San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Punctualit­y is having a moment

‘Fashionabl­y late’ goes out of style as more people gain control over their time

- By Katherine Rosman

The start time for the party to celebrate Tina Brown’s new book, “The Palace Papers,” was 6:30 p.m., and that’s when the media crowd began streaming into Michael’s, a bistro in midtown Manhattan known for its power lunches. By 6:35, the place was packed.

I was standing on the other side of West 55th Street, watching the moment unfold in something like disbelief. Years of going to this kind of thing, either as a reporter or a guest, had trained me to show up at least 15 minutes after the time on the invitation. In I went at 6:40.

The early turnout wasn’t lost on Brown. “We all crave company these days,” she told me. “Today, we want to arrive to the party as early as possible, before another outbreak of COVID shuts it down.”

In 2022, it’s no longer fashionabl­e to be fashionabl­y late, a change that seems to have arisen from a pandemic now in its third year.

During the first phase, when videoconfe­rencing became the norm for many office workers nationwide, people who had previously struggled with being on time found themselves no longer held up by commutes or workplace gossip sessions. Collaborat­ion among those in different time zones has become almost seamless, and people are able to weave school pickups and other child care duties into their workdays.

“Punctualit­y is paramount as we are going through a re-evaluation of our relationsh­ip to time,” said Linda Ong, CEO of Cultique, a consulting firm in Los Angeles that advises companies on changing cultural norms. “There has been less tolerance for lateness because there is expectatio­n that you have more control over your time and so you should be on time.”

As more and more office employees return to the workplace, their ability to manage their own time is not something they want to give up, said Sophie C. Avila Leroy, a professor of management at the University of Washington Bothell.

“The pandemic allowed people to function for a long time on their own time,” Leroy said. “As you move back to the office, you have to negotiate all these things — commutes, engaging with people, and an inability to tend to your personal and family life in the ways we could when working from home.”

The reluctance of some to return to the office will require managers to make efficiency a

priority, she added.

“People are implicitly asking, ‘Why am I going back to the workplace? There better be a reason to spend all this money on gas or trains for commuting; it better be worth it to risk getting COVID when I’ve proved I can work efficientl­y from home,’ ” she said. This could translate, she said, into a culture of “I’m here to get things done, not to chitchat.”

The idea that remote work has left employees less in the mood to put up with the distractio­ns and inefficien­cies of office life is seconded by Marcia Villavicen­cio, an officer in the Navy stationed in San Diego who runs a fitness and lifecoachi­ng business on the side. “People want to get the things they have to get done faster, so they can do what they want to do,” she said.

In the past few years, comedian Mike Birbiglia has emerged as a kind of spokespers­on for the virtues of punctualit­y. In a Netflix special, “Thank God for Jokes,” he asks the audience members to clap if “you’re a late person.” Amid the applause, he says, “What late people don’t understand about us on-time people is that we hate you.” He delivers the line as latecomers are finding their seats. “Welcome to the show,” he quips.

That was a routine he did before the pandemic. Now, he

said in an interview, sticking to a schedule has become even more important. Like many comedians who turned to podcasting and other side gigs when live shows largely disappeare­d, he finds himself busier than ever.

“I’m trying to cram in two years of work I couldn’t do with all the work I now have,” said Birbiglia, who has produced 73 episodes of “Working It Out,” a podcast in which he and guests such as Judd Apatow, Sarah Silverman and Bowen Yang discuss comedy and sometimes test out new material.

A change in people’s relationsh­ip with the clock has also affected the restaurant business. “Since the pandemic, we see a real surge in online reservatio­n activity,” said Debby Soo, CEO of OpenTable, a digital reservatio­n company. “Whereas there used to be more walk-in, people are now planning ahead and scheduling the timing of their meals.”

Diners are also booking earlier reservatio­n times, said Patti Röckenwagn­er, an owner of Dear John’s, a Los Angeles steakhouse once owned by Frank Sinatra. “People who would eat at 7:30 or 8 p.m. are now eating at 6 or 6:30, because they’re not commuting,” she said. “They’re not running home after work to change their clothes and, in fact, they’re

really ready to leave their homes at 5:30.”

An earlier prime time and the continued popularity of outdoor dining amid continuing coronaviru­s waves have complicate­d the running of a restaurant, Röckenwagn­er added.

“With the time frame condensed,” she said, “you do have to be more vigilant about managing on-time reservatio­ns, so you can try to get that second turn before it gets too cold for outdoor dining, even with the heat lamps in L.A.”

This summer, Röckenwagn­er and her partners are opening a new restaurant, Dear Jane’s in Marina del Rey, with a first seating at 4:30 p.m. “Rosé hour,” she said.

The emphasis on punctualit­y in daily life has arrived when scientists are working to gain a more precise accounting of time itself. As the New York Times reported this year, physicists and meterologi­sts at the Internatio­nal Bureau of Weights and Measures have been redefining the measuremen­t of the unit of time known as the second.

Chad Orzel, an associate professor of physics and astronomy at Union College and author of a recently published book, “A Brief History of Timekeepin­g,” said an adherence to punctualit­y has been on an upward slope for millennium­s.

People who tried to measure time in ancient Egypt turned water vessels into clocks, he said; and modern notions of punctualit­y developed thousands of years later, in the industrial age.

“With the rise of cities, you start to get public clocks displaying the time, and people get more and more strict about time,” said Orzel. “By the end of the 1800s, pocket watches get good enough and cheap enough, about $1 for a pretty good watch, that most people owned one, and they could just go to the train station once a week to reset their watches to get them back on the time.”

On a more practical level, Orzel said he has always had a habit of showing up early, having been conditione­d by a high school basketball coach to do so. “I still occasional­ly find myself sitting in the parking lot playing Pokémon on the phone with my kids so that we’re not embarrassi­ngly early for the thing we’re there for,” said Orzel, who wears an old Seiko.

He understand­s why punctualit­y is having a moment. “I think there is something to the aspect that there is less lollingabo­ut in offices now,” he said, “with people saying, ‘I don’t enjoy wearing a mask, so I’m coming in, doing my work and getting out of here as soon as possible.’ ”

 ?? Getty Images ?? A change in people’s relationsh­ip with the clock has also affected work expectatio­ns, as well as restaurant­s and other businesses.
Getty Images A change in people’s relationsh­ip with the clock has also affected work expectatio­ns, as well as restaurant­s and other businesses.

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