Often, the sheer brilliance of my staff of colleagues is
mind-boggling or, if nothing else, at least hard to fathom. Believing the
premise that timing is everything, then consider an office where its players
launch into a seemingly obtuse conversation regarding the origin and merits of
backpacks and kazoos.
The fact that last night, some 50 million folks were
officially glued to their television sets in an earnest attempt to hear and
understand every word being uttered by Barack Obama, the President of the
United States, and his adversary Governor Mitt Romney, didn’t dissuade an early
morning launching of our staff’s latest query…
When did so many people begin donning backpacks and where
did the kazoo come from?
Some less than understanding people might think of us as
softheaded; others might merely contort their facial expression in a visual
display of contempt. Still others might
choose to ignore our research with the ultimate label of foolhardy bestowed as their
offering of stipulated contempt.
I would like to point out in defense of my office, my
colleagues, and myself, ours is a vital endeavor. Think for a moment what the
result would have been last evening if either of the presidential candidates had
asked the other about the origin of the kazoo or, how a fad spread from country
to country, around the world, became the most recognizable accoutrement since
the advent of the black leather jacket or bobby socks.
Of course, I refer to the backpack. Every sniveling little
monster on their way to or from school travels with the infamous backpack
seemingly loaded with nothing but the best in research and necessary
schoolbooks.
Perhaps for those who eventually match up to the scholarly
demeanor of my Kalmenson & Kalmenson colleagues, there will be buried at
the bottom of each of their backpacks… their very own, personal kazoo.
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