An
allusion that indicates an over-hyped event that ends in a spectacularly embarrassing
anticlimax. In short, a promise followed by a huge let down on a massive public scale.
Geraldo Rivera, an acclaimed
investigative journalist who achieved national prominence when he uncovered shocking abuses in New York mental hospitals, caused some controversy in the world of journalism when he abandoned his serious, hard-hitting news style to pursue a career in the world of
tabloid TV.
His
Tom Foolery reached an apex in 1986 when he hosted a glitzy special called
The Mystery of Al Capone's Vault that promised -- live on air -- to open a sealed vault reputed to belong to the infamous gangster. What would it contain? For weeks, viewers were teased with the possibilities. Money?
Gold? Jewels? Maybe an iced victim or two. Wouldn't that be totally cool to see a
mummified bullet-riddled corpse come tumbling out and break apart into dust before our very eyes?
Yeah, that sure would be
sweet to see. And why not? America's recovery from the '81 recession was in full swing. Reagan was dealing with the commies. The invasion of
Grenada proved America could flex its military muscle, invade a
golf course, and not become embroiled in another 'nam. For the first time in its history, America could put a lot of its past behind and worry about stupid, inconsequential trashy stuff. Geraldo was the right man to take us there. He just needed the right project. But
what project? Teen models being turned into porn stars?
Roswell? Buried proof that Kennedy was baggin'
Marilyn Monroe?
And then it happened.
Chicago finally decided to demolish the
Lexington Hotel, a filthy
flop house that was once the
palatial home of
Al Capone. In the basement a sealed vault was discovered. Since Capone lived in the hotel, it was entirely possible this was his vault! Ah ha!
Geraldo hosted
The Mystery of Al Capone's Vault. After about 110 minutes of padding, historical vignettes, rag time music, and Geraldo shooting up a hotel wall with a
Tommy Gun, the vault was finally opened.
In it was found dirt and an old
whisky bottle.
The end.
The show had a 57 rating. Christ,
The Beatles could only muster a 45.3
rating on Sullivan. It's the highest rated special in TV history (exceeding even the "
Who shot JR?" 53.3 rating) and people in 30 million American homes basically sat with eyes glued to their personality boxes to see a man in a thick
mustache sweep out an empty closet. It was TV's finest moment.
Geraldo , sensing his career might be in
jeopardy, decided to get back into the hard-hitting news business by taking on the War on Terrorism... I mean the
War on Drugs. How he'd fuck up the war on terrorism comes later. He hosted a special called
American Vice: The Doping of a Nation.
Its climax was, on live TV, watching six
DEA agents storm into a vile drug den, seize the vile drugs, and cart the vile drug type people off to jail where they'd get totally raped in prison. And then much like Lord
Vader stepping into the corpse-littered hall of the rebel
blockade runner, Geraldo was going to be right behind that
kevlar phalanx of machine-gun toting agents. He'd go right up to those vile drug people, get all up in their
business, and call them a name.
Mano a mano. It was gonna be so sweet.
Doors were smashed in! Vile drug people were wrestled to the ground! People screamed. Geraldo identified the man and woman in the house as a hooker and her pimp. The camera searched wildly for mountains of white drug powder right there on the
coffee table, just like we imagined, but no drugs were ever found. After the broadcast the woman, Terry Rouse, sued Geraldo for character defamation. She was not a
hooker. Huh! In 1990 Geraldo gave in to Rouse's $30 million
defamation suit and they settled out of court for an undisclosed sum.