Tuesday, October 9, 2018

The King of the Bingo Game

Sorry about the formatting.  I can't get it to change for some reason.

One thing that really stood out to me while watching Ralph Ellison: An American Journey was one of the short stories that he wrote: The King of the Bingo Game.  Just hearing the summary was enough to draw me in, but combined with the clips from the video adaptation made me curious as to the whole story, so I read it.  In it, the unnamed main character is in a movie theatre thinking about how the characters on the screen can escape their problems while he can’t escape the fact that he is broke and his wife is sick.  He falls asleep and dreams that he is on a train track with a train about to hit him. When he jumps off to escape, the train follows him onto the streets of the town. He wakes up screaming in his seat.  After the movie, there is a bingo game. In order to have a higher chance of winning, the narrator has brought five cards, which was harder to keep track of, but it ends up paying off when he gets a bingo.  In order to win the jackpot of $36.90, he has to press a button to spin the wheel and it has to land on 00. The narrator knows the correct strategy is to press the button quickly, but as soon as he presses the button he can’t let go.  He compares the experience to being God. The bingo caller and the audience mock him and yell at him to hurry up, but he is drunk on the feeling of power. Eventually two guards come, and as the curtain is being lowered, they wrestle him away from the button.  The last thing he sees before blacking out is the wheel landing on 00.

In Native Son, Bigger is controlled by a series of events that end in Mary’s murder.  Bigger feels that he regains some of the control of his life when he writes the ransom letter because he feels like he has a plan and a way out.  He starts feeling powerful when he is walking down the street and no one around him knows what he did. In Invisible Man, the narrator is controlled by the letters that keep him running and then later he is controlled by the Brotherhood.  He feels he regains his control when he starts to follow his grandfather’s advice and “overcome 'em with yeses.”  In The King of the Bingo Game, the narrator is controlled by his lack of money and his need for it.  He needs money to help his wife and he has to resort to bingo games to try to get it.  He feels trapped and that is symbolized through his dream. The train is bearing down on him and all he can do is run, but it still follows him.  He finally gains some control as soon as he pushes that button. He realizes this and then can’t let go. He is finally in control of his life. If he just keeps pushing the button, he has the potential of winning that money.  As soon as he lets go, he loses that chance. So he just keeps holding it, at least until the choice is taken from him.

4 comments:

  1. The King of the Bingo Game also stood out to me, while I was watching the documentary. The idea of "godlike" powers while holding down the button is really interesting, as well as the idea of the freedom of chance. Ironically, as Ellison loves to use humor, the main character should have the freedom of chance in this bingo game, but even that is taken away from him as he is forcibly taken away. Great post!

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  2. Just seeing the few adaptation clips also got me interested in The King of the Bingo Game. With your summary I can see how it does seem to follow an Ellisonian form of story where the main character is constantly kept running and doesn't have a chance to settle.

    Side note: this post formatted badly for me so the text goes off the side of the screen. You can fix it if you just clear formatting on the entire text in editing.

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  3. Nice post! I really like your comparison of The King of the Bingo Game to Native Son. Both men seem to feel powerful from not doing what they’re supposed to do but the reader is painfully aware that their power will end soon.

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  4. Nice post!!! I was also really drawn in by those clips. I think you draw a lot of interesting similarities between these three texts - the characters get drunk on control in their life that they have never had before. However, one thing that stood out to me about the Bingo clip was the main character narrating, as the wheel is spinning and he is looking at the proctor, he thinks something like "this is my chance. Nobody can control this. Even he doesn't know what's going to happen." I think this really brings out the fact that even though these characters think they're in control, they have no significant control at all. It's up to a wheel spinning. Thanks for writing about this, I was really curious and I think I'll go read it now!!

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