IU/Bloomington

Shalooby’s

Have you ever fallen in love with a place that’s hard to get to?

Current and previous residents of Bloomington, Indiana — home of the ascendant, nationally ranked Indiana Hoosiers football team — spent the weekend of October 19 clamoring to celebrate IU’s success with the creature comforts of beloved local restaurant “Shalooby’s.”

Positioned right in the middle of Kirkwood Avenue, IU/Bloomington’s signature strip of bars and pubs, Shalooby’s is the well-known spot for gathering before or after the big game. Some residents boast it’s the best 24-hour restaurant in town, even if they can’t survive the hellish and snaking line to get inside for an exclusive seat.

Shalooby’s is also completely fake.

Last weekend, I inadvertently unleashed a monster of a meme on the IU football community — one that has exponentially grown, and has no signs of stopping anytime soon.

Somehow, someway, a little white lie of mine drowned (nay, “soaked”) Indiana University’s entire Homecoming weekend. My brain full of worms and Photoshop projects that should land me in a mental asylum inadvertently drove the entire IU cultural zeitgest for a weekend.

Most liked it. Some love it. A few absolutely hate it. But everyone started with the same thought:

“What the fuck is Shalooby’s?”

Before my cursed cranium can cause any more real-life problems stemming from absolute fiction, I want to take a moment (hence, this explanatory article you’re reading) to fully address, confess, redress, and obsess over the weekend that birthed the Shalooby’s legend.

Telling Lies on the Internet

At some point in the last few years, I indulged myself in a terrible-but-addicting habit: workshopping small-scale, relatively harmless mistruths to post about online.

The current digital landscape involves lots of culture wars about everything, whether they’re actual opinions from living people or contrived political angles from propaganda bots. It’s surprisingly easy to spurn inauthentic or undeserved outrage on the internet. Us digital laypeople have no control over this reality, and we must navigate it carefully.

Personally? I wanted to see what it would be like to be on the other side for once.

Get people all riled up over nothing of substance.

So, around April 2023 — with inflation causing the cost of household essentials to skyrocket — I suggested that “real patriots” would be painting rocks for Easter, not eggs. A few months later, I claimed that they’re making the holes in Swiss cheese too big. After that? Kroger is going to start charging you to park there.

The secret to a good lie is twofold:

  1. It must be a claim that nobody has heard before — therefore, it’s hard to immediately dispute
  2. It has to be just fake enough to seem unusual, but not a completely implausible scenario

This combination of “I can’t entirely refute that” and “it’s not totally impossible” makes even the absurd immediately accessible.

“It’s going to cost $15 an hour to park at Kroger this winter,” someone might say. “Even if you’re running in to get milk, they’re going to charge you the full hour.”

Is this real? No.

Is it possible to imagine as the cost of groceries skyrockets? Definitely.

I find so much pleasure in this activity that I routinely drive these “jokes” into the ground on my personal Twitter account. Like any effective piece of propaganda, the idea seems more true each time it is repeated and thus validated. Long-time friends and online acquaintances have begun to associate this sort of digital gaslighting as a benign joke of mine, and they parrot the punchlines to get in on the joke as well.

And why not? When the Massive Powers That Be are trying to influence elections and interfere with global relations, it can be fun, if not liberating, to create a well-meaning joke that acknowledges the doublespeak and “fake news” hallmark that has defined the last decade of American life.

Arguably, it’s an act of rebellion. Of pride.

Okay, the academic part of this article is done now. Feel free to open a beer and relax, as now you have the proper framework for learning about a fictional restaurant — and why people might have found such joy in propagating its lie.

Fucking Around Before Work

Last Thursday, I was researching pictures of “IU Homecoming” to include in slides of my 300-level writing class at the university. Google tossed me an AI-written article from “TripJive” detailing mostly inaccurate information for the weekend — with humorously undercooked “pictures” to boot.

The bloated representations of my alma mater and local city were worth a chuckle, so I decided to share the laughs with Hoosier Nation in preparation of that Saturday’s incoming showdown beatdown against Nebraska. And hey, maybe it would help someone visiting campus find a good thing to attend, even if they needed to check a date or two.

But then we noticed, among the septic pile known as AI copywriting, a piece of “information” about Bloomington that had no basis in reality.

“Shalooby’s: A great place to chill with friends and enjoy comforting food.”

That’s it. No further information.

A place we’ve never heard of, with no similar name in town, with no specifics as to cuisine or ambiance.

Bloomington, Indiana is not a new college town. Both the campus and the city were established more than 200 years ago, and some actual iconic establishments (like Nick’s English Hut) have existed for nearly a century. Hoosiers were heartbroken this summer when intergenerational local staples The Irish Lion and Cafe Pizzaria closed their doors for good.

Like any contemporary city, we get the trendy fast-casual and bowl-centric chain restaurants that come and go. Your Chipotles and Jimmy John’s booths of the world. But to be a truly remarkable, beloved, important part of IU/Bloomington culture usually means to have a history spanning decades.

And Shalooby’s has no history in Bloomington.

Or anywhere else, for that matter.

So…I decided to create one for it.

You know, a little white lie. Because I can.

Because I’m already being lied to with malevolence, and I want a lie that’s fun, goddamnit.

The Birth of Shalooby’s

Every good punchline benefits from a visual, so I wanted to put my outdated graphic design skills to use and illustrate a “Shalooby’s” concept.

I didn’t (and still don’t) want to subject an existing Bloomington business to any kind of harassment, so I kept two things in mind:

  1. Find a piece of recognizable vacant real estate in the downtown area
  2. Make it bear no resemblance to any existing restaurants nor their signature menu items (Nick’s “Biz Fries,” the Bluebird’s “Dirty Bird” cocktail, etc)

I ended up choosing the recently shuttered Cafe Pizzaria (RIP) location, since it’s almost exactly between downtown and the IU campus. Apply a mask here, select some colors there, make a new sign or two, and PRESTO! The fictional Bloomington tradition took its first breaths as a comprehensible joke.

I deliberately made a few things stand out so that no reasonable people would mistake my markup of Shalooby’s as legitimate — even and especially with it taking the place of a pizza place that has been nothing else but that for the past 60+ years.

There’s the giant “SHALOOBY’S” marquee that obviously looks like a bad Photoshop, as well as a letter board (in the middle of a parking spot) advertising the grossest food I could possibly think of — a “Soaked Reuben” for the less-than-thrilling price point of $17.99.

Toss in a cameo appearance from local ambulance chaser attorney Ken Nunn and ambulance sender IU president Pam Whitten, and the rest is history. Clean and simple joke. “Shalooby’s is right here, didn’t you know?”

Another tweet of mine advertised their “64-ounce cocktails” and “carrot rings,” furthering the absurdism.

This all got the reaction a standard Photoshop shitpost will get on Twitter — a few dozen likes, maybe some pity retweets from friends — but it otherwise felt pretty benign by the time I closed my laptop and headed to Franklin Hall to teach my afternoon writing class.

Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, the joke would inevitably join the graveyard of prior mistruths I had posted, occasionally resurrected for a cheap laugh to little fanfare but my own.

Hunger Pains

It wasn’t too long after class ended that I noticed a few IU-centric accounts begin to post their own narrative on Shalooby’s while I was busy instructing.

I owe IU athletics coverage account @crimsonquarry a hat-tip for spreading the first word, which seemingly got the ball rolling. Their latent acknowledgement that Schalooby’s is not a real tradition encouraged the ironic masses online to adopt it as one.

Some people tagged me, some people did not. But each comment was by somebody who clearly got the joke I was going for. I credit longtime online buddy @VT_Ben with the first additional riff.

Prophetically, some of the first responses from followers indicated that they were already able to envision Shalooby’s as a metaphysical establishment.

Other members of Hoosier Nation began to submit their “memories” of the location, each a subtle nod that we’re all lying through our fucking teeth.

Other users, like @DidIndianaWin, began to submit their own visuals and reinterpretations of the restaurant created by AI slop — by using even more AI slop to drive the point home, and inviting celebrities to see Shalooby’s for themselves!

Within hours, somebody — I still don’t know who — created an official, verified branded account for this bullshit eatery and began to give it a distinct, irony-poisoned online voice while I was busy taking care of my own personal responsibilities.

And so on.

What started as a quick cigarette break of a joke was turning into a dumpster fire — one that would soon ignite and spread among the entirety of Indiana University’s Twitter communities.

On Homecoming Weekend, no less. So tons of returning and distant alumni got in on the joke.

Some folks even uploaded pictures to infer they there were actually at Shalooby’s.

Again, I’m used to posting deliberately framed lies for reaction online. This also means that I have a degree of agency in the matter. Being the sole arbiter of telling lies means I can dictate when the lying should stop.

That degree of control quickly left my life on Thursday night. By Friday morning, I was beginning to see that the joke had a life of its own.

Even IU reporters and local pizzerias were getting in on the fun.

Homecoming Eve

Nobody is more impatient for a big Saturday college football game than a bunch of people with office jobs on Friday afternoon.

Some months ago, I was invited to join a private IU fandom group chat. There’s no real authority in the matter, but I’m willing to say that it’s comprised of the largest singular swath of Indiana’s most loyal (or deranged) sports fans. Lots of “burner” accounts, so to speak.

And just as Bloomington couldn’t contain its excitement for a national marquee matchup kicking off in less than 24 hours, my fellow members of the “IU-minati” got stir-crazy and furthered the joke to pass the time.

I suggested a menu of weekly specials. Demands were made for a mascot, and we got one. A founder’s backstory was loosely written. And like any longtime college establishment, people have inevitably met their future spouse there.

Taking the joke through the looking glass altogether, an amiable-but-unnamed software engineer that works at IU continues to build a functioning web page complete with a newsletter, drink offers, and “receipts” (shit-talking from opposing fans that didn’t age well).

It was out of my hands. I made a joke so good other people wanted to tell it. Try doing that intentionally. Even the best stand-up comedians will admire you if you can pull it off.

Confusion Reigns

It wasn’t long before folks outside the in-crowd noticed this “Shalooby’s” thing take off.

A post was made to “Foodies of Bloomington” suggesting that B-Town’s sacred pizza restaurant space had been purchased by an outside group called “Shalooby’s.”

Similar posts began to appear on the local subreddit (r/Bloomington), but with an elevated tilt: They were in on the joke and simply wanted to inspire more chaos as to the restaurant’s semi-fictional status and “amazing wet sandwiches.

A few folks in the comments were able to see through this thick layer of humor — one calling this creation “a performance piece or a massive shitpost” — but the vast majority of my chronically online peers understood the assignment and continued to further the bit. Even to the point where some folks online were getting upset.

“We take these matters seriously and I can outstanding guarantee all the concerns will be addressed,” said u/YarbianTheBarbarian, who claimed to be the singular owner. “Rest assured the wait will be just long enough to get the right amount of soggy into those sandwiches.”

The official IU Bloomington Instagram account even referenced Shalooby’s in an official Homecoming post.

The lore grew, rapidly creating a Mandela Effect among the thousands of people who live in Bloomington or were visiting during one of the busiest weekends of the year.

‘Yes, And’

Like all single white men, I used to be in an improv comedy group.

The singular strategy of improv comedy is “Yes, And” — a constructive joke technique that acknowledges what already exists, but contributes new information to give the scene depth and more reference points on which to riff.

“I like your new convertible,” one actor might suggest.

“Thanks! I take the roof off when I’m feeling depressed,” their co-player might respond.

Bada-bing. We got a bit now. Some minutes later, that character is going to wind up tearing the roof off the convertible, and the audience is going to lose its mind at the implication he’s sadder than he’s ever been in his life.

The same principle exists within Shalooby’s and its ever-growing lore — especially with more and more people wanting participating in the joke.

After I made the doctored image advertising “Soggy Reubens,” other members of the IU fanbase took it as gospel that this venerable place of nonsense must indeed serve the sloppiest, nastiest, wettest, messiest sandwiches on the planet.

Although there is no set menu for Shalooby’s — not yet, at least — the joke has grown to make it evident that you’re going to be eating some of the most disgusting items imaginable, served with a sort of attitude that would repulse a lay customer.

But it’s the best place in town. And we’ll stand by it, for the bit.

A Google Maps location was created — yes, smack-dab where Cafe Pizzaria used to be — generating more than 77 positive reviews (4.9 stars) within 24 hours. People with real names and faces were posting side-by-side with anonymous trolls, each exalting the growing canon of Bloomington’s sloppiest watering hole.

People couldn’t get enough of the wet food, late hours, busy atmosphere, gross side dishes, indoor smoking, poorly designed restrooms, and so on.

The “official” listing, of course, was swiftly removed by Google before too long. The whole thing smacked of red flags to a machine that’s trained to search for them.

But the damage had been done.

“Shalooby’s” was no longer a one-off joke. It wasn’t even an inside joke for a few friends.

The entire city and campus were beginning to take notice.

“Shalooby’s is a movement,” I told my housemate, who sighed heavily before pledging her full support of the gastronomical gaslighting.

Entering the Spotlight

With several high-profile kickoff shows in town for Huskers-Hoosiers, many fans were already spending their time constructing a witty or silly sign to get on television.

Several fans brought Shalooby’s signs to both the FOX Big Noon Kickoff and the Barstool Whatever They Have. One person painted the rear window of their car in support of Shalooby’s, committing to the bit in a way that affected their ability to drive.

People didn’t just like the bit. They were falling in love with it.

And hours later, Indiana Football delivered an electric 56-7 beatdown of the iconic Nebraska program.

We’re the “laughing stock team,” historically. They have five national championships.

And yet, we won by seven (7) touchdowns. That just doesn’t happen.

An Era of Good Times befell the city and campus last weekend, and the Shalooby’s joke further became a reference point in which to celebrate an equally unreal season — our best start in 57 years.

Praise and phrases typically reserved for Bloomington bar royalty — such as The Vid, The Bluebird, Kilroy’s Sports, et al — were now being applied specifically and primarily to a fictional bar.

Real taverns and breweries were getting in on the action, too.

The Upstairs Pub — arguably the most popular bar in town right now — suggested that Shalooby’s was doing so well that a second location was imminent.

When the joke is based entirely in fiction, it means nothing is implausible. It’s equally the best and worst place in town. Shalooby’s is a lovely joke that hurts nobody besides the gullible. And we were all getting in on the fun.

We still are, in fact.

The Fallout

The phenomenon of Shalooby’s continues to grow and spur interest. I legitimately have no idea what’s next.

On Monday of this week, I had people contacting me about where to purchase Shalooby’s merchandise, which prompted me to make a sort of ethos statement. (You can get Shalooby’s merch from Bloomington’s own KC Designs, as well as from Indianapolis-based Lockerbie Designs. Proceeds from each go to a great cause.)

On Tuesday, I saw a video snippet on Twitter from actual IU football lineman Mike Katic. At first I thought it was a one-off scripted bit by the hosts of “The Rock Report” podcast to goad him into a soundbite, but apparently, it was Mike’s idea to shout us out! I am so honored that Shalooby’s (and its subsequent phenomenon) got the attention of anyone on the IU football roster, let alone a key figure currently fortifying Indiana’s trenches in the name of a high-powered offense. There’s no better advocate for your restaurant brand than offensive linemen. They’re gentlemen who engage in polite atrocities. Those guys can EAT (and they DO).

That same day, a student talked with me about Shalooby’s for a class assignment — going so far as to ask about my family’s involvement with the brand, which implies that maybe the joke got to him a little bit too. Or that he was getting me back with it? I don’t know anymore. I did this to myself…

On Wednesday, I filmed an interview with the local PBS affiliate on my front porch, asking me to explain the meme and what it “means.” I don’t know when the video will drop, but it’s supposed to air on local television, which might just confuse the hell out of my neighbors even more than it already has.

It’s Thursday now, and national college sports voices are demanding to know what the hell is going on in Bloomington.

Even more prolific celebrities and reporters will be in Bloomington this Saturday for IU’s ESPN College GameDay. Like any other city they visit, they’re already asking locals where the best place to eat is.

And naturally, local Shalooby’s die-hards are indulging their curiosity.

That’s about all I have on the history of Shalooby’s — the real history, at least.

I’m sure it’s only going to grow more warped and convoluted in the coming weeks, especially if the Hoosiers continue their winning ways (and potentially earn a historic spot in the first 12-team College Football Playoff).

One thing is for sure: The staff at Shalooby’s will be ready to celebrate, night in and night out, with new traditions and old, no matter how smooth or sloppy things end up for ol’ IU this winter.

I’ll catch you there, soggy Reubens and all.

###

-moose

PS: Thank you, Cafe Pizzaria

Please know that you are not the joke. At all.

You will be beloved forever. Thanks for all the wonderful years.

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IU/Bloomington

The Chicken Man

With their final days in school ticking by, college seniors can be tempted to achieve final acts of glory in their last year on campus.

And Mark Lowney, an Indiana University Media School major from Floyd’s Knobs, is certainly no chicken about it.

This Friday, he plans to eat 25 chicken tenders in the outdoor plaza of the Fine Arts Building — just north of the Showalter Fountain on IU’s flagship Bloomington campus — in front of anyone who will watch.

“There’s a lot of turmoil in today’s society,” Lowney told me in a Twitter interview yesterday. “And I think people can unite around watching some guy eat an excessive amount of chicken.”

One of Lowney’s flyers taped to the front sign outside Franklin Hall on the IU Bloomington campus Tuesday.

Lowney, the latest host of IU Student Television’s primetime program “Not Too Late,” started taping flyers around campus hotspots like Ballantine Hall and the Indiana Memorial Union, inviting the masses to witness some gluttonous glory.

“Watch one man attempt to eat 25 chicken fingers,” the candy-striped flyer of various fried chicken cuts reads. “We’re changing the culture of IU.”

Lowney’s attempt is the latest performative palate pugilism among a handful of high-profile public eating stunts: He and show producer John Carter Krell were originally inspired by “Cheeseball Man,” a hooded, anonymous New York City resident who drew crowds by merely eating a jumbo bin of 700 cheeseballs for the public’s enjoyment. Before that, a Philadelphian named Alexander Tominsky drew fame by stepping out into the Always-Sunny City to eat a rotisserie chicken for 40 consecutive days.

“People love rooting for someone taking on a challenge, even if it’s something silly,” Lowney said. “Eating is something everyone does, it’s very universal. I think that’s why stuff like the Nathan’s Hot Dog eating competition has become so huge.”

Lowney’s competition, however, will simply be himself. He plans to ingest an entire 25-piece “Tailgate” chicken finger combo — including all eight tubs of the fast-casual chain’s signature dipping sauce — no matter how long it takes.

Krell originally dared Lowney to eat an entire bucket of KFC’s famous fried chicken, but Lowney insisted on Raising Cane’s chicken strips — his strong preference to “The Colonel.”

Some quick math on the 25-tender feat: The internet generally lists a Raising Cane’s chicken tender net weight as 40 to 55 grams, packing around 130 calories a serving. Add in 190 calories per tub of sauce, and Lowney is slated to ingest approximately 3.5 pounds and 4,770 calories of chicken.

The platter, which is advertised for a family of 4-6, costs $42.99 at the Kirkwood Avenue location, before tax. Lowney, however, remains undaunted: he plans to eat it all without sides or soda, but a healthy amount of water.

“I’m going to try to do it in no more than an hour, but as long as I can get all 25 down, I’ll consider it a win,” Lowney said.

Lowney, the host of “Not Too Late” on IUSTV, with his mannequin co-host.

After his throwing-of-the-gauntlet went viral on Tuesday afternoon, the online narrative about Lowney’s gastronomic feat varied.

“Hate myself for saying this, but…25 fingies ain’t all that many to hoot and holler about, is it?” asked @jskillamilla.

“I do a more sad version of this version in my apartment,” chimed in @itsthebeaves.

Others felt inspired by Lowney’s declaration, or even the spirit attached to his campus flyers.

Promotions for “The Chicken Man’s” attempt also appeared in IU Bloomington classrooms.

“When I ask my students to plug events before class, this is the kind of thing I hope to hear about,” added @alexedcarter, a strategic communications professor at Butler University.

“[C]urt Cignetti arrives at Indiana and suddenly Hoosiers across campus are no longer afraid to compete,” wrote Twitter user @RKalland.

“Seen enough,” added @RedditCFB. “Indiana is headed to the [College Football Playoff].”

In any case, Lowney accepts the commentary’s competition. He’s not afraid of being watched, nor challenged, by the public.

“I would love to see them try!” he said. “I’d take them on in a head-to-head competition any day. Anyone who has ever eaten a Caniac Combo knows that 25 tenders is no joke.”

To that end, Lowney admits that Friday’s task is an uphill climb. He says that his previous high-water mark of Cane’s consumerism is possibly 8 chicken tenders — a figure that was muddied by eating fries and or other sides in tow.

“This is the first time I’ve attempted anything like this but I think I can do it,” he said. “I am preparing my body!”

Lowney and his Not Too Late crew will arrive this Friday at the Fine Arts Plaza, ready or not, to film The Chicken Man’s stunt for the hungry masses.

“It was really just about finding something that we thought people would be excited about, he said. “That challenge element was really interesting to us and hopefully to other people.”

###

If you go:

Fine Arts Plaza

1201 E. Seventh St.

When: 4 p.m. Friday, October 11

Cost: None

Nearby parking: Indiana Memorial Union, East Parking Garage (150 N. Eagleson Ave.)


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The Hug Goodbye

I didn’t even notice them at first.

After 14 hours working between two bars, I was ready to forget about graduation weekend in downtown Bloomington altogether.

But then on my nightly, ever-therapeutic 3-block walk to my truck, in which I prepare to drive home — literally putting it all behind me — I saw a mass of humanity that was not ready to go so easy into that fair night.

It’s Kilroy’s Sports. 3:30 a.m., Sunday morning, after two days of commencement ceremonies in Bloomington.

Nana’s gone to bed. Bubbe’s back at the hotel. What had been a sun-kissed, family-photo weekend for thousands in town had turned into a final night of catharsis for Hoosiers about to leave Hoosierland.

And they were drunk. Very drunk, at the Gates of Valhalla. Standing on every table, every chair, every service area, screaming along to Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” — specifically, the MAMAAAAAAAA part as I was walking by — well past the usual hour mere mortals call it a night. The bar’s double-doors were wide open, a cute-in-retrospect attempt to clue the hundreds of guests it was time to leave. Walking by, I was able to peer well-inside despite being near the sidewalk’s distant curb.

And then I took a picture.

An everyday, whip-out-the-phone, take a quick shot, maybe this is interesting thought after a long day. Something to look at on the toilet in a few weeks. I mean hell, people are standing on tables. I figured my housemates (relative homebodies) would get a kick out of some rowdy boozers getting their feet up on the furniture like a bunch of heathens.

So I got home and put it in the group chat for the housies. Fired up the Nintendo Switch, drank some beers of my own, and crawled onto my mattress after a milestone work weekend put to bed itself.

The next afternoon, after a long night of sleep, I took a second look at the picture.

I didn’t notice the two guys hugging in the middle of all the chaos.

But it stood out to me as something poignant, something raw and vulnerable.

Everyone in Kilroy’s Sports was putting on a brave face, staring at the explicit end of their college experiences. When they went home that night, it meant college — nay, Indiana University — was finally over. It meant the genesis of job-hunting or office gigs or scrambling for something from the parents’ new “guest room.”

So rage, rage against the dying of the light, they did.

And yet, with all of the singing and shouting and chugging and shooting and bumping and grinding and sweating and vibing going on in the room, these two anonymous figures were, in my eyes, finally acknowledging it all, and what it meant for their friendship.

And celebrating the moment before The Great Unknown with one final hug.

These guys, it seems, are really going to miss each other.

Let me be clear: I do not know these guys. I don’t know anyone in this photo (well, there’s one familiar face way in back, but that’s not important). These two friends might not be students. They might not even be close friends! But their body language evoked something that represents the metaphor of turning a page and acknowledging the rest of the book up to that point was now history. Over. Done. Goodbye. Toast. Never coming back.

But nights like these are forever.

Something about this image evoked something in me of my own college experience. Fittingly enough, the day had marked the 10-year anniversary of my own IU graduation — a day I will describe to God Himself as a horrible affair.

Dad had been gone for 4 years. Mom’s health was ailing. Brother and sister had to work. I was a poor student hopping between jobs myself. That Saturday in 2013, I woke up terribly hungover and wearily marched into Assembly Hall with my hot, humid fart-gown. Mom was somewhere in the alcoves, as the steep stairs of the building where Dad used to play were too much for her feeble legs to navigate. My flip phone (yes, a flip phone) was too weak to take a good picture, and Mom couldn’t figure out how to work the camera on her phone.

So there’s not really any pictures of my IU graduation. There wasn’t a party either — I finally found Mom outside IU’s cathedral of basketball after the whole shebang and we went back to my dingy, 1970’s apartment (“A Distinct Management Property”) and ate what I had in the fridge, which was cold chicken sandwiches made from Kroger deli meat and shredded cheddar cheese.

We didn’t get our picture taken together because there was nobody else to take the picture. She needed to drive home before it got too dark, and that was that. I went to bed after a few drinks on the couch. Nothing special.

So, suffice to say, I didn’t get a real elegant finish to my college career. There was no pageantry. No reserved-months-in-advance table at Uptown or Farm.

No pomp, either. Just circumstance.

This memory is kind of traumatic in retrospect. And I say it all as a juxtaposition to this candid photograph, which seemingly illustrates the graduation experience I never got.

Here I am, 10 years later. Same town. Making drinks for the new graduates and their proud families. Those who had been my equal peers are now those I serve with a sense of duty.

Honestly, there’s no resentment. I’m happy for them. I’ve learned to look past the wealth and status that comes with an all-smiles college experience and remember these are real people with real families. And real emotions.

And hugs that seemingly last forever.

I tweeted this same picture, more or less, as what we called a “gee-whizzer” in the newspaper industry. Nothing of particular value, but something that makes you think or feel. Something uncommon that stays with you.

There’s something about this embrace that I’m sure we’ve all been lucky to experience at one point in our lives. The hug that comes at a time of closure and farewell. The Hug Goodbye. I described it on the bird site as the “I don’t want to cry so I’m going to press my eyes into your shoulder and hope I don’t start bawling” hug. But whatever you may call it, pretty much everyone has had a hug this meaningful before.

Apparently, I’m not the only one who felt this way. The original picture (where I used Twitter stickers to cover up a few faces, for privacy’s sake) made the rounds across IU’s wide online alumni network and got people in their feels again.

In the quote tweets, one alumnus said “grad night at Sports was probably the most wholesome night I’ve ever had at a bar in my entire life.” Another said that “places in Bloomington still make me emotional, how you change and they change, but part of the places and a part of you stay forever the same, frozen in time.” Another remembered giving his late brother this same sort of hug.

A few recent graduates (of 2020 and 2021) saw in this photo a lamentation what they never got, a final send-off cancelled by Covid.

As for the picture composition itself, a friend of mine described it as like a Renaissance painting. It made an acquaintance state he was glad to be Straight Edge. A random person remarked “I know it smell like earring backs in there,” which, truthfully speaking, yeah.

However it made people feel, it certainly did just that.

I’m really loath these days to share pictures of strangers on the internet. I took more efforts with this post to blur out any faces that might be easy to recognize. But it was the seeming anonymity, the symmetrical head-in-shoulder hug that covers crying eyes, and the plain-colored clothes that anyone can wear, that I think made this so relatable.

We don’t know these guys — we are these guys. Anyone you love, have loved, will ever love, is these guys.

There’s part of me that’s curious to know who they are, but ultimately? I think I’m better off not learning. After 24 hours and thousands of likes on Instagram (you’re welcome, Barstool IU), the subjects in this picture haven’t spoken up. No retweets or replies with a “hey, it’s so-and-so!” either. I haven’t heard anything yet, at least.

And I’m fine with that. It has the same mystique, in a sense, of iconic photographs like the “high-rise lunch” or “the V-J Day kiss” or “raising the flag at Iwo Jima.” We don’t have to know who the subject is to appreciate the evident human emotion on display, even if it was just two bros hugging it out after a long night (and day) of drinking.

This photograph was a mere passing glimpse into a bar’s pulsing maw, and it got people talking about friends and family they miss. These hugging strangers, in the middle of the chaos, holding each other for dear life, represent a friendship realized and finalized. A hug we’ve all regrettably, lovingly, weepingly had. A goodbye we’ve all had to speak.

And to think, I didn’t even notice them at first.

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-moose

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