Ball people

13 MINUTES

Passion, agility, invisibility – do you have what it takes to become a ball person?

Arthur Ashe Stadium in Queens, New York is both the largest tennis stadium in the world and the American hub of the sport – especially during the late-summer weeks each year that are marked by the US Open. With the event drawing crowds that neared a million in 2023, there’s no shortage of fans eager to get close to the action at the only tennis Grand Slam event played on US soil. And, as the short documentary Ball People (2023) shows, no one, with the exception of the players themselves, gets closer than the members of the US Open Ball Crew tasked with grabbing loose balls between points.

A filmmaker with a knack for chronicling American subcultures with style, the US director Scott Lazer takes viewers inside the process by which Ball Crew hopefuls try out for perhaps the most coveted $11-an-hour job in the country. Shooting inside Arthur Ashe Stadium and the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center that houses it, Lazer captures participants of many ages and degrees of experience as they chase down balls with speed and agility, share what inspired them to try out for the gig, and react to the thrill of being selected or the sting of being passed over.

Director: Scott Lazer

Producer: Tripp Kramer

Explore more

A blue bowl with quinoa, chickpeas, chopped onions, greens and a wooden spoon on a dark background.

How to adventure beyond the same old foods

Most of us develop comfort zones with food. Expand your palate and discover new flavours, techniques and connections

by Nina Mukerjee Furstenau

Photo of a boxing match with a standing boxer in the ring and an opponent kneeling behind, lit by overhead lights.

Motivation is good, but discipline is better

The Ukrainian boxing champion Usyk’s recent claim that ‘discipline is better than motivation’ was psychologically astute

by Christian Jarrett

Illustration of a person with eyes closed, surrounded by colourful waves and geometric shapes on an orange background.

Stressed about a date or an interview? Video games may offer a surprising salve

Video by the University of California

Photo of a man holding a hand-drawn sketch of himself on a city street, wearing a blazer with a colourful patch.
Psyche Exclusive

Bad art, good laughs – a street portraitist’s lacklustre work animates a city

Directed by Rosie Baldwin

Tomato plants with red and green tomatoes in a garden setting against a blurred background of a building and grass.

How to start growing your own food

A vegetable garden is more than a source of sustenance – it’s a psychological sanctuary. Here’s how to create your own

by Gary Pilarchik

A man looking through the scope of a rifle in a crowded exhibition with mounted deer heads in the background.

My husband, the gun nut

Three years into a blissful relationship, my partner picked up a hobby that sent me spiralling

by Lindsey Harrington

Photo of uniformed men standing outside portable toilets, one gestures invitingly.

Does progress seem slower when you constantly check on it?

Research on how we perceive the rate of change shows how you can be strategic about goal tracking and boost your motivation

by André Vaz

Photo of a person reading Tolstoy’s “War and Peace” with a red decorative cover while sitting near a window.

My year of slow-reading War and Peace

Reading a chapter a day of War and Peace shows how a manageable, regular habit can build into a much bigger accomplishment

by Freya Howarth