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Archive for January, 2013

Suck it, world! We're still here!! (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Suck it, world! We’re still here!! (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Does Morgan Payne (20) even know what a VHS tape is?

Does Morgan Payne (20) even know what a VHS tape is?

Wendy (Frost) Mikos: "Clock in on time? Surely you jest, good sir!!"

Wendy (Frost) Mikos: “Clock in on time? Surely you jest, good sir!!”

Videoville will never die.

Oh, the actual store is long gone, replaced by an oriental food store. Yes, I know we moved two doors down for a bit, into the a-frame where the doggie food store now sits, and that version had a run under several different owners, each who brought their own unique twist to the business, but for me, there really is only one store.

And that is the version where Miriam’s Espresso and Videoville shared a space from 1995-2006.

But, of course, there was the little house that used to sit in what is the parking lot for the oriental food store now, the tightly-packed hut where I spent my first year renting movies and screaming like a banshee when the frickin’ popcorn machine spit its insanely hot, insanely yellow “butter” down my arms.

The hut where a squirrel ran in the door one day and was never seen again, until the day the building was torn down and a skeleton was found in the wall. No, not the customer skeleton — we knew that one was there — the squirrel skeleton, mouth still open, look of “Oh crap!!” on its preserved face.

The hut where my arch-nemesis, Mr. Drooly, a righteous bastard of a little kid, used to stand in front of the counter, stuffing gobs o’ greasy popcorn into his gaping mouth, rivers of water cascading down his chin as he stared at me. I stared into the abyss and … man, it was vacant in there.

The hut where a customer tripped and knocked down the entire new release section on top of a little girl, then ran away.

The hut where a couple, now married parents whose names shall remain zipped behind these lips (unless you got $5…), stumbled in from the Tyee one night.

She reached for a movie, missed and landed face-down on the floor. Laughing hysterically, he reached to pick her up, missed and planted himself face-first into the carpet as well. And there they lay for the next 27 minutes, laughing hysterically in between “I love you baby!” and “I love you too, but I think I peed myself.”

The hut where the guy told me about losing part of his brain (for real), the hut where the school bus driver turned too sharply, got her bus caught under the eave of the building, then revved the engine, lurched forward and tore off a chunk of the roof, the hut where we broke the front window by playing “Jurassic Park” at full-blast on the newfangled Laserdisc machine that rested against said window.

Of course, once we moved into the “true” Videoville, added espresso and a ton more workers, the stories just got … different.

My sister, who I worked with for eight years, threw a phone off my face at close range (to the delight of the customers).

A video clerk got nailed in the back parking lot (by a car!) when he pissed off a former girlfriend.

A 450-pound customer exploded an espresso chair … with her butt.

A barista signaled his departure by taking EVERY SINGLE CUP in the store out of their plastic sleeves and piling all 46,912 up to the ceiling.

Another barista locked her keys in the car three days in a row, then got arrested on the third day after having a drunken argument with the responding cop.

We staged a daring daylight commando raid on a rival video store, with one employee sticking a two-liter bottle of pop up his sleeve and letting it drain all over the other store’s carpet. This employee later burned off all his leg hairs by attempting to transport hot, foil-wrapped burgers into a movie theater by sticking them down his pants, so…

And that’s the tip of the iceberg, as we haven’t even discussed the midget/gorilla/butter porn, the customer we gave a stroke, the “baby” in the ice machine, the time Jacob Henderson (now a highly-respected doctor!!) licked coffee grounds out of a garbage can and then ate a peach, even though he was deathly allergic to peaches and the whole “Wendy Frost trying to beat the time clock shenanigans” era.

But what is the point of all of this, you ask?

There are three living tributes to us, the people that were Videoville.

One is the store sign, which grows moss out behind my duplex, a reminder of the best job I could have ever frittered away 13 years of my life doing.

The second is the chair used at Coupeville High School basketball and volleyball games that Miriam Meyer sponsored many years ago. Kids too young to know what a VHS tape was, or why it would hurt to have a customer whip one in its sharp-cornered hard plastic protective case off your head (Leo Mikkelsen, and he did it from a moving car, which was impressive once I got back up) now plant themselves on a piece of rapidly-fading history.

And the third living tribute?

Our memories of those years. There are some things you just can’t scrub away. Therapy doesn’t fix everything!

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Welcome to Wiley World!!

Wiley Hesselgrave (left) has a moment with temmates Josiah Campbell (center) and Joel Walstad. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Wiley Hesselgrave (left) has a moment with teammates Josiah Campbell (center) and Joel Walstad. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Hesselgrave brings the ball up in a game against Lakewood.

Hesselgrave brings the ball up in a game against Lakewood.

Wiley Hesselgrave can’t hardly wait.

The Coupeville High School freshman is two sports into his run as a Wolf, and he’s already made an impact in both. One of just two 9th graders to letter in football (with Lathom Kelley), Hesselgrave has been a leader for the boys’ JV basketball squad, relentlessly attacking the basket while moving like a barely-caged animal.

Friday night the younger brother of former Wolf star Marie Hesselgrave got his first chance to taste the rarefied air of varsity basketball, playing a huge chunk of the second half against visiting Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

True to his nature, he was everywhere, stealing a rebound away from a Wildcat player, helping run the offense and coming really close to netting his first basket. Playing along side fellow JV transplants Joel Walstad and Morgan Payne, the trio showed the future of Wolf basketball is not only on its way, it’s already here.

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Aaron Trumbull has places to be and things to do. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Aaron Trumbull has places to be and things to do. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Trumbull (23) and teammates pause during the "Star Spangled Banner."

Trumbull (23) and teammates pause during the “Star Spangled Banner.”

Honorary coaches for the night, cancer survivors Jim Kessler of Coupeville and Karissa Bragg of ATM.

  Honorary coaches for the night, cancer survivors Jim Kessler of Coupeville and Karissa Bragg of ATM.

Trumbull in action.

Trumbull in action.

The Wolf cheerleaders did their best at halftime to lift the crowd's mood, asking for and getting large-spread support from the student section.

  The Wolf cheerleaders did their best at halftime to lift the crowd’s mood, asking for and getting large-spread support from the student section.

Aaron Trumbull had barely reached the hospital, and he was already talking about leaving.

He needed to get back to his team’s game against Archbishop Thomas Murphy, which was now looking like it would be the only game he didn’t score in this season. He had to be up and about to coach his squad of Boys and Girls Club hoopsters the next day, since co-coach CJ Roberts was out sick. He had places to be.

Of course, after the fall the Coupeville High School sophomore had just suffered Friday night, smacking his head and neck on the unforgiving hardwood of the baseline after having his legs cut out from under him in mid-air, no one was letting him go anywhere all that quickly. But his pluckiness, his competitiveness, his need to get up and go — all positive signs.

To the relief of all, Trumbull eventually walked away with a concussion and a nasty knot, but with full use of his limbs and a spirit which can’t be dampened.

In his absence, his teammates, already missing multiple players due to injury and illness, put up a fight against the powerful Wildcats. Freshman Wiley Hesselgrave made his varsity debut and he and Joel Walstad (making his second varsity appearance) brought a new sense of energy to the Wolves in the second half.

Morgan Payne, who has jumped from swinging between JV and varsity to being a starter for the big squad, pushed the ball relentlessly all night, as well, while inside threat Nick Streubel paced Coupeville with 10 points.

It was a night that started on a positive night, as two cancer survivors — one from each school — were honored in pre-game festivities. It took a potentially horrifying turn, but then righted itself again at the end, with the news that Trumbull would be OK.

At halftime, just moments after Trumbull had been taken to Whidbey General by paramedics, Wolf cheer coach Cheridan Boyd-Eck handled an awkward moment about as well as anyone could.

Before her squad performed, she admitted no one was in the mood to celebrate, but asked for the support of the student body for a group effort to show their concern for Trumbull and the school’s unity.

The resulting performance of “Gangnam Style,” with the gym floor filled with people, wasn’t the smoothest performance, but it worked to ease the tension in the room.

Before the second half kicked off, ATM coach Jamar Williams stopped to offer Wolf coach Anthony Smith some private words of support and many of his players repeated the gesture after the game.

It was a rough evening, but one marked by hope and happiness in seeing others survive and prosper.

That the Wolves lost a game somewhere in between matters not so much at the moment.

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Still wearing his Wolf jersey, Aaron Trumbull had regained his smile an hour after suffering a horrifying fall during Friday night's boys' basketball game. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Aaron Trumbull — in a hospital bed, but much happier and healthier than initially feared after he took a horrifying fall Friday night. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

There are nights when the final score of a basketball game means nothing, and tonight is one of those nights.

All that really matters tonight is that, when last seen, Aaron Trumbull was sitting up in a hospital bed at Whidbey General and smiling for mom Shelli Trumbull’s camera. Because, an hour before, the Coupeville High School sophomore took a horrifying fall that left him motionless on the floor at the CHS gymnasium as paramedics, family and coaches tended to him.

Racing back to defend his hoop with under a minute left to play in the first half Friday, Trumbull, moving at full-speed, went up for a block, only to have the Archbishop Thomas Murphy shooter duck under him at the last second.

Unable to control his momentum, he jackknifed and came down, at full force, with his head and neck hitting the painted “V” in the word COUPEVILLE that runs along the base-line.

Play stopped instantly, as momentary confusion gave way to a gym that went sickeningly quiet. Referees, school principal Sheldon Rosenkrance, Wolf coaches Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Trumbull’s dad, Brad, got to him first while Trumbull’s senior teammates Caleb Valko and Drew Chan stood watch slightly off to the side.

Shelli Trumbull, who had been shooting the game from under the other basket, quickly joined them, kneeling next to Aaron, talking quietly and gently rubbing his cheek and then, at one point, jokingly snapping his picture to keep things light.

In the stands, mothers of fellow players rocked anxiously, but when they saw Trumbull click her camera and giggle, more than one sharply let out their breath and visibly relaxed a bit.

“If Shelli’s shooting, he’s going to be OK,” one said.

Evidence that he was moving his hands provided a brief respite, and Trumbull was eventually strapped to a gurney after being checked-out by paramedics. His exit was accompanied by a standing ovation, but a pall hung over the remainder of the game.

Trailing 38-19 before Trumbull’s fall, but having staged a strong rally earlier in the quarter to cut into ATM’s lead, the Wolves failed to hit another field goal until early in the fourth quarter.

Trumbull’s best friend, fellow sophomore Carson Risner, picked the pocket of an ATM player and lunged hard to the hoop for a basket, sending an electric thrill through the Coupeville faithful. When he exited the game shortly after, Smith reached out as Risner walked by and patted him on the head.

By the time the game sputtered to its end — with the visiting Wildcats claiming a limp 68-28 win — word had begun to buzz through the gym that Trumbull was doing better. Then came confirmation, first from Smith, then from Shelli Trumbull that Aaron had suffered a concussion, had full movement of his extremities and is expected to miss two weeks — essentially the rest of the season.

The last part doesn’t matter, because Aaron Trumbull was smiling the last time we saw him and his town will sleep better tonight because of it.

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"That's why I'm asking you, coach! I don't KNOW the rules!!!"

“That’s why I’m asking you, coach! I DON’T KNOW THE RULES!!!” (Shelli Trumbull photos)

"Ball four! Touchdown!! Um ... guys ... guys?"

“Ball four! Touchdown!! Um … guys … guys?”

"Wait! Wait! My lips are dry again and now the thwistle is thuck to my wips!!!"

“Wait! Wait! My lips are dry again and now the thwistle is thuck to my wips!!!”

"You sir, are an idiot!!"

“You sir, are an idiot!!”

mckayla2It’s Friday — time to get your referee bingo cards ready.

If tonight’s trio of stripe-clad bumblers and back-stabbers manages to fill in enough of the spots on your game board, you win the chance to scream like a loon at them as they giggle at half-court.

Play along with us, during this hallowed season of the god-awful ref. Perch on the edge of your seat and wonder — tonight, will they:

A) Let a visiting player throw a punch and NOT eject him?

B) Give a visiting player two technical fouls and NOT eject him?

C) Give a visiting player five fouls and NOT remove him from the game?

D) Ignore a shot that goes off the top of the backboard and decide to just let play go on because their lips are too dry to blow the whistle?

E) Shove a player in the back and then call a technical on the PLAYER?

F) Call a foul on not the first or second, but THIRD player, to be yanked to the floor in a chain-reaction free-fall?

G) Watch a player trip over her own feet and then call a foul on a defender standing a good ten feet away?

H) Call a 5-second violation that allows one team to have a last-second shot to tie or win a game, then reverse yourself after the third ref says he thinks he heard the opposing coach call for a timeout, even though he was nowhere in the vicinity?

I) Long so desperately for the spotlight that you call a nonexistent foul with 1.8 seconds to go in a tied game, just so you can trot out to mid-court like a proud little show-horse with a new ribbon in its hair, then explain the “foul” to all of us peons as if we were really, really, really stupid second graders who had just left the rain forest and never seen a basketball game before.

J) Just go bat-shit crazy and openly walk up to the Coupeville coaches before tip-off tonight and, with a smirk, nod and say, “Yep, we’re gonna screw you for no good reason tonight! It’s what we do, man!!”

K) Finally figure out who I am, and, in honor of me naming some of you “Little Napoleon,” “Mr. Ed,” “The Bandit Queen,” “Fibber McGee” and “Commander Big Britches,” have me ejected from the CHS sports complex before tip-off?

Let the martyrdom begin!!

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