My Biggest Super Bowl
Surprise Wasn't on the Field
By Cyd
Zeigler jr.
Outsports.com
The Super Bowl took
place in the warm sun of San Diego, just a two hour drive from where I
live. For the last year,
I had been figuring out a way to go down for the game.
I had semi-leads for tickets here and there; and, just a month
before the game, I had decided I’d go down for the fun of the
spectacle, with or without a ticket.
Instead, I ended up
in Springfield, Missouri, watching the game with 300 straight people
while the wind blew outside a frigid zero degrees.
At the beginning of
January, Chuck Booms (comedian extraordinaire who co-hosted the Fox
Sports show Kiley & Booms that I once did a weekly segment
on) asked me if I would go to Springfield for the Super Bowl to do a
local radio appearance and host his stand-up comedy show twice a night
during the weekend, then host the Super Bowl party with him at the
sports bar / comedy club, Sir
Gregory’s. Chuck
told me that, in my ten-week stint on Kiley & Booms, I
became a bit of a celebrity in Springfield.
Yeah, right.
There are more churches in Springfield than liquor stores.
There are three Christian networks on the air.
Hell, Springfield is the home of Redneck Trailer Supplies (no
joke). And a gay guy from
Los Angeles is going to be well-received?
Sun vs. Clouds; 80
vs. 0; Hillcrest vs. the Bible Belt?
My decision was easy: on
the Thursday before the game, I got on a plane headed for Springfield.
I had been told by a
friend from Missouri that it’d be best if I just didn’t tell
anyone I was gay while I was there.
Too late for that. I
was billed as, simply, a “surprise host,” and Chuck had been
dropping hints all week – that the host was a big sports fan; that
he was flying in from Los Angeles.
I thought – yeah, they’ll be surprised when some stranger
gets up on stage instead of Tom Cruise.
On Friday, I was the
one that got the surprise. When
the announcer came over the microphone system and announced to the 300
people in attendance that the surprise guest host was none other than
Cyd Zeigler, from “The Fag Five,” the place erupted with cheers.
Wait, wait, wait.
Cheers? I’m a
gay guy. I AM GAY.
They’re supposed to whip out their Bibles and start praying
for me.
Yet, I saw none of
that. The 300 people
laughed when I proclaimed that I was, in fact, a certifiable “cocksucker.”
They rolled in the aisles when I put the microphone in a
precarious position. And
when I insinuated that a couple quarterbacks of certain teams might be
gay, they joined in the fun and threw out some names of their own.
Jim, a former loyal
listener to Kiley & Booms, came up to me and told me how
happy he was that the surprise guest host was me.
He told me about his gay brother in the military, and how our
bit on that show had given him more compassion for his brother.
There was Chad, the
24-year-old who had already been married for four years, who
couldn’t stop telling me how much he appreciated me coming to
Springfield, and how much he enjoyed my little “routine.”
There were Dwight and
Tracy, an unmarried couple, with whom I spent much of the weekend, who
laughed heartily at my often crude gay jokes.
At times, I tried testing how far I could go before they said
I’d gone far enough – I never got there.
Greg Hanson, the
owner of the bar, told me as I was leaving that he’d personally
finance a radio show with Chuck and me; a guy with an Eminem hat and I
lamented the 2000 Grammys; Derek, another guy married at the age of
24, joked around with me as I hit on him, shared a blowjob shot and
took my shirt off onstage for him.
As I was leaving
Springfield the very early morning after watching the Bucs kick the
Raiders all over the field (and it certainly helped the matter with
these folks that I had picked the Bucs by 17 all weekend), I was left
with a couple emotions.
I was amazed at how
people in the middle of fly-over country could, with some humor and
gentle nudging, come a long way when it comes to accepting gay people.
With this Web site, and with the radio show, we reached into
their homes and affected how they think about us.
I was also surprised.
My perception of the Midwest was of a few million close-minded
ultraconservatives who were rather you were a drug pusher than that
you were gay. While the
latter part of that might not be so far off, the former – the notion
that they’re close-minded – got turned upside down last weekend.
Overwhelmingly,
person after person, a theme developed in their comments to me. Dozens of them told me how they were, just a few months ago,
homophobic; how no gay man could be appreciated in their eyes; how
they thought it was wrong and the people who were gay would go to
hell.
Somehow, through our
humor and our honesty on both Outsports and the Kiley & Booms
show, we got through to them. They
started to realize that what we do with our lives is our own business,
not theirs; they came to believe that gay people could be
“normal,” and that they could actually enjoy their company.
No small feat for a city of 200,000 Bible thumpers.
While it would have
been fun to be in San Diego last weekend – this biggest party this
country will see this year – it was so much more rewarding to freeze
my butt off, listen to Kenny Chesney, and tell gay jokes to a group of
recovering homophobes.
______________________________________________
PS Chuck Booms is absolutely
hysterical. If you find him coming to your area, be sure to get
a ticket early and go see him - you'll be glad you did.
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