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Comedian, writer, former Mercury columnist, and all-around great guy Ian Karmel has written a hilarious and heartfelt essay for the Ringer about Microsoft co-founder and multibillionaire Paul Allen, who died yesterday. Allen owned the Portland Trail Blazers, and Karmel eloquently writes about both being a massive Blazers fan and how Allen’s ownership affected the team’s home city (for the better). Karmel writes:

I didnโ€™t know the guy and Iโ€™m not a journalist. Iโ€™m a Trail Blazers fan, and for all but four years of my life, Paul Allen owned my favorite team. I met him once, though only by the loosest definition of the word โ€œmet.โ€ After a game, he walked by in an expensive sweater that didnโ€™t look expensive, and I choked out the words โ€œthanks for owning the Blazersโ€โ€Šโ€”โ€Šwhich is a deeply silly thing to say to someone, like telling Jon Hamm โ€œthanks for having a big penis.โ€ I said it anyway, though, and I meant it.

Karmel gently touches on something that’s hard to articulateโ€”about what it’s like to see your hometown change in front of your eyes, and why constants, like the Blazers, are so important in keeping a city’s identity. “Sometimes itโ€™s nice to care a lot about the things that ultimately donโ€™t really matter that much,” Karmel writes, while effectively providing hard evidence that these things, in fact, do matter, and quite a lot.

It’s a great essay. Go over to the Ringer and read it.

Ned Lannamann is a writer and editor in Portland, Oregon. He writes about film, music, TV, books, travel, tech, food, drink, outdoors, and other things.

One reply on “Comedian Ian Karmel on Paul Allen (and Portland)”

  1. News U can Youse: there is a luxury apartment atop the Moda Center, just adjacent to the heli-pad. It belongs to Paul Allen.

    So I’ve started asking people who gets to own it now? The answer that keeps coming back is…Paul Allen. We’ll set his embalmed corpse up there, with a small batch of (embalmed) retainers/ employees of Vulcan, Inc. And make the whole damn thing into a pyramid.

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