The Airing of Grievances

The gang is over at Frank’s house for Festivus, complete with the iconic unadorned aluminum pole. Frank, Estelle, Jerry, Elaine, Kramer, and Steve  gather around the dinner table.

FRANK: (standing with authority) And now, the Airing of Grievances. I’ve got a lot of problems with you people!

Steve looks increasingly uncomfortable as Frank turns his attention to him.

FRANK: (pointing at Steve) You! Steve! Trading Scherzer and Verlander? What were you thinking?

STEVE: (nervously) Frank, it’s about the future. We need prospects. It’s a strategic—

FRANK: (cutting him off) Prospects? Prospects?! We need winners, not prospects!  Why didn’t you sign Ohtani? Huh?

STEVE: (defensively) Frank, it’s not that simple. Ohtani never called.

ESTELLE: (interjecting) Well, did you call him?

STEVE: (exasperated) You don’t just call players like Ohtani. It’s not done that way.

FRANK: (exploding in anger) Not done that way? Not done that way?! If you want something, you go get it, Steve! You pick up the phone and call!

STEVE: (trying to reason) Frank, in baseball, there are agents, negotiations…

FRANK: (interrupting, shouting) Excuses! That’s all I hear! If you wanted Ohtani, you should’ve called him! Show some initiative!

JERRY: (to Elaine, sotto voce) Maybe he should have sent a singing telegram.

ELAINE: (giggling) Or a carrier pigeon.

KRAMER: (nodding) Carrier pigeons, very reliable.

FRANK: (demanding) And what about Yamamoto? Why didn’t you sign him?

ESTELLE: (puzzled) Who’s Yamamoto?

FRANK: (frustrated) Who’s Yamamoto? He’s a player Steve should’ve signed, that’s who!

ESTELLE: (shrinking back) Oh…

STEVE: (trying to explain)  I tried everything. I even had him over for dinner.

FRANK: (incredulously) Dinner? You think a dinner is going to sign a player?

STEVE: (frustrated) I thought it was a nice gesture, Frank. A personal touch.

FRANK: (raising his voice) Personal touch?! This is baseball, not a dinner party! You need to show them power, not meatloaf!

ESTELLE: (curiously) Did you make meatloaf?

JERRY: (jokingly) Maybe you should’ve tried a pot roast.

FRANK: (continuing his rant) And another thing about those uniforms! The black uniforms are terrible! The Mets’ colors are blue and orange, blue and orange!

STEVE: (trying to interject) Frank, the uniforms are a modern design—

FRANK: (dismissing) Modern, Schmodern! They look like funeral attire! We need tradition, Steve, tradition!

STEVE: (proudly) Well, I did retire some numbers, Frank. That’s tradition!

FRANK: (fuming) Retired numbers? You retired too many numbers! We don’t have any numbers left!

JERRY: (smirking) I don’t think that’s how numbers work.

KRAMER: (randomly) You know, in some cultures, numbers are considered sacred. Like the number 7. It’s very powerful.

ELAINE: (bemused) What does that have to do with baseball?

KRAMER: (enthusiastically) Everything, Elaine! It’s all interconnected. The players, the numbers, the aura!

ESTELLE: (confused) Why can’t they just make up new numbers?

JERRY: (laughing) Yeah, Steve, start using fractions. Batting third, number 3 and a half!