If
the Stanley Cup could talk, fans would know the X-rated antics of their favorite
champions. If the Olympic Flame could talk, countless questions throughout
history could be answered.
Fortunately,
thanks to the internet, that opportunity is finally among us. The Olympic Flame
has taken time out of its trip across the United
Kingdom to do an exclusive Facebook chat
interview. To keep the interview from turning into an ancient history lecture,
we only tackled the time line from 1928 until today.
Now without
further delay, here is my exclusive interview with the Olympic Flame.
Sports on the Side:
Mr. Flame, thank you very much for agreeing to this interview. I know that you
have a packed schedule, and I appreciate the time.
Olympic Flame: Thanks
for having me.
SOTS:
So, let us get right to it. Every one of your journeys has begun in Olympia ,
Greece where the Temple
of Hera used to stand…..
OF:
Wait, you mean I didn’t get sparked outside of the local Chipolte outside of
her majesty’s castle? I think my whole
life has just been turned upside-down.
SOTS:
My apologies. You obviously know that you make a journey through Greece
before every Olympics. What is that trip like?
OF: Long for one thing. I get passed around
from random person to random person like your freaking stocks.
I don’t know any of these people. These
runners always take the most obscure routes to get from Olympia
to Athens . I always
tell them when they are going from Gastouni to Lechaina; you want to go south
towards Anapafseos first. But no, these guys have to make sure that everybody
and their grandmother sees them running through town with me.
Eight days in Greece
alone is too freaking long. Your NBA trophy flies first class and gets its own
seat for Hera’s sake. I want that kind of treatment. I’ve been around for 49
years longer modern time here. Yet that hunk of metal gets an in flight movie every
time it moves.
SOTS: Well, at least
with the runners you don’t have to worry about being stuck on a plane watching Battleship
for hours on end.
OF: What is
that?
SOTS: It’s this disgrace
of a movie with Rihanna as a….
OF: Say no
more. I concede that point. I just wish that I got better treatment.
Sure it’s nice
to see Greece .
But I’m fire, I don’t need the exercise.
SOTS: The first
time that the modern day relay system was utilized was during the 1936 games in
Berlin .
OF: Yeah. Those
b*&^%$#s really knew how to keep things moving. It only took 12 days and 11
nights to get me from Greece
to Berlin . I
traveled 3,187 kilometers and was
carried by over 3,000 people. I didn’t mind the pace of the travel, what I got
mad at was that that Hitler tool reduced me to part of his propaganda machine.
SOTS: I take it that you were not a big
fan of the film Olympia ?
OF: No I was not a fan of the film. I
think Hitler used the games to illustrate his belief that
classical Greece was an Aryan forerunner of his twisted Reich. There are so many
freaking pictures of me with the pictures of swastikas in the background. I
mean, the rest of the world was there with those stickers in the background.
HELLOOO, YOU SEE THESE FLAGS HERE!? Did people just miss that or did they just
not give two schizers?
It made me look like I supported what they did. I’m the symbol of global unity
for Poseidon’s sake. But the rest of the world just freaking let those guys
just bro-out until it was too late. I don’t know how you humans have survived
for this long.
SOTS: Okay, so next question. What is the
single weirdest thing that happened to you since 1928? Torch run or ceremony
wise?
OF: That’s an easy one. This one gets me
every time. The guy who completely duped everyone in 1956. The Melbourne Games, I think, yeah, in Australia .
SOTS: Barry Larkin?
OF: Yeah, him! Oh my Hermes. I still don’t
have any idea how that happened. That was like waking up in a dumpster after a
drunken night in Prague . You guys are really stupid for that one.
SOTS: I don’t know how that happened either.
You would think that getting a fake torch to the mayor of Sydney would be a plot sure to fail. But it
worked.
OF: Oh I remember that so well. These kids
were planning on protesting the relay because the relay was an idea created by
Nazis. The plan was pretty much get some kid in a white shirt to carry a fake
torch and give it to the mayor of Sydney .
SOTS: How exactly did they manage that?
OF: That’s the best part! They got the
moron carrying me at the time…
SOTS: Harry Dillon.
OF: Yeah, that moron. Anyway, Larkin and
his buddies come running up with the fake torch. I can hear the people laughing
at them. Then all of a sudden, one of the kids is waving his arms around and a
pair of underwear flies out of the fake torch. The fake runner dashes off and
this Larkin kid picks up the fake torch and starts running the rest of the
route PROTECTED BY THE SECURITY WHO THOUGHT THAT HE WAS CARRYING ME. Anyway,
Larkin gets to Sydney town hall and presents the torch to the
mayor. The mayor, then proceeds to read his big speech and Larkin sneaks off.
By the time somebody told the mayor it was a hoax, Larkin was gone!
Everyone was sooooooo pissed when they
found out that torch wasn’t me. The crowd started to get unruly and Dillon and
I needed an army truck to get to the mayor. I was laughing my embers off the
whole time. What ever happened to him anyway?
SOTS: Larkin went on to become a successful
veterinary surgeon. Never faced any jail time or anything for it.
OF: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! So you guys are so
stupid that you got fooled by a fake torch, and then didn’t even arrest the guy
who punked you? Oh that’s rich.
SOTS: I suppose so. Anyway, there have
been plenty of ways that you have been transferred into the Olympic Cauldron.
What is the most memorable way that you went from torch to cauldron?
OF: I have to go with the 1992 Barcelona Games. There was a guy named Antonio
Rebollo. He was a Paralympic archer who lit me on the end of an arrow and shot
me into the cauldron. I shot up like a volcano and boasted to the crowd. That
was the one moment in which I felt all powerful.
SOTS: Umm, you know that’s not what
happened right?
OF: What do you mean? Of course that’s
what happened. I got put on an arrow and shot into the…
SOTS: Rebollo deliberately overshot the
cauldron. The arrow that you were on did not light the natural gas that was
coming rising from the cauldron. A technician from Reyes Abades lit the
cauldron via remote….
OF: LA LA LA LA LA
LA. I can’t hear you. LA LA LA LA. You’re just jealous because that method was too epic for human
understanding. LA LA LA LA.
SOTS: Yes, I suppose you are right. Let us
move on. What was the most memorable lighting ceremony you were a part of?
OF: Oddly enough, it was in 1996. Muhammad
Ali was the guy who placed me to the cauldron in Atlanta that summer.
SOTS: Why is that?
OF: Even though he was shaking the entire
time I barely moved. Even when everyone could see the brutal effects of Parkinson’s
disease right before their eyes, he didn’t drop me. Even when Bob Costas was
patronizing the ever living crap out of the poor man on NBC in front of
millions of people, he held me firm. That is an effort that I will never forget
for as long as I burn.
SOTS: Last one before you go. And really,
thank you very much for the interview. What do you expect out of these Olympics
in London tonight?
OF: The same thing that I see every Olympics.
You guys all across the world gather around me and compete against each other.
Even though it is blatantly obvious you guys pretend to care about most of
these games once every four years. This year, South Africa will celebrate a certain runner who has
no chance of winning, yet he shall compete anyway. Enemies put their conflicts on hold, for the
most part, and shake hands when I’m lit. I represent the ideal that we all
want: that one day, every country in the world can forget about oil, war, and
religious tensions and learn to live together in harmony. And that hope will
never extinguish no matter what, or who, tries to put me out.
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