Ode to Virility
It's taller than 10,000 hot dogs. But hollow
inside.
Will Ferguson
SOME PEOPLE HAVE skeletons in their closets. I have a shiny
blue jumpsuit.
Blame it on Moses, but I was once a professional space
cadet, dressed in Buck Rogers garb and spouting techno-babble
at Tour of the Universe, "the world's first large-scale
simulator ride," an attraction so fantastic it could only
have sprung from the fertile (dare I say fecund) imagination
of Moses Znaimer Himself. It's the part I usually omit on
my resume: Was employed as one of media guru Moses Znaimer's
space cadets. My only defence in taking such a job is that
I was a student at the time, which is to say, I plead poverty.
If you visited the CN Tower in 1986 or 1987, you may have
run into me--unless I had my space helmet on with the visor
down (the better to nap with). Tour of the Universe was
set in a Toronto spaceport in the year 2019, complete with
customs clearance, space inoculations, boarding passes,
security checks and long, unexplained delays.
Passengers would descend in a special "time machine" (i.e.
elevator) into the "very depths of the earth itself!" (i.e.
the basement) where they would be "entertained" by out-of-work
actors -- are there any other kind? -- before boarding a
Shuttlecraft to the outer moons of Jupiter, where they would
inevitably hit an asteroid (same damn asteroid every time)
and be forced to return to earth.
The journey itself was excellent; Znaimer and company
had purchased a pair of authentic flight simulators that
rumbled with every asteroid bump. Alas, the rest of the
attraction, the part involving people in costumes, had a
strained "let's all pretend we are in the future and having
fun" desperation about it.
I worked in Customs for awhile, and then Security, and
was later bumped to Medical, where I was soon reassigned
after parents complained that the shrieks of pain I emitted
when I demonstrated the laser inoculations were scaring
the children. I eventually ended up in the Spaceport Lobby--the
worst assignment possible--where my signature "bit" was
convincing entire groups to chant, "Will deserves a raise!"
loud enough for the administrators upstairs to hear.
The "captain" of our Jupiter-bound flight was actually
just a video loop of an actor who would appear now and then
to address the passengers. He was called, ahem, "Capt. Moses."
Hello, my name is David Moses and I will be your captain
today. It was the same video, the same actor and the same
captain on every flight -- so I decided to have some fun.
When the tour groups were about to board the Shuttlecraft,
I would go on the PA system and announce, "Ladies and gentlemen,
your pilot today will be Capt. Anderson, one of our finest
. . . Hold on." I would then pretend to listen to a message
from my headphone. "What? Moses? They're going to let him
fly again, after what happened last time? The man was drunk,
it's lucky they didn't hit an asteroid and die!" And then,
to the crowd: "Not to worry, your captain will be Anderson.
I assure you, Capt. Moses is a menace to space travel and
will not be your pilot."
And then later, when Capt. Moses appeared on the video
screen, there would be a moment of stunned silence followed
by laughter (albeit, nervous laughter). I think I got fired
at some point.
It goes without saying that being a space cadet was the
strangest job I've ever had -- and not just because of the
uniforms. (What is it with jumpsuits anyway? Why do we always
assume that in the future everyone will be dressed like
that? Is the world of tomorrow really going to be one extended
ABBA reunion?) No, the strangest thing about Tour of the
Universe was that although I worked at the CN Tower, I was
stuck in the basement.
Now, the whole point of the CN Tower is its height. The
soaring views and architectural vertigo, the windows dabbed
with nose smears, the sense of freedom: I was far removed
from it all, which is a shame because the CN Tower is ripe
with superlatives. Guinness World Records recognizes it
as the world's tallest free-standing structure, but that's
only the start.
The CN Tower also boasts the world's highest bar, the
world's highest public observation deck and the world's
highest revolving restaurant, as well as the world's highest
graffiti, courtesy of local schoolchildren who were invited
to paint their names on the final crowning piece, which
was then heli-lifted to the top of the tower when it was
completed in 1976. The CN Tower even has the "world's highest
wine cellar," which is surely an oxymoron of some sort.
The oddest fact about the CN Tower? It's hollow. I discovered
this first-hand in my film student days when I made a documentary
about a charity stair climb. The film crew and I (i.e. me
and Dwayne) took an elevator to the top and then went down
a few flights of stairs to get footage of people staggering
toward the finish line. ("Keep it up! You're halfway there!"
Dwayne yelled cruelly to the runners as they passed.)
In between shouting encouragement to participants, we
noticed a small stairwell service door had been left unlocked.
When we peered inside, we saw a narrow metal catwalk, several
service lines snaking past, and below that . . . darkness.
It was the tower turned inside out, a straight plunge into
nothingness, the Elevator Shaft of Infinity. It was, in
the words of my crew, "the perfect place to dump a body."
Stranger still, the CN Tower sways. As much as two metres
at the top in a high wind, which only underlines what an
incredible engineering feat the structure is. A few years
ago, the American Society of Civil Engineers included it
on its list of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World, alongside
the Panama Canal and the England - to - France Chunnel.
"Today's modern wonders are more than simply awe-inspiring,"
declared the ASCE. "They are functional, operational masterpieces
that have revolutionized civil engineering and benefited
humanity. They are a tribute to the universal human desire
to triumph over the impossible."
Gosh. And you thought the CN Tower was just a really big
antenna.
Something as spectacular and as superlative as Toronto's
tower naturally inspires equally spectacular and superlative
descriptions, what I like to call "hot dogs to the moon."
You know, the sort of statistical comparisons that are so
bizarre, so removed from reality, that you can't even begin
to visualize what they mean, let alone find them useful.
The Acme Wiener Factory produces enough hot dogs every five
weeks to stretch to the moon and back two and a half times.
The CN Tower is rife with "hot dogs to the moon" type
numbers, many of which seem to involve (a) elephants and
(b) football fields. I'm not sure who decided that football
fields would henceforth be the standard unit of measurement
for Really Big Stuff, but the tradition has continued proudly
at the CN Tower.
Fact: The CN Tower took more than three years to
complete and is the height of 5 1/2 football fields stacked
on end. 46
Fact: The CN Tower weighs 117,910 metric tons, which
is the equivalent of 23,214 large elephants. (I'll give
you a moment to picture that.)
Fact: If you piled all of the hot dogs consumed at
the CN Tower cafeteria in a single day on top of each other,
it would be incredibly disgusting.
I had a friend named Josie who worked as an elevator operator
at the tower, and it almost ruined her. Statistics like
these tend to stick in your brain like a mental virus, burrowing
through grey matter and gnawing at the synapses.
Years later, Josie can still reel off CN Tower data in
much the same fashion as an ex-Hare Krishna who can't escape
a mantra. (CN Tower guides really ought to be "deprogrammed"
after working the elevator circuit.) The last I heard from
Josie, she was a radio host north of Montreal and she said
that in moments of weakness, often while on air, she finds
herself starting to slip into the spiel: "We are now ascending
at a rate of 5 1/2 large elephants per hot dog."
There are only a handful of numbers that we share as a
nation: 24 Sussex Drive. '72 Summit. War of 1812. Group
of Seven. Twenty-pack of Timbits.
I would like to add another: 1,816. This is the height,
in feet, of the CN Tower: the largest free-standing whatchamacallit
in the world and as such, the epitome of Stunt Architecture.
Hockey players and beer aside, the CN Tower is one of the
very few areas where Canadians can really lord it over the
Americans, which is why this figure is given in feet and
not in those tricky base-10 metric numbers that our neighbours
to the south are having such a hard time figuring out. (To
impress the rest of the world, the number is 553, metres,
not feet.)
Please note: I said "free-standing structure" and not
"tower." The truth is, and even now I am loathe to admit
it, there are towers taller than the CN. The Americans have
TV towers that are higher, but you can't go up them and
anyway, they cheated: they use guide wires.
Still, if you say "free-standing structure" fast enough
and with just the right amount of breezy confidence, it
still sounds impressive. Don Harron said the CN Tower was
built "to teach Canadian men humility," but I say, no. It
is an ode to Canadian virility, not a lesson in modesty.
At Tour of the Universe, the spaceport and launching pad
were supposedly 1,816 feet beneath the surface: as far below
as the tower rose high. The Shuttlecraft simulator was "blasted
into outer space" from inside the shaft of the tower itself
-- engines throbbing, floor shaking, lights flashing, speed
increasing, faster and faster and faster and faster until
. . . you suddenly burst out from the top and soared towards
the heavens in a euphoric dreamland of zero-gravity. Who
says Toronto isn't a sexy city? I mean, other than everybody.
Which is why it came as such a disappointment when I took
my family to the CN Tower only to discover that Moses Znaimer's
"jaunt to Jupiter" is long since gone. The world of tomorrow
has been packed up and put away, the future has been shut
down. Tour of the Universe, 1985-1992, R.I.P.
So I took my wife and toddler up the tower's turbo-charged
elevators instead, a heady rush of acceleration that hurtles
you to the observation deck in 58 seconds flat. When we
arrived at the main level, we saw people standing in mid-air.
This was the tower's famous glass floor, which allows you
to walk out at cloud levels and look straight down. It's
a breathtaking and dizzying effect.
Things not to do when you have a sleeping child strapped
on and your wife is afraid of heights: walk out onto the
glass floor at the CN Tower and say, "C'mon honey, it's
fine."
"Get over here!" she screamed from the sidelines. "You
have our child on your back!"
"But it's perfectly safe," I said. I then jumped up and
down a couple of times just to, you know, demonstrate how
safe it is. "See?" I said brightly. "We didn't fall through."
Things not to do when you are standing on a glass floor
more than 1,000 feet in the air with your child strapped
to your back and a spouse who is yelling at you to come
back: jump up and down.
When my repeated hopping failed to reassure her, I started
quoting statistics. "Look, right here in the pamphlet, 'The
Glass Floor is strong enough to withstand the weight of
14 large hippos. Fourteen hippos, honey. Fourteen!" But
it was no use, and the gnashing of her teeth and the boiling
of her blood eventually forced me to abandon my gravity-defying
frolic.
It was only then that I noticed the view. We tend to fixate
on the tower itself and forget about the panorama it offers:
a fisheye look at the city, Lake Ontario laid out like a
great swath of fabric, the arc of the shoreline, the curve
of the earth and there, in the distance, a faint rise of
mist: Niagara. You feel as though, if the light is right
and you squint your eyes just so, you might even see the
Rocky Mountains. Perhaps that is why the CN Tower is such
a Canadian icon: in a country as big as ours, it takes a
tower this tall just to get a decent view.
Maclean's Magazine
October 21, 2002
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