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The Times' Designated Man in the Street (Coulter outs Times)
NewsMax ^

Posted on 06/12/2003 9:18:20 AM PDT by Republican Red

Thursday, June 12, 2003 The Times' Designated Man in the Street

When the New York Times needs to find a man in the street to interview they never have to look very far - they have one on tap suitable for every occasion.

Thanks to a sharp-eyed Ann Coulter, one Greg Packer has been outed as the media's designated man in the street - a role Mr. Packer has played more than 100 times, Coulter discovered.

His latest assignment for the Times was to be the average man in the street in line waiting to buy Mrs. Clinton's newest work of fiction.

Wrote Coulter, author of the forthcoming blockbuster "Treason": "Another average individual eager to get Hillary's book was Greg Packer, who was the centerpiece of the New York Times' "man on the street" interview about Hillary-mania. After being first in line for an autographed book at the Fifth Avenue Barnes & Noble, Packer gushed to the Times: 'I'm a big fan of Hillary and Bill's. I want to change her mind about running for president. I want to be part of her campaign.'

"It was easy," Coulter noted "for the Times to spell Packer's name right because he is apparently the entire media's designated "man on the street" for all articles ever written. He has appeared in news stories more than 100 times as a random member of the public. Packer was quoted on his reaction to military strikes against Iraq; he was quoted at the St. Patrick's Day Parade, the Thanksgiving Day Parade and the Veterans' Day Parade. He was quoted at not one - but two - New Year's Eve celebrations at Times Square. He was quoted at the opening of a new "Star Wars" movie, at the opening of an H&M clothing store on Fifth Avenue and at the opening of the viewing stand at Ground Zero. He has been quoted at Yankees games, Mets games, Jets games - even getting tickets for the Brooklyn Cyclones. He was quoted at a Clinton fund-raiser at Alec Baldwin's house in the Hamptons and the pope's visit to Giants stadium."

If the Times and the rest of the New York media don't pay this guy, he's getting short changed.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: ccrm; conspiracy; culturewar; gregpacker; lexisnexisisgreat; media; mediabias; mediabloopers; mediascandals; nytimes; packer; presstitutes
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To: Howlin
Anne's was the funniest articles I've read on Hitlery.
61 posted on 06/12/2003 9:59:40 AM PDT by Peach
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To: jpl
Apparently the NY Times isn't the only media source to quote him.

CNN has quoted him, the NY Daily News, ABC, the NBA...
62 posted on 06/12/2003 10:00:06 AM PDT by Guillermo (Proud Infidel)
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To: NittanyLion
History was on the mind of Greg Packer, a New Yorker visiting ground zero for the fourth time. "Each time, it just gets harder and harder," he said. "But there's nothing more important than to see this. This is more important to me than any concert or game that I've ever seen, because this is history."

Source

63 posted on 06/12/2003 10:00:18 AM PDT by NittanyLion
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To: Republican Red
Greg Packer sounds like a real Clymer (Adam variety).
64 posted on 06/12/2003 10:01:42 AM PDT by DPB101
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To: Howlin
"I could hardly breathe"

Did you gasp for air? ;)

65 posted on 06/12/2003 10:01:50 AM PDT by Carolina
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To: Republican Red
Ann Coulter:Blonde, Brainy and beautiful. Hillary: Just another dumb mousey brownette, pretending to be blonde-not pretending to be dumb.
66 posted on 06/12/2003 10:02:16 AM PDT by F.J. Mitchell (Dumb blondes are most often not blondes at all.)
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To: NittanyLion

67 posted on 06/12/2003 10:02:19 AM PDT by ewing
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To: Hildy
To: July 4th

OH MY GOD...CHECK THIS OUT!!!

THE FIRST IN LINE GUY

ROFLMAO!!!!!!

27 posted on 06/11/2003 9:55 PM PDT by Hildy

From http://www.timessquare.com/bway/features/feat_guy.html:

First in Line Guy: Obsession or Art Form?
by Reid J. Epstein


Greg Packer stood in line for eight hours before meeting Brandy, the pop singer
PHOTO: David Phillips

 

By 8 o'clock on the coldest morning of the year, Greg Packer was already in his second hour waiting in line to go on a double-decker bus tour of Manhattan with Brandy, the R&B singer.

Spending a day waiting in line to meet celebrities is not unusual for the 38-year-old Huntington, N.Y., native, but his position so far back in the queue was. Packer has made obsessions out of being first in line and of being in the company of celebrities.
But on this day, he was 15th in line. That was good enough, for his goal was just to be among the first 50 who would make it on the Brandy bus.

If there's a global or celebrity-laden event in or near New York, odds are Packer is there, or is trying to be there. He was first in the line to see ground zero when the viewing platform opened at the World Trade Center site Dec. 30. He was the first in line in 1997 to sign the condolence book at the British consulate when Princess Diana died. He slept outside in the snow in Washington last January to be the first in line to greet President George W. Bush after his inauguration.

"This is what I like doing," he said. "You only live once, you might as well make the most of it."

When told of the lengths Packer has gone to to be at major events and meet celebrities, Robert Thompson, a Syracuse University professor of pop culture, said Packer has turned a passion into an art form.

"If you're totally obsessed with Shakespeare and James Joyce and go to the ends of the earth researching them, we call you an English professor," Thompson said. "This guy has chosen his body of art to consume, it just so happens he can't make a living off of it. The only fundamental difference is he doesn't have tenure."

In his quest to mingle with the rich and famous, Packer has met Gloria Estefan and Garth Brooks, Sammy Hagar and Hillary Clinton, Rosie O'Donnell and Keith Richards. He's been the first in line to buy playoff tickets for the Yankees, Mets, Rangers and the minor league Brooklyn Cyclones. He bribed an usher at the Georgia Dome $100 to let him into Super Bowl XXXIV and convinced a nun to give him her extra ticket to see Pope John Paul II at Giants Stadium in 1995. And he never misses the New Year's Eve ball drop in Times Square, where he can be found next to the MTV stage.

Packer drops more celebrities' names than an episode of "Access Hollywood." From Billy Joel, Don Henley and Mariah Carey to the Dixie Chicks, Rage Against the Machine and the punk band Nofx, he's met just about everyone in heavy rotation on MTV. To see where the likes of Sting or Enrique Inglesias will be next, Packer searches newspaper advertisements to see who's coming to New York, and when. It is all part of his quest to meet the real-life stars behind the sequined jacket or guitar strap.

"You get to be hands-on, you get to really know them when you're sitting across from them," said Packer, who lives alone. "Sometimes its like, 'Hello, goodbye.' But sometimes I'll have a few minutes, like with 'N Sync."
It's important to be first, Packer said, because he tends to get impatient if the action begins without him. So he's always near the front of the line, and often is the first to meet Britney Spears, Ringo Starr or Winona.

"I don't want to be in the middle of the line and start getting antsy," he said. "I get there early to avoid things like that."

The obsession with celebrity started 30 years ago, when Packer's mother brought him a photograph of the actress Natalie Wood, whom she met on an airplane. A couple years later, his father presented him with the autograph of heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis.

Then came high school, when he was able to meet many of the New York Islanders while they were winning four straight Stanley Cups. After games and at malls, Packer tracked down his hockey heroes.

And for the last 10 years, when Packer has learned of a chance to meet a celebrity in the New York area, he has made it his business to be there. Consequences be damned, he takes vacation and personal days or calls in sick from his job filling potholes and mowing lawns for the Huntington highway department for the chance to rub elbows with the likes of Gene Simmons and Jimmy Carter.

"Even if when I went back to work I got fired, I know I would have the full support of the public," said Packer, who said he hopes to someday endorse products in television commercials.

While others waiting on the frigid line to see Brandy came equipped with blankets and heavy coats, Packer weathered the morning in jeans and a New York Fire Department hooded sweatshirt. For the expected seven-hour wait, he brought only The New York Post to read.

"I have all these people around to talk to," he said. "It's like having a different family every time."

As one with so much line-waiting experience, Packer preaches the etiquette of waiting in line. He'll save a spot for someone who's making a run across the street for a hot dog and a hot chocolate, as several Brandy fans did that cold morning, but vacating for more than a few minutes is strictly forbidden.
"Everybody understands that you can go get something to eat and come right back," Packer said. "But some of the girls at 'N Sync thought they could go home and get their beauty sleep. That just wasn't happening."

His line-waiting strategy depends on the relative fame of the celebrity in question. Pop culture icons like Michael Jackson require arriving up to two days in advance, but Packer has found a few hours will suffice to meet B-list stars like Lisa Loeb. For events like the St. Patrick's Day parade, he arrives before the crack of dawn to make sure he has the best spot.

"This guy has clearly found something he loves to do, and few people have done that," said Thompson. "You have to admire that. How many people have found something that they love to wake up at 2:30 in the morning to do? Not very many."  


68 posted on 06/12/2003 10:02:53 AM PDT by RonDog
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To: NittanyLion
Here's his story:

In his quest to mingle with the rich and famous, Packer has met Gloria Estefan and Garth Brooks, Sammy Hagar and Hillary Clinton, Rosie O'Donnell and Keith Richards. He's been the first in line to buy playoff tickets for the Yankees, Mets, Rangers and the minor league Brooklyn Cyclones. He bribed an usher at the Georgia Dome $100 to let him into Super Bowl XXXIV and convinced a nun to give him her extra ticket to see Pope John Paul II at Giants Stadium in 1995. And he never misses the New Year's Eve ball drop in Times Square, where he can be found next to the MTV stage.

Packer drops more celebrities' names than an episode of "Access Hollywood." From Billy Joel, Don Henley and Mariah Carey to the Dixie Chicks, Rage Against the Machine and the punk band Nofx, he's met just about everyone in heavy rotation on MTV. To see where the likes of Sting or Enrique Inglesias will be next, Packer searches newspaper advertisements to see who's coming to New York, and when. It is all part of his quest to meet the real-life stars behind the sequined jacket or guitar strap.

69 posted on 06/12/2003 10:04:09 AM PDT by NittanyLion
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To: RonDog
And for the last 10 years, when Packer has learned of a chance to meet a celebrity in the New York area, he has made it his business to be there. Consequences be damned, he takes vacation and personal days or calls in sick from his job filling potholes and mowing lawns for the Huntington highway department for the chance to rub elbows with the likes of Gene Simmons and Jimmy Carter.
Sounds like a typical government-funded RAT to me!
70 posted on 06/12/2003 10:06:29 AM PDT by RonDog
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To: Liz; Howlin
Heheh....good one.....has become a FR classic. Who knew?

...another 15 minutes of fame?...Greg "Fudge" Packer...Another $hillarys' Craig "Got anymore FBI files?, Craig?" Livingstone.

71 posted on 06/12/2003 10:07:39 AM PDT by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid,doesn't mean they aren't out to get you. :)
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To: RonDog
I bet he doesn't mow too many lawns!
72 posted on 06/12/2003 10:07:48 AM PDT by ewing
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To: NittanyLion
Greg Packer stood in line for eight hours before meeting Brandy, the pop singer.(from Columbia News Service)

Greg Packer holds a missing person flyer (from the BBC):

Greg Packer, from Huntington, N.Y., looks up Monday on Dec. 31, 2001, at where the traditional crystal ball will drop to ring in the year 2002, in New York's Times Square (AP Photo on the ABCNews.com website)

Greg Packer, center, and Eriko Migagawa, right, watch the overhead giant video screen in New York's Times Square for news from Iraq. (AP Photo in NewsDay)

This article explains that the guy is obsessed with meeting celebrities. It may be that he hunts out the News in order to make comments. In any event, he is hardly a random man on the street. An excerpt:

By 8 o'clock on the coldest morning of the year, Greg Packer was already in his second hour waiting in line to go on a double-decker bus tour of Manhattan with Brandy, the R&B singer.

Spending a day waiting in line to meet celebrities is not unusual for the 38-year-old Huntington, N.Y., native, but his position so far back in the queue was. Packer has made obsessions out of being first in line and of being in the company of celebrities.

Here are three examples of the results from a Google search. There are too many to go through them all. I don't think Google is allowed to cache the NYT so that is why hits on their stuff doesn't turn up in a google search. Someone with Lexus/Nexus could check it out, through.

1. Associate Press in Newsday March 20 - On the start of the War.

In Times Square, Greg Packer, 39, a highway maintenance worker from Long Island, wore a black t-shirt with "War" written on it to show his support.

"9/11 was the catalyst. Having been in the city on that day, and seeing how the streets were so empty and the sky smelling so bad, it really reminded me that we had to do whatever we had to do," he said. "And tonight is the night."

2. Associate Press Jan 2, 2002 - Commenting on Ground Zero

History was on the mind of Greg Packer, a New Yorker visiting Ground Zero for the fourth time.

"Each time, it just gets harder and harder," he said. "But there's nothing more important than to see this. This is more important to me than any concert or game that I've ever seen, because this is history."

3. NBA.com - Commenting on the 2002 NBA Draft

I think they need to add a bug guy," said one. Greg Packer, of Huntington, N.Y., who was attending his second draft, had an opinion as to who the Knicks would draft.

"They need Wilcox," Packer said. "They need to get bigger."

73 posted on 06/12/2003 10:08:11 AM PDT by Pete
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To: Howlin
This is absolutely hilarious, "The Grey Lady" turns out to be "The Grey Whore"
74 posted on 06/12/2003 10:09:44 AM PDT by MJY1288 (Keep our country secure, Vote for GWB in 2004)
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To: Pete
He's everywhere!
75 posted on 06/12/2003 10:09:59 AM PDT by ewing
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To: NittanyLion
My lord!

Gadfly!
76 posted on 06/12/2003 10:10:11 AM PDT by Howlin
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To: RonDog
Hmmmm, I wonder if Greg Packer ever met Matt Groening?


77 posted on 06/12/2003 10:10:11 AM PDT by Incorrigible
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To: jpl
Well, if this dude is always the first at line at "big events" like Hillary's book signing, the New York reporters who show up probably recognize him right away. I'm sure they find it somewhat amusing, which is certainly understandable.

If the reporters recognize him as a veteran line attendee, then they have NO business describing him as they did:

"Another average individual eager to get Hillary's book was Greg Packer,..."

He is NOT an "average individual".

78 posted on 06/12/2003 10:11:45 AM PDT by cyncooper
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To: RonDog
FOFL ... Thanks for posting Ann's article .. Gotta Love It!
79 posted on 06/12/2003 10:11:55 AM PDT by Mo1 (I'm a monthly Donor .. You can be one too!)
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To: Republican Red
Bwaa-haaa!!!!
80 posted on 06/12/2003 10:12:31 AM PDT by Ciexyz
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