FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Me
and the Kid
By Eric Friedman
The
first time I tried to join the Big Brother program, I was rejected.
And just to be clear, I'm not talking about the reality show --
I'm talking about the charity. I went in for an interview,
and four days later I got a letter saying thank you very much but
you do not fit our Big Brother criterion. Translation: "There's
a kid out there with no father, and a shitty home life, just dying
for someone to reach out and give him some love and attention --
but we think little Johnny McNoDad is better off without you in
his life. Thanks for driving all the way out to fucking Alhambra."
That
was three years ago, and to this day I don't know why I got turned
down. They never tell you the reason. I thought the interview went
really well. I was responsible. And mature. Even when the social
worker asked me, "Can you think of any time where it would
be appropriate to touch a child sexually?" And I knew it would
be hilarious to say, "Because they look really hot?"
But I didn't. Because I'm mature.
The
only thing I can put my finger on that may have gotten me nixed
was when the woman asked me if I had any preference for the kind
of little brother I got matched up with, and I said "I'd love
a little black kid. Because," and I said this, "they're
so cute and funny." Which I still maintain is true. Webster
didn't stay on the air for five seasons because of the zingers coming
out of George Pappadopoulos's mouth, am I right?
But
in retrospect, that probably wasn't the best thing to say to a social
worker whose job is to keep creepy dudes away from innocent kids.
And now I realize that when she asked "what kind" of little
brother, she was probably looking for adjectives like "athletic"
or "personable," whereas I was thinking more in terms
of flavor -- like "What kind of ice cream do you want?"
Clearly I wanted chocolate. And clearly the Big Brother organization
didn't want me.
At
least not the Gentile Big Brother organization. But did you
know there's a Jewish Big Brothers? I didn't. When I first
heard the term "underprivileged Jewish kid," I pictured
someone who only went to four weeks of sleep-away camp instead of
eight. But apparently Jewish dads sometimes bail on their kids too,
and apparently the Jewish Big Brother program isn't as choosy about
who they let in, because in February, 2002, I was matched up with
Hector, a shy, smiley, spiky-haired, ten-year-old Latino Jew.
"Oh yeah," I thought, the first time he hopped in my Jetta,
and I told him he could put on whatever radio station he liked,
"I'm gonna Big Brother the shit out of this kid."
Hector
popped on Power 106 and started rapping along with Mystikal's "Shake
Ya Ass" as I drove us to the Santa Monica Pier -- Hector's
favorite place in Los Angeles, and what would soon become my least
favorite place in Los Angeles.
"So
what
ride do you want to go on first?"
"I
don't want to go on rides. I want to play the games."
When I was growing up, my father never let us play carnival games
-- you know the cheesy "throw some shit at some other shit
so you can win some stuffed shit" kind of games. He taught
us at an early age that those things were a total waste of money
-- like hotel mini bars. And Brendan Frazier movies.
"Eric,
Eric. Can I have some money for the ring toss?"
"You
know what Hector, I don't think those games are such a good idea.
They're pretty expensive, and kind of a ripoff, y'know?"
"I
have no dad."
He
didn't actually say that. But he didn't have to. The voice in my
head said it for him. All day long. Two ring tosses, three dart
throws, a water-cannon-horse-race, and several mole-whackings later,
the kid didn't even have so much as a stuffed koala to show for
it. And I was out 46 Bucks. For that kind of money, I could've bought
some Toblerones out of a hotel mini fridge and rented Encino
Man. And it would've been way more enjoyable than the Santa
fucking Monica pier.
A couple
weeks later, I took Hector to the Downtown Science Center. We check
out some cool hands-on exhibits about dinosaurs and technology and
other stuff that 10-year-old kids go apeshit over.
"Hey
Hector, how do you like the museum?"
"It's
alright."
We
go next door to the Imax theater and watch a totally awesome movie
about outer space.
"Hey
Hect, what'd you think of the movie?"
"It
was alright."
We
leave the museum and hop on the shuttle bus that takes us to the
parking lot. The bus starts moving. Hector's face lights up.
"Daaaang,
this is tight!"
"This?
This is tight? This BUS that's taking us from the front of the museum
to parking section Jupiter is tighter than the movie we just saw
on a thousand foot screen with fucking sweet-ass surround sound.
This is tighter than that? What the fuck is wrong with you?"
Instead,
I say, "Yeah. It is tight, isn't it? Really, really tight."
continued...
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