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SFX script
Saturday, January 1, 2005
Listen
(MUSIC)
Garrison Keillor: Our sound-effects man, Mr. Tom Keith, looks forward to January because
that's when the snow gets deep in his beloved North Woods, where he
goes to escape the pressures of public adulation.
Tom Keith: That's correct.
GK: When you're the only sound-effects man left in live radio
today, it means that a lot of people are trying to get a piece of you.
(CELLPHONE RING) Tom's cellphone rings about every two minutes (RING
AND PICKUP)-
TK: Yeah. (HIGH VOICE AT OTHER END) I see. (HIGH VOICE AT OTHER
END) You want me to come, when? (HIGH VOICE AT OTHER END) Naw, I'll be
up on the Gunflint Trail then. (CLICK)
GK: The Gunflint Trail in January (BLIZZARD WIND), that's when
all the hikers are gone and the pack takes over (WOLF HOWL). Big silver
timber wolves slipping across the packed snow, seeking their prey (WOLF
HOWL), and Tom Keith aboard his 680 hp jet snowmobile (BIG ENGINE START
UP AND TAKE OFF, LIKE JET PLANE, AND FAST PASS). When you work in public
radio, you have to put up with a lot of tree-huggers and Sierra Club
types, so on his weekends, Tom likes to snowmobile. (FAST PASS) And
go through those pristine snowscapes at about 310 miles per hour (FAST
PASS, BIRD FLIES UP IN ALARM) and in the heated soundproof cab of his
jet snowmobile (LOW HUM OF INTERIOR, SOME SENSE OF TERRAIN UNDER SKIS)
he likes to (POP TOP) pop open a cold one and listen to Rush on the
radio (SARCASTIC MALE GIBBERISH ON RADIO) and do some target shooting
with his twin wing-mounted 30 caliber rifles (TWO RIFLE SHOTS, THEN
TWO MORE).
I know there are some who would condemn Tom for going up to a pristine
wilderness, home to endangered species such as the giant snowy owl (SFX),
the snowy gopher (SFX), and the great white ox (SFX) and driving through
at 310 miles per hour (FAST PASS, OWL FLURRY IN PANIC), but those people
don't understand the terrible pressures of success.
To stand alone in front of a microphone (SOME SLIGHT TK UNEASINESS)
and know that in twenty-five seconds you're going to have to do the
cry of a giant condor and it's got to be better than all the other giant
condors you've done, people are taping this at home and they compare
your performances, and now the script is coming toward your giant condor
cue and suddenly you can't remember what a condor is supposed to sound
like (HEART POUNDING), you've done this sound a hundred times and now
you don't have the faintest clue what sound a condor makes, it's a big
bird with a giant beak and red glinty eyes and a wingspread of fourteen
feet, and now you've got to make its cry and nothing, absolutely nothing
is coming to mind, you can't think, your chest is tight, you're perspiring,
the actors are reading their lines, you're coming to your cue, in just
another line or two, you think you're going to black out, and now here
it is, here it is, it's your cue, they look at you, everybody is looking
at you, the director points, your mouth is open (TK BIG CONDOR CRY)
- you did it (TK RELIEF, HEART POUNDING) but now you've got a horse
whinny (WHINNY) and a toilet flushing (TOILET) and gunshots (GUNSHOTS)
and a man falling off a cliff (MAN FALLING, SPLASH) and some chickens
(CHICKEN FLURRY) - it's a tough show and when you walk out the stage
door (FOOTSTEPS, TK: Bye, Tommy. See ya, Al. See ya next week, Jack.)
is it any wonder that you're in a mood to cut loose. You get in your
Ferrari (SPORTS CAR REV UP) and you drive to Holman Field, get in your
Lear jet (JET ENGINE), and you fly north, north to Duluth Air Base where
your pals in the Air National Guard (CHOPPER) give you a lift up to
the North Woods, and as the chopper disappears over the horizon (CHOPPER
FADING), there you are at your secret hideaway (SLIGHT WIND), it's midnight,
a billion stars above, fresh snow (FOOTSTEPS IN SNOW) - you walk over
to your snowmobile, standing there eight feet high, sixteen feet long,
enclosed cab, 680 horses, and you start her up. (START ATTEMPT) A little
more choke. (START ATTEMPT) Funny, she always started up before. (START
ATTEMPT) And now you realize, this is it, you're going to freeze to
death on the Gunflint Trail in a quarter-million-dollar snowmobile!
(TK CRY, BIG KONK, MOTOR STARTS, REVS) A good hit on the dashboard,
that's all it takes. (MOTOR REVS) And you head off through the frozen
muskeg, along the trail, at 80 (MOTOR)...110 (MOTOR)...140 (MOTOR)...160
(MOTOR) miles per hour, the trees whipping past, over hills (IMPACT,
MOTOR), jumping ravines (MOTOR), down hills (MOTOR), the snowmobile
skidding (SKID IN SNOW), and you get it under control and now - look
out - (TK: Oh no!) it's a moose (TK: Oh no!) it's on the trail (IMPACT,
GLASS), and now it's in the snowmobile with you (MOOSE), it's a 1200-pound
moose (TK SQUEEZED), and when it puts its hoof down on the accelerator
(MOOSE), nothing you can do (MOTOR REV), and now you're going 180 (MOTOR)...200
(MOTOR)...240 (MOTOR)...and you're heading straight for the cliff (TK
PANIC)...and you try to pull his hoof off (MOOSE)...and over the cliff
you go (GLIDING IN WIND)...sailing, sailing, sailing...down onto Lake
Superior (SLIGHT IMPACT, MOTOR)...and out across the ice...(MOOSE) and
here comes the edge of the ice (TK PANIC)...(WHOOSH OF WATER) and now
you're snowmobiling on water....and what's that up ahead? (BOAT HORN)...An
ore boat. It's dead ahead. (BOAT HORN) And you try to avoid it, and
it's going to be close, it's going to be close, it's going to be close,
turn left, turn left, left left left left left left, look out (DOPPLER
HORN GOING BY), just missed it, and now you're angling in toward shore
and (WHUMP) you're up on the ice again and heading for the beach and
(MOTOR TONE CHANGES) you're up on land and heading across the snow and
there's a log cabin straight ahead, turn left, turn left, left left
left left left, look out, (CRASH, CRUNCH, MOOSE) and the moose is thrown
from the snowmobile (he wasn't wearing a seatbelt) and he is flung through
the door of the cabin (FLYING MOOSE) and a second later, out the back
door of the cabin (DISTANT SHRIEKS, HIGH AND LOWER), two naked people
dash out and across the snow. You walk in the cabin (DOOR CREAKS) and
the moose is lying on the bed (MOOSE MISERY) and he's got a headache.
You cover him with a quilt. (MOOSE) There's no telephone. Just a radio.
The one-way kind. You could be here for weeks, you and your moose (MOOSE),
and your only entertainment would be - TK: Oh no -- Oh yes, this show.
With a substitute sound effects guy. A guy who doesn't quite have it
down. (BAD WOOF SFX) You're going to have to get help. (TK: How?) Fire
those cannons there. (ARTILLERY VOLLEY) And moments later -- (CHOPPER).
Your pals. They land. (CHOPPER IDLING) You bid farewell. (MOOSE) And
head for St. Paul. (CHOPPER UP AND AWAY) But hurry. Because it's coming
to the place in the script where there's a sound effect only you can
do - (CHOPPER) you see the roof of the Fitzgerald Theater, and you rappel
down on a winch (WINCH), through the cold January wind (WIND) and you
go through the skylight (GLASS BREAKAGE) and down to the stage (TK:
Outta my way, amateur) just in time for the cue. (CONDOR)
Our sound effects guy, Tom Keith...

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