Current:Home > MarketsMy day at the ballpark with Mr. and Mrs. Met, the first family of MLB mascots -Core Financial Strategies
My day at the ballpark with Mr. and Mrs. Met, the first family of MLB mascots
View
Date:2025-04-17 04:58:03
NEW YORK — The sounds of summertime have begun to play in New York City.
Children shriek as they drench themselves in the fountain of an open fire hydrant, Mister Softee trucks decorate neighborhood blocks with their looping music and, of course at the end of 7 line, you can hear the crack of the bat at Citi Field.
Major League Baseball is, for many, a mainstay of the warmer months. None more so than Mr. and Mrs. Met, MLB’s It Couple. Well, MLB’s only mascot couple − but the point stands.
When I visited the pair for an afternoon game against the Los Angeles Dodgers in May, they were as much a part of the ballpark experience as the hot dogs and overpriced beer.
With baseballs for heads and uniforms to match the players, the duo have no problem leaning into their goofy appeal. Unlike others, they are not animals or whatever any of the Philly mascots are supposed to be. Instead, they represent some sort of humanoid, perhaps an ode to fandoms that attach “head” to the end of their interest like "sneakerheads" or "Deadheads." They’re baseball-heads, literally.
Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.
The city's team
Online, Mr. and Mrs. Met cultivate an in-the-know persona, hopping on popular internet trends and playing up their romance. They also want you to know they're real New Yorkers. In the fall, a mock photo of a Mrs. Met balloon for the Thanksgiving Day Parade graced her Twitter along with another shot of her cropped into a line of high-kicking Rockettes.
That the couple are easily meme-able and don't mind matches the vibe of the team they represent.
The New York Metropolitans (Mets, colloquially) are a team rarely adopted by out-of-towners. Not for the bridge and tunnel crowd, they belong to the city and the fans who continue to stand by them even during slumps. "We stay true to the team even when they keep breaking out hearts," Adam Wattstein, 56, a lifelong fan tells me. He met Mr. Met a few years back at an event and was thrilled to snap a pic together.
While the Yankees, the city's other team, have what some might call “universal appeal,” others might malign it as stuffy austerity. The Yankees, notably, do not have a mascot. All the better for the Mets to have two, with enough personality to fill the stadium to the nosebleeds.
Married in the mid-seventies, Mr. and Mrs. Met have existed as a duo for decades but only began working full-time as a couple in 2013.
With a perky ponytail and thick lashes, she emits a sort of “cool mom” energy − like she would have the snack pack of Gushers in the pantry. And she can dance. For someone wearing clown-sized New Balances, her moves are enviable and Mr. Met seems to know it.
At times, it seems her star outshines his. She was, after all, nominated for the Mascot Hall of Fame this year by her lonesome and some users expressed outrage last month when Mrs. Met announced she was shuttering her individual Twitter account and future updates would be found at her husband's handle @mrmet.
Throughout my time with the couple, Mr. Met's adoration for his partner read clearly.
Meet another mascotWhat it's like to spend a day with the San Francisco 49ers' Sourdough Sam
An 'It Couple' in its element
Before the game begins, Mr. and Mrs. Met weave through the crowd of fans with their handlers, snapping selfies and stealing fist-bumps on the way down to the field. Young children in oversized jerseys rush behind them, eager to get a glimpse. Some distracted fans don't realize who's walking by until the size of the heads registers. They do jazz hands, bust a move and hold out for that fist bump when a tipsy fan careens in for an unwanted hug.
Once we make it to the diamond Mr. Met is sure to hold the door open for the Mrs. and blow her a kiss after she makes it through. Like most mascots, they don’t speak – opting instead for a sort of individualized sign language.
When we get introduced they’re all hand gestures and excitement. Mrs. Met clasps my hand and her husband drags me to take a picture.
After mingling with ballpark staff and dazzling young fans through the fence they return to their “offices” – no doubt to cool off a bit before the first pitch.
When they return to dance atop the dugout as the players take the field, Mr. Met sneaks up behind me and pulls a classic fake-out tapping me on one shoulder but appearing behind the other. Only his hyperbolically large head scares the life out of me which, I'm sure, was the point. He and Mrs. Met seem just as delighted by their interactions as the fans.
Perhaps that's the magic of the pair − they revel in their ridiculousness and in doing so give tacit permission for fans to do the same.
"First off, he's a big baseball. He's a family guy, he likes America's pastime," Yoel Genao, 40, says of Mr. Met.
"He's always in uniform, he's always spiffy, you can't beat him.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Swans in Florida that date to Queen Elizabeth II gift are rounded up for their annual physicals
- Folate is crucial for prenatal care. But it could also prolong your life.
- Louisiana principal apologizes, requests leave after punishing student for dancing at party; her mom says too little, too late
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Judge’s order cancels event that would have blocked sole entrance to a Kansas abortion clinic
- Fiery crash during prestigious ballooning race leaves 2 Polish pilots with burns and other injuries
- Bedbugs can’t really hurt you. But your fear of them might, experts say.
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Audit recommended University of North Carolina mandate training that could mitigate shootings
Ranking
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- 'Feels like the world is ending': Impacts of strikes in Gaza already devastating
- Carey Mulligan Confirms She and Husband Marcus Mumford Privately Welcomed Baby No. 3
- Wall Street Journal reporter loses appeal in Russia and will stay in jail until the end of November
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Facing Beijing’s threats, Taiwan president says peace ‘only option’ to resolve political differences
- Voters in Iowa community to decide whether to give City Council more control over library books
- What is Hezbollah? The militant group has long been one of Israel's biggest foes
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Rookie sensation De'Von Achane to miss 'multiple' weeks with knee injury, per reports
Everything Julia Fox Reveals About Dating Kanye West in Her Book Down the Drain
Birkenstock prices its initial public offering of stock valuing the sandal maker at $8.64 billion
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Seager still going deep in Texas, helps send Rangers to ALCS with sweep of 101-win Orioles
US church groups, law enforcement officials in Israel struggle to stay safe and get home
Voters in Iowa community to decide whether to give City Council more control over library books