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OK, Fans, What's the Story?

Turnout of Angel supporters is light but lively at a casting call for a TV ad that seeks to capture the essence of sports fanaticism.

February 02, 2005|Dave McKibben, Times Staff Writer

When producers of a Major League Baseball commercial were casting for heartfelt stories about the sport, 1,000 fans in Boston braved sub-zero, blizzard conditions to talk about their beloved Red Sox.

When the casting call moved to New York and St. Louis, 500 people in each city turned out for a role in baseball's marketing campaign "I Live for This."


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And when the campaign rolled into Anaheim on Tuesday -- a cloudless, 70-degree day in laid-back Southern California -- all of about 200 fans responded to the invitation to play a role in the TV commercial, less than half what baseball officials had expected.

Some showed up with faces painted in Angel blue and red. Several wore replica jerseys of their favorite Angel players. Others believed decibel level would determine who was the most enthusiastic Angel fan.

But behind the screamers and colorful outfits were a few fans who connected with the casting directors on a deeper level: a father and a deaf son who communicated his passion for baseball in sign language; a 50-year-old man who kept a lifelong promise to his son by taking him to the Angels' first World Series game, in 2002; and a woman dressed as a baseball who brought her Angel lunch pail, Rally Monkey, antique glove and baseball fan resume.

While waiting in line for auditions to begin, some fans criticized owner Arte Moreno's decision to change the team's name to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

"[Moreno] has misjudged the fans of Anaheim," said Lori Christensen of Silverado Canyon. "The name change has upset me deeply, but I'm still an Angel fan."

Others moaned about the departures of shortstop David Eckstein, reliever Troy Percival and third baseman Troy Glaus, who signed as free agents elsewhere.

But once the auditions began, the casting directors made it clear they didn't want a critique of the Angels' off-season moves or the name change. This was a chance, they said, for Angel fans to rhapsodize about a "unique baseball experience."

The Angels are one of six 2004 playoff teams whose fans will appear in the 30-second spots, to be shown on national television beginning in March.

The ad campaign continues a theme introduced in 2003, with Major League players professing their passion for the game.

Kathleen Fineout, a Major League Baseball spokeswoman, said one to six fans in each city would be flown to Miami this month for the shoot.

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