Would not like being the guy that had to load and unload this abortion, everyday. Must have been a wonderful job, in pouring down rain and cold. OH! HOW I LOVE SHOW BUSINESS! Jim Elliott
When we were on the King Show the last month of 1954, the hippo den sagged exactly like this and got hung up regularly. Mr. King seemed totally oblivious.
as much as i admire and respect mr. king, details of running the show were not his strong suit. he had no equal on the advance but was much better at running the advance for other people than operating his own show. i have heard that, crafty as he was, his show folded because others robbed him blind.
Hey Jim, frequently the lot was so far out that we had to truck the parade to a starti9ng location and we would unloade all that crap plus horses, ponies and harbness as part of the "Grand and glorious free street parade". We would arrive back on the lot to find out that the slop from the cookhouse was eaten up ande the cookhouse was closed and "doors" would be callede in a few minutes. All the side show people would really be screwed as they had to b"bally" etc. Nowadays with companies they have "human resource" technical people that are supposed to consul you andmake you like it, but obviously our situation was so far out of whack that any i9ntelligent person with some sort of PHD. wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole and it hasn't changed much over the years "300 overnight with a ten thirty morning show".
I thought these much be from the King '50's street parade. Ouch! How much of the season did the free and glorious street parade go on before those involved threatened to blow the show?
7 comments:
Man handling those cross cages on that flatbed must have been some chore! This was before the days of skid-steers (aka Bobcat, other brands)
Would not like being the guy that had to load and unload this abortion, everyday.
Must have been a wonderful job, in pouring down rain and cold.
OH! HOW I LOVE SHOW BUSINESS!
Jim Elliott
Boy, talk about a low slung trailer.It wouldn't have made it over curbs.
When we were on the King Show the last month of 1954, the hippo den sagged exactly like this and got hung up regularly.
Mr. King seemed totally oblivious.
as much as i admire and respect mr. king, details of running the show were not his strong suit. he had no equal on the advance but was much better at running the advance for other people than operating his own show. i have heard that, crafty as he was, his show folded because others robbed him blind.
Hey Jim, frequently the lot was so far out that we had to truck the parade to a starti9ng location and we would unloade all that crap plus horses, ponies and harbness as part of the "Grand and glorious free street parade". We would arrive back on the lot to find out that the slop from the cookhouse was eaten up ande the cookhouse was closed and "doors" would be callede in a few minutes. All the side show people would really be screwed as they had to b"bally" etc. Nowadays with companies they have "human resource" technical people that are supposed to consul you andmake you like it, but obviously our situation was so far out of whack that any i9ntelligent person with some sort of PHD. wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole and it hasn't changed much over the years "300 overnight with a ten thirty morning show".
I thought these much be from the King '50's street parade. Ouch! How much of the season did the free and glorious street parade go on before those involved threatened to blow the show?
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