I was thinking about the holidays this year and my thoughts wandered back to one of my very first jobs with a major corporation. In fact, come to think of it, that was the only job I had with a major corporation. It was the RCA Color TV service company in Hollywood California. This was probably the best and easiest job anyone could ever have, probably as easy as being president or the head of General Motors. One of those cushy jobs you never forget and will never ever find again. Now my cohorts in this story were Charlie Muir and Paul Scott. Charlie was not only a Fraternity brother but also a schoolmate going back to Daniel Webster Junior High. We both took Electricity 101 together with Mr. Payton and it was there that we learned (in just 3 painful weeks) how to strip the insulation off of a piece of wire real, real good. Paul and I went all the way back to Betsy Ross grade school in Culver City where we learned how to daydream and look at girls real, real good. It was Charlie who first got a job at RCA and then recommended Paul and me for a position as “Color” TV repair technicians. Now back then color was king. This was before computers and if you could fix a “Color” TV, you were the man. Of course when computers came around many TV techs learned how to fix them too just to amuse them selves.
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There were so many aspects to this job at RCA that were great. Like, we had to drive a long distance to get there, which gave us the opportunity to ride our motorcycles to work each day. When you ride a bike to work, the further away it is, the better. Except or course, when it rained or was just too darn cold (as it often got as we approached the Holidays). Then we would take my 1953 Buick Special instead. Its funny, now come to think of it, the 53 Buick was a hand-me-down from my father which he drove to work too, down that very same street years earlier. He took Venice Blvd. to downtown and I would veer off to Hollywood. Yes, “Hollywood,” tinsel town, tuff town, my town. |
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Well, I was not one for sitting around chewing the fat for hours each day, so I decided to use my time more wisely and, well, build a boat. As everyone else headed off for the coffee shop I rushed out to do all my service calls and then head back to Culver City, by noon, to work on my cruiser. Paul Scott’s mom agreed to let me use her garage and driveway to build it, not realizing how large it was going to be. She was thinking “row boat” and I was thinking “Cabin Cruiser.” My intention was to build this ship and live on it in the newly built Marina Del Ray boat harbor. I also intended on having lots of bikini clad babes on board as often as possible to. I did not actually know how to get bikini-clad babes aboard yet, but I did know how to build an ocean going vessel. And I was sure that if I did that, the bikini-clad babes would soon follow. |
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We could never understand why the managers
just didn’t come up and talk to us personally. They always had to have
a whole “shop meeting” to tell us. It never did make sense but that’s what
corporations do. Thinking back, it was probably the Chicken Delight dinners
they would buy us to eat after each meeting that made them call so many
meetings. Union rules maybe? I don’t know. I never found out.
So that’s how my days went. Fixing TVs really fast, building the boat, and then hurrying back to the shop to check in. I am not sure how many extra miles I put on that service truck or how much gas was wasted driving back to Culver City but it must have been substantial. Things got even better working there just after Thanksgiving when a new secretary was hired and I couldn’t keep my eyes off of her. After that no matter what direction I went there was something beautiful to see, “my boat” or back to work to see the “secretary.” |
The end
Bill Czappa ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Winter 2004 ARC TV Gazette Circulation 10,000