(Content may be offensive to some members of The Community)
Back when they started wiring all our homes for cable TV,
there were suddenly so many more channels to watch. My friends, for the most
part, were infatuated with all-day music videos on MTV or uncut R-rated slasher
and bikini movies, but for me it was the oddball low-budget programs on the
public access channel that turned my crank, especially when that surly old man
named Leonard Rodney Ford was on.
He hosted a program called Community Forum, which was
probably the most violent public affairs show ever. The show's title seemed
innocuous enough, but the host was a lunatic. He was a thin, frail-looking man
probably in his seventies. He had greased hair, a pencil-thin mustache, a
leathery, wrinkled face, and he always wore what appeared to be a circa 1935
tuxedo, complete with a bow tie. Almost like the stereotypical movie villain.
He began each show standing at a Hammond
organ, playing this strange theme song as the title and opening credits rolled
across the screen.
"How do you do", he'd say in a snarly, graveled,
rather nasal voice. "This is your Community Forum, and I am your host,
Mister Ford." He'd continue playing the organ as he talked about that
edition's guest.
His guests were so-called community activists looking for a
place to promote their cause. But Mr. Ford hated just about everybody who had a
cause and with no studio audience and no warm-up, just about anything happened.
One show that sticks out in mind was when an environmental
activist named Michael M. Shepherd was on. As they argued over the merits of
clean air and water legislation, Shepherd's first mistake was calling the host
by his first name.
"You have to understand, Leonard, that the earth is a
fragile place..."
"You call me Mister Ford!" he snapped, his face
close enough to Shepherd's that they almost touched noses. When Shepherd
apologized and put his hand on Mr. Ford's shoulder in a friendly gesture, the
host pushed him away, yelling "You get your filthy, communist hands OFF
me!"
Shepherd pointed out that the word "communist"
actually comes from the word "community" but Mr. Ford abruptly got up
and started playing the organ, drowning out anything Shepherd had to say.
Mr. Ford was indeed touchy about his name. When asked why,
he snarled, "I am the host of this Community Forum, and as the host, I
demand respect! If you have a problem with that, then I suggest that you get
out of here and don't come back. And I will see to it that you will never
appear on another television or radio program again!"
Another show had feminist Deb Zworkin, who was on to talk
about sexism and the plight of women in the workplace.
"A woman's workplace is the kitchen and the
bedroom," Mr. Ford told her, in no uncertain terms.
"Ford, you are the number one leading oppressor of women,"
replied Zworkin.
"That's Mister Ford and if you were a man or my wife,
I'd belt you!"
"Go ahead,"
she taunted.
"Okay."
BAM! He hauled off
and cracked her across the jaw.
When Asian-American rights activist Steven Wu called Mr.
Ford "an example of the typical Caucasian-American racist", the host
eloquently responded, "Listen here, slant-eyes, I slaughtered gooks like
you in the Korean War and I'll do the same to you right now if you don't watch
it!"
"I don't need this," said Wu as he got up to
leave.
"That's right," Mr. Ford told him. "Get your
little yellow ass the hell out of here. And don't ever come back!" He then
forcefully shoved Wu from behind, knocking him to the floor. Mr. Ford then
kicked him and yelled, "I said get out of here!"
When gay activist Bruce McKenzie showed up, the host wore an
asbestos suit and gas mask because "You probably have AIDS." The
interview lasted a whole ten minutes when the guest, smirking, said "Oh,
you're such a homophobe, Lenny-poo." Mr. Ford wasn't going to stand for
that kind of disrespect.
"Homophobe? I'll homophobe you!" He punched
McKenzie in the face, knocking him backward in his chair. "And the name is
Mister Ford!"
I would have friends over to watch this thing and we'd be
drinking beer and doubling over with laughter. "You call me Mister
Ford" became a running gag among us as we'd mimic his voice. The
girlfriend of one of my buddies, however, couldn't stand it when I had Mr. Ford
on when they were over. She'd sigh loudly and say, "Could you, like, change
the channel," not as a request, but as a demand.
I'd say, "No, I like this guy. He's cool."
"No he's NOT. He's not cool and he's not funny. This
show makes me very uncomfortable."
"Too bad," I'd say. She'd let out loud sighs and
roll her eyes, but I don’t take demands from someone else's girlfriend too
seriously.
I don't ever remember seeing a guest lasting an entire show,
except for the AARP representative who called for more government benefits for
seniors. That was one guy Mr. Ford agreed with. Otherwise, if guests didn't
leave on their own in anger or in tears, they were usually punched, kicked,
shoved into cameras, hit with a cane, you name it. If somebody dripped blood on
the studio floor after being beaten and forcefully ejected, Mr. Ford would
point to it and yell to a custodian, "Clean this up!"
One guy who seemed to follow protocol by saying "Yes
Sir, Mr. Ford" was punched for "being a smart ass." To fill the
balance of the program upon someone's abrupt departure, Mr. Ford would entertain
his viewers by playing his organ.
Then there was my favorite show, the one when Syd Vomit, a
punker dude with spiked green hair who represented some anarchy group, was on
to argue with Mr. Ford. When Syd called the host "dude" a few too
many times, he was warned, "Don't ever call me that disrespectful word,
you funny-looking freak of nature. You call me Mister Ford or you call me
Sir!"
Syd put his hand up to his ear pretending he couldn't hear
and said sarcastically, "What was that? Sister Ford?"
Mr. Ford picked Syd up by his leather jacket, got in his
face and shouted, "It's Mister Ford, PUNK!" He threw him back down in
his chair.
"Yeah, whatever. Rodney," Syd taunted.
Mr. Ford punched the young anarchist in the face with full
force. The punker got up and tried to fight back, but Mr. Ford quickly knocked
him off the stage and brought him down, grabbing a spike of his green hair and
slammed his head into the cement studio floor with several loud thumps. When
Syd managed to pull away and run for the exit, Mr. Ford grabbed an unplugged
microphone and threw it at him, yelling, "Get out of here, you rotten
kid!"
Now that's my kind of public affairs.
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