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The deadline for the 2008 Amanda Davis Highwire Fiction Award, a $2,500 grant given to a woman writer of 32 years or younger, is this Thursday, May 15. For more information, click here.

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J U S T   C A L L   M E
Z I P P Y ,   A N   I N T E R V I E W
W I T H   A M Y   B A R I C H .

By Suzanne Yeagley

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Q: When did you first start working at Mail Boxes, Etc?
A: It was my first real job after one year of college. My mom said she'd gone by the store and they seemed nice and were hiring. I went in, met Sharon, the owner, and she sent in Patty, the manager. Patty didn't know what to talk to me about, but I think she was thinking, "You're normal; you'll be fine." They got a lot of weirdo applicants there.

Q: So you started working there in the summertime?
A: I started there in the beginning of June. I was working there for two weeks, wearing my little polo shirts, you know, mail, copy, fax. And one day Sharon came up to me and said, "I forgot to tell you—part of your job is to be Zippy for our grand opening."

Q: Zippy?
A: Zippy the Mailbox.

Q: And they hadn't mentioned this to you when they hired you?
A: No, they acted like it was just part of the job description they'd forgot to tell me about. They had just moved to a new location and they were having a grand opening. Special 2-cent copies, stuff like that.

Q: Were other people working there? Maybe one of them might've dressed up like Zippy?
A: None of them wanted to do it. I mean, duh.

Q: Do you remember any of the people who worked there?
A: There was a horrible bitch-of-a-girl named Kathy. In my experience, women named Kathy are always bitchy. Kathy with a K, I mean, not Cathy with a C. She was really nice to your face but then would totally backstab you. She trained me. She went on Montel Williams at some point—she got her whole face waxed to go. But she didn't find that necessary in the rest of her life.

Q: How did you react when they told you that you were going to be Zippy?
A: I said, "What's that?" And they said, "There's this mailbox costume. You're going to wear it and wave at cars. It's part of why we hired you." I was supposed to stand at the main thoroughfare—on the sidewalk—and wave at cars. This was one of the busiest intersections in town. The potential for embarrassment was high.

Q: What was the outfit like?
A: It's a corporate costume that you schedule to come to your location. Zippy comes in the mail. It's shaped like a mailbox, covered with plush orange and blue fur. It has armholes, and big white plastic mesh eyes with big blue pipe cleaner eyelashes. The front has a flap that opens with velcro. The front flap is supposed to be where the mail goes in, like on a real mail box. The inside has straps to hold it up since it's taller than you. The whole contraption came down to my knees. The most horrible part is that underneath I have to wear a red leotard.

Q: Why is that so horrible?
A: After age 8 you don't want to wear a leotard! I had big plastic hands—like Mickey Mouse gloves, and I wore little black shoes. It was 90 degrees, the hottest degrees of summer. My boyfriend was in from out of town and I didn't tell him or anyone. I didn't want them to know that it was me.

Q: So you would get dressed in the store and then go out to the street?
A: I would come out in the leotard and Sharon's husband Dave would put the box over me. Then someone had to lead me out to the corner. I had to cross the strip-mall parking lot to get to the road. In an hour they would come and get me.

Q: Did people wave to you?
A: The people who wave back—it's not who you would expect. I do remember one stately black guy who was driving a pimped-out BMW. He had the music going and gave me the "'Sup" guy nod. Like "How YOU doin.'"

Q: Did anyone find out that it was you?
A: My mom knew. She worked across the street and she came and took a picture. It was on her fridge for a long time but then she took it down and I was kind of hurt. You know, like where's the picture? It makes for a good story when people see that picture.

Q: Would you ever do it again, say, for a million dollars?
A: I think I'd do it again. If I did it for $4.25, I'd do it for a million. Heck yeah.

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