THE BELL CURVE -- Joseph N. Bell
- Share via
Treb Heining showed up for our January neighborhood poker game still a
little dazed from his millennium labors in New York’s Times Square. Treb
played a kind of God role in that celebration. He was responsible for the
cornucopia of blessings from above that rained down on almost 2 million
people who hung out in the Square during the 24-hour celebration.
From his eyrie on the eighth floor of the Minskolf Building, Treb used a
walkie-talkie to direct crews stationed at a half-dozen other locations
well above Times Square. At precisely scheduled moments, they showered
the celebrants below with a heavenly assortment that ranged from paper
boomerangs and cherry blossoms for Australia and Japan at midmorning in
New York, to three-foot balloon replicas of the Earth and tons of
confetti at midnight in Times Square.
The nuts-and-bolts of this operation are fascinating even to a technical
illiterate like me. Treb showed me a book that seemed to be a foot thick
containing the various scenarios as they emerged over the year of
planning that preceded the event.
But it was Treb’s reaction to his part in the Times Square celebration
that intrigues me enough to resurrect the millennium a month after we
have gratefully buried it.
Conversation around a serious poker table is generally minimal, and
philosophical reflections are considered bad form. It was not
well-received when I asked Treb between deals what the defining moment of
that long night in New York was. So a few days later, I sat at his
breakfast bar and asked the same question. His response was immediate.
“It happened at seven o’clock,” he said, “when we celebrated midnight in
London. We dropped 700 pounds of foil confetti that picked up and
reflected the lights in Times Square and took on a kind of magical
effect. At that moment, the loudspeakers carried the first music that the
people below us recognized: the Beatles’ ‘All You Need Is Love.’ And
suddenly a million-and-a-half people were singing at the top of their
lungs that all we need is love -- and there wasn’t a dry eye in my crew.”
And just as suddenly as he told this story in his Santa Ana Heights home,
Treb Heining was once again the 15-year-old kid who got a job blowing up
balloons at Disneyland and became the best balloon blower in the whole
world on his way to being called on by the people who plan political
conventions and Super Bowls to Saudi Arabian princes to contribute his
skills to their celebrations.
Along the way he’s acquired the business smarts and sophistication to
function in this world. But he has also never lost the wonderment of that
15-year-old kid.
“I told them for months that they couldn’t possibly bring off the
minute-to-minute schedule they drew up,” he told me. “There were too many
scattered pieces forming in too many different places. None of us knew
what was going on elsewhere. And then at 7 a.m., like some kind of
miracle, it all came together. It gave me goose bumps as the ball went up
the pole and the crowd cheered. For the first time in weeks, excitement
took over from stress, and I started to enjoy myself. It was rather like
being pushed over a cliff and enjoying the fall.
“The things I’d rolled my eyes at early on were really happening, and all
of a sudden, high up on those buildings, we became spectators, watching
the people we’d been working with all those months do their thing. Like
magic, Times Square literally became a part of Japan, and I began to feel
what we were tapping into around the world.”I told Treb about the New
Year’s Eve 10 years ago when my wife and I emerged from a theater near
Times Square into a much smaller mob scene that was totally out of
control and downright frightening.
“That was one of our worries, but so were the threats of terrorism we
kept hearing. None of that happened. There were only 14 arrests that
whole night, and those weren’t for criminal acts. Normally a crowd is a
beast, unpredictable. But this one knew that something new and wonderful
was going to happen every hour, so it didn’t have to create its own
excitement. There was an enormous feeling of connection with the event.
That Beatles song set the tone for a lovefest the rest of the night.”
The last hour was rock’n’roll and country-western for the U.S., and Treb
remembered that the dancers who had been working on stage and had
finished their gig were dancing in the emergency lanes on the street out
of sheer exuberance. At midnight, Treb’s people dropped a solid wall of
confetti, the ball came down, and the new millennium came in.
He says proudly that the New Yorkers who ran this event refused
steadfastly to commercialize it. They were offered all kinds of name
performers and commercial sponsorship and turned them all down. “They
insisted on keeping it pure,” said Treb, “to allow New York to salute and
honor the rest of the world.
“We worried that expectations were too high,” he concluded. “That the
program was too exotic, too worldly. That people wouldn’t get what we
were up to. But, by God, they did. For that one night, at least, the
whole Earth was united in Times Square.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column appears
Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.