When I opened the e-mail from a reporter at the Chicago Tribune back in
2004, I knew the game was up. He was doing a story about the Order of the
Occult Hand, and wanted to know how it got started. I knew we'd be caught
eventually, and eventually had arrived. I decided I might as well come
clean:
It was at a long-ago convention of editorial writers - yes, even as anarchic
a bunch as editorial writers have conventions - that I noticed some knowing
smiles when one of the group started a sentence with, "It was as if an
occult handŠ."
Except for the knowing smiles, the phrase might have gone unnoticed. Which
is the object of the game. It seems that years ago some young reporters -
maybe with the AP - decided to see if they could slip that telltale phrase
past the copy desk and into the paper. It was an inside joke, if more inside
than joke.
Maybe you had to be a young AP reporter required to write countless routine,
fill-in-the-blank stories to appreciate this little game. It's a harmless
enough diversion. And less serious an infraction than inserting a second
baseman named In Cognito into the box scores.
It was a lot easier to keep the Order of the Occult Hand a secret before
Google. Now all an ace reporter need do is type in the suspect phrase and,
bingo, he's got a list of all of us co-conspirators.
In mitigation, allow me to plead that a mention of the occult hand may
provide the only bright spot in still another of those thumbsuckers entitled
"Whither NATO?" or "End Unfunded Federal Mandates."
Admittedly, some candidates for the Order never should have been accepted.
These were the lazy types who threw the magic phrase into their copy so
artlessly it stuck out like a sore metaphor and gave the whole conspiracy
away. ("It was as if an occult hand had strewn federal programs with
unfunded mandatesŠ.")
The object of the game wasn't just to use the phrase but to use it with some
subtlety. The clumsy types eventually exposed us all - like an American spy
in a bad World War II movie who forgets to use his knife and fork in the
European manner.
Continued... |