When I'm occasionally stopped in an airport, the question is "Do you really like the '80s?" The answer is a qualified yes. I preferred the movies and TV shows of the '70s, but I'm not old enough to remember most of the decade. Just as well, since "I Love the '70s" didn't rate as well on VH1. (For the target demo, the 1970s might as well be medieval European history.)
My secondary airport question is "You're on so many shows! What do you want to do?" Ugh. It's a drag of a question. It's friendly enough, I know, but it's also unanswerable in under three hours. (Let's just say I'm working things out with Dr. Saguaro.)
In the meantime there are three things that I know I want:1. I want to be in a movie with an opening credit that reads, "And Introducing Mo Rocca as Marvin." Marvin is a placeholder. I don't know what the character's name would be and I don't really care what kind of a movie it is, just as long as it's not slasher porn. It can be a small quirky comedy, an epic romance or even a Hong Kong martial arts action film.
I just want an elegant "and introducing" to fade in, with "Mo Rocca" coming in just below in larger font, and "as Dack" (or Mitch or Sun Yat-sen) completing the three-lined credit, as the music soars. Then the whole credit fades away as the opening scene at the crowded bazaar begins -- and the first lines between Livonia and the mysterious spice dealer are spoken. Here's how it would look:

2. I want to sing a part of the Officer Krupke song from West Side Story on a TV variety show. It's a great song in which can you sound charactery but still sing out. The chorus parts are great, so it's not like you're just singing along waiting for your turn to sing solo. However I would insist on having some solo lines that are at least somewhat rangy (song begins at 1:42):
3. I want to be presented with the Key to the City. This is the big one. Remember when the greatest honor was to be commended by a city's mayor, with townspeople assembled, and presented with a Key to the City. What did it open?! When I was a child, someone told me that it opened everything – that it was a master key to every lock in town.
Naturally this raised all sorts of homeland security issues. Suddenly every business and residence in the city would be vulnerable. What if the recipient had an evil streak, or became embittered with the inevitable letdown that comes after receiving the Key to the City? Havoc would ensue as the first few establishments were looted. Fear would tear through the city. Gun sales would soar. Everyone would get pit bulls and tasers. A massive manhunt would be deployed to reclaim the Key to the City -- but the evil honoree would have made copies. And he/she would've done away with the local locksmith so that so no one could get their locks changed!
Of course this was a foolish concern. If you're given the Key to the City, you're of irreproachable character. (Well at least you're not a psychopath.) The Key to the City is the pinnacle honor, bestowed for a great deed performed - the crowning glory of a life lived as decently as possible.
At the ceremony, the Mayor wears a top hat (think Punxsutawney) and reads from a scroll, decreeing that I shall forever be a special citizen, in recognition of [insert great deed here]. I, wearing a sober blue suit with a splash of color for a tie, am seated on a platform in the wooden chair that the city's very first Mayor used. A choir sings as an adorable little girl in a red velvet dress enters bearing a pillow, atop which nestles the golden Key to the City.
Afterwards, the Ladies of this City hold a luncheon to honor me. They are a proud legion - most of them widowed in World War II, many of them wearing hats. I am scrupulously polite, never interrupting, speaking only when spoken to. When Honora Quakenbush, the handsome Chairwoman of the Ladies Luncheon to Honor the Key to the City Recipient, pronounces me an "exemplary citizen," I am touched. She's not someone who gushes, so I know she means it. At the end of the luncheon, the town's last surviving veteran from the Spanish-American War, posture still arrow-straight, poses for a picture with me. What a day!
***
I don't know that my first two goals will ever be realized. But I'm determined to make the third happen. So help me out here:
- What city should I aim for? I'm not delusional. I know it can't be New York, Los Angeles, Chicago or Albuquerque. But as much as I love small towns, I need something that will generate some coverage. What about a medium-sized city like Grand Rapids, MI or St. Paul, MN or Tacoma, WA? My friend Adrian lives in Omaha. I like Omaha and Adrian knows tons of people. Tulsa?
- What is the great deed that I perform? Should I build a Senior Center? A barbecue pit for the town? Should I restore a historic flour mill? Should I bequeath free dance classes?



Reader Comments ( Page 2 of 2)
16. or should I have said
MOnneapolis MOnnesota?
(I think that's how they say it anyhow.)
JG:)
John Giza at 11:58PM on Aug 9th 2008
17.
John Giza how was the 1859 escalator powered?
JefFlyingV at 12:30AM on Aug 10th 2008
18. Now Hiring!!!
A brand new situational-reality based comedy show called, appropriately enough:
"The Mo Rocca More Show"
Episode One:
Mo is alerted that he is about to enter the realm of reality shows. He asks for advice from his fourth digit on his left hand which contains a small transmitter which actually transmits, (under normal transmitting usage) to the deep base station in Mars (which, itself, is dangerously close to being discovered by cheap robotic SUVS shot into space in order to divert attention away from the giant meteor which is hurling toward Earth at 100+ billion miles per second, which may mean it has already hit and we are just in some form of denial).
Applicants must be WILLing to relocate:
http://www.morocca.com/
Why does it feel like ants are crawling on my...
Space Aliens at 12:35AM on Aug 10th 2008
19. Dear JefFlyingV (after the guitar)
Got me? I suspect the whole thing was a hoax, perperpepertrated by that son of a gun Criss Angel.
Seriously,
every time you come upon an escalator, don't you
"walk up the stairs?"
They getcha coming and going!
JG:)
John Giza at 12:51AM on Aug 10th 2008
20. Well, there's always Detroit, home of MOtown and "Detroit Rocca City". Maybe SmoKEY Robinson could show up and give you "MicKEY's MOnKEY":
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNYyYahggtA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgsoJrzplUI
JG- Too bad Robert Hazard didn't live to celebrate the escalator patent's anniversary...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WE8D4tHOg7k
SGS at 10:30AM on Aug 10th 2008
21. Dear John Giza (of the pyramid?),
When I first saw the post I was trying to figure out if it would be steam or water driven with pulleys and belts. I ended up doing the wiki; no hoax, just a broad patent claim.
JefFlyingV at 2:55PM on Aug 10th 2008
22. Querido Mo,
Since you like cats (I'm guessing since you feature cat ladies) you can save all the stray cats in Miami, FL and get a tan and practice your EspaƱol....
BTW, you're too cure in the Bank of America vidoes. Who would of thought that banking can be so DAMN SEXY!!!
Melissa at 12:00AM on Aug 11th 2008
23. Jef(of the crazy like a foxworthy)
Didn't mean to be flip (and don't wear flip-flops on escalators.)
However, the Escalator patent lead to the elevator, which, during the Industrial Revolution (in addition to Railroads) changed the complextion of America and ameliorated city life.
But I still think Criss Angel is behind the gasoline prices.
JG^^
John Giza at 1:38AM on Aug 12th 2008
24. Do a story on people that have been recipients of a Key to the City. My friend, the Commanding Officer at Great Lakes Naval Base was given the Key to the City of North Chicago. David Schnell. Start interviewing him and others and eventually you will have a CBS This Morning segment - and a key to a city!
BarbaraAllen at 10:59AM on Aug 13th 2008
25. MO, It's quite obvious where you should strive to receive the key to the city.... St. Louis, MO.
Laura Filiatreau at 2:18PM on Aug 14th 2008