No
central air, so we’d sit
in
the one air-conditioned
room
and watch Lawrence Welk
on
summer Saturday nights:
aunt,
uncle, grandmother, me.
We’d
watch in silence until
the
uncle would bark
Ignorant! at the screen
and
throw
his shoe. It was usually
the
Lennon Sisters who sparked
the
outrage; no harm was done:
the shoe never hit the screen,
and
the Lennon Sisters never knew.
This
is another in the series of poems about growing up in the South, suggested by Nancy Rosback. Like all the
poems in the series, it is true.
Laughing quietly ...
ReplyDeleteWould love to have seen that shoe-tossing! My grandparents had a nursery school. The living room was empty of furniture except for a large (for the time) television set, so that cots could be set up in there for nap times M-F. When I'd stay with them, they'd bring in comfy chairs and LW was what we watched. Every. Single. Saturday. I even knew one of the guy singers - in a quartet. He eventually married one of the dancers. What a window into a slice of history.
ReplyDeleteBwa.
ReplyDeleteMy aunts loved Welk, and when I stayed with them in the summers, we watched it every -- was in Saturday night????
The bubbles, a one and a two uh...
:-)
smiling and laughing to myself...
ReplyDeletethat's good
SIr Glynn,
ReplyDeleteYou do Funny good!
I was raised on LW but we never did any shoe-tossing. Mamma woulda whooped out buttocks.
Blessings.
I think we were watching together, Glynn. Miles apart, but together all the same.
ReplyDelete