Fmr. weatherman for CBS News
Spending New Year's Entertaining the Troops
I won't be with my family at home watching the
ball drop in Times Square this year. But I am still going to be
surrounded by people I care for. I'm ushering in 2012 alongside
members of the US Military serving overseas. I've come with a
rag-tag bunch of self-proclaimed 'B-listers', as I have for much of
the last decade, to volunteer and perform stand-up for the Armed
Forces abroad this Holiday season. Another midnight of belly-laughs
and heart-felt hopes for a year filled with peace.
I wouldn't know the people I'm ringing in the new
year with without reading dog tags hanging from chains or the names
velcro'd to uniforms. There's not a familiar face in the crowd. But
the flag on each flack-jacket, helmet, or ACU's creates an instant
bond. We're brothers and sisters, friends and neighbors -- Americans
-- looking after one another on foreign soil.
Over the years we've played all the hottest (and I
do mean hottest in every sense of the word) venues in Iraq and
Afghanistan. We've been from Kuwait to Germany and several points in
between.

Who needs Vegas when you have great audiences in Landsthul, Baghdad,
Kabul, Fallujah, Sadr City, Haditha Dam, and some of the smallest
forward operating bases you've never heard of? The big shows can
bring thousands of troops, the most remote performances, 10-15
people. Each one is as special as the last.
The "green room" is often just the fuselage of the
dark green Black Hawk helicopter that we land in and the venues
range from tents, to dining halls, to gravel parking lots lit only
by glow sticks (to avoid creating a target for incoming mortar
attacks). The shows are often standing room only -- but that's only
because sometimes we can't round-up enough folding chairs.
People ask me if we're funny. I respond, "if we're
not, where's the audience gonna' go?" Most troops I survey would
rather go see someone bomb rather than spending the hour looking for
one. ...But it's not really about the show. To the troops scattered
around the globe during the holidays, it's just that someone
remembered. Someone cared. Someone brought a brief special-delivery
of "home" all the way to where they serve. Regardless of whether
their mission was popular or controversial, in the headlines or out
of the spotlight -- people kept them in their thoughts.
These shows allow the troops a chance to spend 60
minutes laughing -- able to forget for a short time what's happening
outside "the wire". It does them good, but truth be told -- it makes
those of us who perform feel even better. I know the power of a
smile. The holidays are more meaningful to me because of that.
The troops in the audience are too young to have
seen Bob Hope perform live in USO shows, but they are keenly aware
of his efforts and are grateful for his legacy. So are those of us
who travel here. For many of us, we come because he did. He taught
us that you serve however you can. The people we perform for
sacrifice years of their lives away from home on tours of duty.
While we can't shoot and we don't fight, we can take a week and
bring a laugh and a smile to a place where those assets are in short
supply.
This year, it's New Years in Kuwait with soldiers
who just left Iraq and are en route home, those who are finishing
out deployments and those who are being re-deployed to Afghanistan.
There are several thousand troops serving in Kuwait alone right now.
I'm sure we'll be able to fill the house night-after- night until we
come home on January 3rd.
My real career is as a broadcaster and a
journalist, and as such, I keep my thoughts on the policy and
politics of our military involvement firmly locked in my head. The
people who serve our country however, remain firmly locked in my
heart and I wear those emotions on my shirtsleeve.
Every year, I find myself with a painful lump in
my throat at the end of our final performance, as we head out and
leave our troops behind to fight our battles and protect our
freedoms. I say a prayer for their safety and I give thanks for
their service. This New Years, as the Ball drops in Times Square, I
hope that you will do the same.
Dave Price is the former weatherman for CBS
News and has reported major weather-related stories and features for
the "CBS Evening News" and "The Early Show" from around the world.
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