Jason Sutter//blog

30 Jul 2011culture

The History and Mystery of the High Five

Jon Mooallem in ESPN the Magazine…

I was calling Sleets because I wanted to talk to the man who invented the high five. I’d first read about him in 2007 in a press release from National High Five Day, a group that was trying to establish a holiday for convivial palm-slapping on the third Thursday in April. Apparently, Sleets had been reluctantly put in touch with the holiday’s founders, and he explained that his father, Lamont Sleets Sr., served in Vietnam in the 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry — a unit nicknamed The Five. The men of The Five often gathered at the Sleets home when Lamont Jr. was a toddler. They’d blow through the front door doing their signature greeting: arm straight up, five fingers spread, grunting “Five.” Lamont Jr. loved to jump up and slap his tiny palms against their larger ones. “Hi, Five!” he’d yell, unable to keep all their names straight.

This is actually the story of a gay baseball player in the late 70s.

Via: givemesomethingtoread | Filed under: greetings five  history  jon mooallem 

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Jason Sutter

This is the blog of Jason Sutter, a User Experience Designer located in beautiful Portland, Oregon.

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