
In America, on one night in July, the entire country becomes a single audience.
Nobody sells tickets. Nobody announces the program. But one hundred million people show up anyway—lawn chairs, rooftops, riversides, back porches.
At sunset, the overture begins.
A woman in Ohio starts crying during the anthem. A man in Texas wipes his eyes and pretends he has allergies. A teenager in Portland tries to look cool and fails immediately.
I thought America was mourning something nobody wanted to say out loud.
Then the first firework exploded.
The whole sky became the final act.
A woman three yards to my left was still crying into her sleeve.
A man three yards to my right was laughing so hard he dropped his beer on a dog.
And then—a drunk uncle in New Jersey launched a bottle rocket from his cargo shorts, a toddler named Brayden declared independence from his mother’s sunscreen, and an entire block in Nashville screamed because a hot dog rolled off a paper plate and was mourned like a fallen soldier.
The dog did not leave early either.
I have watched kabuki for thirty years. I have never seen an audience commit like this.
Is every July 4th supposed to have this many acts? And am I supposed to react to all of them in order?
Tell me the rules. I want to come back next year with the correct emotional schedule.





