tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19508680.post-1139426830785860882006-02-08T14:25:00.000-05:002006-02-08T14:27:10.803-05:00BIG ACTION TODAY!<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/382/1708/1600/fogsite2.gif"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer;" src="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/382/1708/320/fogsite2.gif" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><span class="Text"><p class="StoryText12">A great man once said: "some days, it don't pay to get outta bed."</p><p class="StoryText12">That man was Foghorn Leghorn. A person could conduct his entire life upon the wisdom of that wise rooster.<br /><br />But the point is this: bad things happen when I get out of bed early. Unequipped to deal with the brightness and clamor of morning, I run into obstacles everywhere.<br /><br />It was midweek, and I awoke to the girlish screeching of the alarm clock at 9 a.m. Unspeakable. But I was out of bed within minutes and fully dressed not long after. It was a January miracle.<br /><br />The reason for this uncharacteristic rising was a hunch. I had a good feeling there might be big action downtown and I wanted to be there. I had already alerted my editors that huge news was imminent.<br /><br />"Huge news is imminent," I told them, standing in a defensive posture and protecting my gallon jug of coffee from their talons.<br /><br />At the paper, we have what is called (I have no idea why) a daily budget. On the budget go items that will appear in tomorrow's paper. With assurances from me that huge news was imminent, a notation was made at the top of the budget.<br /><br />BIG ACTION TODAY! LAFLAMME WILL COVER!<br /><br />And so I wandered out into the frothing world of a Lewiston morning. I parked my car discreetly on Park Street so I could watch the cops and anyone else that wandered in or out of the station.<br /><br />It's always a funny thing when I get to surveilling the police department. Unsure of what I'm looking for, I lunge at everything that moves. A cruiser pulls out of the compound, I give chase, like a dog after a cat.<br /><br />But you can't drive with utter freedom in the morning like you can at night. The roads are clogged. People stop for red lights. It's like skating on a rink with too many people jammed onto the ice. You never get a chance to open up and fly.<br /><br />Many minutes and miles later, I learn that the officer was sent to a loud stereo complaint. I lob a few lines of profanity and return to my perch on Park Street. And wait. And wait. And get distracted by street noise.<br /><br />"I am not going to take this anymore! You need to change your ways, buddy bone!"<br /><br />What's this? Marital discord? An argument between drug peddler and a troublesome customer? I creep from my car to check it out.<br /><br />None of the above. A cranky dad yelling at his 2-year-old. There goes that Father of the Year award. I return to the car and wait. And also, wait.<br /><br />It's hard to lurk in daylight. I'm slumped in my car, peering over the top of the steering wheel and thinking I'm blending right in. A police cruiser rolls up next to my car and a cop is grinning at me. A familiar face strolls out of Speakers with a warm sandwich, looks at me, rolls his eyes.<br /><br />In the morning I'm vulnerable, like an overturned turtle. Without the protection of darkness, I might as well have a spotlight on me as I wait. And wait. And besides that, wait.<br /><br />Long story short: nothing happens. No big arrest, no huge news. The loud stereo complaint was the highlight of the morning. The following day, I'm at it again.<br /><br />"Huge news is imminent," I tell the editors, approaching their webs with caution.<br /><br />The item on the budget said something like: "Action today? LaFlamme will cover?"<br /><br />And the next day, way down on the page, in parenthesis: "LaFlamme blithering about huge news again. Assigning weather story, instead."<br /><br />So, I've stopped talking about it. Huge news? What huge news? Because I know better now. I learned from the sage Foghorn Leghorn, who once quipped: "That boy keeps talking, he's gonna get his tongue sunburned."</p><span class="Tagline">Mark LaFlamme is the Sun Journal crime reporter.</span></span>Mark LaFlammehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05078311850822126859noreply@blogger.com