My wife and I had been married a year and a half in August
2000. We had been to Germany two years before to see my family and now it was time to see hers in
California. We were going Hollywood baby.
I had mentioned to the executive producer of a talk show at
my work that I was going to Los Angeles for a week. She told me that she could probably get me to
the taping of a TV show. Maybe even the
Price is Right! Come on down! A few days later she
informed me that Price is Right was on hiatus but I could get to a taping of
Jimmy Kimmel Live. Sure! That’d be great. She corresponded with her contact and got me the info. Where to go, when to go,
whose name to mention.
Where? El Capitan
Theatre on Hollywood Blvd off N Highland Ave.
Photos from the private Jones Family photo Album. 2010 |
When? Midafternoon. The show taped at 5pm. Yep, Jimmy Kimmel Live wasn’t actually
live. It was taped about three hours
before it airs.
That’s cool. Have
lunch. Spend a few hours in
Hollywood. Go to the taping. Have dinner.
Wonderful. I’m a nerd and I make
schedules. I’m an anal nerd and the
schedules are made in a spreadsheet and every minute is planned for. And every time, before the end of breakfast,
the plans are thrown out the window. But
I planned this out any way. With something like a TV taping, you had to be
there on time. Same thing with flights
too.
When booking our flights, we didn’t take the fastest and
cheapest flight. My wife boycotted the
state of Arizona, so no layovers in Phoenix.
Thanks to SB1070 we stopped in Denver on the way there and Vegas on the
way back. Hooray racism. Jan Brewer was such a mess.
August 2010 issue of Spirit. Took some serious googling to find this picture. |
So anyway, we flew Southwest Airlines. Love them by the way. And I read their in-flight
magazine Spirit (it’s since been renamed to Southwest the Magazine). And I actually read most of it. There was a sandwich theme and I read the
editor’s note that discussed the dubious history of one of mankind’s greatest
inventions. Jon Montagu of Sandwich…the
Earl of Sandwich. Yeah, he supposedly
had his servant put meat on bread while he gambled and stuff. Cool story.
Not as cool as the Dracula myth of my mom’s hometown but still cool, and certainly more plausible.
Serious thanks go out to the fine folks at Southwest The Magazine. They not only sent me a huge PDF file of the 10-year-old magazine, but they offered to mail me a physical copy! Thanks guys! |
Kharla's family was great. The weather was great. Universal Studios was great. Griffin Observatory was great. The Getty Museum was great. Santa Monica was great. But I’m not here to talk about any of that. I’m here to talk about Jimmy Kimmel.
So we got there early and were on the list to
hang out in the hospitality room. That’s
the infamous “green room” you hear about.
There were free drinks, free snacks, preseason football on big screen TV’s,
Ricky Schroder, pool tables. Wait,
what? My wife pointed him out to me and I
corrected her (as I’m prone to do), “That’s
not Ricky Schroder, that’s RICK Schroder, he goes by Rick now.” I told her we should leave him alone. He must get bugged all the time. Let’s just be cool like we belong here.
We were told to get to the studio, the taping would begin
soon, about half an hour. We went
there. It’s much smaller than it looks
on TV. After a while the last person was
seated, it was Rick Schroder. And he was
directly behind my wife and me. Why
would Rick Schroder be in the studio audience for one of these? Between Silver Spoons and NYPD Blue surely, he
was a talk show fixture. I leaned over and told my wife, “I bet we’ll be seen
on TV. I bet he’s part of a segment in
the show.” Kharla turned around and
stuck out her hand. “Mr. Schroder, we
are big fans. It’s great to see you!” He replied in kind and we turned around.
Jimmy came out to applause.
He was much smaller in person than what the TV makes appear. Sense a pattern here? He told us what to expect. Told us we’d have a good time. Then he introduced Don Barris, the warm up
act. Comedian Don Barris was bald and
dressed really well. They’re all
professional here. Except for maybe Guillermo,
the famous parking security guy for Jimmy.
Anyway, It was a maybe ten minute set.
Filthy dirty language that would never be seen on network TV but it
really did its job. It loosened up the
audience and got us ready for some TV.
Some producer came
out and coached us. Told to exaggerate
everything. Enjoy the show. Hayden Christensen would be the first
guest. Followed by Chriss Angel. And
lastly, a band we hadn’t heard of.
The show open began and Jimmy came out. I don’t remember his opening monologue, just
that it was mildly funny and we had to ham it up with our laughter and applause. We were told we’d feel silly but the energy
looks great on TV.
The first guest, Christiansen came out. He was promoting his new movie Takers. That movie was coming out, I have never seen
it. Probably never will. Nobody
cared. It was forgettable. Though I guess it was a modest hit at the
time. Hayden was, and always will be
known as Anakin Skywalker. Though he did
star in Life as a House which may or may not have made me cry.
God bless Jimmy. He
worked hard to make the interview interesting.
But Hayden was boring. He had the
charisma and demeanor of…Anakin Skywalker.
He did have a memorable anecdote though (for me at least.) He talked about visiting the town of Sandwich
outside London. And eating
sandwiches. See, the Earl of Sandwich
invented the sandwich a few hundred years before. What?
Hayden Christensen flies Southwest too?
Sweet! This guy was a movie
star. He’s promoting a movie. He’s Anakin freaking Skywalker. He’s talking about sandwiches. A story he read about probably a few hours
before.
Following the interview Jimmy teased Chriss Angel and
musical guest Ozzy Osborne. What? Did they change music guests? We broke for a few minutes and Angel came
out. He got a good pop from the
audience. Maybe too much of a pop? Dude has his fans I guess. All I remember about this was going to break
and a drunk Angel fan was escorted out by security. This is probably why these shows aren’t
live. After Angel’s segment Jimmy again
teased Ozzy. That was essentially the
end of the taping.
Rick (he goes by Ricky again) Schroder got up first and
left. He was not in a segment. He was just in the audience to watch. I guess after 30 years in the business he still finds entertainment in something like this? Even if he's a friend of one of the guests hanging with him, he could have just stayed in the dressing room. That's cool. I would have thought he would take experiences like that for granted. Appreciate the little things like this.
Then producers and floor crew herded us all like cattle to a different studio made to look like a bar with a stage. We were told that the original band announced would perform. Apparently musical acts are taped days in advance. We couldn’t leave. They need all 100 or so of us in the audience to remain and cheer. And we did. The band was okay. You feel bad for a band performing in front of a captive audience that never heard of them.
Then producers and floor crew herded us all like cattle to a different studio made to look like a bar with a stage. We were told that the original band announced would perform. Apparently musical acts are taped days in advance. We couldn’t leave. They need all 100 or so of us in the audience to remain and cheer. And we did. The band was okay. You feel bad for a band performing in front of a captive audience that never heard of them.
After the band, we were allowed to leave. Was it worth it to blow a couple of hours
of our vacation? I dunno. I guess so.
So, we could say we were at a network TV taping maybe? We had dinner. I think maybe we even had sandwiches? Then we went “home” to Kharla’s cousin’s
house and went to sleep.
Did a lot happen in this story? Not really.
But as Hayden Christiansen said (without actually saying it), maybe even the most
mundane things are worth remembering, worth chronicling, memorializing. Maybe not everybody’s life is as interesting
as you think. People can relate to the
small. Can’t necessarily relate to a
rich kid’s movie star lifestyle. We can
all relate to sandwiches.
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