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Well
since I usually work during the weekend, spending Saturday and Sunday
in kiddie Hell with my daughter and her two little Couzzies was
not really a reprieve. Especially when I started noticing that said
midnight e-mails were making reference to our class on Monday. Presidents
Day? Three day weekend? Not at Cal State.
Now
I was really screwed. You see, I decided to take this Film Course
that runs on Monday afternoon, right before my class. I'm always
looking to pick up on new technologies and this was to be my chance
to sharpen my digital editing and filmaking skills. But the instructor
loves to load up the home work and sure enough, the one minute film
I was counting on being due next week. You got it. This week. So
now I got multiple time conflicts going. Add to this nightmare,
a promise to help out my friend Kristin, a hot young Casting Producer
on "Apprentice" with a new show she's doing, and that's
me you see sinking into a puddle of my own ooze.
Never
one to be defeated by something as witless as time management, I
power through the storm until I get to Tuesday afternoon and realize,
Opps. I still got that one minute film hanging over my head. And
of course it's pouring outside and my proposed one minute opus is
all exteriors. Time for a drink and a quick decision. I'm doing
my film in the rain. So I take my trusty DV out to the porch and
start shooting the brand new waterfall the week's worth of downpour
has blessed us with. Then I'm shooting puddles. Then leaves. All
the while, the light is going down and I don't have a clue as to
what this film is going to be about.
While
I'm shooting I start humming "Oh how I wish that it would rain."
in my best under the breath David Ruffin, whisky tenor. If you remember
the Temptations hit, it's about a guy who is so torn up about losing
his lady that he can't stop crying. So he's wishing for it to rain,
so he can leave the house and not be embarrassed by his crying jag.
Nobody writes great songs like that for Nine Inch Nails. Anyway,
I'm singing and I say, "That would be a great piece of music
for my film. Now I've got rainshots, music and no idea. Then it
hits me like a wet brick. Ten years ago my dearest friend, Melvin
Franklin, the Temptations bass singer passed away. It had been months
since I had made the time to go over the hill to Forest Lawn to
pay my respects. So I grab my camera and off I go. Funny thing happened
when I got to the great Mausoleum that is the final resting place
for "The World's Greatest Bass Singer." All the wonderful
times we had spent together came rushing back.
Now
if you ever spent any time in a Cemetery in the rain, you know it
can be a pretty sobering experience. I passed Danny Cracchiolo's
final pad on the way to Melvin. And Billy Davis who gave us "Like
to Buy The World A Coke." By the time I got out of the car,
I was a basket case. Funny thing, I was the embodiment of the song
as "the raindrops hide my tearstained face." I was crying
because it was Melvin Franklin who told me at 19 after being at
Motown for 6 months, to go back to Washington D.C. and marry the
High School sweetheart I had left "in a family way" after
a wild New Years Eve Celebration.
It
was Melvin Franklin who left the Temptations Show in Vegas to fly
to Newark, New Jersey to help my mother and I bury my father. Yes
that same Melvin Franklin less than one year later had limo'd down
my mother and her card playing cronies to the Temptations Show at
Atlantic City. That night, Melvin put a chair up on the stage and
sat my mother in it while the Temps performed their entire show
directly to her. That was the kind of man he was. It was Melvin,
who insisted that I say Grace at each and every meal, even though
a less pious individual than myself would be hard to imagine. But
that's not what broke me down to bawling like a two year old. It
was the memory as I stood standing in front of his marble and brass
edifice, that on the day he died, I was too busy dealing with taxes
and accountants to take his phone call. The last phone call he would
ever make on this Earth. Three hours later, David Melvin Franklin
English was gone.
After
I pulled myself together, I had a theme and a purpose for my one
minute film as well as for this week's column.
Don't
find your self being "too busy" for the things that matter
most in your life. Your family. Your health. The people who love
you and care for you, need you to give them the time they deserve.
Hug you babies more. Listen to your wife or your husband more. No
ad on this planet is worth more than your child's birthday, or graduation.
Those things you think
will hold until manana. "Tell Melvin I'll get back to him tomorrow."
Those were my final words to the one who was the brother I never
had. Don't be too busy to miss-out on those moments you can never
bring back again.
Stay
Tuned.
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