4- The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, November 11, 1993 Mitch Albom on basketball, trash talk and the American Dream By WILL MATTHEWS Philosopher William James believed that one could understand the normal by studying the ab- normal. This could be translated into an analogy about sports writing - one can understand the ordinary by studying the extraordinary. In other words, sports writing, at its best, can serve as a window into the most elusive ofnatures-human nature. Mitch Albom, nationally syndicated sports writer for the Detroit Free Press and author of several books, including this week's Warner Books' release "Fab Five: Basketball, Trash Talk, and the American Dream," is just such a writer. Albom's easy-going, vernacular style, as well as his focus on the players and their lives, has earned him a name in both sports writing and journalism. "Human nature is an essential element in my column," he explained in a recent interview. "So is humor. So is the fact that this is still just a game and there are a lot of times when you're just supposed to laugh about it." Originally, Albom had no plans of being a sports writer. In college at Brandeis University and at Berkeley, he studied music, concentrating on a performance major in piano. After gradua- tion, he spent time in Europe as, among other things, a night club singer on the island of Crete. "I was anight club singer and piano player and I sang the rock 'n' roll songs with what had to be a Greek band, which was an interesting combina- tion," he recalled. "I lived in a bungalow. They paid me a fortune, I was alittle celebrity on the isle of Crete. Slept all day in the sun and went scuba diving and all that kind of stuff and then at night I was singing with a band, singing Elvis songs. I think some of the people thought it was original material. I mean Crete is pretty remote. I think they thought I made it up." After Europe, Albom went to New York City to try his hand at the music business, and eventu- ally got involved in newspapers. "I did the whole starving artist routine," he explained. "[After] two or three years of that you get a little tired... takes a lot of luck. So I wanted to get into something that took a little less luck but was still creative. So I decided this journalism thing would be good." Albom worked at a New York weekly for six months on no salary, gaining experience and a portfolio. When he enrolled at Columbia to con- tinue his education, he needed money for tuition and was willing to take any job he could get; his first prospect was Sports Magazine. Though originally his interest was writing about social issues, sports writing gradually be- gan to dominate his portfolio. "Every time I would try to get a different type of work they would say 'Well, sports seems to be your forte, why don't you do that?' and I was in no position to turn down employment. So I said yes and pretty soon I had this whole volume of sports work that eventually lead to my first [full-time] job ... I wasn't even applying for ajob as a sports writer, but they gave me the job and I've been in it ever since." After working at several newspapers on the East Coast and one in Florida, he eventually ended up at the Detroit Free Press - as a sports writer. Working in Detroit, it was only inevitable that one of the nation's leading sports writers would get involved in one of sports' most unique and emotional stories - that of Michigan's Fab Five. "My initial idea on that was to write a book about being famous young, and I saw these five guys come in already famous before they ever got here," he said. "I thought this would be a good opportunity to follow them through college and their experience. I basically did that through the two years they were here and then the book grew - I mean, that book is nothing if it's not about people and what it's like tobe in the spotlight... what it's like to be a Black student at a primarily white university, what it's like to have sort of playground style but on national television where they cluck their tongues at you and say, 'You know, you shouldn't do that,' but by the same token you know that's what makes you great. All those kind of conflicts going back and forth." "[Or] someone like Steve Fisher who came from a small town in Illinois, primarily white, to be coaching five kids, five young freshman from the inner-cities, most of them. What it's like for existing players who have been there and thought that they were going to have their moment now as juniors and seniors, suddenly have to move aside to make room for the freshmen. It's very human and talks about very simple emotions - ego, fame, resentment, heroism, excitement, gratitude, lack of gratitude, jealousy, exuberance of youth... [the book] is all about human emotions." The prologue to the book is indicative of the human lens through which Albom approached his subject. It begins at the State Theatre in downtown Detroit, where Chris Webber is throwing a party for his teammates, friends, supporters and fans in celebration of his new career in NBA basketball on the day of the NBA draft pick. He then cuts directly to senior guard Michael Talley at his home, accepting the fact that he was overlooked in the draft pick, and that his dreams of the NBA are dimming."This is a story about extremes," writes Albom in the prologue, "City meeting suburbs, veterans meeting rookies, white meeting black, noise meeting quiet. It's a story about the Greatest Class Ever Recruited in college basketball, the Fab Five, and how a group like them will never come along again." Through the lens of college sports, Albom writes a book that exposes not only the lives and nature of extraordinary athletes, but the delicacies of human nature as well. Above all, Albom ex- plains, it is a story with elements of drama and humor that reveals people and their relation to the American dream. "It's a great story, whether you like college basketball ornot-it'sjust a great story. Five kids come from all over the country, each one of them being told that they were the greatest thing that their high schools had ever seen and suddenly they're all on one team and there's only one ball and what happens to thatdynamic when you can't all be the superstar. That's what it's about." S Mitch Albom used to be a night club singer. Picture him in a powder blue tux. Come see all your favorite characters in our new Keepsake Ornament Looney TunesTM Collection! Hallmark Keepsake Ornaments now available in our store. 3 StE E bE 761435 301 s. State 1-4ss' I Heidelberg's Poetry Slam ORVIS BROWNING patagoni plus fine American and European Antique Furniture 803 N. Main * Ann Arbor 761-9200 Mon. - Sat. 10-6 SLAM Continued from page 1 responds the way I want them to. (Then I know) I've hit the nail right on the head." Stebleton acknowledges that the type of poetry appropriate for the jAnn Arbor Civic Theatre Second Stage Productions AT ONA HOT T IN OOF by Tennessee Williams directed by Anne Kolaczkowski Magee November 4-20,1993 Thurs dmSat. 8:00p.m. Tickets are $8.00Thurs.2-for-1 AACT - 2275 Platt Rd. Tickets & Reservations, 971-AACT Poetry Slam might notv forums. "You have af audience, who like tot poems are going to be drinking," he explaine are going to hear protes political undertones." In the slam's protes buzz word seems to be nasty, profane wash-you with-soap word that you spellcheck. YourEnglis have told you it cannot b poetry, but some local, have to disagree. "I'll u words I think sound righ are a lot of swears, thent of swears," Cormier sta And swearhe does. W for language and unint choice, Cormier remode Haiku, the five-seven- pattern we alllearned inl "Ernie Harell, you craz me down to Memphis. and "Clandestine me Christ and Uncle San tongues and screw" exem gets to heart of rhyme work in other lyrics that your fifth grade teacher fairly literate would probably be hesitant to repeat. drink, so the If Cormier's Haikus don't sound e on sex and like poetry to you, it may be because d. "You also his work is about performance, not t poetry with just words. A skilled musician in gui- tar, drums, and bass, Cormier has an st poetry, the ear for rhythm and a pension for per- "fuck," that forming - both which add to his ir-mouth-out- slam performances. "It seems like the won'tfindin most surface thing, but poetry needs h teachermay to be entertaining at some level," e considered Cormier stated. poets would Poets have different styles of en- use whatever tertaining. Cormier bangs on himself ht and if there with his hands and becomes a "hu- there are a lot man percussion machine." Stebleton, ted. also a drummer, uses unique subjects with his knack and his distinguished, theatrical voice. hibited word Steve Marsh delivers a "Condom els the classic Rap," which relates the dangers of five syllable unprotected sex through humor. Some grade school. poets scream and yell, while others y fucker. Ride dance, play harps, repeat nonsensical Hee Haw!" words or dance wildly around stage. eting, Jesus Only at the Poetry Slam, and that's in exchange what makes slamming, well, unique. nplify his raw When you go to read poetry at the Heidelberg, chances are nobody will ask you how many credits of English you have under your belt. Nobody will care if your metaphors are incon- sistent or if your fluorescent orange shirt clashes with yourfavorite pairof bowling shoes. This poetry is about ti performance, but not about appear- ance. This slam is not just a poetry {reading. It's a slam dunking, rip-roar- ing, thigh-slapping, head-banging whale of a good time. Yeah. Pass the beer. ETnis Um " Study Lounge " TV Lun CompafrRoo eudryfw aciktW 24hour ttedL44 " game Xom 5(eat wandWater Indaidd 0 .... ......... . ....................... .......... . ................ ................ .............. . ...... I-- ............... - ............ . ............. ............... ................. I .......... ..... . ......... ........... THE ONLY SHOEON EARTH THAT CAN Go TOE To TOE STA lE R L A ,N-D BOOT. :", :r : ., ,. k ., ii :. : ., : : 1 .S 1 .ti :ti Katerina I A L& .% .&ft A vvas namea the Rthigan aig Display Account Executive of the week. Congratulations 0 UniverAty Towe sApartments 536 S. Forest Ave. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 7Rl m9 Rnf I I . .. .. Ur U"/ ._.,.._ The same guaranteed waterproof protection you've always relied on from a pair of Timberland* boots is now available in oxfords and wingtips. The Timberland* Weatherbuck Collection. o you need more siudents In your group or organizaion? Tke hicaga Daily, Cusitom Rr+- ~an '- nT hM-A1 1 -.i , M .1 I