Okay, this is it. This is the final straw.
We hung in there through four, sometimes five years of getting completely stymied both by bitter professors with an inflated sense of self-worth and homely co-eds whose self-worth wasn't the only thing unnecessarily inflated. We dealt with one (1) bar and two (2) Dellys (sic). We tolerated retirees, tourists, and 10,000 tri-cornered hats. We smiled at the rumors of suicides and gay people. We swallowed Katie Koestner. We accepted cans over kegs, statesmen over sports heroes, and big time SAT's over big-time PAT's. Our fraternities were all dorms. Our classmates were all dorks. Our curriculum was straight out of the 50's (1750's), our options for amusement were straight out of witness protection programs, and our friends quickly became some of the closest we would ever have -- on a par with war veterans or cellmates. And we took it. We were made to feel like Blutarsky clichés -- and this diatribe won't do anything to diminish that notion among unfamiliar readers -- but we took it.
We made the best of it. I know I did. Had a ball.
As alumni, we accept that we won't be going to watch our D-I men's basketball team play in one of the biggest annual sporting events in the nation. Ever. The football team is starting to resemble the basketball team in its putridity, even as the Laycock Center (not instructions from the Kama Sutra) still has the "new football complex" smell. But we shrug it off. We know that with each passing year, our alma mater ups its academic standards and lowers its chances of attracting anyone like us to the campus. (Actually, we may even appreciate it, as it unjustly raises our résumés' stock.) Well-rounded -- truly, not just double-major candidates -- students need not apply. The rugby and lacrosse club teams are on their last legs, gasping for air, and we dismiss it as changing with the times. The school makes the news not for something noteworthy and impressive, but because they ran their well-liked -- but only by students and peers, not by Pat Robertson -- president out of town on a rail for the trifling cross thing. We mock it, we write about it condescendingly, and then we forget it. The students are no doubt suffering the constraints of the era and the administration far worse than we did, and anyone of our ilk who squeezes through the gates of admission for some good times and a good education in a state school must certainly find themselves in some sort of intelligence-quotient-arrogance/social-skill-ignorance purgatory, grinding out their days until transfer, graduation, or death. But that's that. Meanwhile, the pleas for alumni donations become more vociferous every year, even as we wonder if it's really the most worthwhile of causes. But we accept it all the way.
And we make the best of it. We come back for Homecomings, but simply resume our pattern of isolation and consumption. We follow the teams, even as they let us down. We look for news items on the school, even as they tend to make us cringe. And many of us write the checks every year. And we enjoy it.
This is it, though. This is beyond what we are expected to take as persons even loosely affiliated with the College of William & Mary. This is a new low in the coolness factor ratings for the College, and I feel a bit lamer just for having been in these Sunken Gardens many a time. (Bangin' chicks and drinkin' brews, undoubtedly.)
Gheorghe: The Blog readers unfamiliar with our alma mater, feast your eyes on this atrocity and please go lightly on us in your future judgments of us.
Meanwhile, for those of us who ever harked upon the gale, or barfed upon the Crim Dell, or overpaid an ungrateful Greek for tepid swill through unclean taps into a cheap plastic cup, or strode the Colonial Mile down DOG Street wondering what it's all about and why we're here and not somewhere else with nickel drafts and beautiful, brainless hallmates with casual morals . . .
. . . well, here's another reason to cringe.
I spotted a girl in the lower left of the screen who could also help them recreate Weird Al's "I'm Fat" video.
ReplyDeleteG:TB is bringing the wood of late. Excellent post. Shameful video. I renew my submission that the mascot should be named after Blow Hall. W&M Blows.
ReplyDeleteESPN has an "Insider" article about Anquan Boldin, the link to which says "Rumors: Boldin will land along Interstate 95."
ReplyDeleteI don't pay the premium there any more, so I can't read the article, but assuming it means "playing for a team whose home city is along I-95" and not that Boldin will be picking up litter and mowing wildflowers in an orange jumpsuit along I-95, by my count there are 8 teams that fit that description. 1 in 4 chance of being prescient/having insider knowledge. Not worth the premium price for that scoop, I'd say.
My knowledge of major American roads is good, not great, so I could be wrong about the geography.
Looks like tryouts for the tribal dancers has started.
ReplyDeleteAnd just like that...Lumpy ambled back into our lives...
ReplyDeleteNFL teams on I-95...Patriots (arguably), Giants/Jets (eh, kind of), Eagles, Ravens, Redskins, Jaguars, Dolphins.
ReplyDeleteAs a (once) proud W&M alum, I encountered many of these people on a daily basis. Perhaps the best story of what we were dealing with there occurred in the Winter of '03when we were struck with 2 inches of snow, which obviously shut down campus. Even though school was closed the library was obviously open. A friend of mine had an exam coming up so she braved the weather to get her study on. As she approached the library, a kid who had this record been set back then, would definitely be front and center in this video, took a tumble down the stairs. The girl ran to him fighting back laughter, and asked "Are you alright?!" He paused for a moment, then exclaimed, "The mixture of Hydrogen and Oxygen is a dangerous combination!!!"
ReplyDeleteAt least the rest of the world now knows what we had to deal with...
95 runs right through Foxboro. You can see 95 from Giants Stadium. The Skins are further from 95 than either team.
ReplyDeleteI was basing the NY on the fact that 95 doesn't run right thru NYC...as to Foxboro, there I just didn't know what I was talking about. Its part of my charm.
ReplyDeleteTechnically, the right side of the Beltway (east, whatever) is 95. So they're pretty daggone close at Jack Kent Cooke FedEx Neutral Site Stadium.
ReplyDeleteRavens might be the closest? I could throw a baseball onto the highway from the upper deck. You people couldn't but I could.
I think the Linc is the closest. You can see the field from 95.
ReplyDeleteThis discussion is riveting.
ReplyDeleteShouldn't you be breaking down Haywood Workman versus Vern Fleming right now?
ReplyDeleteI believe he spells it "Haywoode". The extra "e" is for "expendable."
ReplyDeleteAnd you mock my alma mater because...?
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to some live blogging from the New Orleans bound contingent of G:TB this weekend.
Haywoode Workman is an NBA Referee now. So...he wins...
ReplyDeleteHe also attended Oral Roberts...
ReplyDeleteIts 40 fucking degrees out...the fucking Nationals need to show me something.
ReplyDeleteSean Avery...wow...
ReplyDeletedouchebag sean avery trying hard to keep the caps in this series.
ReplyDeleteMark, how did we not discuss Linas Kleiza in our "how the Fuck do these guys play in the NBA playoffs" conversation?
ReplyDeleteCan someone (Mark) please remind me how bad those two Patino panic trades were? Billups was the 3 and Mercer was the 5...and they were both gone in 6 months?
ReplyDeleteSo, when I'm forced to listen to PJ Carleisimo (sp?), its normal to always wonder how hard Latrell choked him, right?
ReplyDeleteThat's a hell of a video Wrens/Blow/Tribe. I've never been more proud to be a George Mason Patriot.
ReplyDelete