Young women famously tossed panties at Elvis, Tom Jones, the Beatles.
"This is your mom?" Pink can be heard asking in a video as she picked up the bag. "I don't know how I feel about this."
The 43-year-old walked with the bag to the front of the stage and set it down before continuing singing "Just Like a Pill." (Source: USA Today)
Maybe the ashes to ashes mom was a big Pink fan, but what in god's name did the person throwing them to or at her think she was supposed to do with them. I mean you can eat a chicken nugget or a skittle. You can wear a bracelet. You can at least make an emergency call with someone's phone. (I'm assuming this was a mobile, and not an old Bakelite rotary dial. Now getting hit with that would hurt.) But there's not much you can do with ashes except scatter them, or bury them, or put them in a Connemara marble urneen and leave it on your mantel.
My mother wasn't cremated. She was buried next to my father, which is definitely where she wanted to be. But if she'd been cremated, and wanted her ashes thrown to a performer, that performer would have been Nelson Eddy.
As a teenager, my mother had a major crush on Nelson Eddy. She had a Nelson Eddy album, when albums were, in fact, albums: cardboard books containing sheaths that held 78 records. We had a record player that could play 78s, and my mother liked to spin her Nelson's every once in a while.
As kids, we rather favored "Shortnin' Bread" and "Boots." And I could do a credible imitation - at least to my own ear - of Mr. Eddy baritoning either of those tunes.
Of course, we found Nelson Eddy completely unattractive: prissy, wooden, and effete. And we couldn't believe that my mother had ever had a crush on the likes of him - the antithesis of my father.
Among my mother's possessions was a scrap book devoted to Nelson Eddy. Unfortunately, we destroyed it trying to find if there was the picture of anyone interesting on the reverse side of the pics of Nelson Eddy she'd so carefully glued in. We did find a picture of Shirley Temple behind one of them.
Anyway, I can't imagine that, even if I had my mother's ashes to toss, and even if Nelson Eddy were still alive and warbling ("When I'm Calling You..."), I would ever have thrown her ashes at him.
But the world is a changed place.
People want attention. They want notoriety. They want content for Insta and TikTok. They want to be acknowledged by celebrities, even for an apparently weird and/or hostile and/or worshipful act of assault with a flying object.
So that's where we're at.
It used to be ashes to ashes. Now, I guess, it's ashes to Pink.
Oh, Nelson! How lucky Jeanette McDonald was!
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