I knew right away that The Capitol Steps had what it takes when I saw them doing a sketch in which they depicted a would-be airplane bomber at a TSA check point line asking a second terrorist,
"Do you think my new explosive rig -- makes my butt look big?"
And the second terrorist replies,
"Honestly, your derriere -- looks smokin' in that underwear."
Yes, these men and women, many of whom came from straight-laced jobs on Capitol Hill, now proclaim in satire and song that Joe Biden's televised napping during a speech by President Obama qualifies the vice president to be an air traffic controller.
"Things have gotten funnier and funnier in aviation," Capitol Steps founding member Elaina Newport told me on the phone on Monday. Pointing out the comedy of errors that is politics is what they normally do. But air travel is right up there on the Steps' comedic radar.
"Aviation really does strike a chord because you encounter people with a lot of power over your day," Elaina told me. At the same time, the Senate staffer turned comedienne and frequent flyer adds, "I imagine passengers can be very annoying and it gets into a little bit of a cycle. You probably have the passenger annoying the gate agent and the gate agent taking it out on the next passenger. We're probably on a downhill spiral."
There was no loss of situational awareness at the Steps show when my sister Lee, her husband Hugo and I took our seats in the amphitheater at the Ronald Reagan Building last Saturday night. Soon we were off -- flying high above the beltway into the not-so-friendly skies to the tune of Strangers in the Night.
Strangers on the flight
Might cause a scare, well
It is just not right
They seized my hair gel
We could yell "jihad!"
Before the flight is through
Hear the lib'rals say
We can't profile them
We'll pass TSA
With just a smile then
As guards stop some nuns
And make them all get nude
As far as I'm concerned, Henri Bergson's laughter-as-a-corrective-force has never been more needed than in commercial aviation today, where there's an oversupply of cranky people and an under supply of laughs. So I asked Elaina if perhaps she would be willing to help out and improve the atmosphere.
"I'd be happy to sit on a commission," she agreed right way, but she won't come cheap. "For an upgrade, I would do it."
Well, even without the upgrade, the Steps are making a valuable contribution and they're not alone. Southwest Airlines boss Gary Kelly likes to play the goof from time to time, especially at Halloween, a message that clearly filters down.
Ashley Dillon, a spokeswoman for Southwest says, "Customers have begun to see travel as a hassle because of all the rules and restrictions, and our employees have put the fun back in flying." The airline encourages employees to lighten up. "If they tell a joke, it grabs the customer's attention because it's something unexpected," she said.
Do ya think Southwest execs would laugh at the Steps' parody of their recent flight when a big ol' section of fuselage ripped open at cruise altitude? I sure did. Sung to the Danny Kaye kiddie tune, "There's a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea", the Steps' version," There's a Hole in the Middle of the Plane," tells passengers that while checked bags are free, those that get sucked out of the roof will incur a $35 charge.
Business class meals and lie flat beds should be offered up also to the pillow-tossing economy passengers who showed they know how to make the best of it on Lufthansa Flight 687. With the assistance of a fun-loving flight attendant, en route from Tel Aviv to Frankfurt, they didn't get bored during the lengthy trip, they got even, staging an impromptu pillow flight.