The TV is on in the Community Room. The community is
undefined, but presumably it means the people who live in the building’s 40
apartments, and their guests or friends. The community is entitled to use of
the room for family events: birthday parties, wedding or baby or baptismal or
confirmation showers, graduation galas, family reunions, divorce or annulment
commemorations, book signings, candidate kickoffs or pronouncements,
landlord-sponsored and –contrived get-to-know-each-other gatherings with pizza,
wings, and soda and coffee, and post-funeral gatherings. We’re in a basement.
At the top of one wall are windows facing up at grates on sidewalk level. The
opposite wall features glass walls and doors with venetian blinds. The blinds
are typically closed. When the TV is on, it most often is tuned to the local
Time Warner Spectrum channel with its endless, night-or-day loop of local weather,
stories of death and mayhem or small-town thievery or depravity, the scores of high
school teams, their success or failure in the sectional championships, the
regional marching band competitions, the stray murder or rape, the drunk driver
rocketing the wrong way on the Thruway, the statement from the sheriff’s office
about the latest suspects, the mug shots of the young and accused with their
surprised, scarred, and scared or defiant faces. All to be repeated again after an appointed duration that
viewers are trained to expect, such as “news on the nines” or “weather on the
ones.” I walk by in the hallway outside the Community Room. As a resident,
count me as a member of the community. No one is in the room. The blinds are
drawn. The lights are off. The television is on, the newsreaders’ voices solemn
and barely audible to a passer-by. I walk in and pick up one of two remotes
sitting on the firm, faux leather chair. I click the O/I power button. Nothing
happens. Someone once told me O/I stands for Out of Operation and In Operation.
That does not seem plausible three decades later — if that is what I was truly told.
Time was, we saw Off / On as the choices. It couldn’t be O and O, for off and
on, could it? Too confusing. (I am pausing here to let you Google this
modern-day mystery on my behalf. What did you discover? Thanks for coming back
to finish reading.) I click the O/I on the other remote, and the massive screen
on the wall goes blank, fades and cracles to black-but-not-quite-that-color,
accompanied by a palpable silence. The local voices are silenced. The hearth is
doused. No smoke puffs toward me or up a chimney. The electronic hearth with its
comforting chatter and hum is snuffed out. The Community Room’s temperature is
lowered by 1.7°F. I walk out. I do my laundry. When I return to the hallway
by the Community Room, its lights are out, its blinds still drawn. And the TV
is on again. I keep walking.
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1 comment:
Very well written article and it is also very informative.Thanks for providing such a awesome writing.
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