HOWARD WALDROP
MR. GOOBER'S SHOW
YOU KNOW HOW IT IS:
There's a bar on the comer, where hardly
anybody knows your name, and you like
it that way. Live bands play there two or three
nights a week. Before they start
up it's nice, and on the nights they don't play --there's
a good jukebox, the
big TV's on low on ESPN all the time. At his prices, the owner should
be a
millionaire, but he's given his friends so many free drinks they've forgotten
they
should pay for more than every third or fourth one. Not that you know the
owner, but you've
watched.
You go there when your life's good, you go there when your life's bads mostly
you
go there instead of having a good or bad life.
And one night, fairly crowded, you're on the
stools so the couples and the happy
people can have the booths and tables. Someone's put
$12 in the jukebox land
they have some taste), the TV's on the Australian ThumbWrestling
Finals, the
neon beer signs are on, and the place looks like the inside of the Ferris Wheel
on opening night at the state fair.
You start talking to the guy next to you, early
fifties, your age, and you get
off on TV (you can talk to any American, except a
Pentecostal, about television)
and you're talking the classic stuff: the last Newhart
episode; Northern
Exposure; the episode where Lucy stomps the grapes; the coast-to-coast
bigmouth
Dick Van Dyke; Howdy-Doody (every eightyear-old boy in America had a Jones for
Princess
Summer-Fall WinterSpring).
And the guy, whose name you know is Eldon (maybe he told you,
maybe you were
born knowing it) starts asking you about some sci-fi show from the early
'50s,
maybe you didn't get it, maybe it was only on local upstate New York, sort of,
it
sounds like, a travelog, like the old Seven League Boots, only about space,
stars and such,
planets...
"Well, no," you say, "there was Tom Corbett, Space Cadet; Space Patrol; Captain
Video" -- which you never got but knew about -- "Rod Brown of the Rocket
Rangers; Captain
Midnight (or Jet Jackson, Flying Commando, depending on whether
you saw it before or after
Ovaltine quit sponsoring it, and in reruns people's
lips flapped after saying 'Captain
Midnight' but what came out was 'Jet
Jackson'...); or maybe one of the anthology shows,
Twilight Zone or Tales of
....
"No." he says, "not them. See, there was this TV..."
"Oh," you
say, "a TV. Well, the only one I know of was this one where a guy at a
grocery store (one
season) invents this TV that contacts..."
"No," he says, looking at you (Gee, this guy can
be intense!). "I don't mean
Johnny Jupiter, which is what you were going to say. Jimmy
Duckweather invents
TV. Contacts Jupiter, which is inhabited by puppets when they're inside
the TV,
and by guys in robot suits when they come down to Earth, and almost cause
Duckweather
to lose his job and not get a date with the boss's daughter, episode
after episode, two
seasons."
"Maybe you mean Red Planet Mars, a movie. Peter Graves --"
"...Andrea King, guy
invents hydrogen tube; Nazis; Commies; Eisenhower
president. Jesus speaks from Mars."
"Well,
The Twonky. Horrible movie, about a TV from the future?"
"Hans Conreid. Nah, that's not
it."
And so it goes. The conversation turns to other stuff (you're not the one with
The
Answer) and mostly it's conversation you forget because, if all the crap we
carry around in
our heads were real, and it was flushed, the continents would
drown, and you forget it, and
mostly get drunk and a little maudlin, slightly
depressed and mildly horny, and eventually
you go home.
But it doesn't matter, because this isn't your story, it's Eldon's.
When he was
eight years old, city.kid Eldon and his seven-year-old sister Irene
were sent off for two
weeks in the summer of 1953, to Aunt Joanie's house in
upstate New York while, not known to
them, their mother had a hysterectomy.
Aunt Joanie was not their favorite aunt; that was
Aunt Nonie, who would as soon
whip out a Monopoly board, or Game of Life, or checkers as
look at you, and
always took them off on picnics or fishing or whatever it was she thought
they'd
like to do. But Aunt Nonie (their Moro's youngest sister) was off in Egypt on a
cruise
she'd won in a slogan contest for pitted dates, so it fell to Aunt
Joanie, (their Father's
oldest sister) to keep them the two weeks.
Their father' s side of the family wasn't the
fun one. If an adult unbent toward
a child a little, some other family member would be
around to remind them they
were just children. Their cousins on that side of the family
(not that Aunt
Joanie or Uncle Arthridge had any kids) were like mice; they had to take off
their shoes and put on house slippers when they got home from school; they could
never go
in to the family room; they had to be in bed by 8:30 P.M., even when
the sun was still up
in the summer.
Uncle Arthridge was off in California, so it was just them and Aunt Joanie,
who,
through no fault of her own, looked just like the Queen in Snow White and the
Seven
Dwarves, which they had seen with Aunt Nonie the summer before.
They arrived by train,
white tags stuck to them like turkeys in a raffle, and a
porter had made sure they were
comfortable. When Irene had been upset, realizing
she would be away from home, and was
going to be at Aunt Joanie' s for two
weeks, and had begun to sniffle, Eldon held her hand.
He was still at the age
where he could hold his sister' s hand against the world and think
nothing of
it.
Aunt Joanie was waiting for them in the depot on the platform, and handed the
porter a $1 tip, which made him smile.
And then Aunt Joanie drove them, allowing them to
sit in the front seat of her
Plymouth, to her house, and there they were.
At first, he
thought it might be a radio.
It was up on legs, the bottom of them looking like eagle claws
holding a wooden
ball. It wasn't a sewing machine cabinet, or a table. It might be a liquor
cabinet, but there wasn't a keyhole.
It was the second day at Aunt Joanie's and he was
already cranky. Irene had had
a crying jag the night before and their aunt had given them
some ice cream.
He was exploring. He already knew every room; there was a basement and an
attic.
The real radio was in the front room; this was in the sitting room at the back.
One
of the reasons they hadn't wanted to come to Aunt Joanie's was that she had
no television,
like their downstairs neighbors, the Stevenses, did back in the
city. They'd spent the
first part of summer vacation downstairs in front of it,
every chance they got. Two weeks
at Aunt Nonie's without television would have
been great, because she wouldn't have given
them time to think, and would have
them exhausted by bedtime anyway.
But two weeks at Aunt
Joanie's and Uncle Arthridge's without television was
going to be murder. She had let them
listen to radio, but not the scary shows,
or anything good. And Johnny Dollar and Suspense
weren't on out here, she was
sure.
So he was looking at the cabinet in the sitting room. It
had the eagleclaw legs.
It was about three feet wide, and the part that was solid started a
foot and a
half off the floor. There was two feet of cabinet above that. At the back was a
rounded part, with air holes in it, like a Lincoln Continental spare tire
holder. He ran
his hand over it -- it was made out of that same stuff as the
backs of radios and
televisions.
There were two little knobs on the front of the cabinet though he couldn't see
a
door. He pulled on them. Then he turned and pulled on them.
They opened, revealing three
or four other knobs, and a metal toggle switch down
at the right front corner. They didn't
look like radio controls. It didn't look
like a television either. There was no screen.
There
was no big lightning-bolt moving dial like on their radio at home in the
city.
Then he
noticed a double-line of wood across the top front of it, like on the
old ice-box at his
grandfather's. He pushed on it from the floor. Something
gave, but he couldn't make it go
farther.
Eldon pulled a stool up to the front of it.
"What are you doing?" asked Irene.
"This
must be another radio," he said. "This part lifts up."
He climbed atop the stool. He had a
hard time getting his fingers under the
ridge. He pushed.
The whole top of the thing lifted
up a few inches. He could see glass. Then it
was too heavy. He lifted at it again after it
dropped down, and this time it
came up halfway open.
There was glass on the under-lid. It
was a mirror. He saw the reflection of part
of the room. Something else moved below the
mirror, inside the cabinet.
"Aunt Joanie's coming!" said Irene,
He dropped the lid and
pushed the stool away and closed the doors.
"What are you two little cautions doing?" asked
Aunt Joanie from the other room.
THE NEXT MORNING, when Aunt Joanie went to the store on
the comer, he opened the
top while Irene watched.
The inner lid was a mirror that stopped
halfway up, at an angle. Once he got it
to a certain point, it clicked into place. There
was a noise from inside and
another click.
He looked down into it. There was a big dark
glass screen.
"It's a television!" he said.
"Can we get Howdy-Doody?"
"I don't know," he
said.
"You better ask Aunt Joanie, or you'll get in trouble."
He clicked the toggle switch.
Nothing happened.
"It doesn't work," he said.
"Maybe it's not plugged in," said Irene.
Eldon
lay down on the bare floor at the edge of the area rug, saw the prongs of
a big electric
plug sticking out underneath. He pulled on it. The cord uncoiled
from behind. He looked
around for the outlet. The nearest one was on the far
wall.
"What are you two doing?" asked
Aunt Joanie, stepping into the room with a small
grocery bag in her arms.
"Is...is this a
television set?" asked Eldon.
"Can we get Howdy-Doody?" asked Irene.
Aunt Joanie put down
the sack. "It is a television. But it won't work anymore.
There's no need to plug it in.
It's an old-style one, from before the war. They
don't work like that anymore. Your uncle
Arthridge and I bought it in 1938.
There were no broadcasts out here then, but we thought
there would be soon."
As she was saying this, she stepped forward, took the cord from
Eldon's hands,
rewound it and placed it behind the cabinet again.
"Then came the War, and
everything changed. These kind won't work anymore. So we
shan't be playing with it, shall
we? It's probably dangerous by now."
"Can't we try it, just once?" said Eldon.
"I do not
think so," said Aunt Joanie. "Please put it out of your mind. Go wash
up now, we'll have
lunch soon."
Three days before they left, they found themselves alone in the house again,
in
the early evening. It had mined that afternoon, and was cool for summer.
Irene heard
scraping in the sitting room. She went there and found Eldon pushing
the television cabinet
down the bare part of the floor toward the electrical
outlet on the far wall.
He plugged it
in. Irene sat down in front of it, made herself comfortable.
"You're going to get in
trouble," she said. "What if it explodes?"
He opened the lid. They saw the reflection of
the television screen in it from
the end of the couch.
He flipped the toggle. Something
hummed, there was a glow in the back, and they
heard something spinning. Eldon put his hand
near the round part and felt pulses
of air, like from a weak fan. He could see lights
through the holes in the
cabinet, and something was moving.
He twisted a small knob, and
light sprang up in the picture-tube part, enlarged
and reflected in the mirror on the lid.
Lines of bright static moved up the
screen and disappeared in a repeating pattern.
He turned
another knob, the larger one, and the bright went dark and then bright
again.
Then a picture
came in.
They watched those last three days, every time Aunt Joanie left; afraid at
first,
watching only a few minutes, then turning it off, unplugging it, and
closing it up and
pushing it back into its place, careful not to scratch the
floor.
Then they watched more,
and more, and there was an excitement each time they
went through the ritual, a tense
expectation.
Since no sound came in, what they saw they referred to as "Mr. Goober's Show,"
from his shape, and his motions, and what went on around him. He was on anytime
they turned
the TV on.
They left Aunt Joanie's reluctantly. She had never caught them watching it. They
took the train home.
Eldon was in a kind of anxiety. He talked to all his friends, who knew
nothing
about anything like that, and some of them had been as far away as San Francisco
during the summer. The only person he could talk to about it was his little
sister, Irene.
He did not know what the jumpiness in him was.
They rushed into Aunt Joanie's house the
first time they visited at Christmas,
and ran to the sitting room.
The wall was blank.
They
looked at at each other, then ran back into the living room.
"Aunt Joanie!" said Eldon,
interrupting her, Uncle Artbridge and his father.
"Aunt Joanie, where's the television?"
"Television...? Oh, that thing. I sold it to a used furniture man end of the
summer. He
bought it for the cabinetry, he said, to make an aquarium out of it.
I suppose he sold the
insides for
They grew up, talking to each other, late at nights, seen. When their family
got
TV, they spent their time trying
Then high school, then college, the '60s. Eldon went m
Nam, back about the same.
Irene got a job in television, and sent him letters, while he
taught bookkeeping
at a junior college.
April 11, 1971
Dear Bro' --
I ran down what kind of
set Aunt Joanie had.
It was a mechanical television, with a Nipkov disk scanner. It was a
model made
between 1927 and 1929.
Mechanical: yes. You light a person, place, thing, very
very brightly. On one
side of the studio are photoelectric cells that turn light to
current. Between
the subject and the cells, you drop in a disk that spins 300 times a
minute.
Starting at the edge of the disk, and spiraling inward all the way around to the
center are holes. You have a slitscan shutter. As the light leaves the subject
it's broken
into a series of lines by the holes passing across the slit. The
photoelectric cells pick
up the pulses of light. (An orthicon tube does exactly
the same thing, except
electronically, in a camera, and your modern TV is just a
big orthicon tube on the other
end.) Since it was a mechanical signal, your disk
in the cabinet at home had to spin at
exactly the same rate. So they had to send
out a regulating signal at the same time.
Not
swell, not good definition, but workable.
But Aunt Joanie (rest her soul) was right -
nothing in 1953 was broadcasting
that it could receive, because all early pre-war
televisions were made with the
picture-portion going out on FM and the sound going out on
short-wave (so her
set had receivers for both) and neither of them are where TVis now on
the
wavelengths (where they've been since 1946).
Mr. Goober could not have come from an FCC
licensed broadcaster in 1953. I'll
check Canada and Mexico, but I'm pretty sure everything
was moved off those
bands by then, even experimental stations. Since we never got sound,
either
there was none, or maybe it was coming in with the picture (like now) and her
set
couldn't separate four pieces of information (one-half each of two signals,
which is why we
use FM for TV).
It shouldn't have happened, I don't think. There are weird stories (the
ghost
signals of a Midwest station people saw the test patterns of more than a year
after
they quit broadcasting; the famous 2.8 second delay in radio transmissions
all over the
world on shortwave in 1927 and early 1928).
Am going to the NAB meeting in three weeks.
Will talk to everybody there,
especially the old guys, and find out if any of them knows
about Mr. Goober's
Show. Stay sweet.
Your sis,
Irene
Eldon began the search on his own; at
parties, at bars, at ball games. During
the next few years, he wrote his sister with bits
of fugitive matter he'd picked
up. And he got quite a specialized knowledge of local TV
shows, kid's show
clowns, Shock Theater hosts, and eclectic local programming of the early
1950%
throughout these United States.
June 25, 1979
Dear Eldon --
Sorry it took so long to get
this letter off to you, but I've been busy at work,
and helping with the Fund Drive, and I
also think I'm onto something. I've just
run across stuff that indicates there was some
kind of medical outfit that used
radio in the late '40s and early '50s.
Hope you can come
home for Christmas this time. Mom's getting along in years,
you know. I know you had your
troubles with her (I'm the one to talk) but she
really misses you. As Bill Cosby says,
she's an old person trying to get into
Heaven now. She's trying to be good the second
thirty years of her life...
Will write you again as soon as I find out more about these
quacks.
Your little sister,
Irene
August 14, 1979
Dear Big Brother:
Well, it's depressing here.
The lead I had turned out to be a bust, and I could
just about cry, since I thought this
might be it, since they broadcast on both
shortwave and FM (like Aunt Joanie's set
received) but this probably wasn't it,
either.
It was called Drown Radio Therapy (there's
something poetic about the name, but
not the operation). It was named for Dr. Ruth Drown,
she was a real osteopath.
Sometime before the War, she and a technocrat started working
with a lowpower
broadcast device. By War's end, she was claiming she could treat disease at
a
distance, and set up a small broadcast station behind her Chicago suburb office.
Patients
came in, were diagnosed, and given a schedule of broadcast times they
were supposed to tune
in. (The broadcasts were directly to each patient,
supposedly, two or three times a day.)
By the late '40s, she'd also gone into
TV, which is of course FM(the radio stuff being
shortwave). That's where I'd
hoped I'd found someone broadcasting at the same time on both
bands.
But probably no go. She franchised the machines out to other doctors, mostly
naturopaths
and cancer quacks. It's possible that one was operating near Aunt
Joanie's somewhere, but
probably not, and anyway, a committee of docs
investigated her stuff. What they found was
that the equipment was so
low-powered it could only broadcast a dozen miles (not counting
random skipping,
bouncing off the Heaviside layer, which it wouldn't have been able to
reach).
Essentially they ruled the equipment worthless.
And, the thing that got to me, there
was no picture transmission on the FM (TV)
portion; just the same type of random signals
that went out on short-wave, on
the same schedule, every day. Even if you had a rogue
cancer specialist, the FCC
said the stuff couldn't broadcast a visual signal, not with the
technology of
the time. (The engineer at the station here looked at the specs and said
'even
if they had access to video orthicon tubes, the signal wouldn't have gotten
across the
room,' unless it was on cable, which it wasn't.)
I've gone on too long. It's not it.
Sorry
to disappoint you (again). But I'm still going through back files of
Variety and BNJ and
everything put out by the networks in those years. And,
maybe a motherlode, a friend's got
a friend who knows where all the Dumont
records (except Gleason's) are stored.
We'll find
out yet, brother. I've heard stories of people waiting twenty,
thirty, forty years to clear
things like this up. There was a guy who kept
insisting he'd read a serialized novel in a
newspaper, about the fall of
civilization, in the early 1920s. Pre-bomb, pre-almost
everything. He was only a
kid when he read it. Ten years ago he mentioned it to someone who
had a friend
who recognized it, not from a newspaper, but as a book called Darkness and the
Dawn. It was in three parts, and serial rights were sold, on the first part
only, to, like
newspapers in the whole U.S. And the man, now in his sixties, had
read it in one of them.
Things like that do happen, kiddo.
Write me when you can.
Love,
Irene
Sept. 12, 1982
El --
I'm
ready to give up on this. It's running me crazy - not
crazy, but to distraction, if I had
anything else to be
distracted from.
I can't see any way out of this except to join the
Welcome
Space Brothers Club, which I refuse to do.
That would be the easy way out, give up,
go over to the Cheesy Side of the
Force. You and me saw a travelog, a SeeIt-Now of the
Planets, hosted by an
interstellar Walter Cronkite on a Nipkov disk TV in 1953. We're the
only people
in the world who did. No one else.
But that's why CE3K and the others have made
so many millions of dollars. People
want to believe, but they want to believe for other
people, not themselves. They
don't want to be the ones. They want someone else to be the
one. And then they
want everybody to believe. But it's not their ass out there saying: the
Space
Brothers are here; I can't prove it, take my word for it, it's real. Believe me
as a
person.
I'm not that person, and neither are you; OR there has to be some other answer.
One,
or the other, but not both; and not neither.
I don't know what to do anymore; whatever it
is, it's not this. It's quit being
fun. It's quit being something I do aside from life as
we know it. It is my
life, and yours, and it's all I've got.
I know what Mr. Goober was
trying to tell us, and there was more, but the sound
was off.
I'm tired. I'll write you next
week when I can call my life my own again.
Your Sis
Cops called from Irene's town the next
week.
After the funeral, and the stay at his mother's, and the inevitable fights, with
his
stepfather trying to stay out of it, he came home and found one more letter,
postmarked the
same day as the police had called him.
Dear Eldon --
Remember this, and don't think less of
me: What we saw was real.
Evidently, too real for me.
Find out what we saw.
Love always,
Irene
So you'll be sitting in the bar, there'll be the low hum and thump of noise as
the
band sets up, and over in the comer, two people will be talking. You'll hear
the word
"Lucy" which could be many things -- a girlfriend, a TV show, a late
President's daughter,
a 4-million-year-old ape-child. Then you'll hear "M-Squad"
or "Untouchables" and there'll
be more talk, and you'll hear distinctly, during
a noise-level drop, "...and I don't mean
Johnny-fucking-Jupiter either..."
And in a few minutes he'll leave, because the band will
have started, and
conversation, except at the 100-decibel level, is over for the night.
But
he'll be back tomorrow night. And the night after.
And all the star-filled nights that
follow that one.