As many of you will know, G:TB-endorsed good guy Scott Van Pelt recently returned to his native Washington D.C. after a couple of decades in Connecticut. SVP's show now broadcasts from the DMV, and the local made good wasted no time adding a little bit of D.C. flavor to the mix. Van Pelt worked with legendary go go outfit Trouble Funk to spice up the SportsCenter theme:
Monday, August 31, 2020
Play That Funky Music, White Boy
Saturday, August 29, 2020
I hate the new blogger but I might have some good covid news, alternatively titled "The Wisdom of Barbers," even more alternatively titled "T is for Trump," with some bad news predicted at the end
We've been awash in a sea of conflicting covid-19 information since the beginning of the crisis. I think I've found some good news amid this morass of confusion.
Our adaptive immune systems primarily involve two types of cells: B cells and T cells. It appears that T cells are more predominant when it comes to beating covid-19. You can read about it here.
In July 2020, a group of European scientists published an article in Nature describing how they tested a bunch of people who never had coivd-19 and found that about 35% of them had a T cell response. They attribute this to exposure to other coronaviruses. This means that about 35% of the population might have some preexisting immunity to covid-19. That's good news!
I learned about this from a friend who is probably the smartest guy I know (sorry Dave). He also posits that about 2% of the population of NJ already tested positive, which means that about 20% of NJ had the virus (the CDC says the true infection rate is about 10 times higher than reported).
Taken together, about 55% of the people in NJ should have some sort of immune response to the virus so we're close to the level needed for herd immunity. That's good news too!
This conclusion is further validated by my barber. I subscribe to a theory I call The Wisdom of Barbers. Barbers spend the day shooting the shit with men of all ages, ethnicities, races, backgrounds, and socioeconomic status. As a result they gather in an insanely broad range of views on whatever topic the feel like discussing and they can often crystallize that information into a prediction about the future. My old barber ran a presidential election poll for over 20 years and it was always right.
Anyway, I got a haircut the other day at my local barbershop, an uncle-and-nephew team who may or may not take your action on NFL games. My friend who told me about the European study also gets his hair cut there, so I asked the nephew if my friend told him about it too. The nephew said "No, but I read a paper published through the NIH and it says the number could be as high as 50%." I found the article in Science and he's right. This is more good news!
All of that said, my friend an my barber are both conservatives. My friend hates Trump but he's also a bit of a Blue Lives Matter guy (stuff like "If he had just listened to the police he wouldn't have gotten shot."). My barber voted for Trump and I'm pretty sure he will do so again (he's a Ben Shapiro fan). The fact that they and no one other than zdaughter's speech therapist (who may be kinda Trumpy too) talks about this makes me wonder if it's a right wing talking point.
I suspect it's both. For once, Republicans are speaking the truth and the virus will soon run its course, turning into nothing more than a relatively routine but life-threatening infection like measles. I predict this will happen around mid-October.
Why then? Because that's two weeks before the election. Of course this is when the virus will clear up. My old barber with the straw poll once told me "If you're ever at the race track and you see Bill Clinton, bet like he does. That lucky bastard could bet on a three-legged horse and still win." This is true--his shitty shenanigans never resulted in any real penalties and he's even allowed to speak publicly despite #MeToo. Trump is the same guy, a bizzarro Cill Clinton. Of course our T cells will save his lucky ass right in time to get reelected.
I eagerly await the FDA's approval of Trump brand T cells, yours for only $500 a dose or free when you buys a one year membership to any Trump brand golf club.
Thursday, August 27, 2020
Bite Me, Randy Newman
Stevie Ray Vaughan perished in a helicopter crash 30 years ago today. I remember we were back in college (after a stellar, silly summer in the 'Burg) when we heard the news. I also remember hearing the rumor first that Eric Clapton had died. Nope, that was wrong. It was instead his "people." And then we learned about SRV. Goddammit.
It's a crap tale of bad luck.
The day before his death, Vaughan told his band and crew members about a nightmare that he had in which he was at his own funeral and saw thousands of mourners. He felt "terrified, yet almost peaceful." Backstage after the show that evening, the musicians talked about playing together again, particularly with Eric Clapton for a series of dates at London's Royal Albert Hall in February and March 1991 as a tribute to Jimi Hendrix. Moments later, Clapton's tour manager Peter Jackson said that the weather was getting worse and they had to leave soon. Stevie wrangled the last seat on the first copter, saying, "I really need to get back." Vaughan's last words to drummer Chris Layton were "I love ya."
The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error. And what a shame. SRV had just cleaned up his act; after years of doing Alps-sized mountains of cocaine and drinking to excess, he'd gotten sober and was crushing it. The sky was the limit, until it was crying.
He was and is guitar genius. He channeled Hendrix like no others. No one seems to be able to channel him. When he was on stage, he was an absolute wizard and larger than life.
And he stood 5'5".
In his honor, we bring you five of our favorite SRV moments.
Voodoo Child (Slight Return) - Austin, TX - December 13, 1983
Pride And Joy - Montreux, Switzerland - July 17, 1982
Texas Flood - Toronto, Canada - July 20, 1983
Change It - Passaic, NJ - September 21, 1985
Little Wing - Toronto, Canada - July 20, 1983
Bite Me, Randy Newman.
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
The One About Vaginas and Greg Kihn
My eldest turned 13 last week. We let him have a similar party to his younger brother - a backyard movie showing on a jumbo screen. When the woman showed up to set up, I was taken aback. This was not a young adult who could lug stuff. This was a ~70 year old woman who, while rugged and sporting a knee brace, was clearly a senior. I helped her wheel stuff to our backyard. She told she would be good from there because an assistant was coming.
The woman's name was Tina (fake name). She told me this would be a piece of cake event for her b/c she had been DJing for 37 years. She also told me she was a DJ at our town's "ECLC" school, which is for kids with special needs. So, of course, my mind went right to Matt Dillon in Something About Mary. Am I going to get canceled for that?
Tina (dumbfounded): "I'm playing a clean hip hop mix."
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
Bringing a Knife to a Gunfight (Like He Said)
Sean Connery is 90 today.
The quintessential man's man from the Highlands. A wise man once said, "Manly props to Sean Connery -- not only was he the best James Bond, he also was Mr. Universe and has a black belt in karate (athlete)."
Beyond that, he's been in a series of terrific films, many of which featured him as the bad-assed hero or antihero.
You loved him as James Bond. We know this.
You likely enjoyed him as the Soviet Admiral submariner.
Older Pi Lams were cultists for his Ramirez. (Once.)
You've seen him excel at game shows.
And you've probably liked him in an assortment of other roles, from Indy's dad to the guy who escaped Alcatraz to King Arthur to Robin Hood to the man who would be king in The Man Who Would Be King. Watch clips from someone's list of his best roles here.
But -- despite the protestations from Sick Boy -- I'll take his Academy Award-winning work as Jimmy Malone in Brian DePalma's masterstroke, The Untouchables. DeNiro was top-notch, Costner was at the crest of his super brief but impressive wave, and Sean Connery crushed it. Watch it again.
Okay, now. Everybody celebrate the new nonagenarian Sir Sean Connery KBE's birthday by speaking like him for a minute. Like this.
Monday, August 24, 2020
Happy Belated
There's surely such a thing as issuing too much content on one subject. Me being that for the Joe Strummer / Clash material. But this was awesome.
Birthday cards some in many forms. Hallmark, homemade, or a strip-o-gram. Or a two-hour tip of the cap from a bevy of musicians who are fans of yours. That's what this is for Joe Strummer, who, as I commented Friday, would have entered his 69th year had his heart not given out in 2002. Mostly musical tributes, with a few old stories from old friends. My favorites include a couple of cool covers of "Death or Glory" (Jeff Tweedy; Bob Weir) and some Spanish dames dropping "Spanish Bombs."
Joe Strummer died when he was 50, a number I turn next month. With COVID putting an annoying crimp in group revelry for such events, I could (and will) do way worse than to have such a birthday card. So I'll enjoy this instead.
"Wish you were here, Joe, We could use you now more than ever."
Sunday, August 23, 2020
These Go to Twelve
They've finally gone and done it. With the release of Twelfth, the, um, 12th full-length album of their nearly 30-year career, Old 97s have managed to make my Dad happy. Or at least I assume he's happy, up there in heaven rocking out to a record that has this cover:
Dad was a big Cowboys fan, and he loved Roger Staubach. Same for 97's front man Rhett Miller, who grew up in Dallas idolizing the hall of fame quarterback.
I think Dad would like the record, too. As a Paste review puts it, "The Old 97's sound like themselves on Twelfth - and that's a good thing."
Indeed, the album is familiar in all the right ways, like a perfectly worn pair of jeans, it's comfortable and cool. Rhett and the boys aren't breaking any new ground, but the terrain they're covering is the good shit. Here's a lyric from "Diamonds on Neptune": I got a room at a cheap hotel/I got a girl I don't know well/I got a feeling I'm gonna let her down. That sentiment is at home in every 97s record ever. I dig it.
Here's the whole record if you've got a lazy Sunday on tap and want something to keep you company.
Friday, August 21, 2020
Our Matrix Sucks
As it describes itself, "The Bulwark is a news network launched in 2018 dedicated to providing political analysis and reporting free from the constraints of partisan loyalties or tribal prejudices." Its editors and contributors do span a reasonable range of American political thought, at least broad enough sampling of the center-left and center-right. Of note, Bill Kristol, the very same person who helped immensely the project to foist Sarah Palin's canary-in-a-coalmine version of skin-deep dumb on our political firmament, is doing penance flagellating the Trump-era GOP as an editor-at-large.
Introductions aside, I do appreciate The Bulwark's generally actually fact-focused approach to the news of the day. In this era where many in the political maelstrom and their media enablers pit us against one another because it sells, I especially liked a story this week that reassured me and pissed me off all at once.
Entitled "Unplug From The Matrix", the story by Gregg Hurwitz and Marshall Herskovitz (the fourth and fifth Beastie Boys, I believe) simply and concisely lays out the many ways the majority of Americans are in violent agreement about the issues of the day, as backed by polling. So concisely that it's easy to repeat:
- We believe hard work and innovation should be rewarded.
- We believe everyone should play by the same rules, that the same laws should apply to all, regardless of race, religion, or background.
- We believe in opportunity, that everyone should have a fair shot to earn a sustainable living for themselves and their family. And that working Americans have not received that fair shot for a generation.
- We believe in laws and stability and want a competent, fair, and just legal system with enforcement that protects us all equally and is deserving of our respect.
- We believe in the right to hold opposing views.
- We believe in borders around our country and in a lawful, regulated, and humane immigration system.
- We believe that children from every community should have access to quality education.
- We believe the stain of slavery and racism has not been lifted from America, in spite of the great progress that’s been made.
- We believe affordable healthcare should be available to every American, regardless of pre-existing conditions, and that prescription drugs are too expensive.
- We believe in preserving our oceans, land, and skies for future generations.
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Rick Astley Muppet Filler
Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Filler Times at Gheorghe High
So this is happening. Whom do we think will be reading for which parts?
Morgan Freeman has to be Mr. Hand, right?
Sean Penn won't play Spicoli, right? That'd be too easy?
Is Shia LaBeouf or Dane Cook reading for Damone?
Does a table reading include the Linda pool scene?
We should do a Zoom table reading of a script we like for a Gheorghe segment. At least one scene.
Dave and I wrote a few scripts, and one was recently unearthed two time zones away. Maybe one day we'll give it a read-through.
Monday, August 17, 2020
A House, a Home
In 1983, we moved out of the house and neighborhood I described a few posts ago and into the Ghent Square section of Norfolk. My mom, stepdad, little sister, and stepbro Ian, whom my Pi Lam fratres know. It was a new house; they'd razed the old run down blocks and built all new construction for a handful of blocks. I was too young to understand gentrification and its many impacts. I just liked that my room was up on the third floor.
It's debatable whether it's a good idea to put teenage boys in their own little world up on a different floor. At least the smell stayed up there.
I left that house in August of 1988 to live in Williamsburg with Dave, Rob, Hightower, and 26 other dudes I'd never met. One of the most fun years of my life. Beer Olympics, the Graffiti Wall, semi-regular copulation, random idiots, and Random Idiots.
I spent college summers in Goshen, VA, Cape Cod (2), and Williamsburg (2). I was pretty sure I was never living back in the Norfolk house again.
Graduation was a bit of a moving target for me. May '92 begat December '92 which begat May '93. In the spring of 1993, I needed "just" one 3-credit A in order to get my degree. I orchestrated an independent study wherein I wrote a 50-page paper on the Chesapeake Bay and it problems as seen by two opposing entities, the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers. It was a worthy document; for once, a whole-assed effort.
Given the nature of my out-of-class schooling that final semester, I moved back in with my mom. She was fresh into her second divorce and yet to meet the real love of her life a year later. Life there was... challenging.
I was also working for my dad in Virginia Beach. He'd recently parted ways with his commercial real estate business partner of 20 years due to the recession. As such, he was pretty unhappy, more so because I had not graduated. He enlisted me as his Office Manager (pronounced "secretary") for five bucks an hour. Life there was... challenging.
That stint as a Norfolk resident was six of the longest months of my life, but I made it through the spring and out of college. I bolted for Cape Cod and never looked back. Six months later, I embarked on Whitney: The Washington Years when I rented a house with Rob and Spoid Spurrier.
A lot of shit happened after that. As the Monty Python lads might say, "Skip a bit, brother."
Back to Norfolk in 2005, good days and bad, tumult and upheaval, and in 2017 I moved back into my old house. My mom and stepdad are Florida residents now, and they were poised to sell the Ghent house then, but instead I moved in and rented from them for the final few years of my two daughters' high school careers. After that, I figured I would move out and go find my own place in the world.
Eh. This past Friday, I bought the house from them.
Single-income mortgages are slightly intimidating to me, but the rates are laughably low (I locked in at 2.875%) and I'm gonna stay a while. So I'm a homeowner for the first time since 2010, and for the first time by myself.
I love my old house. That old 3rd floor bedroom is now a guest room / office / Les Coole Studios. I will slowly make the place my own, which I guess means more Wilco posters and fewer prints of flowers. Although I did put up a Wilco concert poster print with flowers.
As Jimmy Buffett sang before he became a parrot-cature...
And there aren't many reasons I would leave
Yes, I have found me some peace
Yes, I have found me a home.
Sunday, August 16, 2020
Happy Anniversary
I commend to your attention Major League Baseball's celebration today of the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Negro National League, the first league for black players that lasted any significant period of time. This will be a short post, because I regret to admit that I don't know as much about the Negro Leagues as I should.
Sure, like most baseball fans, I'm aware of Josh Gibson and Satchel Paige, and Cool Papa Bell, and, of course, Jackie Robinson. But as I'm learning while reading Joe Posnanski's terrific travelogue, The Soul of Baseball: A Road Trip Through Buck O'Neil's America, there are so many more great ballplayers and even better stories that people should know about.
Written in 2007 about O'Neil and Posnanski's travels across the country to promote the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, the book is at once a lesson on how to live (from the cheerful and charismatic O'Neil) and a history of the game he played. We learn about the explosive Oscar Charleston, the eccentric Turkey Stearnes (who talked to his bats - they must've listened, because he hit over .400 three times), the slick-fielding and power hitting Ray Dandridge, and a long list of others.
I'm not the only one with a somewhat bittersweet view of MLB's celebratory remembrance. Kevin Blackistone wrote a piece in today's Washington Post that takes the league to task for the significant part it played in the Negro Leagues very need to exist. Without MLB's institutional racism, the players mentioned above and the 35 Negro Leaguers who eventually made the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown would've demonstrated their talents at the major league level.
Buck O'Neil had a lot to be bitter about, as did so many of his contemporaries. It's a measure of his character that he chose a different worldview. Here's a passage from The Soul of Baseball that's a decent summation of the man:
"In time, I would grow accustomed to Buck’s boundless joy. That joy went with him everywhere. Every day, Buck hugged strangers, invented nicknames, told jokes, and shared stories. He sang out loud and danced happily. He threw baseballs to kids and asked adults to tell him about their parents and he kept signing autographs long after his hand started to shake. I heard him leave an inspiring and heartfelt two-minute phone message for a person he had never met. I saw him take a child by the hand during a class, another child grabbed her hand, and another child grabbed his, until a human chain had formed and together they curled and coiled between the desks of the classroom, a Chinese dragon dance, and they all laughed happily. I saw Buck pose for a thousand photographs with a thousand different people and it never bothered him when the amateur photographer fumbled around, trying all at once to focus an automatic camera, frame the shot like Scorsese, and make the camera’s flash pop at two on a sunny afternoon. Buck kept his arm wrapped tight around the woman standing next to him. “Take your time,” he always said. “I like this.” Always."
Friday, August 14, 2020
An Onomatopoeia
Though he has previously attended The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he has not affiliated with that Church since at least 2004. He and his first wife Angela divorced in 2005. Later that year, he started dating Redskinnette (Redskin cheerleader) Christy Oglevee. She was fired for fraternizing with Redskins players, which the Redskins organization prohibits. They married on May 23, 2008 in Landsdowne, Virginia. In January 2012 they separated, and in September they announced their intent to divorce.
Cooley's first child, daughter Sloane, was born on September 11, 2014. Cooley, frequently referred to by his nickname "Captain Chaos," is known for his eccentric hair styles, affinity for heavy metal music, and what one reporter has called an "Animal House persona". This nickname was created when teammates bet him he would not go out to the opening coin toss and introduce himself to the opposing team captains as "Captain Chaos". Cooley did so and the nickname stuck.
Cooley maintains his own blog, "The Cooley Zone." On Sunday, September 14, 2008, Cooley posted on his blog a photo of Redskins training materials that also included his genitals. The picture remained on his site all day Sunday until it was finally removed. Cooley apologized and referred to the incident as "a complete accident", claiming that he initially posted the photo without realizing it showed his genitals.
Cooley majored in art at Utah State, and now pursues a side career as a potter. He owns an art gallery in Leesburg.
https://omny.fm/shows/kevin-sheehan-show/08-13-20-kevin-sheehan-show-hour-2
As always, Chris Cooley is some chill cross between Seth Rogen and Brian Hightower. He confirms that he got offers in recent years to be an announcer for Fox, ESPN, and the NFL network, among others. Offers that would have either made him move to L.A. or Bristol (Cooley offers an amusing hard no to living in Connecticut) or at least had him on the road Thurs-Sun 20 weeks a year. He didn’t want to be away from his young kids.
So this spring he had decided he was going to coach high school football up near where he and Rob and Marls live. It was all happening, and then . . . COVID. Sucks. That would’ve been a cool development for him and whatever HS had the pleasure.
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Fulhamerica and the Undefeated Internet
It's been a week or so since Fulham defeated Brentford in the English League Championship playoff final to clinch promotion to the Premier League for 2020-21. We're not here to recap the game in its entirety, but I will share Joe Bryan's first goal of the game because it was a) sublime, and b) the product of outstanding scouting and in-the-moment coaching. According to Bryan, Fulham coach Scott Parker told him to attempt the shot in real time. It worked out.
But that's not why we're here today.
Parker, Fulham's young skipper, was emotional and candid in his post-match interviews, which drew plaudits. But one internet wizard was struck by the similarities between Parker's South London accent and speaking cadence and those of The Streets frontman Mike Skinner, as heard on 'Dry Your Eyes'.
And that internet genius (@markypickard) went and did this, mashing up images from Parker's playing (and childhood commercial acting) career with his post-match video:
And here is the extended, better edited version of Scott Parker vs the Streets including Scott as the Mcdonalds kid 😁 thanks to the following for the footage: @footballdaily @leisureleagues As said before congrats to Scott and @FulhamFC #dryyoureyes #thestreets #ScottParker pic.twitter.com/ZQGc5OpZv5
— Mark Pickard (@MarkyPickard) August 6, 2020
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
A Story
When I think of him, I kind remember him like the bodyguard in My Bodyguard, not the Whitney Houston film The Bodyguard but the 1980 film with Matt Dillon and Martin Mull and Adam Baldwin as the bodyguard. I think mostly I remember him like that because the character in the film is also named Ricky and wore an army jacket, but that’s not where the similarities ended. Anyway, Ricky was more than a little off.
When he spoke, which I prayed with all of my might that he would not do when we crossed paths (usually along the four-block walk to and from my school bus stop), it was usually unintelligible. Way out there.
Stories about Ricky were wild, because... well, kids will believe just about anything. Honest to God, the story we heard most often was that Ricky lost his cool and picked up a car and threw it into the swamp that was adjacent to my route to said bus stop. Even then we said “No way,” but when we heard it was a small car, we thought “Maybe.” As we got older, we thought perhaps he’d driven a car into the swamp. Any way we sliced it, we were told to be afraid. And we were afraid.
I never asked my parents about Ricky, mainly because the less I thought about Ricky, the happier a childhood I would have. I felt bad for him. I mean the guy clearly had no family. I guess, well, none of my friends ever talked about them. Or where he lived. I suppose my parents could have proactively explained Ricky, assuming they knew the details, but maybe they didn’t want to give my clucking henhouse of a circle of friends any chicken feed. Or maybe the less they thought about Ricky, the more they could sleep as parents. There but for the grace of God and all that jazz.
In retrospect it makes me sad. (I’m making an assumption about Ricky now, based on what I saw and remember from 40 years ago, but I feel pretty sure.) I worked for a nonprofit serving people with disabilities for 8 years, and when I think of the monstrous stories about a monstrous character that we created and propagated, that makes me feel lousy. Obviously fear does that to people. You’re afraid of what’s different, and he was just different. Well, plus it’s legitimately scary to a kid when a cross between an old kid and a young adult is ambling around your block saying words that don’t compute... and you have a strong sense that it’s not one of those times when an older person says stuff you don't understand because they are older and smarter and wiser.
The neighborhood where I grew up, like that of many people I know, was a site of blissfully ignorant youth in an era when you said bye to Mom as you were pedaling away on a summer morning and returned to base only for sustenance or because the sun went down. Ricky represented an element that did not go with that grain. At my current age, I realize that this must have been hardest — by a Larchmont mile — for poor Ricky. At age 8, we felt a little sorry for him but were mostly scared. And we managed that fear with group therapy (groups of friends telling predominantly fabricated stories) and establishing a common enemy to help us cope. I’m glad that, for the most part, I no longer need to do this in my life.
Anyway, in the last years before I forgot about Ricky, either because he no longer came around or because in 7th grade we moved to a new neighborhood, Ricky took to carrying a bag with him. I guess you’d call it a satchel, though that word isn’t very Ricky. As you’d guess, that accoutrement to his ensemble, as the descriptors venture further and further away from apropos, was fuel for a whole new batch of red-hot fables from the Lords of Buckingham Avenue, or whatever we were calling ourselves that week. Front. Page. News.
Why did he always have the bag? What’s that about? Where did he get it? And of course, most importantly, what in the world was in it? Top answers on the board included “a gun,” “knives,” “nunchucks” (one of my friends thought nunchucks were the baddest-assed thing ever and mentioned them as often as he could), and, of course, “a human head.” One kid thought Ricky might have a jar with his own excrement in it. That kid always said stuff like that to elicit a group “ewwwww, sick!”
We never knew what Ricky had in his satchel. Maybe comic books. Maybe a list of grievances. Could’ve been a human head or a poop jar. Could’ve been anything. Could’ve been nothing. But I’ll tell you this: whatever the hell it was, you could prop it up on a TV-tray next to a podium and run it as Joe Biden’s Vice Presidential candidate and that ticket should beat Donald Trump. 100 times out of 100, Sleepy Joe and Ricky’s Bag should sweep Trump/Pence out of the Oval Office in an electoral bludgeoning that makes Fritz Mondale feel emboldened. That’s what should happen.
Given that it’s the Democratic Party, National chapter, in the United States of America orchestrating this, however, well... that clouds the issue. As my JV football line coach used to say, they could fuck up a wet dream.
That’s what I think.
Monday, August 10, 2020
Felt 4 U
Mark turned me on to Murs' chill rap stylings several years ago, and I learned about Slug through his involvement with Minneapolis collective Atmosphere. I was yesterday days old when I realized the two of them had recorded three albums together as Felt.
The pair, elder statesmen in the indie rap game at this point, just released Felt 4 U, their fourth album. It's a head-nodding slow jam celebration, two dudes talking about wives and kids and remembering their youth in all its joy and dumbassery.
Here's 'Don't Do Me Like That'.
And if you've got 40 minutes, here's the whole record.
Saturday, August 08, 2020
A Scene
Sitting on the deck of the Nags Head cottage. The last 24 hours were spent with my first born, just Dad and his little girl.
The two of us sat on the beach, swam in the ocean, watched a wicked thunderstorm roll through and then out to sea, stared at a mesmerizing clouded moon/lightning storm over the ocean, ate shrimp and crab, drank beers and seltzers, reminisced, talked about life and how funny/sad/amazing it is, imparted what passed for wisdom (me), grinned and tolerated it (her), listened to our favorite tunes from her youth, told stories, played cards and then beer pong (her request) (with water cups), expressed how important the other is in our lives, and said goodnight.
And then goodbye, as she woke up and drove off to go be a college student starting this week.
In a weird circle of life thing, out of nowhere my Dad is currently driving down from Va Beach to visit the beach house where he spent the 80's and early 90's getting wild with my late stepmom. He's with his new bride, a wonderful human who has in many ways rejuvenated him. And he gets to come down for the first time in many years and impart some wisdom on his son while feasting on fresh seafood and drinking blended cocktails with family by the seaside.
Life... she gets me misty sometimes, but she ain't bad at all.
Friday, August 07, 2020
Staff Member Guestie: Requiem for a Scribe
Pete Hamill’s death this week was another cruel reminder of the demise of newspapers and the people that made them part of the fabric of towns and cities everywhere.
Hamill was a columnist, magazine writer and best-selling author. He traveled the world, knew the famous and infamous, and wrote about people and places far and wide. But mostly, he was a newspaperman, New York through and through.
Born in Brooklyn, he wrote for five New York City papers and outlived three, as one of his obituaries put it. His knowledge of the city was encyclopedic, but he once wrote, “In the end, the only thing the true New Yorker knows about New York is that it’s unknowable.”
Hamill was part of a vanishing breed of newspaperman – the columnist who tried to take the pulse of a
city, the reporter who is comfortable at city hall or a crime scene or a local tavern or a neighborhood fair, the sort of voice that caused people to reflexively pick up the paper to read what he thought.New York was blessed with a slew of such voices, among them Jimmy Breslin, Mike McAlary, Russell Baker and Red Smith (Breslin wrote a column, on deadline, the night that John Lennon was assassinated that is equal parts wizardry and journalism).
Metro columnists were a staple and in some cases the face of city newspapers – Breslin and Hamill, Mike Royko in Chicago, Mike Barnicle in Boston, Jim Murray in Los Angeles, Herb Caen in San Francisco, Molly Ivins in Dallas and Fort Worth, Carl Hiaasen in Miami. Many of them died or moved on, and as newspaper staffs were gutted in the past 25 years, the position in many places was deemed expendable.
Many major newspapers still employ columnists, some of whom are excellent. But you won’t find David Brooks or Peggy Noonan or Leonard Pitts at Engine Co. 14 to talk about firemen’s pension funds or roasting city council members over budget shenanigans.
Hamill wrote with grace and empathy, a two-fingered-typing poet. He approached his work with an explorer’s curiosity. He often said that being a high school dropout and getting what he thought was a late start into newspapering – he was 25 when he landed his first job – were ample motivation. We are unlikely to see his kind again, thanks to the jackals of commerce and the march of time.
Enough gasbagging from me. Here’s an excerpt from one of Hamill’s collections:
“For me, the work itself was everything. I had grown up under the heroic spell of the Abstract Expressionist painters, and one of their lessons was that the essence of the work was the doing of it. … In my experience, nothing before or since could compare to walking into the New York Post at midnight, being sent into the dark, scary city on assignment, and coming back to write a story for the first edition. No day’s work was like any other’s, no story repeated any other in its details. Day after day, week after week, I loved being a newspaperman, living in the permanent present tense of the trade.
“This is not to claim that I’ve produced an uninterrupted series of amazements. Reading over a quarter-century of my journalism for this collection, I have often winced. If I’d only had another three inches of space, or another two hours beyond the deadline, perhaps this piece would have been better or that piece wiser. There were newspaper columns that I wish I’d never written, full of easy insult or cheap injury. There were many pieces limited by my ignorance. Too many lazily derived their energy from the breaking news to which they served as mere sidebars. … Sometimes I completely missed the point, or didn’t see the truth of a story whose facts were evidently there in my notebook. But this is not an apology. It is the nature of such work that that it is produced in a rush; the deadlines usually force the newspaper writer to publish a first draft because there is no time for a second or third. Once that piece is locked up in type and sent to the newsstands, there is no going back; the writer can correct the factual error, but it’s too late to deepen the insight, alter the mistaken or naïve judgment, erase the stale language that was taken off the rack. He or she can only vow never to make that error again and start fresh the next day.”
Thursday, August 06, 2020
Crime Against Nature
Tuesday, August 04, 2020
A Weed-Dealing Central Park Manatee? Sign Me Up.
Monday, August 03, 2020
All Day Long I Dream About...Murdering Polish Flies
Sunday, August 02, 2020
A Return to Our Roots
And so, here's a definitive list of the five best team logos in American major professional sports, as defined by the following leagues (and using the logos presented on sportslogos.net - no secondary merchandising dollar grabs allowed):