Showing posts with label Roseto Pennsylvania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roseto Pennsylvania. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

My Documentary: Roseto's Royals

by Jeff Fisher
High School Football America

When I left the practice field at Nazareth tonight, I had officially shot 85 hours worth of video for my feature documentary called Roseto's Royals, which is a look at the unique relationship between the northeast Pennsylvania town of Roseto and its high school football team, the Pius X Royals.

Things are coming together nicely on the film, and you'll be able to become part of the team when I release my trailer on KickStarter.com.

In the meantime, I'm going to be sharing what I'm currently doing, so you can learn more about the project that has mass appeal, because it's not a typical high school football documentary.

Yes, I'm following the Royals drive for the school's first-ever state football championship, but the story goes beyond that quest.

With high school football and the third smallest high school football team in Pennsylvania as the backdrop, Roseto's Royals tells the story of the community of 1,600 that was created out of discrimination in the late 19th Century.  Roseto became the healthiest town in America and is struggling to hold-on to old school ways that made it America's first-ever all Italian city 100-years ago.

Roseto and the school exist because the Italian immigrants, who came to this country from Roseto Valfortore experienced discrimination because of their heritage.  The English, German and Welsh residents in the area, known as the Slate Belt region because of the high concentration of slate in the area, didn't like the immigrants who first started coming to the area in 1882.

To the right, you can see a photo I took early this morning when I hiked into the area's mountainous terrain to shoot video of one of the abandoned, water-filled slate quarries.  There were hundreds of slate quarries operating in Pennsylvania in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries.

By the turn of the century, Roseto Valfortore was basically a ghost town because most of its residents crossed the ocean to create almost an identical community in northeast Pennsylvania.  All settled on "the hill" above Bangor and continued to live basically the same life they did in Italy.

They worked hard in the slate quarries; grew their own vegetables; made their own wine; and spent a lot of time together.

When Roseto was incorporated on January 2, 1912, it was 100% Italian.

Because of the discrimination, some prominent members of Roseto decided the best way to help the younger generation have a better life was to start their own school.  In 1947, Pius X High School was born.

A couple of decades later, Dr. Stewart Wolf from Oklahoma discovered that the town was immune to heart disease.  His study called the "Roseto Effect" defied logic because the men of the town smoked and drank wine freely; and they cooked with lard, instead of olive oil.

Dr. Wolf came to the conclusion that there was virtually no heart disease in Roseto, because its residents lived in a very communal way, meaning they put family first and lived like a clan.

As you can imagine, one of the bonding mechanisms in the community was the pride the community had for its beloved Royals, who could combat the discrimination by beating athletes from nearby Bangor and Pen Argyl.

One interesting fact is the school and the football field are physically located in Bangor, but just by the width of 3rd Street.

Roseto is no longer all-Italian, but a majority of the population is.  The discrimination is a thing of the past, although it's still fresh in the mind of many of the older residents.  However, the school's athletic program is still discriminated against, especially the football program.

Pius has never been accepted into any of the local high school leagues.  That causes them to travel hundreds of miles to find opponents to play.

Why?

Well, that's a big part of the documentary.

Some local school officials constantly vote against the Royals' entry into the Colonial League, which would dramatically reduce the school's travel budget in these tough economic times.  One of the reasons Colonial League officials vote against Pius becoming a members is because they feel that the Royals recruit.  Others say there's some left-over resentment from nearby Bangor and Pen Argyl High Schools, that are part of the Colonial League.

Bottom-line, it's made for interesting arcs in the storyline!!

Tomorrow, I'll write about some of the crazy things that the football team has had to do to play football games, like taking 700-mile round trips to the Pittsburgh-area on back-to-back weekends.  However, those sort of things should help during the postseason.

Even though the Royals, with a 9-1 regular season, claimed the top-seed and home field advantage in the District XI Class A playoffs, the team won't play a home playoff game, because its home field is nearly all-dirt between the hash marks.  That's the reason the team practiced at 12-miles away from home at Nazareth tonight, and will play this Saturday's championship game at Nazareth, as well.

I hope this gets you excited to read more of my daily stories this week that will lead-up to the release of the 10-minute trailer.

Sincerely,

Jeff Fisher
Director/Producer 
Roseto's Royals

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Cheesesteaks & High School Football

by Jeff Fisher
High School Football America

Before getting into today's first post, I just want to apologize to my readers for a technical snafu by Blogger that caused us to be down for three days.  The good news is everything is back to normal now.

My three-day odyssey to Roseto, Pennsylvania for an inside look at the opening of Pius X High School's 2010 high school football season has ended...for now.

Some of the numbers...65 hours on the ground; 13 hours of video shot; 11 hours of sleep; 3 "flats" (hoagies) from Ruggiero's Market; 2 cheesesteaks at Detzi's Tavern and ONE great memory...with more to come.

Here is the first video from Day 1 of Camp Royal.  It's a 90-second sights-and-sounds piece from the Royals first official practice under first-year head coach Phil Stambaugh, who is a Pius alum and also played in the NFL and NFL Europe.


I will be posting dozens of other video clips and stories at High School Football America over the next two weeks, leading up to the Royals' season opener against Pottstown on September 4th.

To learn more about this Class A program with only 180 students in grades 9-12, please go to the 2010 Pius X HS Story at High School Football America.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

High School Football America to give its readers the "Royal" treatment

by Jeff Fisher


As I contemplated what I could do special for the 2010 high school football season, one thought came to mind...think SMALL!

Yes, I said SMALL.

You see, as I’ve been telling my readers for the past year, High School Football America is all about covering good stories.  It’s almost like we’re miners looking for those hidden gems of high school football stories that are buried deep beneath national rankings and recruiting stories.

So with that in mind, I wracked my brain for something small that could be turned into something big. 

It didn’t take me long to come-up with the answer.

I wanted to chronicle a small town football team for an entire year to give fans a feel for how the line between a community and its football team blurs, and the team becomes part of the fabric of the community.

But the question was which team?

Once again, it didn’t take long to come-up with the answer.

I just had to look a little north of my hometown of Easton, Pennsylvania to the tiny borough of Roseto…home to the Pius X Royals, a small catholic school with an enrollment of approximately 260 students in 7-12 grades.  The Royals play in Pennsylvania’s smallest classification (Class A). 

That definitely qualifies as small, but what the school and the football program have accomplished through the years in sports is big, including an NFL quarterback in Phil Stambaugh…and that’s where the story begins.

Stambaugh, who just celebrated his 32nd birthday on Tuesday, is preparing to open his first camp as a head coach at his alma mater on Monday, August 16th…and High School Football America will be there with him.

Even after spending time as a quarterback in the NFL and NFL Europe, Stambaugh is your typical Pius X alum…once a Royal, always a Royal.

What seems to make this story feel right is Stambaugh and I have a history that includes me covering him while I worked at WFMZ-TV while he was leading his team to a 1995 District 11 Class A championship, plus his brilliant career at Lehigh University where he spent his four years re-writing school and Patriot League record books.

What appeals the most to me about Pius is how it truly is a family affair for the approximately 1,600 people that reside in the community. 

Like Stambaugh, eight of his eleven assistant coaches attended the “old school” brick school building on 3rd Avenue.  Heck...Stambaugh’s mom Connie currently is the athletic director at the school.  His dad, Mike, coached football, volleyball, girls’ softball and wrestling at Pius.

Roseto is a little bit like the imaginary TV show bar Cheers…everyone knows your name.

Hopefully, between now and the end of the season, America will know the Pius X Royals.

Editor’s note: Beginning Monday, August 16th, High School Football America, The High School Football Huddle and the Pennsylvania High School Football Huddle will have daily stories on the Royals.

To learn more about the upcoming season, go to the Pius X Royals football website