In honor of the baseball playoffs, I offer this story, as it appeared in May, 2008.
In the early 1940’s, Norman Corwin was nearly as well known as Franklin Delano Roosevelt and much admired. Author Ray Bradbury calls Corwin, “…the greatest director, the greatest writer and the greatest producer in the history of radio. His brilliant dramas, fantasies, and documentaries reached into American homes – and across an ocean – as far as the radio could carry his words.”
However, what made Corwin’s work truly inspiring was that it could reach beyond a simple box in a room and command your attention. He could get you to imagine, feel, and, more importantly, think. We Hold These Truths was written to be a celebration of The Bill of Rights. But airing just eight days after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, it became a timely reminder of what the country stands for.
What follows is a story Norman told me regarding a common courtesy.
“Years ago, while watching a baseball game on TV, I saw Orel Hershiser, pitching for the Dodgers, throw a fastball that hit a batter. The camera was on a close-up of Hershiser, and I could read his lips as he mouthed, ‘I’m sorry.’ The batter, taking first base, nodded to the pitcher in a friendly way, and the game went on.
“Just two words and I felt good about Hershiser and the batter and the game all at once. Only a common courtesy, but it made an impression striking enough for me to remember after many a summer.
“Look, let’s not kid ourselves. It would be foolish to hope that kindness, consideration, and compassion will right wrongs, heal wounds, keep the peace, and set the new millennium on course to recover from inherited ills. That would be asking a lot from even a heaven-sent methodology, and heaven is not in that business.
“But why linger?
“Why wait to begin planting seeds, however long they take to germinate? It took us 200-plus years to get into the straits we now occupy, and it may take us long again to get out, but there must be a beginning.
“It comes down to the value of exemplars, which can be either positive or negative, and it works like this: Because of the principle that a calm sea and a prosperous voyage do not make news but a shipwreck does, most circulated news is bad news. The badness of it is publicized, and the negative publicity attracts more of the same through imitation.
“But good can be as communicable and catching as evil, and this is where kindness and compassion come into play.
“So long as conscionable and caring people are around, so long as they are not muted or exiled, so long as they remain alert in thought and action, there is a chance for contagions of the right stuff, whereby democracy becomes no longer a choice of lesser evils, whereby the right to vote is not betrayed by staying away from the polls, whereby the freedoms of speech, assembly, religion, and dissent are never forsaken.”
Yeah, Hershiser was being a nice guy and good for him. But baseball is my game and I knew as a player that no matter why a pitcher whacked some guy, the message was still the same, “Don’t get too comfortable up there. Either I’m doing it on purpose … or maybe even more terrifying I’m completely out of control!” (Remember ‘Nuke’ LaLoush from Bull Durham?), is the two-pronged pitcher message.
Hershiser was a control pitcher and perhaps he was embarrassed that he would be that off his game. Still, it’s baseball and the analogy to human interaction and basic ethics is weak. Sorry.