"Steve Buckley's old-time, gay-ass, baseball something or other is coming up, right? Do I have to actually play in that?"
The guy's a natural!
The only way to reconcile this, then, is to focus on the second word of Gerry's epithet. Old. Because that's really the only difference between the two. Hmmm....OK, here goes: I'm guessing there exists within the racist crank community an age-based pecking order, in which the older racist cranks are discounted as doddering coots, and the younger racist cranks are dismissed as snot-nosed punks......That makes sense, right? Right?
Gerry may be an ageist. But a hypocrite? To quote Butch Stearns, "I'm not so sure about that."["Zero point zero....Good Glavin!"]
Anybody can be unfunny for a day or two. Some people can even go a full week without a single clever utterance.
But only one man has the unique talent and dogged persistence to give us nearly nine years' worth of bad puns and pointless stories.
Say what you want about Buckley:
He's arrogant. He's self-righteous. He's the prototypical sports-radio Jekyll-and-Hyde (self-styled tough guy / whiney little pussy).
All true. But above all, he's stultifyingly boring. And that's what makes him special.
[Actual listeners]
I never knew my mother. The official records claim she was a circus performer who died in a freak tricycle accident. But I have long suspected this to be a cover story. Perhaps she abandoned me and I was to be spared the shame. Perhaps she died in 'rilla-birth and I was to be spared the guilt.
Either way, I feel neither resentment nor longing for my mother. In fact, I feel nothing for her. Because I never knew her. And all of this, too, is immaterial; because the point I'm trying to make is that I spent the formative years of my life alone. Just me and my thoughts.
And a radio.
The radio belonged to a zoo attendant who worked the day shift in my pen. (In retrospect, it's odd that I don't remember his name, considering he was something of a prophet, albeit an unwitting one.) It was always tuned to AM-850; as a youth, I woke to the sounds of WEEI's "Dennis & Callahan Show." And for hours each morning, theirs were the only voices I heard. (The attendant wasn't much of a conversationalist.)
Back then, the morning show was nothing but unintelligible background noise to me. A cacaphonous rattle of self-righteousness and mispronunciations.
But one day, I understood. It was miraculous. They were speaking and I could comprehend them. Finally, I could hear them. Word for sanctimonious word.
Oh, happy, inexplicable day! I cannot convey the trembling and delirium that accompanied this new dawn, this wondrous realization. As God spoke to Moses, so were Dennis & Callahan speaking to me, through the burning bush of my attendant's radio.
[A brief literary aside: I should point out that gorillas generally don't use burning bush metaphors; it's a red-flag phrase. The reason being that a voice emanating from a bush has traditionally meant bad news for gorillas. Granted, these days a bush is more likely concealing a Discovery Channel documentarian than it is a poacher. Indeed, we've made progress. But it wasn't too long ago that the bushes were crawling with would-be Hemingways who'd shoot you, cut your head off, and mount it on the wall of their bumper pool room faster than you could say The Snows of Kilimanjaro.]
[Let's see how tough you are without that giant shotgun, you monocled jerkoff.]
Back to my epiphany. Just as Moses was spurred to lead his people out of Egypt, I was divinely inspired to make an exodus of my own: I would flee the zoo and make a pilgrimage to WEEI, where (John-and-Gerry-willing) I would meet John and Gerry.
Months later, I escaped and got as far as that bus stop, where I was apprehended. My detainment made the news, and that's when D&C first learned of me. Up until then, they had been my world. And now I had finally, and fatefully, become a part of theirs.
That was the day they named me. That was they day their ill-advised attempt at humor got them in all sorts of funny trouble. But most important, that was the day I became Metco Gorilla.
[Editor's note: *Here's what actually happened. ]
Well, that's pretty much it for the dramatic backstory. After briefly returning to the zoo, I decided to move to Lexington. I mean, if it was good enough for their joke, it was good enough for me, right? I've been living there ever since (Go Minutemen!), happily listening to D&C and the rest of the gang at WEEI each day.
Recently I decided to start this blog as a gesture of gratitude to D&C. After all, they made me; I figure it's the least I can do. My hope is that when people think of Dennis & Callahan, they'll remember Metco Gorilla.
Plus, to be honest, there isn't much else to do in Lexington.