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Mr. Gardello And Other PBsBy 
LC Van Savage
 
 One of the funniest and perhaps most embarrassing things in 
our culture is…well, wait a second. Perhaps I should first warn 
you about the subject of today’s article in case you’re eating 
or something. Honestly, I don’t wish to be crude, OK I actually 
do wish to be crude, but someone has to address this awkward 
situation sometime and the mantle has fallen to me.  Well all 
right; I’ve willingly pulled the mantle down onto me.
        So here goes; today folks, we’re going to address the 
great societal faux pas, that ooogy, blushy gaucheness of 
plumber’s butt. Don’t pretend you don’t know what it is because 
you do, you’ve sneaked a look or two, probably pointed, have 
suppressed a snicker, and in fact you yourself have maybe 
graced the world with an inadvertent flash of your own 
plumber’s butt.  We all have one you know. Even the skinniest 
of us. 
 Since we’re being so cheeky here, and in the interest of 
ecumenical buttock gaffes, we have to suggest that plumber’s 
butts are not always seen only on plumbers.  Anyone who hasn’t 
hitched his or her britches up high enough and gets involved in 
an activity requiring your squats or bends quite probably will, 
want to or not, display to the world a goodly portion of our 
tender, private PB tips.
      I apologize to all plumbers everywhere; I promise you 
are most definitely not the only ones guilty of this social 
indiscretion.   Alas, the label has been stuck on you forever, 
because even if ballerinas, used car dealers, politicians or 
anyone on earth accidentally shows the world the tops of their 
derrieres during some bending forward activity, plumbers still 
get the bad rap.            Hey, accidents happen and we can’t 
see behind our behinds so we sometimes just simply don’t know 
we’re smiling vertically at people bringing up the rear.  And 
of course there are those who, even if they did know, just 
wouldn’t care anyway. Or some may even take perverse pleasure 
in pretending they don’t know they’re displaying.
        The first PB I ever saw belonged to dear old lovely 
Mr. Gardello who in fact actually was a plumber, a big gruff 
loud sweet man with a perpetual five o'clock shadow, a huge 
distinctive nose and two rows of big square teeth. I loved him. 
He smelled great. He was so kind and nice.  
 My family had one of the first electric dishwashers possibly 
ever made and it had to be rolled across our large, 
antediluvian kitchen and plugged into the sink faucet where, 
like a pressure cooker it exploded routinely, shattering the 
faucet and spraying down all the walls, the ceiling, the floor, 
the curtains, all other appliances and us if we happened by at 
the wrong time. Mr. Gardello would then be quickly called in 
and in short order would grace us all with an ample view of his 
ample backside’s perpendicular grin, and we kids hung around of 
course so we could get an unobstructed view.  We’d giggle and 
point as Mr. G. worked and he’d turn his big, friendly face 
toward us and smile back, thinking it was merely his presence 
that was giving us so much joy. It kind of was.
        When and where I was growing up, Italians were the 
ones to hate even though their contributions to the world of 
art and music, architecture, science, entertainment, literature 
and everything else were legion. Didn’t matter. After the 
Puerto Ricans, African Americans and a wide variety of 
religions, the Italians were it, although I forget the order of 
anti-nesses. Mr. Gardello was treated OK by my bigoted family 
as long as he kept his place, came in to plumb us out of things 
and didn’t get too friendly. But after a few years, Mr. G. did 
pretty well in the plumbing biz and eventually got enough money 
together to buy a really huge home in the same neighborhood 
where my family and their fellow 'bigottos' lived. I mean please, 
the plumber, living right down the street? Unthinkable. How 
dare he?
  I well recall my hooting with wild laughter when that huge, 
funny and happy Gardello family moved in, and did it quite 
loudly. Seeing the frozen horror on the faces of … well 
everyone in that neighborhood gave me a sense of delight I will 
never forget. How wonderful! There he was! Our former plumber 
with a vowel at the end of his name yet, and living just down 
the street. Oh the shuddering shock of it all!  It was just 
plain downright delicious.
        I was personally sorry that Mr. Gardello gave up the 
plumbing biz to make a series of killings in the stock market, 
and therefore his outstanding PB demonstrations were seen no 
more in our home.
 My family found another plumber to work on that balky 
dishwasher. That man was Polish and oh no! His last name also 
ended in a vowel; ski. Nice guy, but he had a very skinny back 
end so when he worked on that appliance it just wasn’t the 
same. In fact his britches stayed firmly around his waist. Thus 
we kids, heads hung low, had to sadly shuffle off in search of 
other PBs to conquer. But none ever compared in any way to Mr. 
Gardello’s.  Hey come on. After all, all we had back then were 
covert National Geographics to teach us about the forbidden 
parts of the human anatomy. Polish plumber guy just didn’t 
measure up, so to speak.
        So the question begging an answer is this; when 
someone we know, or heck, perhaps even don’t know, presents a 
third of his rump to the world and seems oblivious to his doing 
that, should we tell him? Or do we just stare a while and move 
on with our lives? That’s a tough one. I mean do you just go up 
to the guy and say, “Hey Mack, your arse is showing and we’ve 
got kids here”?   Or what?  Probably not.  Wouldn’t be polite. 
I think sometimes when we see someone who’s oblivious to a 
wardrobe malfunction, the kindest thing to do is just tuck the 
memory away, smile, say nada and carry on, except of course if 
they’re dragging eleven yards of toilet paper on their heel 
after exiting the public lav.  I mean, should the guy with the 
silent, unseen PB or other accidental exposures be told? Do I 
know? After all, we kids never told that darling old grinning- 
from-both-ends unforgettable Plumber Gardello. He never knew, 
and he had a great life anyway.
 
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Stubs Online.Email LC at lcvs@suscom-maine.net
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