Showing posts with label Patriots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patriots. Show all posts
Friday, April 21, 2017
This Week in Review: Trump, Bill O'Reilly, Aaron Hernandez, Tom Brady and Sean Spicer
Photo: from isitfunnyoroffensive.com, here (at your own risk). United's newest "passenger removal specialist."
Hey, it's been a few weeks! Mostly my absence was due to an illness that felt like a minor-league flu, but wasn't (I think). Fever up to 101 for a few days; really bad throat and ear pain; fuzzy and congested head (which I have normally anyway). I still have a lingering minor cough and fuzziness/congestion and ear pain, a few weeks and two different antibiotics later. Twice a doctor has shined a light into my right ear and said, "Whoa, there's a lot of water build-up there." Could've been worse, I could've met United's newest employee, pictured above, who calls himself a "passenger removal specialist."
Anyway, there's been a lot of crap lately to get my mind off it. Among these:
--Bill O'Reilly, who's made a (lucrative) living blowharding about "values" and telling people how to behave, has been paying off women over the last 15 years so they don't sue him for sexual harassment. To the tune of $13 million, that is, and I'll bet that's conservative. (See what I did there?) What a hypocrite! Is it me, or does it seem that everyone who makes a living telling others how they should live is a hypocritical dirtbag?
--And even then, Fox only let him go after the sponsors started pulling out. Which shows you it's, unfortunately, not about sexual harassment, but about dollars.
--By the way, O'Reilly's publisher, Henry Holt, has stated that it will still work with him. "Our plans have not changed," Holt said in an email, according to the New York Times. O'Reilly's latest best-selling book titles: Killing Lincoln, Killing Kennedy, Killing Jesus, Killing Patton, and Killing Reagan. I am not making those up. Read into the similarities what you will, but you don't need to read books from Henry Holt Publishing anymore, right? I don't (if I do already). I don't normally advocate not reading, but we don't need to support this dirtbag. There's plenty of other things to read.
Photo: from his own Wikipedia page.
--And in any dictionary, next to the word "smug."
--Bill O'Reilly was given a severance package as high as $25 million, by the way. Add to that the approximate $13 million Fox paid to women he sexually harassed, and that's $38 million Fox had paid to kiss his butt, not counting his actual salary. His latest contract, just recently signed, was for $18 million a year--which he won't collect. Fox had an out-clause: it was void if any new allegations and lawsuits were filed against him. Hmmm...You think Fox knew anything?
--And this is after Fox Chairman Roger Ailes had to resign over his own sexual harassment woes. Despite this, Fox was still willing to pay the money for O'Reilly and sweep him under the rug. Rather than clean house all at once, Fox was willing to let it go on.
--And Fox has been putting on conservative "news" for years about proper values and behavior. Sexually harassing women? Check. Gay marriage? No.
--Scumbags.
--Speaking of scumbags, so Aaron Hernandez was (somehow) acquitted of double-homicide, then hanged himself in his cell with a bedsheet, the same day the Super Bowl-winning Patriots visited the White House. If you think that's a coincidence, I want to drink your Kool-Aid. This is what narcissistic sociopaths do, right to the bitter end. That'll show them, he thought.
Photo: from the Huffington Post, at this website
--He also scribbled John 3:16 on his forehead. It reads: "For God so loved the world, as to give his only begotten Son; that whosoever believeth in [H]im may not perish, but may have life everlasting." That's a narcissistic That'll show 'em, too. Again, all about him. That's not religious belief. That's self-importance. And power. Actual religious people are the ones not killing people. This act is an offense to every Christian out there. Narcissistic sociopaths will do anything, and believe anything, that benefits them. Unless you think he was actually seriously religious. Again, I'll take a glass of that.
Photo: Tom and Gisele, from the International Business Times, at this website. These two are so used to the limelight that they know they'll look better together if they're looking in opposite directions.
--I normally don't give a damn about the politics or beliefs of my favorite athletes, but I have to give kudos to Tom Brady, who at the last minute pulled out of a visit to the White House this week. He'll deny it was a political move, but a) Gisele posted an anti-Trump tweet this week (and as Gisele goes, Tom Brady goes); and b) Tom Brady has been quoted many times supporting Trump, speaking for him, and basically being Defense Exhibit A of why I don't care about the politics of my favorite athletes (See also: Curt Schilling). But to blow off Trump at the last second on a worldwide stage is a gutsy move, because we all know it will anger him. And it speaks very loudly, no matter what PC spin all three will put on it. I don't know why he did it (except, as Gisele goes, so does Tom Brady), but I'm glad he did. I might actually try his workout and diet plans, too. Which are really out there.
--Prince died a year ago. I can't believe I just typed that, but it's so.
Photo: from entertainment.ie, here
--There've been idiots in American politics since there's been an America, but Sean Spicer must be the most verbally handicapped one I've ever seen--and I've been keeping track since 2001. He makes Dubya look like he actually passed Yale with his own intellectual capacity. Dubya is an Oxford don next to this guy. If all the crap Spicer said before this week didn't open your eyes, drop your jaw and make you shake your head like a wet dog, surely this week's verbal diarrhea did it for you. Hitler didn't use gas?!? Holocaust centers?!? Bottom line: this is a national spokesman who cannot speak. And this doesn't just shock and awe Americans. It pisses off people across the world, including Germans, who haven't been our biggest fans since Trump refused to shake Andrea Merkel's hand, twice. What is it with this administration's problem with Jews, anyway? (Look up "Trump" and "National Holocaust Museum.") Now that O'Bannon is out, let's see what happens. If nothing does, we'll have to face the fact that it isn't just him, but the entire administration. (P.S.--It's all of them.)
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Sunday, February 5, 2017
Super Bowl LI Predictions -- Patriots and Falcons
Photo: Brady is congratulated by Patriots coach Bill Belichick after New England beat the Colts 44-13 in Brady's first career start on Sept. 30, 2001. Victoria Arocho, AP. From usatoday.com at this address.
Just a quick post about today's game, due to start in about 2 hours. Any given Sunday, of course, but:
--I'll pat myself on the back for a second: long before the Vegas oddsmakers made the Pats a 3-point favorite, I said weeks ago that the Pats would win a close one by 3.
--My overall score pick: Pats, 40-37 or 41-38. High scoring game, and by 3. That's been my stance since both teams won two weeks ago.
--Why? Overall, because the offenses may cancel each other out, but the Pats defense is better. It's that simple.
--The Falcons were bad against the run this year. The Patriots, surprisingly, were in the top-5 rushing. The Falcons' running game was average at best.
--The Falcons were a good, but average good, 11-5 this season. The Patriots were 11-5 a few years ago and didn't make the playoffs. So 11-5, while good, doesn't knock me outta my socks.
--Sure, the Patriots schedule this year may have been easier than that of the Falcons (or of anyone, really), but that doesn't mean it's not a great team. They had a hiccup of two games in there, one of which they lost with Brady, but overall it's possible they were a great team with an easier schedule.
--The schedule thing evens out, by the way. Next year could be brutal.
--The Patriots also have an edge with experience. An inexperienced team can win, of course--like the Patriots in 2001. But I'll take it when it's used mentally and productively, which Belichick and Brady seem to do. They visualize and channel well. Brady in particular could have a post-sports career on the self-help lecture circuit.
--Speaking of Belichick, he's an edge, too. His reputation precedes him and it can mess with you. Just ask Pete Carroll and Marshawn Lynch. Belichick is one of the few coaches whose name is as well known as his best players. Who's the Falcons coach? (Atlanta, don't answer that.)
--The Falcons have one truly great receiver. The Patriots have 3--and 4 if you count The Gronk, who--of course--isn't playing.
--Another edge the Patriots have is the very large chip on Brady's shoulder. It's actually about boulder size, and can be seen for miles with the naked eye. I mean this, by the way, as a compliment. The man is a HOFer, a millionaire perhaps literally hundreds of times over, is married to a gorgeous supermodel, has incredible homes and cars, is famous outside the sport--and he's as angry and petulant as a foot-stomping teenager. Except, he focuses better and is more driven, but still...Most guys in his position would've mailed it in a long time ago. Not him. He wants to be perfect, and believes he can be (and often is, on the field), which is why he may come across as arrogant and bossy. But he's earned the right to be that way on the field. His players like and respect him, which is all that really matters.
--Though I can do without his politics. Curt Schilling needs to step away from the political mike, too.
--By the way, Brady went on vacation for those 4 games, all over Europe, with his gorgeous supermodel wife and his undoubtedly perfect kids. If Roger Goodell thinks that's punishment, he doesn't understand the word or the concept. And, note to Goodell: The Patriots were 3-1 in those 4 games. And good job finding, finally, the right judge for you. How many millions of lawyers' fees did that cost you? Because Brady's were paid by Robert Kraft, who has more money than God--and much, much more than Roger Goodell.
MVP: Brady. Possibly Hogan, if he repeats his AFC game.
Still, it'll be a close one. Either team could, and maybe should, win. Having said that, Patriots by 3 in a high-scoring game, 41-38.
I've got a small pile of dirt from my backyard in a little cup, in case I need to eat some in about 5 hours.
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Thursday, November 26, 2015
Being Thankful--Happy Thanksgiving 2015
I recently asked some people to explain what non-material things--besides family, friends, home and technology--they were thankful for. Here's mine:
--A job I like. (Most people I know hate their jobs. I love mine. Not every day is a fairy tale, but I love the job overall.)
--A good career, with good benefits. (I get lots of sinus infections--as if that was my career instead.)
--My numerous interests. (Writing; literature; baseball; baseball cards; the writing industry; short story and novel reading [and writing]; antique buying and dealing; dealing baseball cards [I'm also a part-time picker]; football; walking; hiking; biking; movies...) You get the idea. I think boredom is the worst kind of hell.
--My abundance of energy. (Until lately, I could subsist quite well on 4-6 hours of sleep per night.)
--My "intelligence." (Real or imagined.)
--My imagination. (Which can often get out of control, and which is often not a gift.)
--My health. (I used to be a lot worse off, and my sinuses--as terrible as they are--used to be much worse.)
--My sense of humor. (Again, real or imagined. If I'm only half as funny as I think I am, then I'm still hilarious.)
--My proximity to mountains, beaches, rivers, hiking and biking trails, and big cities.
--My local sports teams. (I've got the Patriots and Red Sox. True, the Sox finished last the past two years, but even then they're entertaining. And they've still got 3 World Championships in the past eleven years, with a few other post-season appearances thrown in. Plus I've got Fenway.)
--Great neighbors. (Bad neighbors can be nightmares.)
--Heat, electric and an affordable education. (Most people in the world don't have any of those.)
AND A HEAD'S UP TO CHRIS AND JAY AND TO ALL MY FAMILY AND FRIENDS WHO MADE THIS THANKSGIVING STRESS-FREE AND WONDERFUL. YOU'RE THE BEST!!!
WHAT'RE YOU THANKFUL FOR? (It's okay to comment even if it's not Thanksgiving anymore.)
--A job I like. (Most people I know hate their jobs. I love mine. Not every day is a fairy tale, but I love the job overall.)
--A good career, with good benefits. (I get lots of sinus infections--as if that was my career instead.)
--My numerous interests. (Writing; literature; baseball; baseball cards; the writing industry; short story and novel reading [and writing]; antique buying and dealing; dealing baseball cards [I'm also a part-time picker]; football; walking; hiking; biking; movies...) You get the idea. I think boredom is the worst kind of hell.
--My abundance of energy. (Until lately, I could subsist quite well on 4-6 hours of sleep per night.)
--My "intelligence." (Real or imagined.)
--My imagination. (Which can often get out of control, and which is often not a gift.)
--My health. (I used to be a lot worse off, and my sinuses--as terrible as they are--used to be much worse.)
--My sense of humor. (Again, real or imagined. If I'm only half as funny as I think I am, then I'm still hilarious.)
--My proximity to mountains, beaches, rivers, hiking and biking trails, and big cities.
--My local sports teams. (I've got the Patriots and Red Sox. True, the Sox finished last the past two years, but even then they're entertaining. And they've still got 3 World Championships in the past eleven years, with a few other post-season appearances thrown in. Plus I've got Fenway.)
--Great neighbors. (Bad neighbors can be nightmares.)
--Heat, electric and an affordable education. (Most people in the world don't have any of those.)
AND A HEAD'S UP TO CHRIS AND JAY AND TO ALL MY FAMILY AND FRIENDS WHO MADE THIS THANKSGIVING STRESS-FREE AND WONDERFUL. YOU'RE THE BEST!!!
WHAT'RE YOU THANKFUL FOR? (It's okay to comment even if it's not Thanksgiving anymore.)
Sunday, February 1, 2015
Quick Jots 2.1.15
--The website urlmetrics.com says that my website, the one you're currently reading, is ranked 13,660,425 in the entire United States. I don't know if this is deplorable, or actually really good. There are about 360 million people in this country, but how many of them have websites or blogs? 10%? That would place me 13.6 million out of 36 million, which I guess isn't that bad. But if that ranking also includes sites like msn.com, and other huge pages like that, than the ranking is really impressive. I mean, I don't post any video, or music. Very few pics or links. Mostly, just me ranting, really, and usually about books or movies--not riveting for most people. So, I can't decide if this is really cool, or if it really isn't, or if I just need to get a life. Or any combination. And I don't know how I stumbled upon urlmetrics.com to begin with, as I was just logging off to go to bed. (It's 1 a.m. on Feb. 1, 2015.)
--And the site said this blog has an estimated worth of $749.93! This is interesting because I pay less than $50 a year to keep it going, and I don't sell anything on it, and I don't have any ads on it. Does this mean that my thoughts have actual value? Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiice...
--So now I'm thinking how I can make the actual $749.93 from this, without putting up any ads. I would never do that to you, my cherished readers, or to myself. So...anyone wanna cut me a check for $749.93?
--If you wanna see for yourself, here's the link. The monthly visits and monthly pages viewed stats are way off, by the way. I get many more than what it says, for both. I got 1,594 pageviews last month, which was a little low for me, according to the Google Analytics stuff. I'm just sayin'. So, I wonder what the ranking would be if the stats were correct on that page? I need a moment to get over myself.
So what else is going on...
--I got just over 19" of snow here this week, Tuesday and Wednesday. And it looks like I'm getting 10" to 12" more Sunday night through Tuesday morning. Damn good thing I have lots of house projects and writing things to do. And I don't mind the cold, as it actually improves my sinuses. Still...I think I can do without for awhile now. I can see more ice on my driveway than cement.
--And it's going to be -3 here Thursday night. That's real temp, not wind chill.
--I've had enough with the Patriots' hijinks, but still...If you make the teams bring their own 12 footballs, you're begging for a problem. I mean, the $1 billion + business that's the NFL can't afford its own 24 footballs for one of the two playoff games playing that week?
--And you can't tell me the other teams haven't been doing something with their footballs all this time. I wonder if the Pats would get ratted on if they didn't win as often. The Jets, for example, rat on the Pats, not the other way around. Speaking of which--Every football team has cameras filming the other sideline--a few years ago during Spygate, before that, and even now, I'd bet. I'd be shocked if that didn't happen in college, too.
--And deflated footballs didn't cause the Colts to lose by 38 points. Unless the balls themselves can score five touchdowns and a field goal, that is.
--Having said that, a note to the Patriots: Let's just play the game, shall we?
--I'm a Pats fan, but I pick the Seahawks to win. The Pats have trouble with great rushing QBs. But Wilson will lose if he throws a handful of picks again. Belichick has already forgotten more about football than I'll ever know, but I'll say it anyway: If I'm the Pats, I try to shut down the Seahawks's running game, keep Wilson in the pocket, and make him beat me with his arm. This will be a lot easier if the Pats can lead early by a score or two, so he has to throw.
--As for the halftime show, well...I'm not her target audience, but Katy Perry is amusing. She doesn't take herself too seriously, and she doesn't try to be more than what she is: a pop star with a core audience of 13-18 year old girls.
--That's not the Super Bowl audience, but we'll see what the Halftime ratings turn out to be.
--And I approve of a recently-released pic of her and her small dog. It's looking at the camera like the person taking the picture has just said, "Wanna go for a walk?" or "Wanna eat?"
--And, please, I'd take Katy Perry over Rick Perry any day, every day.
--Mitt Romney announced this week that he will not run for president after all. When asked how sure he was, he said, "Oh, about 47%."
--Mike Huckabee said he probably will run, and Sarah Palin changes her mind (or, "mind") by the minute, so I'm keeping some blog tabs ready to go, just in case. Cuz there's gonna be a lotta verbal head-scratchin' silliness with those two.
--Speaking of blog tabs, you may have noticed that I have not been using my American Horror Story: Freak Show or Cards and Commentary blogs at all. Just haven't had the time. For the record, this past season's AHS was very good, light-years ahead of Coven. Though the last two or three episodes were just Eh. But well-done Eh, if you know what I mean.
--Biggest beef: Some sort of odd character judgement by the show's creators. For the last two years, the last episode was about most of the characters dying, and what kind of "heaven" they go to.
--And there was something disquieting about watching three people eating popcorn while watching a guy dressed in just his underwear drown to death while chained to a cement block.
--Watching someone struggle and die in pain and vain is...well, watching someone struggle and die in pain and vain. Just because you're watching someone die like that who'd also murdered people and who'd also watched many people die like that, that doesn't mean you're not also murdering him.
--And liking it.
--Now that I put it like that...the last episode wasn't so great after all.
--I'm tired of seeing characters knocked out just so they can wake up and die badly. Off the top of my head, this also happened in: the remake of The Last House on the Left; True Lies; Die Hard 4, all of the Saw movies, and countless other shows and movies I've seen that I forget because it's now 2 a.m. It's done for the same effect--this time by the movie's audience--as described above. The movie-makers will tell you it's done for the audience's catharsis, so the audience will see that evil fails and all is right with the world again--but that's crap, of course, and they know it.
--The movie-makers do that because they assume we all have the same base instincts and desires.
--We don't.
--And the site said this blog has an estimated worth of $749.93! This is interesting because I pay less than $50 a year to keep it going, and I don't sell anything on it, and I don't have any ads on it. Does this mean that my thoughts have actual value? Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiice...
--So now I'm thinking how I can make the actual $749.93 from this, without putting up any ads. I would never do that to you, my cherished readers, or to myself. So...anyone wanna cut me a check for $749.93?
--If you wanna see for yourself, here's the link. The monthly visits and monthly pages viewed stats are way off, by the way. I get many more than what it says, for both. I got 1,594 pageviews last month, which was a little low for me, according to the Google Analytics stuff. I'm just sayin'. So, I wonder what the ranking would be if the stats were correct on that page? I need a moment to get over myself.
So what else is going on...
--I got just over 19" of snow here this week, Tuesday and Wednesday. And it looks like I'm getting 10" to 12" more Sunday night through Tuesday morning. Damn good thing I have lots of house projects and writing things to do. And I don't mind the cold, as it actually improves my sinuses. Still...I think I can do without for awhile now. I can see more ice on my driveway than cement.
--And it's going to be -3 here Thursday night. That's real temp, not wind chill.
--I've had enough with the Patriots' hijinks, but still...If you make the teams bring their own 12 footballs, you're begging for a problem. I mean, the $1 billion + business that's the NFL can't afford its own 24 footballs for one of the two playoff games playing that week?
--And you can't tell me the other teams haven't been doing something with their footballs all this time. I wonder if the Pats would get ratted on if they didn't win as often. The Jets, for example, rat on the Pats, not the other way around. Speaking of which--Every football team has cameras filming the other sideline--a few years ago during Spygate, before that, and even now, I'd bet. I'd be shocked if that didn't happen in college, too.
--And deflated footballs didn't cause the Colts to lose by 38 points. Unless the balls themselves can score five touchdowns and a field goal, that is.
--Having said that, a note to the Patriots: Let's just play the game, shall we?
--I'm a Pats fan, but I pick the Seahawks to win. The Pats have trouble with great rushing QBs. But Wilson will lose if he throws a handful of picks again. Belichick has already forgotten more about football than I'll ever know, but I'll say it anyway: If I'm the Pats, I try to shut down the Seahawks's running game, keep Wilson in the pocket, and make him beat me with his arm. This will be a lot easier if the Pats can lead early by a score or two, so he has to throw.
--As for the halftime show, well...I'm not her target audience, but Katy Perry is amusing. She doesn't take herself too seriously, and she doesn't try to be more than what she is: a pop star with a core audience of 13-18 year old girls.
--That's not the Super Bowl audience, but we'll see what the Halftime ratings turn out to be.
--And I approve of a recently-released pic of her and her small dog. It's looking at the camera like the person taking the picture has just said, "Wanna go for a walk?" or "Wanna eat?"
--And, please, I'd take Katy Perry over Rick Perry any day, every day.
--Mitt Romney announced this week that he will not run for president after all. When asked how sure he was, he said, "Oh, about 47%."
--Mike Huckabee said he probably will run, and Sarah Palin changes her mind (or, "mind") by the minute, so I'm keeping some blog tabs ready to go, just in case. Cuz there's gonna be a lotta verbal head-scratchin' silliness with those two.
--Speaking of blog tabs, you may have noticed that I have not been using my American Horror Story: Freak Show or Cards and Commentary blogs at all. Just haven't had the time. For the record, this past season's AHS was very good, light-years ahead of Coven. Though the last two or three episodes were just Eh. But well-done Eh, if you know what I mean.
--Biggest beef: Some sort of odd character judgement by the show's creators. For the last two years, the last episode was about most of the characters dying, and what kind of "heaven" they go to.
--And there was something disquieting about watching three people eating popcorn while watching a guy dressed in just his underwear drown to death while chained to a cement block.
--Watching someone struggle and die in pain and vain is...well, watching someone struggle and die in pain and vain. Just because you're watching someone die like that who'd also murdered people and who'd also watched many people die like that, that doesn't mean you're not also murdering him.
--And liking it.
--Now that I put it like that...the last episode wasn't so great after all.
--I'm tired of seeing characters knocked out just so they can wake up and die badly. Off the top of my head, this also happened in: the remake of The Last House on the Left; True Lies; Die Hard 4, all of the Saw movies, and countless other shows and movies I've seen that I forget because it's now 2 a.m. It's done for the same effect--this time by the movie's audience--as described above. The movie-makers will tell you it's done for the audience's catharsis, so the audience will see that evil fails and all is right with the world again--but that's crap, of course, and they know it.
--The movie-makers do that because they assume we all have the same base instincts and desires.
--We don't.
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Friday, December 27, 2013
Reviewing 2013 at Christmastime
First of all, Happy Holidays, or Merry Christmas, or Happy Hannukah,
or just Have A Nice Vacation Between Now and New Year's, depending on
each reader's particular persuasion.
Secondly, thank you to all my readers, here and at Red Room. 35,000 plus pageviews here, and 96,000 plus pageviews there. If I could shake the hand of each of you, and say "Thank you," I would. I can't, so I'll say a heartfelt Thank You here. I appreciate each and every one of my readers.
Thirdly, I've been thinking of a few friends who I haven't spoken to recently; a few of them are friends or followers of this site, or on Google +. I've been thinking of you recently, even if I haven't called. But I'll do that soon. (Fair warning!)
Okay. So, a few other memorable things from this year past:
--A great new living arrangement. It took some doing, and it wasn't always easy, but I'm here, and I'm happy.
--A World Series ring for a baseball team I watched more this year than ever before, at Fenway, at Oriole Park, and at McCoy. To everyone who went with me, or who watched a game with me, thank you very much. I enjoyed every game, even Aceves's aberration in the monsoon. I especially thank my friend Chris, who just returned me from M & T Bank Park, in Baltimore, Maryland, to watch the Patriots beat the Ravens, 41-7. And he did all the driving, too. Thanks for that, and for all the Fenway visits. Thanks also to the great company at McCoy this year.
--Speaking of the Sox, they seriously overachieved this year. And so have I.
--I read 18 books and over 6,900 pages, according to Goodreads. Thought it was more than that.
--I watched lots of good movies, a few okay ones, and a couple of drecks. They've all been reviewed here.
--I finished three short stories, sold a couple of others, and sold a few other short works, as well. A couple of others are pounding the pavement right now.
--And I finally got a grip on the novel, too. And started five others, all of which are waiting impatiently for me.
--I had some really bad patches this year, but they pale in comparison to what was suffered by my friend Mike. I won't mention anything about it, because it was personal for him, but suffice it to say that he and Job could have a drink together and share some things. So a big shout-out to Mike, who has been extremely brave when I probably couldn't be. I'm thinking about you over here, even if I haven't called as often as I should.
--May 2014 be just as good, if not much better, than was 2013, for all of my friends and readers.
Secondly, thank you to all my readers, here and at Red Room. 35,000 plus pageviews here, and 96,000 plus pageviews there. If I could shake the hand of each of you, and say "Thank you," I would. I can't, so I'll say a heartfelt Thank You here. I appreciate each and every one of my readers.
Thirdly, I've been thinking of a few friends who I haven't spoken to recently; a few of them are friends or followers of this site, or on Google +. I've been thinking of you recently, even if I haven't called. But I'll do that soon. (Fair warning!)
Okay. So, a few other memorable things from this year past:
--A great new living arrangement. It took some doing, and it wasn't always easy, but I'm here, and I'm happy.
--A World Series ring for a baseball team I watched more this year than ever before, at Fenway, at Oriole Park, and at McCoy. To everyone who went with me, or who watched a game with me, thank you very much. I enjoyed every game, even Aceves's aberration in the monsoon. I especially thank my friend Chris, who just returned me from M & T Bank Park, in Baltimore, Maryland, to watch the Patriots beat the Ravens, 41-7. And he did all the driving, too. Thanks for that, and for all the Fenway visits. Thanks also to the great company at McCoy this year.
--Speaking of the Sox, they seriously overachieved this year. And so have I.
--I read 18 books and over 6,900 pages, according to Goodreads. Thought it was more than that.
--I watched lots of good movies, a few okay ones, and a couple of drecks. They've all been reviewed here.
--I finished three short stories, sold a couple of others, and sold a few other short works, as well. A couple of others are pounding the pavement right now.
--And I finally got a grip on the novel, too. And started five others, all of which are waiting impatiently for me.
--I had some really bad patches this year, but they pale in comparison to what was suffered by my friend Mike. I won't mention anything about it, because it was personal for him, but suffice it to say that he and Job could have a drink together and share some things. So a big shout-out to Mike, who has been extremely brave when I probably couldn't be. I'm thinking about you over here, even if I haven't called as often as I should.
--May 2014 be just as good, if not much better, than was 2013, for all of my friends and readers.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Mackenzie and Nick from Longwood University in Virginia, and Other Cool People in Baltimore
I met a lot of cool people at all of the sporting events this year. I met a few in Baltimore on Sunday. I especially remember eating after the game at a Chili's near our (By "our," I mean my friend Chris and me) hotel, and meeting Mackenzie and Nick, from Longwood University, in Virginia. They were nice enough to laugh at all my silliness. Nick even tried a "Well, you know, Susan..."--which is my rendition of the New York Yankees' radio guy, John Sterling--and Mackenzie did an outstanding Inappropriate Slap. (Don't ask.) Funniest moment was when I told Nick that he was overachieving with such a pretty girl with him--and he agreed with me! The smart ones know when they're overachieving. (I'm always overachieving.) She's going to be an elementary school teacher (the world always needs good teachers) and Nick's going to be something in the law, either a lawyer or a policeman. Good luck to both of them, and if you're reading the blog, guys, please comment or email me! The email is to the right of this entry, below my other pages. (And I'm upset that I didn't take their picture, while I did take the picture of the other cool people I spoke to, below.)
--Others I met in Baltimore include a Santa / Grinch cameraman:
And a very cool Ravens fan / Santa who was such a good guy that he deserved better. He was such a solid fan that he was one of the few Ravens fans to stay to the bitter end. And what did he get? Two garbage-time touchdowns scored against his team. Here he is taking a beard break:
--And, if you've never been there, here are a few pics of M & T Bank Stadium. I was pretty high up, but I had such a great view that I was able to see every single play of the game, a rare occurrence at any football stadium. (And the fireworks before the game were cool, too.) I saw each play so well that I correctly overruled the refs on some plays, even in the Ravens' favor. That shows you how brutally bad the refs were that night. And for the record, Ravens fans know the first name of one of the refs personally--that's how often, they say, he has screwed them over. So, the pics:
--I watched a Patriots game on December 22nd, sans jacket, and with my sleeves rolled up. It was sixty-one degrees at game time. Sure, it rained all the way back, but there were only a few scattered drops during the game itself. What a great night!
A great, big, hearty thank-you to my friend Chris for inviting me along, and for driving me a total of about 13 hours, to and fro--including 6 1/2 hours in a pouring rain the entire time back. Thanks for all the Fenway games, too!
--Others I met in Baltimore include a Santa / Grinch cameraman:
And a very cool Ravens fan / Santa who was such a good guy that he deserved better. He was such a solid fan that he was one of the few Ravens fans to stay to the bitter end. And what did he get? Two garbage-time touchdowns scored against his team. Here he is taking a beard break:
--And, if you've never been there, here are a few pics of M & T Bank Stadium. I was pretty high up, but I had such a great view that I was able to see every single play of the game, a rare occurrence at any football stadium. (And the fireworks before the game were cool, too.) I saw each play so well that I correctly overruled the refs on some plays, even in the Ravens' favor. That shows you how brutally bad the refs were that night. And for the record, Ravens fans know the first name of one of the refs personally--that's how often, they say, he has screwed them over. So, the pics:
--I watched a Patriots game on December 22nd, sans jacket, and with my sleeves rolled up. It was sixty-one degrees at game time. Sure, it rained all the way back, but there were only a few scattered drops during the game itself. What a great night!
A great, big, hearty thank-you to my friend Chris for inviting me along, and for driving me a total of about 13 hours, to and fro--including 6 1/2 hours in a pouring rain the entire time back. Thanks for all the Fenway games, too!
Labels:
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teacher,
University,
Virginia,
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Friday, September 13, 2013
It's Been Awhile--and More Quick Jots
So I've been away for much longer than usual. Exhaustion, work, sinus infections and some serious insomnia (so bad that, despite a lifetime with the issue, I had to take a sick day for it for the first time), but I'm plugging along. Here are a few quick considerations in the meantime:
--From the Sick World File, as per my last blog entry about this sick, crazy world, I offer you the story of three teens who beat to death a father of 12, grandfather of 23, while he was collecting cans in an alley for some money (which you would need with 12 children and 23 grandchildren). As if that weren't horrible enough, it turns out that one of them filmed it on his cellphone, and then uploaded it to his Facebook page. The reason? Same as the one other teens gave when they shot a college ballplayer a few weeks ago: they were bored.
Filming a murder. Laughing during the filming. Posting a murder to Facebook. Killing...for fun.
What the hell is going on?!? Read it for yourself here.
--Speaking of which, the teens who beat to death the World War II vet in his 80s in Washington state recently pled not guilty today. Although they, and the beating, were videotaped by security cameras.
--And one of them said the man was trying to cheat them in a crack deal. I couldn't make that up.
--This past Sunday night, a neighbor and I met in the street while I put my barrels out. We talked about the Patriots game, the Sox game, and the tennis match, that we coincidentally both watched. Then I went back in and started yet another three-hour night of sleep. He went to bed early, as usual. And did not wake up.
--I'll miss meeting up with you at the mailbox and talking sports, my old friend. Shine on.
--It can happen just that suddenly.
--And not just to my neighbor, who was in his 80s. The guy murdered in Washington state was in his 80s, and the guy in the alley probably was, too.
--If I'd known that the Sox would make beards like those the Seven Dwarfs had the new big thing, I would have kept mine. It wasn't in Mike Napoli's range, but it got very full and gnarly when I just didn't give a damn about shaving.
--The Patriots are a very ugly 2-0. But as a co-worker said today, a win's a win.
--Putin isn't making Obama look bad. That's a whole lot of nothin' right there. Putin's the same guy who has recently sung bad songs to celebrities, who poses without his shirt, and who does many other things to increase his own visibility. The surprising thing here is that he did a relatively restrained thing, like write a commentary for the New York Times.
--Though he's certainly not as popular and well-loved by the world as he was six years ago, Obama is still very well-liked and well-respected. Nobody could have kept up his past level of world love. But to say he's now unliked by the world is ridiculous. You're talking about Obama's predecessor there.
--Up next: a blog entry about the evils of ebay.
--From the Sick World File, as per my last blog entry about this sick, crazy world, I offer you the story of three teens who beat to death a father of 12, grandfather of 23, while he was collecting cans in an alley for some money (which you would need with 12 children and 23 grandchildren). As if that weren't horrible enough, it turns out that one of them filmed it on his cellphone, and then uploaded it to his Facebook page. The reason? Same as the one other teens gave when they shot a college ballplayer a few weeks ago: they were bored.
Filming a murder. Laughing during the filming. Posting a murder to Facebook. Killing...for fun.
What the hell is going on?!? Read it for yourself here.
--Speaking of which, the teens who beat to death the World War II vet in his 80s in Washington state recently pled not guilty today. Although they, and the beating, were videotaped by security cameras.
--And one of them said the man was trying to cheat them in a crack deal. I couldn't make that up.
--This past Sunday night, a neighbor and I met in the street while I put my barrels out. We talked about the Patriots game, the Sox game, and the tennis match, that we coincidentally both watched. Then I went back in and started yet another three-hour night of sleep. He went to bed early, as usual. And did not wake up.
--I'll miss meeting up with you at the mailbox and talking sports, my old friend. Shine on.
--It can happen just that suddenly.
--And not just to my neighbor, who was in his 80s. The guy murdered in Washington state was in his 80s, and the guy in the alley probably was, too.
--If I'd known that the Sox would make beards like those the Seven Dwarfs had the new big thing, I would have kept mine. It wasn't in Mike Napoli's range, but it got very full and gnarly when I just didn't give a damn about shaving.
--The Patriots are a very ugly 2-0. But as a co-worker said today, a win's a win.
--Putin isn't making Obama look bad. That's a whole lot of nothin' right there. Putin's the same guy who has recently sung bad songs to celebrities, who poses without his shirt, and who does many other things to increase his own visibility. The surprising thing here is that he did a relatively restrained thing, like write a commentary for the New York Times.
--Though he's certainly not as popular and well-loved by the world as he was six years ago, Obama is still very well-liked and well-respected. Nobody could have kept up his past level of world love. But to say he's now unliked by the world is ridiculous. You're talking about Obama's predecessor there.
--Up next: a blog entry about the evils of ebay.
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