Tom Changes BackTom stood on the beach, staring wistfully at the sea. Then he looked down at the pile of pretty rocks he'd collected. Most were common pebbles, but Tom had found a few Cape May diamonds which shimmered in the late afternoon light. Returning from his reverie, he gathered up the rocks and placed them in his pouch.
He had been thinking about time a lot: the past, the future,
Back to the Future, the thousands of years it took to make the pebbles smooth, the decade and a half of The Best Show, the ten months of the new Best Show, the endless days and nights he worked to make the Best Show great.
When he got home, he showed Terre his loot.
"Wow," Terre said. "You got some really...nice...minerals."
"Jesus, Terre, they're rocks!" Tom screamed.
Of course, there were both rocks and minerals in his pouch, and he had a lot to learn about rock collecting. But he was going to learn. And one day, he might even teach.
On Monday, he headed to the studio for an "all hands on board" meeting with Mike, Dudio, and Jon.
Tom has been a little on edge after all his hypnosis-induced jazz/sex talk last week, and the situation was only exacerbated by Mike humming Dave Brubeck whenever he saw Tom, and Dudio making strained references to the Utah Jazz. Even Jon got in on the action by suggesting they work a "long, jazzy -
really jazzy - drum solo" into this week's call.
"Don't say exacerbate," Tom said.
"I didn't," said Mike.
All the teasing was in good fun, and when it came to teasing, Tom certainly was one of the best at dishing it out. But sometimes he wasn't so great at spooning it in.
"Don't say spooning," Tom said.
"I didn't," said Dudio.
Tom was clearly under a lot of stress.
He found himself wishing he could be a kid again, if only for a day, and he couldn't stop thinking about Tom Hanks in
Big. If only he could go back to before he knew about sex, and jazz, and lying, and stealing, and bills, and all the evil and banality in the world.
"Don't say banality," Tom said.
"I didn't," said Jon.
"Listen," Tom said. "I've gotten lax. I've looked the other way when people have sworn on the show, and perhaps I haven't set the best example myself recently. But we need to redouble our efforts to keep this a family-friendly show. Okay?"
"Sure, chief," said Mike.
Tom grimaced.
"I'm serious. No sex stuff."
"Even normal, healthy sex between consenting adults?"
"You mean missionary?" asked Dudio.
"Yeah," said Mike. "Or perhaps--"
"No!" shouted Tom. "No sex talk."
"You got it, boss," said Dudio.
Tom cringed.
"Moving on--"
"What about, just talking about people's bodies?" asked Jon. "Like the arms of old male porn stars."
"No...sex...talk."
"Sure thing, captain," said Jon.
Tom liked the sound of that.
At this point, some people might get the impression that Tom is a bit of a prude. Far from it. He believes that sex is a beautiful gift to be shared between two people who love each other very much. In fact, for a long time, his go-to karaoke song was Blur's Girls and Boys, which contain a couple lines when have always meant a lot to him:
Girls who are boys
Who like boys to be girls
Who do boys like they're girls
Who do girls like they're boys
Always should be someone you really loveand
Nothing is wasted
Only reproduced
Get nasty blisters
Du bist sehr schönThat song, Tom felt, embodied the contrast between the ideal - love - and debauched desperation - blisters - and why he was proud to have stuck to his ideals and found love, both personally and professionally. He had no idea what the German said, but he liked the sound of it.
Soon enough, though, his go-to song became their woo-hoo song.
In any case, he felt himself at a crossroads, and knew he had to have a fitting topic to save the Best Show from turning into a non-stop raunchfest.
"Okay: show topic suggestions?"
"Jazz," said Mike, humming Take Five again.
"Sex," said Dudio.
"No sex!" said Tom. "We've been over this."
"I meant sechs, the German number for six. Maybe do something on neunundsechzig. Would you be interested in talking about 69, Tom?"
"Eeeeeeeuuuuuggggghhhh," said Tom.
Oral sex was, ironically, Tom's least favorite subject of conversation.
Jon made a series of inappropriate suggestions and Tom finally told him that they no longer needed all hands on board at the meeting.
Finally, they decided on a topic which brought back memories of innocence: When I Was a Kid. Weird misunderstandings and lapses of logic kids have. It was sure to elicit nostalgia and some laughs.
And it did. People called with all sorts of crazy kid stories. And The Call was wonderfully demented, though Tom was not happy with Jon's unauthorized digression about porno arms.
A wide-eyed kid even called up to ask Tom about his voice work on Steven Universe. Tom bantered with him, half-wishing the whole show could be like that: just engaging in the giddy guilelessness of childhood.
Then Nathan Fielder called in, and before long, Tom found himself trying to shift the subject away from Captain "Sully" Sullenberger's fellatio habits.
Mike, to no one's surprise, was thrilled with this turn of events.
Tom was not. Wishing there was some podcast equivalent of the FCC - perhaps a PCC - with which he could warn guests to keep it clean, he realized that it was too late. Even one of his comedy heroes had a foul mouth. What was next? Alan Partridge discussing anal? Chris Elliott discussing...anal? Tom had somewhat limited list of taboo topics in his mind.
Why couldn't everyone just be like Tom and bleep any bad words, inside or outside their heads? The bleeps are always funnier than whatever anyone could actually say. He thought of Gob's sexual harrassment speech in Arrested Development:
And please refrain from discussing or engaging in any sort of interoffice [BLEEP] or [BLEEP] or finger-[BLEEP] or [BLEEP] or [BLEEP] or even [BLEEP] even though so many people in this office are begging for it.Tom quickly queued up his sound collage, trying to figure out how to prevent the Best Show from becoming a mouthpiece for potty talk.
The haunting strains of Frankie Teardrop gave way to all sorts of strange samples, some familiar, some new, and How Soon Is Now? even made an appearance, instantly transporting some listeners back to a more innocent, and probably awkward, time.
And then something happened. The Soundboard app started going haywire, as if it was revolting against Tom. Suddenly the list of samples - "Do you have puppy dogs?" and so on - were replaced with vulgar titles, each one more obscene than the last. It was as if the universe was telling Tom he was fighting a losing battle against the barbarians. And now, instead of Gob, Tom began to feel like Job.
He looked over at Dudio. For once, this wasn't one of his pranks. He looked at Mike. For once, he didn't seem to be secretly plotting something.
Just then, he got a text from Jon:
Free speech!

For whatever reason - perhaps chafing at Tom's chafing at all his porn star talk - Jon had sabotaged Tom's Soundboard program and filled it with the most filthy material possible.
Summoning Mario Savio, Tom thought to himself:
There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part! You can't even passively take part! And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels…upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop!And so Tom turned off the sound collage. Perhaps, he hoped, the MacBook's Time Machine function would return his computer to its natural, unsullied state. But probably not. Deciding it was impossible to turn back the clock, Tom continued the show, and just decided to let the chips - and the unbleeped bleeps - fall where they may.
Tom was relieved in a way. He no longer had to fight against the tide. He no longer had struggle against the current. He no longer had to swim upstream to - nevermind. He could let the denominator keep sinking until it divided evenly into everything and everyone. The Best Show would become a no-holds-barred venue for graphic discussions of sex, drugs, and if time allowed, rock'n'roll.
By the time the Half Hour of Power started, Tom had resigned himself to the Best Show basically being a forum for whatever Mike wanted to discuss. And in this case, it happened to be penises, chimpanzee thumbs, and pornography hidden in the woods.
After the show was over, Tom looked down at his keyboard and saw that Jon had left a sickening little surprise between the keys, something only a real time machine could fix. He never wanted to say the F word more in his life. He knew now that he could never give up his fight against the forces of barbarism.
"Fudge," said Tom.