Riding on the Retro
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Jeff Benson
He has the youthful appearance of a Jimmy Neutron, the pompadour hair
of an Elvis Presley, the goofiness of an Ace Ventura and the
happy-go-lucky charm of a Mr. Rogers.
You can call Bill Russ clever, hyper and childish, too, but he
prefers to be called “Retro Bill,” his alter-ego who directs,
produces and stars in a DARE safety-tips video used in more than
350,000 classrooms nationwide.
“That Mr. Rogers guy -- he’s cool, but a while ago, I said I’m
going to replace the sweater with the Chuck Taylors [Converse
sneakers] with flames on them,” Retro Bill said. “And the hair. And
the positive attitude.”
Retro Bill visited the students at Harbor Day School in Corona del
Mar Wednesday to talk about name-calling, drug and tobacco
prevention, helmet and seat belt safety, and bullying issues. His
crazy antics had the kids laughing throughout two morning
performances.
“Just because you’re riding a bicycle or a scooter doesn’t mean
other drivers are paying attention,” he said. “They could be talking
on their cellphones. They could be going, ‘Aaaaagh!’ I saw one guy
talking on his cellphone this morning, going ‘Aaaaagh’ -- and
shaving!”
First-grader Madeleine Francis, 6, said she learned a lot from
Retro Bill’s lesson.
“If you’re a good role model, then people will copy you, like my
2-year-old sister does,” Madeleine said. “If I’m careful, she’ll be
careful. If I make a new friend at school, she will too.”
Retro Bill also showed the effects of careless actions, as he
slammed a helmetless Mr. Potato Head to the stage floor, causing all
of its limbs to fall off.
Later, he applauded all the kids in attendance with braces and
glasses because they’ve likely been teased about them.
“The day your braces come off, you’ll hear good things the rest of
your life,” he said. “People tell me, ‘Retro Bill, I have braces.’
And I’ll say, ‘Wow, cool! I had them too, for like four years. And
before that I was Bucky Beaver.’”
He also told kids to listen to their inner voices that can tell
them the difference between right and wrong.
“It goes a little something like this: ‘Hey, I’m going to do
something stupid! Uh-uh-uh.’ Like my grandma always said, if you
don’t have something nice to say about somebody, don’t say anything
at all.”
It’s more than a gimmick. Russ, 41, spent his entire life savings,
$250,000, and maxed out all of his credit cards to ensure that every
school in the DARE program received a video. He’s barely getting by
because he’s committed to spending everything he makes so he can give
each child a color photo they can take home to their parents. He said
nearly 40,000 police officers have promoted the video to a million
students in the national DARE program. On top of that, he said he
tours 300 days per year.
He said he’s talked with Disney, Nickelodeon and PBS networks
about the possibility of his own show, and he’s working on getting on
“Oprah.”
“I literally lived on rice cakes and tuna for a while,” he said.
“But when I’m talking to kids, I say I’m achieving my dreams, and I
say it started right here at school,” he said. “Each day you do your
homework and get good grades, you’re taking steps.”
Retro Bill, who lives in Santa Clarita in Los Angeles County, said
he hoped to use multiple cans of silly string Wednesday but decided
against it after accidentally pelting his personal assistant, Rick
Lamster, on the bridge of his nose with two cans the day before.
Lamster required stitches and didn’t attend Wednesday’s show.
“He’s supposed to be about safety,” Lamster joked.
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