For whom the balloons fall
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JOSEPH N. BELL
As you read this, my friend and neighbor -- Newport Beach’s
international “balloon man” Treb Heining -- will be trying to
convince dubious FBI and Secret Service agents in New York City that
a busload of high school students from Syracuse, N.Y., should be
allowed entrance on the following day to Madison Square Garden, site
of next week’s Republican National Convention.
Treb will explain that these young people are members of the
marching band at Baldwinsville High School who have volunteered to
blow up 100,000 balloons in six hours in return for a contribution to
their band fund that will enable them to enter an upcoming
competition in Michigan.
This opportunity pleases Treb -- who is known universally by his
first name -- almost as much as getting the convention job. “I’m a
band guy,” he said, “and I still remember when we were always trying
to raise money at my school. That’s why I turn to public school
musicians. They seem to be the first ones cut off from funding, and
it does my heart good to help where help is needed.”
He’s done all this many times before while raining balloons on
every Republican convention and one Democratic convention since 1988.
But there’s a special challenge in this one. Treb was part of a
Boston group that sought and was rejected for the balloon gig at the
recent Democratic convention. So when it came time for the climactic
drop of the balloons, Treb was at home watching TV with a
professional eye. The moment came -- but not the balloons. Instead,
an anguished producer’s voice, caught on an open microphone, pleaded
in language as colorful as the missing balloons that they come forth.
They did, finally (Treb said about 30% never made it out), but the
magic moment had passed.
“Balloons,” Treb added, with a note of reverence, “are the
signature of a convention. The highlight moment. Both parties want
the balloon photo on the front pages of our newspapers the next day.”
That photo doesn’t get there easily. Treb’s work week started when
he arrived in New York with his basic crew last Tuesday evening. On
Wednesday, he went to Syracuse to meet his high school helpers and
brief them on what they had to do. Today will be spent greasing the
way with security and setting up the necessary equipment.
On Friday, when the bus arrives from Syracuse, the student workers
will be accompanied into the upper reaches of Madison Square Garden
by a posse of Secret Service agents. There, the students will inflate
some 15,000 balloons per hour and drop them into enormous plastic
tubes hanging over the edge of a balcony.
Union crews will then dump the filled tubes into rigging nets in
the rafters of the Garden, where they will rest until the last speech
is delivered.
“Several levels of Secret Service sit with us the whole time we
inflate,” Treb said. “They want to be very sure that only air goes
into the balloons and only balloons go into the tubes.”
The tricky parts of this process are the trip lines that release
the balloons. “Every single trip line has to be labeled,” Treb said,
“and they have to work quickly and smoothly when the balloon drop
order goes out.”
He feels this is one area that might have caused problems for the
Democrats. He learned from experience that friction on the line
increases with length, making it progressively harder to pull the
trip lines.
“I predicted trouble for the Democrats,” Treb said, “because they
used 100-foot nets. I use 50-foot [nets] or less.”
Once his equipment is in place and rigged, Treb is mostly reduced
to reviewing his arrangements and assuring himself of how well they
are going to work.
Sherry and I know from serving on his New Year’s Eve confetti crew
over Times Square how meticulous those preparations are. Treb is also
in charge of confetti and streamers at the convention and predicted,
“They are going to provide some surprises, but balloons will still --
as always -- be the star of the show.”
While he awaits his moment in the convention limelight, Treb will
be attending the USC-Virginia Tech game in Washington, D.C., over the
weekend and directing the balloon display at an MTV musical show in
Miami on Sunday. Then back to New York to ponder such matters as word
from his producer that President Bush doesn’t like balloons falling
on his head “so we have to drop them around him but not on him.” Or
dreaming that while Bush is making his speech, Treb loses
communication with the people holding the trip lines. Or wondering if
protesters are going to mess up his schedule. Things like that.
Politics have no part in all this.
“My own political feelings don’t apply here,” Treb said. “I’m
happy to take a back seat. I just want everyone I work for to look
good. It’s a show, and I want it to be the best.”
So a week from tonight -- however you may feel about the speaker
-- if you are watching the climax of the Republican convention, take
a moment to tip one to the hometown boy on the press platform in
Madison Square Garden. He’ll be wearing headphones and glasses and
maybe sweating a little. He likes to say that, “When it’s over, I’m
either going to be walking on air or going out with my tail between
my legs.”
Maybe a little positive thinking from here will help bring those
balloons down when and how Treb has it planned. But not on the
president’s head.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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