a podcast about how to write stories and jokes. I've actually been on it a couple of times. It's called Working It Out. You can find it wherever you get your podcasts.
Act 4, fiasco is a force for good. George Clooney, Barbara Streisand, Jennifer Aniston, Vidal Sassoon, Jody Foster, Jason Momoa, Brad Pitt, Keanu Reeves, Sharon Stone, and John Travolta. Also, George Burns, Bob Hope, Jean Kelly, Gina Rowans. Also, Quentin Tarantino, John Waters, Nora Ephron, Margie Rocklin, has interviewed all these people.
She's written big feature stories for all sorts of big magazines and newspapers. But the very, very first big feature assignment that she was actually sent out on was by a publication in 1982, the Los Angeles reader. They sent out a very nervous, very useful Margie Rocklin to interview Moon unit Zappa. Remember her daughter Frank Zappa.
In this little bit that she does on the song, she's using a lot of this language that sort of Val speak that no one had ever heard before, and it was considered really exotic. And so I was from the valley, so I was sent to go talk to her. She is one of your people. Speak to her in your secret private argot.
Exactly. And of course, what is so touching to me is that I totally bought that. You're right. I'm the right person for the job. I'm going to go speak to her in the valley language and we will bond.
So you get there and you're a bit nervous, and the pressure is on, which is, of course, the setting for a possible triumph or a possible fiasco. Right. And what happens next? Well, what I noticed was that it was a tense situation. I just didn't feel like it was going very well, and the mother was sort of hovering. Right. But we have a recording of it, because you had a tape recorder rolling during this.
Yes. What is mother hangouts in the valley besides the Galleria? Boeing alleys with big arcades are very popular. At this point, I'm sort of at that rock bottom level that everyone can get at an interview where you're just saying, what's your favorite color? And she's trying to help me along. Kirk was just gone. It's now the sports center. It's the same thing. It's still very. So we're seated in the den.
And the mother made me coffee. But I was too nervous to drink it. But I sort of kept staring at it and she kept staring at it. And I felt like it was pretty important that at some point I better drain that coffee cup. And so what happened was Moon told me a joke. And I didn't
see the joke coming. And right before she told me the joke, I had taken a big swig of the coffee, which was now cold. And when she told me the joke, I burst out laughing. And I started to choke. And so I pressed my lips together. So I didn't spit it out. I didn't want to do a spit take. And the coffee came shooting out my nose. Shooting out your nose. Shooting right out my nose. Are you OK?
And I was really embarrassed, but simultaneously I couldn't breathe. At the same time I was choking and I jumped up and I sort of started running around the room, knocking things over. And I don't think they, I think that they didn't know what was going on and that the mother began chasing me.
She began chasing you. She began chasing me because she could, you know, I was sort of running from corner to corner, trying to catch my breath. And she began sort of chasing me. And at a certain point, she got behind me and she gave me the Heimlich maneuver. Wait, put your arms up. No, we're not doing this. OK? Let's do the Heimlich maneuver. Oh, God. I know we're right. I'm just tired. Well, you know, I've been in the news business. I've been a reporter for 20 years and nobody's ever given me the Heimlich maneuver while I've been on the story.
Well, I always say that it's a benchmark. It's a very low benchmark. And I can do any interview, I can get thrown off a set, you know. I can be cursed out by this subject, but I can leave and get in the car and I can drive home and think, you know, I didn't blow coffee out my nose. Now, what happened after that?
It was sort of like we'd all been in an earthquake together. And all of the nervousness left the room and suddenly we were three gals just chatting. And I remember I sort of like hugged them both when I loved it. Wow. They were now my friends.
it's interesting you know because one of our criteria for fiasco is that all social order the normal social structure breaks down and literally that's what happens here that the normal interview stops and the social structure of the moment completely changes sheet the mom gives you the hymek maneuver and then suddenly stops feeling like an interview yeah it was really and i have to say that you know it was a very embarrassing experience and it completely made me feel close to them
It was so interesting when Moon's father died a while ago. I bumped into her somewhere and we both burst into tears. I mean, I really felt like a little sister of mine and had a loss. And you know, the starting point was, you know... That moment. That moment.
To me, the thing about it that's useful is that it shows the useful purpose of a fiasco. That is, when social order breaks down, that can be a force not just for chaos and for entropy and for evil, but in fact, that can be a force for good. It can bring people together.
Right. You know, it was actually this huge success to me. I'd never been sent out, you know, under these kind of circumstances before. And I remember we beat the local paper. The Herald Examiner followed us a week later. And so we had the first story, and it was sort of considered the definitive one because we had this glossary of terms that I had made or put together. And... Valley speak terms. Valley speak terms. And then it was syndicated.
And most of the quotable stuff that you ended up using in your story happened after the story. It's a technique I don't suggest anyone try. For years afterwards, Moon would send me postcards.
And on the postcard somewhere would be a picture of a nose, and there would be liquid coming out of it. Sort of like my logo. Reading, ready to the mask. I'm sure it's like really nauseating. Like, bark out, gag me with the spoon, gross. I am sure. Totally.
Margay Raccoon. She covers film and television in Los Angeles. Moon unit Zappa's memoir Earth to Moon is published in August.
When today's program is produced by Nancy Update and myself, we've bought top of Lee Spiegel and Julie Snyder, Germany editors for today's program, Jack Hitt, Margie Rockman, and Konsuyere Serra Val, production up for this rerun from Henry Larson, Stonelson, and Matt Tierney. This American life is given to public radio stations by PRX, the public radio exchange.
become a This American Life Partner, which has you all kinds of bonus content, ad-free listening, and hundreds of our favorite episodes of the show right in your podcast feed, go to thisamericanlife.org slash Life Partners. That link is also in the show notes. Thank you so much to our program's co-founder, Mr. Turin Malatilla. You know, he walks into our studio at the end of each and every episode, every single broadcast, to grimly assess the damage.
Dead squirrel, ruin pillows, need a new couch. The walls are covered with soot, the fire alarm's going off. I'm Eric Glass. Back next week, there's more stories of this American Bible.
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