I'm 68 years old.
After 68 years of toeing-the-line,
doing what was expected of me,
working for others,
working for my family,
working to pay my taxes
and trying to make sure that I'm not destitute
in my dotage,
I'll admit something.
I'm ready to do something radical.
I have a large, wonderful apartment in New York City.
I've lived there since 1998.
It's paid off.
I have a small, seaside cottage in Connecticut.
I can spit into the Long Island Sound from my bedroom.
And it's all-but paid for.
But I'm ready to do something radical.
Not move to a larger house,
or a smaller house,
or to California,
where my younger daughter lives,
or closer to Boston,
where my elder daughter,
my grandsons and my son-in-law lives.
Not to the middle of the country,
closer to my Chicago brother,
and equidistant from my kids.
I'm ready to do something radical.
Not take a day-off from blogging.
Not retire.
Not have the hot-fudge sundae of my dreams.
No.
I keep telling my wife.
I'm ready to do something radical.
When the Times runs pieces like this,
I'm no longer looking for a nice split level,
this time with a mudroom.
Like I said, radical.
At least radical for me.
Of course, it doesn't take long for my thoughts to turn to advertising. What would it mean for a brand to do something radical.
Radical doesn't mean off-brand, by-the-way.
Maybe radical means more on-brand than you could possibly ever imagine yourself allowing yourself.
Radical might mean,
in this era of universal namby-pamby,
speaking out.
Calling bull-shit.
Not pulling punches.
Radical might mean--in this era of politesse--
actually saying what you feel.
As the Knicks were returning from San Antonio, Texas, up two-games to none against the highly-favored Spurs, I wondered, what would happen if the Knicks did something radical.
I wondered what would happen if instead of holding Game Three in Madison Square Garden, the self-proclaimed "world's most-famous arena," what if the Knicks played a game at Rucker Park in Harlem--the center of gravity for New York street basketball.
Or even the famous W. 4th Street courts?
Or what if they went back to basics. Found an out of the way high school gym in the Bronx, or somewhere in Queens, or somewhere far from the madding crowd and had the game there?
There might be outrage among monied fans who couldn't get to 155th and Eighth Avenue. Or some band-box of a gym in Corona, Queens.
But really about 98% of the NBA's money comes from TV, so the amount of revenue lost would be nominal. Maybe the broadcast--done on a shoe-string without all the built-in big-arena gee-whizery would suffer. But what it might lack in polish it would more than make up with charm and humility.
Then there's this, which I just read in The Economist.
What if Dolan,
the Knicks,
the NBA did something radical.
"LIVE FROM RUCKER PARK,
the cornerstone of basketball history,
where the crossover, the slam-dunk and streetball
were invented and honed,
a court graced by
LIVE FROM RUCKER PARK,
GAME THREE OF THE NBA FINALS."
Or what if the game were played on a court like the one Richard Avedon shot Kareem Abdul Jabbar on (back when he was Lew Alcindor) near the old Power High on W. 65th Street?
Doing so would have been radical.
A tribute to the dreams of kids who breathed the game.
Not the big money people who bought it.
Doing so might have made James Dolan, one of the most-hated team-owners in the world, perhaps a bit human. Maybe even, for a moment, likable.
Also, for all those dreaming kids,
many of them now old men,
what if the Knicks re-designed their uniforms for one day.
And went with something like this.
A slight uniform revise,
in the universal language of New York
that no one would ever forget.
Radical.