<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601040643
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860126
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, January 26, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1G
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FEAR AND LOATHING IN A $23 MILLION PARTY STORE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW ORLEANS -- Listen, boss. The kid was a professional hustler, I don't
care how high his voice was. He had a shoe- shine brush and a jar of polish
and he was about nine years old, but he didn't fool  me; he was on the make
just like everybody else in this city during Super Bowl Week, the biggest,
liquor-crazed, money-soaked Pep Rally of the American calendar year. And the
little newt had his eye  on my shoes, which made me nervous.

  "I betcha I can tell you where you got those shoes," he said.

  "How much?" I said.
  "Five bucks," he said.
  I thought about it. And I figured, what the  hell? Maybe the kid'll be
psychic and I'll get the Super Bowl score two days before it happens. Then I
can clean up on every bookie in New Orleans and take a nice long vacation.
  "OK. Five bucks.  Tell me where I got my shoes."
  He pointed to the street sign on the corner. "Right now, you got your shoes
on St. Peter's Street.
  "Now gimme my money," he said.
  Get it? OK, OK. There are  worse ways to go down. I paid him. Besides,
compared to the general swill that was flying around here by then, the kid
actually made sense.
  Anyhow, boss, I just wanted to tell you that before we  go any further, so
you don't balk when you see the entry on my expense account, under the heading
"social research." It won't be the only one. And they won't all be five bucks,
either. But OK. I'm jumping  the gun a little.
  This was the week that was, the Super Bowl XX countdown, and here, holed up
in my peach-colored hotel room, with old newspapers and dirty socks and
several  half-filled glasses blocking the door, I am trying desperately to get
it all down before deadline comes or I pass out, both of which must happen
sooner or later.
  You wanted me to document the past six days, do a diary  sort of thing,
right? And I thought it was a pretty good idea at the time. I'm not so sure
anymore. Super Bowl week can get pretty weird, and how many lunatics can you
squeeze into one piece without  illustrations? Personally, I think this whole
adventure started going downhill the minute Jim McMahon's butt turned into the
week's hottest story. But all right, a deal's a deal. Here goes nothing:
Monday:  This was the day the players arrived, and the day every strip joint
on Bourbon Street nailed up a "Welcome Super Bowl XX!" sign to let the
tourists know it was OK to get smashed there, right alongside  the locals.
  I came in around 10 a.m. My cab driver wore a cowboy hat. Called himself
Dirty Harry. Right, I figured. He told me to bet on the Patriots with three
points. He had a sticker on his window  that said "This Cab Protected By Smith
And Wesson." So I said "Patriots, huh? Good advice. Thanks, friend." It's
starting, I thought. The weirdness.
  Since the players were due to arrive soon, there  were already TV film
crews scouring the hotel lobby. They knew the big stars such as McMahon,
Walter Payton, and Refrigerator Perry by sight, but with everyone else it was,
"Psst. Is that guy a Bear  or a Patriot?" And it would turn out to be a
bellhop.
  You don't find a lot of intelligent behavior during Super Bowl week. Face
it. It's six days of waiting for a football game to start. Nothing  is
happening, and you have about a trillion reporters who have to file something
by six o'clock. Which is why you get great stories such as how the mayor's
wife is betting a gallon of gumbo on the Bears,  because blue is her favorite
color.
  I might as well talk here a little about Bourbon Street, since it will come
up again. Bourbon Street  is the jugular vein of this city, coursing through
the French  Quarter with every sort of sin known to man, many available now by
credit card. "Girls! Men! Topless! Bottomless!" Name it, they got it, all set
to the rhythm of a Dixieland beat, and washed down with  a big red drink they
call a Hurricane, which I suppose comes from the way you look after you finish
one. As in, "Hey. What hit you? A hurricane?"
  Bourbon Street has no memory. At dawn they come by  and sweep up the
bottles and the bodies and they juice the bugger back up and start over again
that night. Which is why a lot of people want the Super Bowl to be here full
time. What better place for a disposable celebration?
  So at 3 p.m. Monday, Bourbon Street  was sedate with the soft sound of a
distant saxophone, like something out of the Old South. And by 10 p.m. there
were a thousand bugheads  staggering in the middle of it, wearing sunglasses
and headbands, and screaming "GO BEARS! KICK A--!
  I tell you boss, the place comes alive like instant soup. Just add liquor
and, boom, it's lit.
Tuesday:  Between 9 and 11 a.m., the Bears and Patriots players were scattered
around the field of the Louisiana Superdome, a cavernous indoor stadium big
enough to house five or six cruise ships. It was the first  of several
full-scale encounters with the world's media. We're talking thousands of
reporters here. You have Japan and Australia rubbing elbows with Fargo, N.D.
Print journalists fighting for space  with radio and TV. All of them trying to
circle the same half-dozen "name" players -- Payton, McMahon, Perry, Tony
Eason, Craig James, Andre Tippett. It's not a good mix. Newspaper guys have
little tolerance  for TV types, especially when they stick a boom mike up
their noses. It can get ugly.
  What was said? Oh, let's see. Irving Fryar refused comment on reports that
his wife cut him with a knife. Julius  Adams, 37, the oldest lineman in
football, said the wait had been worth it. So did Steve Grogan, John Hannah,
Billy Sullivan and about 50 other people. McMahon sat in the middle of a mob
and chewed tobacco.  He said he had a sore butt and he was flying an
acupuncturist in to treat it. You'd have thought he just predicted the day the
stock market would crash.
  By the way, boss. I found out the Chicago  Tribune has 27 people here
covering this. We have two -- Curt Sylvester and me. Don't worry though.
Nothing those extra 25 reporters are gonna get that we won't.
  Tuesday night we saw some players  walking Bourbon Street for the first
time. Steve Nelson, who's been a Patriots linebacker for about a zillion
years, bumped into Gary Fencik, the free safety and token Yuppie of the
Chicago Bears in  front of a female impersonators' club. Now, since Fencik
graduated from Yale and Nelson went to North Dakota State, I'm not sure what
they had to talk about. But I got close enough to hear Fencik say,  "I'm just
thrilled to be here," and then they split apart and this little geek with a
cigar stepped up to Fencik and shoved a hand at him and said, "Gary, pleased
to meet you. We just hired someone from  Yale to join our firm." Fencik sort
of nodded, then turned and high-tailed it down the street like a jackrabbit. I
think he suddenly realized this wasn't a football field. And it sure as hell
wasn't  Yale.
Wednesday: By now McMahon's rear end was front page news, which goes to show
you how little really goes on here during this week. Over eggs and grits --
cooked industrial style and served to two  thousand hung-over sports writers
-- Bears coach Mike Ditka insisted McMahon's butt was for real. "He's hurting"
Ditka said. So were the sports writers. In several minutes they would be
turned loose  inside a giant ballroom with every player seated at his own
table, identified by a magic-marker sign with his number and his name. And
there would be only 10 seats per table. First shoved, first served.  It takes
more than eggs to prepare a man for a nightmare like that.
  Meanwhile, the whole city of New Orleans was starting to look alike.
Everywhere you went people were wearing headbands that said  "Rozelle" --
McMahon had worn one in the NFC championship in defiance of the commissioner
--  which I'm sure teed off old Pete, since he wasn't getting a cut.
Face-painting was big. There is nothing  quite like asking a middle-aged lady
for the time and seeing P-A-T-S! across her forehead.
  By Wednesday night, I saw a man belly-flop onto concrete along Bourbon
Street,  while his friends stood  by and applauded. There was a old piano
player who played "C.C. Rider" and made horn sounds and called himself "The
Human Trumpet." There was someone in a Bears suit and someone dressed like
Paul Revere,  and some bimbo hanging from a telephone pole screaming, "ALL
CHICAGO IS GOOD FOR IS LANDING THE AIRPLANE" -- he swooped one way -- "AND
TAKING BACK OFF!" -- he swooped the other way. Several listeners  thought he
made perfect sense. Things were sinking.
Thursday: A buddy of mine, whom we'll call J.S., rolled into town and asked to
crash on the spare bed in my hotel room, and I said OK. We woke up  Thursday
morning to hysterical voices. "My God, they've come for us!"  J.S. screamed.
But it was the clock radio. A report that McMahon had called the women of New
Orleans "sluts" had prompted every  half-brained morning deejay  to incite a
riot. Women were calling in with insults of their own to McMahon, screaming
them across morning drive time.
  It would turn out to be only a drop in the barrel  of weirdness that day.
There was a photo of McMahon mooning a helicopter. Payton was complaining
about lack of recognition for his career. Eason was rumored to have the flu.
Tony Franklin said his Super  Bowl dream was "to win the game with a 60-yard
kick, run into the locker room and jump into a hot tub with Heather Locklear
and a bottle of Dom Perignon." Hell, he could have done most of that on
Bourbon  Street that night.
  By the end of the day, the McMahon thing turned out to be a complete lie,
giving new meaning to the phrase "what journalistic standards?" Meanwhile,
there wasn't a TV screen in town that wasn't running the Bears' Super Bowl
Shuffle -- a mindless rap song video that only proves Steve Fuller can't dance
to save his life.
  I saw a baby with a Rozelle headband. A baby? Two female impersonators
singing a Bears fight song. Acupuncture needles selling at an all-time high.
Odds were put out on who would score the first touchdown on Sunday, and
Refrigerator Perry was listed at 12-1.
  Speaking of odds, did you realize, boss, that in 1803 we picked up the
whole state of Louisiana for $23 million from the French -- and on Sunday
we'll bet about $30 million alone on the Bears' ability  to eat up a
quarterback by halftime?
  It was clearly time for a Hurricane.
Friday: How can I describe Friday to you? Maybe this way. Friday is the
long-awaited day that every slimeball, lounge lizard, air-brained,
donut-eating, semi-plastered chewing-gum mutant head shows up at the hotel and
immediately stakes out a spot in the elevator. That way no matter when you
need to get to your room, it's absolutely  impossible unless you want to walk
23 flights of stairs marked FIRE EXIT: KEEP OUT.
  The press conferences were dwindling down. With the game just two days
away, players were off-limits. Only Ditka  and Raymond Berry, the Patriots
coach whom the media had nicknamed Mr. Snooze, were available. There was
plenty going on without interviews. The S.W.A.T. team had already been in the
Hilton once that  morning sweeping the place on account of a bomb threat.
  Bourbon Street  was sheer insanity by this point. You needed a nut card
just to get out there. J.S. and I made it over. Someone ran by in a  rabbit
costume, followed by a girl dressed like Alice. "Did you see the rabbit?" she
asked. We just shrugged. It's best not to encourage these people.
  Friday night is traditionally the Commissioner's  party -- the NFL's
All-Out Blow Out for 3,000 executives and media. About two zillion pounds of
oysters and lobster and shrimp, washed down with two zillion mixed drinks, all
sprinkled with the appropriate  number of stars -- Diana Ross, Doug Flutie,
Ahmad Rashad, Michael J. Fox -- mixing in like common folks. Someone spotted
Sonny Jurgensen, the old Redskins quarterback, and asked what the difference
was  between football today and when he played.
  "You mean besides fun?" he said.
Saturday: Madness. You couldn't make a phone call from the hotel because the
switchboard was so jammed. People were sleeping  in the lobby chairs, while
rocks bands pounded away. Someone spotted Bill Murray. Bill Murray? A
torrential rain fell on the city -- some divine sign, no doubt -- which only
kept people running and drinking  indoors. There was Frank Sinatra. Frank
Sinatra? A Patriots rally was held in Jackson Square -- a few thousand crazed
and soaked New Englanders whooping it up before the serious nighttime drinking
began.  J.S. told me there was a full moon predicted for this evening.
"Great," I said. "That's all we need." I had visions of werewolves, Minnie
Mouse and Rambo trashing my hotel room. 
  This was getting  to be too much, boss. Every nonsensical word a football
player had uttered was reported 200 times. The desk people were wearing furry
ears. Every cheesehead had a drink in his hand, if not a bottle.
  I needed air. I wandered back to St. Peter's Street. I wanted another crack
at that kid.
  "Betcha I know where you got those shoes," he said. The little thief. 
  "Tell me where I bought them."  I said.
  "I'll tell you where you got 'em," he said.
  "Uh-uh. Tell me where I bought them." 
  He just shrugged. Another kid came over. About the same size. He was
wearing a cap, and one of his  eyes was closed. There were stitches around it.
  "I'll tell you what you paid for those shoes," he said. "For five dollars."
  A new challenge. All right, kid. At this point I was sure I had him.
  "You're on. Tell me what I paid for em."
  "You paid money for 'em," he said.
  I owed him five. I reached into my pocket. All I had was a $10. His eyes
lit up.
  It was getting late. Just hours  to go before the big game. Somewhere in
the city, McMahon and his sore butt were resting on cotton sheets. Payton was
down the hall, probably meditating. Eason was sneezing, and Berry was praying
for  a miracle, or maybe just throwing up. On Bourbon Street people were
hanging out of windows and spilling champagne and hollering gibberish that
they would never remember the next day. The moon was out. The music was
thumping. This was the Super Bowl, I thought. And the game hasn't even
started.
  Next thing I knew, the kid was gone. So was my 10 bucks.
CUTLINE:
Patriots fan Susan Green has a lot  on her mind -- such as lynching the
Chicago Bears, or at least a rodent-like replica. 
New England supporter Chuck Wilson is one of the many who joined the headband
craze. His "McWho" mocks Jim McMahon. 
Bears quarterback Jim McMahon gets instructions from his acupuncturist,
Hiroshi Shiriashi. Or maybe Shiriashi is describing the length of the needle. 
Chicago mayor Harold Washington, wearing a cowboy  hat he won in a bet on the
Dallas-Chicago game, prepares to leave Midway Airport in Chicago for the
mayhem of New Orleans.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
FOOTBALL;NEW ORLEANS;SUPER BOWL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
