DON’T WORRY, ATLANTA STILL HAS PLENTY OF IZZYS LEFT
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A “Snowlet” has become the Cabbage Patch Doll or Tickle Me Elmo of the Winter Olympics, a cute stuffed toy, near-impossible to find.
That is, until I passed a storefront in a busy Nagano shopping district.
There they were! Snowlets! Two of them!
My friend Tony wanted a couple for his kids. I think to get a Snowlet, my friend Tony would have offered a couple of his kids.
“I’ll take two,” I told the saleslady.
“Nani?” she replied. (“What?”)
“Snowlets o kudasai!” I said, showing off. (“I would like Snowlets.”)
“Nani?” she replied. (“What are you saying, you large, strange-looking American who is blocking my store’s door?”)
“Ikura desu ka?” I persisted. (“How much?”)
“Kamawanai de kudasai,” she replied. (“Leave me alone, you dumb-as-an-ox creature undoubtedly from Los Angeles who can’t speak Japanese and probably trashed the Olympic village.”)
Exasperated, she pointed to a sign.
LOTTERY, it read.
The two Snowlets were being raffled off. Buy a ticket, take a chance at winning a Snowlet.
“Oh,” I said. “Gomen nasai!” (“Sorry.”)
In Japanese, I believe her parting words to me were something along the lines of, “Aren’t you a little old to be sleeping with Snowlets, you jackal who is probably a journalist?”
BEING A FAIR-WEATHER FAN NOT RESTRICTED TO AMERICANS
“When I came in seventh in the 3,000 meters, they came to me and told me, ‘You’re not an athlete. That was no result. You should pack your bag and go home,’ ” speedskater Lyudmila Prokasheva said of Kazakhstan’s team officials.
After winning a bronze medal in a later race, “The president of the National Olympic Committee came up and said, ‘Congratulations! That’s exactly what we wanted!’ and that was the end of his interest.”
I had no idea that George Steinbrenner was a Kazakhstan Olympic official.
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