I’ll start off right now by acknowledging that this blog entry will not make me popular with some people. If you are the kind of person who looks forward each year to the day the giant Christmas Tree in Rockefeller Center gets lit, then you are “some people” and you might want to spare us both some grief and stop reading right now. Trust me. At this moment I’ve got your best interests in mind.
Still here? OK, now
that “some people” have gone, I can tell you how I really feel.
I like Christmas. I
really do. For a nice Jewish boy from
New York, I do a heck of a lot of Christmas celebrating this time of year. We have a real 8 foot Frasier Fir tree
decorated down in our den. I even strung
all of the lights on it myself this year.
(Now I know why Jews just light candles.) We also have an artificial tree in our living
room. We have 3 menorahs too. I worried when we got the third menorah a few
years back that my wife would say now we need to get a third Christmas
tree. Maybe she hasn’t noticed. Please don’t tell her.
I give you all of that background so you don’t think I’m Ebenezer
Scrooge.
I just walked across town from my office to Grand Central
Station. Between my office and Grand
Central sits Rockefeller Center. Most
mornings, I stroll through there and catch a moment or two of the Today
Show. Most evenings, I hustle through to
catch my train and I have no issues.
But tonight – and every single year on the night of the tree
lighting – that area becomes impossible.
Police blockades prevent you from crossing the street and people are
packed in so tightly there’s no way to move in either direction.
Why? Well to see the
lighting of the tree, of course.
I like the tree. I
enjoy passing it on my way to and from the train each day. It is a very pretty Christmas tree.
BUT
When it comes to the lighting, the streets are insane. Even walking 5 blocks south of the tree, the
streets are still barely passable. Move
along people. There’s certainly nothing
to see here – we’re 5 blocks away. Some
of us want to pass by and go home. A
walk that normally takes 15 minutes tops took me 30 minutes tonight. Lucky I didn’t have plans.
As I said, it is a very pretty tree. But let’s face it, hundreds of cops and
thousands of people really don’t need to cram in to stand there while someone
plugs it in. I mean, you don’t even get
to see the guy flip the switch. First
the lights are off. Then the lights are
on. Sweet. So glad you made the trip, right?
My advice? Come
around tomorrow morning or tomorrow night to see it. The lights will still be on and it will look
just as pretty as today.
Frosty
Hell, I get annoyed at my tiny town's tree-lighting because I have to get home by driving around the world to the right. I love that Rockefeller tree, but being in that crown would make me nuts.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading!
ReplyDeleteSounds a lot how us locals feel about Mardi Gras down here in Louisiana! www.valeroni.com
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