It's September 25, 1985 at the Palace Theatre in downtown New Haven, Connecticut, and the buoyant staccato guitar rhythm, breezy sax and distinctly '80s synth-pop has the crowd footloose.
UB40, which has since enticed countless people worldwide into pouring a glass of red red wine, is on stage. The British reggae-pop band has just put out a hot new single, a silky cover of Sonny and Cher's "I Got You Babe" put to a Jamaican drum beat, springing the band into the Top 40. And the crowd, full of Yale college students and many cheering "prepubescent girls," is "wildly enthusiastic" about the performance, as one student wrote in the Yale Daily News then.
For UB40, the night is but a liner note in the band's 30-year run. But for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, the night has found its way into the dramatic narrative surrounding his confirmation hearings - in turn dragging the '80s band named after a British unemployment benefits form (UB40) back into a spotlight.
By Monday evening, the band had become a trending hashtag on social media as a result of a report in the New York Times. The Times story detailed a bar fight on Sept. 25, 1985, that police say involved Kavanaugh, his friends and a random person mistaken for the lead singer of UB40. The new report comes as the FBI is investigating sexual misconduct allegations made against him by three women, with each allegation involving drinking in some way.
After the show that night, Kavanaugh, then 20, and his friends were drinking at a bar called Demery's when they spotted a guy who looked just like UB40's frontman, Ali Campbell, as Kavanaugh's Yale classmate and former Yale basketball player Chad Ludington told The Washington Post. They began staring at him, Ludington said. So Ludington went over to the guy's table to ask if he was Campbell.