They’ve just announced the rules of how this works, and I gotta say I’m not too thrilled. All of us present at the announcement got a BBW branded paper tray like the ones they serve wings in, and tonight starting at 8 o’clock, they’ll be giving everyone who’s awake a sticker to put on the trays every hour. At the end, whoever has the most stickers gets a prize until all 100 are gone. In other words, your position in line means zilch, and it’s possible for someone to show up at 8 PM, stay the night and still have a shot. That reeks to me of an underhanded way of them trying to get as many people as possible to stay in order to drum up business. If they started turning people away once there were 100 people in line there would only be 100 people here, but they want everyone to stick around thinking they have a chance. I don’t like it. Of course, I realize that I’m not entitled to anything here, and they make the rules, but the sign and all the advertising says that the first 100 people get free wings, not the first to amass 14 stickers. I’m just sayin’.
Now, for some real liveblogging, because this is the future.
Update: 8:00 PM - The fun has begun. I spent the day playing cards and chatting with my new buddies Ryan, Ammon, Lindsay, and Kami. My dad swung by earlier and brought me food (thanks Dad!) and came back a few minutes ago to take my brother Cameron's place, since he got a boat last night but can't stay tonight due to work in the morning. Which brings us to now, and the first sticker of what I can tell is going to be a long, long, night.
Update: 9:45 PM - 2nd sticker!! They've got the speakers blasting popular tunes and will keep it up all night. Blazing challenges continue. Meanwhile, I play my guitar and watch episodes of Community on my laptop.
Update: 12:00 AM - 5th sticker and going strong. Computer is dying so no more Community. I've been waking my dad up every hour for a sticker, and soon we'll start taking shifts getting each other up.
Update: 2:00 - AM Overheard while waiting in the sticker line for the upteenth time: "This is exactly like being in a concentration camp!" - Some ignorant caffeine-addled teen girl who clearly would know all about being in a concentration camp.
Update: 3:00 AM - Time is blurry. All our jokes are funnier. Kid next door has a rat tail that I thought about cutting off earlier. The more I think about it the bettter the idea seems.
Update: 5:00 AM - Was there a time before stickers and cardboard wing boats? I... I don't remember. I just don't remember anything.
Update: 6:00 AM - We are the undead, and every hour we rise, bidden by our buffalo masters to shamble forth to the doors. The only sound is the rasp of our feet - some clad in shoes, others barefoot - dragging over the rough pavement. When we have recieved our sticker, we return to our shallow canvas graves accompanied by Carly Rae Jepsen's 'Call Me Maybe'. There we lie dormant until the hiss of the loudspeaker summons us again to life. Maybe next time they'll be playing Mambo Number 5. ... again.
Update: 8:30 AM - WE MADE IT!! We're about to get our last sticker and then our victory will be assured. The sweet taste of free wings is already in my mouth. People are getting lined up for the last time and the mood is pretty jovial. Last update folks. After this we pack up the tents and then get into another line, this time to get into the restaurant. In two hours I'll be stuffing my face with the best wings straight from the herd on Antelope Island*!
*Not actually from the buffalo on Antelope Island.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
roozden scoot 2: stairway to buffalo wing heaven
Well, the rain has stopped.
Apparently it saw that my resolve was unshakable and gave up. I had water in my tent however, and so I ran into the mall to grab napkins (camping in a parking lot does have some benefits). There were no napkins in the bathrooms thanks to those tree-smooching jerks replacing them with air-powered hand driers (pro-tip: do not attempt to remove and transport wall mounted hand-driers. Not all mall cops are loveable oafs like Kevin James.), so I went to the food court and turned my gentlemanly charm on at the hot-dog-on-a-stick place. Scored myself some napkins, but when I returned to my tent I found they weren’t enough. So then I did something really stupid.
Apparently it saw that my resolve was unshakable and gave up. I had water in my tent however, and so I ran into the mall to grab napkins (camping in a parking lot does have some benefits). There were no napkins in the bathrooms thanks to those tree-smooching jerks replacing them with air-powered hand driers (pro-tip: do not attempt to remove and transport wall mounted hand-driers. Not all mall cops are loveable oafs like Kevin James.), so I went to the food court and turned my gentlemanly charm on at the hot-dog-on-a-stick place. Scored myself some napkins, but when I returned to my tent I found they weren’t enough. So then I did something really stupid.
I stole a roll of paper towels.
I was on my way back to the food court to the same joint prepared to
ask for more napkins, but as I approached, I saw the one girl who was working
there walk into the back room. And
there, right on the countertop, was a brand new roll of paper towels, which I
assume she was going to clean something with.
Now, I coulda and shoulda just waited for her to come back and asked her
for some, but my brain panicked and was like, “STEAL THEM NOW DO IT!!” and without any conscious thought I snatched
the whole roll and ran. There must have
been a couple dozen witnesses, and I can only imagine what they must have been thinking. Probably they were wondering why. I wondered the same thing as I rode down the
escalator clutching my pilfered towels to my chest.
[Update: several hours later]
It’s late now and the music and the kids in the tent next door are too loud to sleep, so I’ll update this again.
Watching how this line has grown has been like watching the
development of a civilization. When I
arrived in what I’m now calling Buffaloville there were a few loosely grouped
tents and camp chairs, and as the population grew, so did the level of
organization. The tents now form neat,
ordered rows, and they’re no longer the basic shelters of yesterday. Where a visitor walking the street of
Buffaloville once would have seen a tranquil group of happy campers talking and
playing cards on simple camp chairs, he is now greeted by elaborate and
imposing fortlike canvas and blanket structures surrounding groups of teens,
too young and recently arrived to remember to storm of 5:22 PM, who cluster in front of TV’s playing Call of Duty
while deep Hip Hop beats blast from the speakers set up around the
perimeters. Even the street itself has
changed. Crisscrossing snarls of
extension cords line the way and lead up to where one of the new yuppies found
an outlet on the side of the mall. This
place has changed, and you may call me old-fashioned, but I say it’s not for
the better.
This guy's beard was black when he started the blazing challenge |
roozden scoot: the quest for free buffalo wings
I’m lying on a blue sleeping bag with my backpack propping my
head up while the sides of my drab, olive-green pup tent are whipping back and
forth in the howling wind, and water
seeps into the corners, rudely ignoring my polite reminders that this tent is
in fact waterproof and would you kindly respect that. On either side of me are other people in
other tents, and we’re all in the middle of the Layton Hills Mall parking lot. And
we’re all here while our tents try to blow away with us inside because in two
days, on Labor Day morning, the new Buffalo Wild Wings franchise in Layton
opens for business, and the first one hundred people there get free wings for
an entire year. Let me repeat that for
emphasis. One hundred people will be
eating the best wings ever to not actually be grown on buffalo totally FREE for an entire year. We’re talking
the Kobe beef of buffalo wings here; among the
most incredible foodstuffs known to man.
Klondike bars are awesome, but if you asked me what I’d do for a
Klondike bar, I’d tell you that I’d perhaps exchange one US dollar for it, and
no more. But for a year of BWW, I would
give a sponge bath to a transient, I would spend a day with Justin Bieber, I
would delouse Bigfoot and braid all his body hair (or, lacking a Bigfoot, I
would provide the same service to Robin Williams.). Because it’s just that good.
And so here I am, number 40 in line, with about 40 hours to go before the gates of Shan Gra La are laid open before me and I enter the land of blazing sauce and honey-mustard. And with all that time to kill, I thought I might as well document my experience on my blog.
My original plan was to get here early tomorrow afternoon
(Sunday), since I figured most people would plan on arriving sometime Sunday
evening, but since I wanted to be sure, I passed by the BWW while doing some
other shopping this morning and to my surprise there were already three tents
set up in front of the restaurant. That
made me realize that I wasn’t the only one who appreciated the phenomenal
powers of these wings, and I knew I couldn’t afford to wait until Sunday if I
really wanted this.
So I went home and packed as quickly and lightly as I could,
and I arrived here around 3 PM, equipped only with a tent, sleeping bag,
pillow, guitar, laptop, scriptures, and my iron will.
In the few hours in between me checking and coming back, the
line had grown to about 38 people, putting me right around number forty. I took my place on the eastern corner of the
building and went about setting up camp.
This proved to be harder than I’d envisioned.
In my haste to pack I’d done a pretty slapdash job, and I’d
grabbed the first tent I saw, which happened to be a large 8 man deal and
proved to be impossible to set up in a parking lot. The tent was constructed unconventionally,
and the only possible way for the tent to stay up was for it to be staked
down. Since I didn’t have any concrete
nails with me and the mall cops probably wouldn’t be too keen on that anyway, I
ended up with a 2D tent instead of the 3D tent I’d wanted. So I sat in my chair and chatted with some of
the other people there until my brother arrived and dropped off a pup tent.
He was just in time, it turned out, as not five minutes
after I’d set up and moved my stuff inside, a huge storm broke. And it rages on unchecked. Rain is drilling the tent with the force of
buckshot and the wind, jealous because it can’t even eat delicious buffalo
wings, is doing its best to make sure the rain blows at an angle that propels it
up and into the tent. But no force of
man or nature can deter me. I am
impervious to the fury of the storm. I
will have wings, I will have them of no cost, and I will have them for a year.
Updates to follow.
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