Saturday, February 9, 2013

HBT: Jeter autograph seekers go to?great lengths

Scott Cacciola writes a fantastic and somewhat disturbing article in the New York Times about the people who camp out for Derek Jeter?s autograph at the Yankees training facility down in Tampa.

Cacciola outlines the whole, elaborate setup outside the facility. About the Yankees employee who shouts at the autograph seekers regarding the exact way they are to lineup and behave if they expect to get a chance at a Jeter autograph. ?And that chance, Cacciola reports: about 10% that he?ll even sign. And if he signs, only a fraction of the people waiting outside will get an autograph.

He also writes about some of the specific people who take a whole heck of a lot of effort to try to get that signature:

?I guess I?ll have to come back again tomorrow if he doesn?t sign today,? said Melissa Davis, a patient-support technician at a hospital in nearby Clearwater, whose prize for showing up at 4 a.m. was the sixth spot in line, a prime piece of real estate. She had not slept in two days, she said. Or was it three? She was, by her own admission, bordering on delirium.

?I?m basically on a mission at this point,? said Davis, who kept herself occupied by reading ?Fifty Shades of Grey? on her Kindle. ?I want his autograph. You can?t really talk to him because he?s not going to sit and talk to you. So I want his autograph. That?s all I want.?

I?ve written at length about my hangups with autographs. I don?t really understand the appeal.?On a simple level, an autograph is proof that you were in the presence of someone famous. That you saw, in this instance, Derek Jeter, and he took a second to sign his name for you. ?I?m not sure what that brief, exceedingly superficial interaction does for a person. You?ve seen Jeter on TV. If you?ve gone to Yankee Stadium you?ve seen him in person. If you?ve managed over the past 19 years to hit some Yankees event or another you may have very well seen him up close and in person. Maybe you even snapped his photograph.

But what does the autograph give you? Proof? What, no one will believe you when you say you saw him? A memory? Don?t you remember seeing him and don?t your memories of his thousands of games in pinstripes constitute much more meaningful and lasting memories?

I know I?m in the minority here, but I?ve never understood what autographs do for a person. I have a lot of autographs from when I was a kid. Hank Aaron is probably the biggest name. My favorite player from childhood, Alan Trammell, is the one I held most dear when I was younger. ?But they don?t do much for me now.

They?re not even great reminders of when I got the actual autograph. ?Both were at baseball card shows. Aaron?s was actually kind of depressing: he had all kinds of security around him and was at a high table so you couldn?t even get too close. You had to reach up high and place the card there, someone handed it to him, he signed, and they handed it back. You were instructed not to talk to him. ?Trammell?s was not that crazy, but it was still kind of a cattle call. ?I certainly get way more jazzed remembering Trammell play and reading about Aaron or watching whatever old footage of him I can find than I do remember ?meeting? them. ?The autographs are curios. Not much more.

I know those people who wait for Derek Jeter to sign his name feel very strongly about what they?re doing. And I presume they?ll value that autograph, if they?re lucky enough to get it, way more than I value the autographs I have. ?I just don?t know why. It?s something I?ve never really been able to understand.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/08/i-want-his-autograph-thats-all-i-want/related/

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